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Words that Rhyme with condition

2 Syllable Words

britian, fission, mission, titian, wishon

3 Syllable Words

addition, admission, ambition, attrition, audition, beautician, clinician, cognition, commision, commission, contrition, dentition, edition, emission, fruition, ignition, logician, magician, mccuistion, mortician, munition, musician, nutrition, omission, optician, partition, patrician, permission, petition, physician, position, recission, remission, rendition, sedition, submission, suspicion, tactician, technician, tradition, transition, transmission, tuition, volition

4 Syllable Words

abolition, acquisition, admonition, ammunition, apparition, coalition, competition, composition, daffynition, decommission, definition, demolition, deposition, dietitian, disposition, electrician, erudition, exhibition, expedition, exposition, extradition, fondkommission, imposition, inhibition, inquisition, intermission, intuition, malnutrition, obstetrician, opposition, politician, precondition, preignition, premonition, prohibition, proposition, recognition, recondition, repetition, reposition, requisition, retransmission, rhetorician, statistician, superstition, supposition

5 Syllable Words

academician, decomposition, geriatrician, juxtaposition, mathematician, pediatrician, predisposition, presupposition, redefinition, redeposition, reimposition, theoretician

Definitions of condition

n. Mode or state of being; state or situation with regard to external circumstances or influences, or to physical or mental integrity, health, strength, etc.; predicament; rank; position, estate.

n. Essential quality; property; attribute.

n. Temperament; disposition; character.

n. That which must exist as the occasion or concomitant of something else; that which is requisite in order that something else should take effect; an essential qualification; stipulation; terms specified.

n. A clause in a contract, or agreement, which has for its object to suspend, to defeat, or in some way to modify, the principal obligation; or, in case of a will, to suspend, revoke, or modify a devise or bequest. It is also the case of a future uncertain event, which may or may not happen, and on the occurrence or non-occurrence of which, the accomplishment, recission, or modification of an obligation or testamentary disposition is made to depend.

v. i. To make terms; to stipulate.

v. i. To impose upon an object those relations or conditions without which knowledge and thought are alleged to be impossible.

n. To invest with, or limit by, conditions; to burden or qualify by a condition; to impose or be imposed as the condition of.

n. To contract; to stipulate; to agree.

n. To put under conditions; to require to pass a new examination or to make up a specified study, as a condition of remaining in one's class or in college; as, to condition a student who has failed in some branch of study.

n. To test or assay, as silk (to ascertain the proportion of moisture it contains).

n. train; acclimate.

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