- free
- fren
- fret
- frim
- frit
- friz
- froe
- from
- flow
- flue
- flux
- flew
- foal
- foam
- foci
- foge
- fogy
- foil
- foin
- fold
- folk
- fond
- fone
- font
- food
- fool
- feet
- feed
- feel
- feet
- fele
- fell
- fend
- feod
- fere
- fake
- fell
- falx
- fame
- fand
- fane
- fard
- fare
- farm
- fash
- fate
- fawe
- faze
- feal
- frow
- fubs
- fuci
- fuel
- fuff
- full
- fume
- fumy
- fund
- furl
- fuss
- fust
- fuze
- fuzz
- fyke
- fyrd
- face
- fact
- fade
- fady
- fail
- fain
- feat
- fork
- form
- fora
- foul
- fowl
- foxy
- fozy
- frab
- frap
- fray
- free
- for-
- fess
- fest
- fete
- feud
- fiar
- fiat
- fice
- fico
- fief
- fike
- file
- fill
- film
- find
- fire
- firk
- firm
- fisc
- fist
- five
- fizz
- flag
- fore
- flap
- flat
- flaw
- flax
- flay
- flea
- fled
- flee
- flet
- flew
- flex
- flit
- flix
- floe
- flog
(superl.) Not confined or imprisoned; released from arrest;
liberated; at liberty to go.
(superl.) Not subjected to the laws of physical necessity; capable
of voluntary activity; endowed with moral liberty; -- said of the will.
(superl.) Clear of offense or crime; guiltless; innocent.
(superl.) Unconstrained by timidity or distrust; unreserved;
ingenuous; frank; familiar; communicative.
(superl.) Unrestrained; immoderate; lavish; licentious; -- used in
a bad sense.
(superl.) Not close or parsimonious; liberal; open-handed; lavish;
as, free with his money.
(superl.) Exempt; clear; released; liberated; not encumbered or
troubled with; as, free from pain; free from a burden; -- followed by
from, or, rarely, by of.
(superl.) Characteristic of one acting without restraint;
charming; easy.
(superl.) Ready; eager; acting without spurring or whipping;
spirited; as, a free horse.
(superl.) Invested with a particular freedom or franchise;
enjoying certain immunities or privileges; admitted to special rights;
-- followed by of.
(superl.) Thrown open, or made accessible, to all; to be enjoyed
without limitations; unrestricted; not obstructed, engrossed, or
appropriated; open; -- said of a thing to be possessed or enjoyed; as,
a free school.
(superl.) Not gained by importunity or purchase; gratuitous;
spontaneous; as, free admission; a free gift.
(superl.) Not arbitrary or despotic; assuring liberty; defending
individual rights against encroachment by any person or class;
instituted by a free people; -- said of a government, institutions,
etc.
(superl.) Certain or honorable; the opposite of base; as, free
service; free socage.
(superl.) Privileged or individual; the opposite of common; as, a
free fishery; a free warren.
(superl.) Not united or combined with anything else; separated;
dissevered; unattached; at liberty to escape; as, free carbonic acid
gas; free cells.
(adv.) Freely; willingly.
(adv.) Without charge; as, children admitted free.
(a.) To make free; to set at liberty; to rid of that which
confines, limits, embarrasses, oppresses, etc.; to release; to
disengage; to clear; -- followed by from, and sometimes by off; as, to
free a captive or a slave; to be freed of these inconveniences.
(a.) To remove, as something that confines or bars; to relieve
from the constraint of.
(a.) To frank.
(a.) A stranger.
(n.) See 1st Frith.
(v. t.) To devour.
(v. t.) To rub; to wear away by friction; to chafe; to gall;
hence, to eat away; to gnaw; as, to fret cloth; to fret a piece of gold
or other metal; a worm frets the plants of a ship.
(v. t.) To impair; to wear away; to diminish.
(v. t.) To make rough, agitate, or disturb; to cause to ripple;
as, to fret the surface of water.
(v. t.) To tease; to irritate; to vex.
(v. i.) To be worn away; to chafe; to fray; as, a wristband frets
on the edges.
(v. i.) To eat in; to make way by corrosion.
(v. i.) To be agitated; to be in violent commotion; to rankle; as,
rancor frets in the malignant breast.
(v. i.) To be vexed; to be chafed or irritated; to be angry; to
utter peevish expressions.
(n.) The agitation of the surface of a fluid by fermentation or
other cause; a rippling on the surface of water.
(n.) Agitation of mind marked by complaint and impatience;
disturbance of temper; irritation; as, he keeps his mind in a continual
fret.
(n.) Herpes; tetter.
(n.) The worn sides of river banks, where ores, or stones
containing them, accumulate by being washed down from the hills, and
thus indicate to the miners the locality of the veins.
(v. t.) To ornament with raised work; to variegate; to diversify.
(n.) Ornamental work in relief, as carving or embossing. See
Fretwork.
(n.) An ornament consisting of smmall fillets or slats
intersecting each other or bent at right angles, as in classical
designs, or at obilique angles, as often in Oriental art.
(n.) The reticulated headdress or net, made of gold or silver
wire, in which ladies in the Middle Ages confined their hair.
(n.) A saltire interlaced with a mascle.
(n.) A short piece of wire, or other material fixed across the
finger board of a guitar or a similar instrument, to indicate where the
finger is to be placed.
(v. t.) To furnish with frets, as an instrument of music.
(a.) Flourishing; thriving; fresh; in good case; vigorous.
(v. t.) The material of which glass is made, after having been
calcined or partly fused in a furnace, but before vitrification. It is
a composition of silex and alkali, occasionally with other ingredients.
(v. t.) The material for glaze of pottery.
(v. t.) To prepare by heat (the materials for making glass); to
fuse partially.
(v. t.) To fritter; -- with away.
(v. t.) To curl or form into small curls, as hair, with a crisping
pin; to crisp.
(v. t.) To form into little burs, prominences, knobs, or tufts, as
the nap of cloth.
(v. t.) To soften and make of even thickness by rubbing, as with
pumice stone or a blunt instrument.
(n.) That which is frizzed; anything crisped or curled, as a wig;
a frizzle.
(n.) A dirty woman; a slattern; a frow.
(n.) An iron cleaver or splitting tool; a frow.
(prep.) Out of the neighborhood of; lessening or losing proximity
to; leaving behind; by reason of; out of; by aid of; -- used whenever
departure, setting out, commencement of action, being, state,
occurrence, etc., or procedure, emanation, absence, separation, etc.,
are to be expressed. It is construed with, and indicates, the point of
space or time at which the action, state, etc., are regarded as setting
out or beginning; also, less frequently, the source, the cause, the
occasion, out of which anything proceeds; -- the aritithesis and
correlative of to; as, it, is one hundred miles from Boston to
Springfield; he took his sword from his side; light proceeds from the
sun; separate the coarse wool from the fine; men have all sprung from
Adam, and often go from good to bad, and from bad to worse; the merit
of an action depends on the principle from which it proceeds; men judge
of facts from personal knowledge, or from testimony.
() imp. sing. of Fly, v. i.
(v. i.) To move with a continual change of place among the
particles or parts, as a fluid; to change place or circulate, as a
liquid; as, rivers flow from springs and lakes; tears flow from the
eyes.
(v. i.) To become liquid; to melt.
(v. i.) To proceed; to issue forth; as, wealth flows from industry
and economy.
(v. i.) To glide along smoothly, without harshness or asperties;
as, a flowing period; flowing numbers; to sound smoothly to the ear; to
be uttered easily.
(v. i.) To have or be in abundance; to abound; to full, so as to
run or flow over; to be copious.
(v. i.) To hang loose and waving; as, a flowing mantle; flowing
locks.
(v. i.) To rise, as the tide; -- opposed to ebb; as, the tide
flows twice in twenty-four hours.
(v. i.) To discharge blood in excess from the uterus.
(v. t.) To cover with water or other liquid; to overflow; to
inundate; to flood.
(v. t.) To cover with varnish.
(n.) A stream of water or other fluid; a current; as, a flow of
water; a flow of blood.
(n.) A continuous movement of something abundant; as, a flow of
words.
(n.) Any gentle, gradual movement or procedure of thought,
diction, music, or the like, resembling the quiet, steady movement of a
river; a stream.
(n.) The tidal setting in of the water from the ocean to the
shore. See Ebb and flow, under Ebb.
(n.) A low-lying piece of watery land; -- called also flow moss
and flow bog.
(n.) An inclosed passage way for establishing and directing a
current of air, gases, etc.; an air passage
(n.) A compartment or division of a chimney for conveying flame
and smoke to the outer air.
(n.) A passage way for conducting a current of fresh, foul, or
heated air from one place to another.
(n.) A pipe or passage for conveying flame and hot gases through
surrounding water in a boiler; -- distinguished from a tube which holds
water and is surrounded by fire. Small flues are called fire tubes or
simply tubes.
(n.) Light down, such as rises from cotton, fur, etc.; very fine
lint or hair.
(n.) The act of flowing; a continuous moving on or passing by, as
of a flowing stream; constant succession; change.
(n.) The setting in of the tide toward the shore, -- the ebb being
called the reflux.
(n.) The state of being liquid through heat; fusion.
(n.) Any substance or mixture used to promote the fusion of metals
or minerals, as alkalies, borax, lime, fluorite.
(n.) A fluid discharge from the bowels or other part; especially,
an excessive and morbid discharge; as, the bloody flux or dysentery.
See Bloody flux.
(n.) The matter thus discharged.
(n.) The quantity of a fluid that crosses a unit area of a given
surface in a unit of time.
(n.) Flowing; unstable; inconstant; variable.
(v. t.) To affect, or bring to a certain state, by flux.
(v. t.) To cause to become fluid; to fuse.
(v. t.) To cause a discharge from; to purge.
(imp.) of Fly
(n.) The young of any animal of the Horse family (Equidae); a
colt; a filly.
(v.t.) To bring forth (a colt); -- said of a mare or a she ass.
(v.i.) To bring forth young, as an animal of the horse kind.
(n.) The white substance, consisting of an aggregation of bubbles,
which is formed on the surface of liquids, or in the mouth of an
animal, by violent agitation or fermentation; froth; spume; scum; as,
the foam of the sea.
(n.) To gather foam; to froth; as, the billows foam.
(n.) To form foam, or become filled with foam; -- said of a steam
boiler when the water is unduly agitated and frothy, as because of
chemical action.
(v.t.) To cause to foam; as,to foam the goblet; also (with out),
to throw out with rage or violence, as foam.
(pl. ) of Focus
(n.) The Cornish name for a forge used for smelting tin.
(n.) A dull old fellow; a person behind the times,
over-conservative, or slow; -- usually preceded by old.
(v. t.) To tread under foot; to trample.
(v. t.) To render (an effort or attempt) vain or nugatory; to
baffle; to outwit; to balk; to frustrate; to defeat.
(v. t.) To blunt; to dull; to spoil; as, to foil the scent in
chase.
(v. t.) To defile; to soil.
(n.) Failure of success when on the point of attainment; defeat;
frustration; miscarriage.
(n.) A blunt weapon used in fencing, resembling a smallsword in
the main, but usually lighter and having a button at the point.
(n.) The track or trail of an animal.
(n.) A leaf or very thin sheet of metal; as, brass foil; tin foil;
gold foil.
(n.) A thin leaf of sheet copper silvered and burnished, and
afterwards coated with transparent colors mixed with isinglass; --
employed by jewelers to give color or brilliancy to pastes and inferior
stones.
(n.) Anything that serves by contrast of color or quality to adorn
or set off another thing to advantage.
(n.) A thin coat of tin, with quicksilver, laid on the back of a
looking-glass, to cause reflection.
(n.) The space between the cusps in Gothic architecture; a rounded
or leaflike ornament, in windows, niches, etc. A group of foils is
called trefoil, quatrefoil, quinquefoil, etc., according to the number
of arcs of which it is composed.
(n.) The beech marten (Mustela foina). See Marten.
(n.) A kind of fur, black at the top on a whitish ground, taken
from the ferret or weasel of the same name.
(v. i.) To thrust with a sword or spear; to lunge.
(v. t.) To prick; to st?ng.
(n.) A pass in fencing; a lunge.
(v. t.) To lap or lay in plaits or folds; to lay one part over
another part of; to double; as, to fold cloth; to fold a letter.
(v. t.) To double or lay together, as the arms or the hands; as,
he folds his arms in despair.
(v. t.) To inclose within folds or plaitings; to envelop; to
infold; to clasp; to embrace.
(v. t.) To cover or wrap up; to conceal.
(v. i.) To become folded, plaited, or doubled; to close over
another of the same kind; to double together; as, the leaves of the
door fold.
(v.) A doubling,esp. of any flexible substance; a part laid over
on another part; a plait; a plication.
(v.) Times or repetitions; -- used with numerals, chiefly in
composition, to denote multiplication or increase in a geometrical
ratio, the doubling, tripling, etc., of anything; as, fourfold, four
times, increased in a quadruple ratio, multiplied by four.
(v.) That which is folded together, or which infolds or envelops;
embrace.
(n.) An inclosure for sheep; a sheep pen.
(n.) A flock of sheep; figuratively, the Church or a church; as,
Christ's fold.
(n.) A boundary; a limit.
(v. t.) To confine in a fold, as sheep.
(v. i.) To confine sheep in a fold.
(n. collect. & pl.) Alt. of Folks
() imp. of Find. Found.
(superl.) Foolish; silly; simple; weak.
(superl.) Foolishly tender and loving; weakly indulgent;
over-affectionate.
(superl.) Affectionate; loving; tender; -- in a good sense; as, a
fond mother or wife.
(superl.) Loving; much pleased; affectionately regardful,
indulgent, or desirous; longing or yearning; -- followed by of
(formerly also by on).
(superl.) Doted on; regarded with affection.
(superl.) Trifling; valued by folly; trivial.
(v. t.) To caress; to fondle.
(v. i.) To be fond; to dote.
(n.) pl. of Foe.
(n.) A complete assortment of printing type of one size, including
a due proportion of all the letters in the alphabet, large and small,
points, accents, and whatever else is necessary for printing with that
variety of types; a fount.
(n.) A fountain; a spring; a source.
(n.) A basin or stone vessel in which water is contained for
baptizing.
(n.) What is fed upon; that which goes to support life by being
received within, and assimilated by, the organism of an animal or a
plant; nutriment; aliment; especially, what is eaten by animals for
nourishment.
(n.) Anything that instructs the intellect, excites the feelings,
or molds habits of character; that which nourishes.
(v. t.) To supply with food.
(n.) A compound of gooseberries scalded and crushed, with cream;
-- commonly called gooseberry fool.
(n.) One destitute of reason, or of the common powers of
understanding; an idiot; a natural.
(n.) A person deficient in intellect; one who acts absurdly, or
pursues a course contrary to the dictates of wisdom; one without
judgment; a simpleton; a dolt.
(n.) One who acts contrary to moral and religious wisdom; a wicked
person.
(n.) One who counterfeits folly; a professional jester or buffoon;
a retainer formerly kept to make sport, dressed fantastically in
motley, with ridiculous accouterments.
(v. i.) To play the fool; to trifle; to toy; to spend time in idle
sport or mirth.
(v. t.) To infatuate; to make foolish.
(v. t.) To use as a fool; to deceive in a shameful or mortifying
manner; to impose upon; to cheat by inspiring foolish confidence; as,
to fool one out of his money.
(pl. ) of Foot
(imp. & p. p.) of Fee
(v. t.) To give food to; to supply with nourishment; to satisfy
the physical huger of.
(v. t.) To satisfy; grafity or minister to, as any sense, talent,
taste, or desire.
(v. t.) To fill the wants of; to supply with that which is used or
wasted; as, springs feed ponds; the hopper feeds the mill; to feed a
furnace with coal.
(v. t.) To nourish, in a general sense; to foster, strengthen,
develop, and guard.
(v. t.) To graze; to cause to be cropped by feeding, as herbage by
cattle; as, if grain is too forward in autumn, feed it with sheep.
(v. t.) To give for food, especially to animals; to furnish for
consumption; as, to feed out turnips to the cows; to feed water to a
steam boiler.
(v. t.) To supply (the material to be operated upon) to a machine;
as, to feed paper to a printing press.
(v. t.) To produce progressive operation upon or with (as in wood
and metal working machines, so that the work moves to the cutting tool,
or the tool to the work).
(v. i.) To take food; to eat.
(v. i.) To subject by eating; to satisfy the appetite; to feed
one's self (upon something); to prey; -- with on or upon.
(v. i.) To be nourished, strengthened, or satisfied, as if by
food.
(v. i.) To place cattle to feed; to pasture; to graze.
(n.) That which is eaten; esp., food for beasts; fodder; pasture;
hay; grain, ground or whole; as, the best feed for sheep.
(n.) A grazing or pasture ground.
(n.) An allowance of provender given to a horse, cow, etc.; a
meal; as, a feed of corn or oats.
(n.) A meal, or the act of eating.
(n.) The water supplied to steam boilers.
(n.) The motion, or act, of carrying forward the stuff to be
operated upon, as cloth to the needle in a sewing machine; or of
producing progressive operation upon any material or object in a
machine, as, in a turning lathe, by moving the cutting tool along or in
the work.
(n.) The supply of material to a machine, as water to a steam
boiler, coal to a furnace, or grain to a run of stones.
(n.) The mechanism by which the action of feeding is produced; a
feed motion.
(v. t.) To perceive by the touch; to take cognizance of by means
of the nerves of sensation distributed all over the body, especially by
those of the skin; to have sensation excited by contact of (a thing)
with the body or limbs.
(v. t.) To touch; to handle; to examine by touching; as, feel this
piece of silk; hence, to make trial of; to test; often with out.
(v. t.) To perceive by the mind; to have a sense of; to
experience; to be affected by; to be sensible of, or sensetive to; as,
to feel pleasure; to feel pain.
(v. t.) To take internal cognizance of; to be conscious of; to
have an inward persuasion of.
(v. t.) To perceive; to observe.
(v. i.) To have perception by the touch, or by contact of anything
with the nerves of sensation, especially those upon the surface of the
body.
(v. i.) To have the sensibilities moved or affected.
(v. i.) To be conscious of an inward impression, state of mind,
persuasion, physical condition, etc.; to perceive one's self to be; --
followed by an adjective describing the state, etc.; as, to feel
assured, grieved, persuaded.
(v. i.) To know with feeling; to be conscious; hence, to know
certainly or without misgiving.
(v. i.) To appear to the touch; to give a perception; to produce
an impression by the nerves of sensation; -- followed by an adjective
describing the kind of sensation.
(n.) Feeling; perception.
(n.) A sensation communicated by touching; impression made upon
one who touches or handles; as, this leather has a greasy feel.
(n. pl.) See Foot.
(n.) Fact; performance.
(a.) Many.
() imp. of Fall.
(a.) Cruel; barbarous; inhuman; fierce; savage; ravenous.
(a.) Eager; earnest; intent.
(a.) Gall; anger; melancholy.
(n.) A skin or hide of a beast with the wool or hair on; a pelt;
-- used chiefly in composition, as woolfell.
(n.) A barren or rocky hill.
(n.) A wild field; a moor.
(v. i.) To cause to fall; to prostrate; to bring down or to the
ground; to cut down.
(n.) The finer portions of ore which go through the meshes, when
the ore is sorted by sifting.
(v. t.) To sew or hem; -- said of seams.
(n.) A form of seam joining two pieces of cloth, the edges being
folded together and the stitches taken through both thicknesses.
(n.) The end of a web, formed by the last thread of the weft.
(n.) A fiend.
(v. t.) To keep off; to prevent from entering or hitting; to ward
off; to shut out; -- often with off; as, to fend off blows.
(v. i.) To act on the defensive, or in opposition; to resist; to
parry; to shift off.
(n.) A feud. See 2d Feud.
(n.) A mate or companion; -- often used of a wife.
(a.) Fierce.
(n.) Fire.
(n.) Fear.
(v. t. & i.) To fear.
(n.) One of the circles or windings of a cable or hawser, as it
lies in a coil; a single turn or coil.
(v. t.) To coil (a rope, line, or hawser), by winding alternately
in opposite directions, in layers usually of zigzag or figure of eight
form,, to prevent twisting when running out.
(v. t.) To cheat; to swindle; to steal; to rob.
(v. t.) To make; to construct; to do.
(v. t.) To manipulate fraudulently, so as to make an object appear
better or other than it really is; as, to fake a bulldog, by burning
his upper lip and thus artificially shortening it.
(n.) A trick; a swindle.
(imp.) of Fall
(n.) A curved fold or process of the dura mater or the peritoneum;
esp., one of the partitionlike folds of the dura mater which extend
into the great fissures of the brain.
(n.) Public report or rumor.
(n.) Report or opinion generally diffused; renown; public
estimation; celebrity, either favorable or unfavorable; as, the fame of
Washington.
(v. t.) To report widely or honorably.
(v. t.) To make famous or renowned.
() imp. of Find.
(n.) A temple; a place consecrated to religion; a church.
(n.) A weathercock.
(n.) Paint used on the face.
(v. t.) To paint; -- said esp. of one's face.
(n.) To go; to pass; to journey; to travel.
(n.) To be in any state, or pass through any experience, good or
bad; to be attended with any circummstances or train of events,
fortunate or unfortunate; as, he fared well, or ill.
(n.) To be treated or entertained at table, or with bodily or
social comforts; to live.
(n.) To happen well, or ill; -- used impersonally; as, we shall
see how it will fare with him.
(n.) To behave; to conduct one's self.
(v.) A journey; a passage.
(v.) The price of passage or going; the sum paid or due for
conveying a person by land or water; as, the fare for crossing a river;
the fare in a coach or by railway.
(v.) Ado; bustle; business.
(v.) Condition or state of things; fortune; hap; cheer.
(v.) Food; provisions for the table; entertainment; as, coarse
fare; delicious fare.
(v.) The person or persons conveyed in a vehicle; as, a full fare
of passengers.
(v.) The catch of fish on a fishing vessel.
(a. & n.) The rent of land, -- originally paid by reservation of
part of its products.
(a. & n.) The term or tenure of a lease of land for cultivation; a
leasehold.
(a. & n.) The land held under lease and by payment of rent for the
purpose of cultivation.
(a. & n.) Any tract of land devoted to agricultural purposes,
under the management of a tenant or the owner.
(a. & n.) A district of country leased (or farmed) out for the
collection of the revenues of government.
(a. & n.) A lease of the imposts on particular goods; as, the
sugar farm, the silk farm.
(v. t.) To lease or let for an equivalent, as land for a rent; to
yield the use of to proceeds.
(v. t.) To give up to another, as an estate, a business, the
revenue, etc., on condition of receiving in return a percentage of what
it yields; as, to farm the taxes.
(v. t.) To take at a certain rent or rate.
(v. t.) To devote (land) to agriculture; to cultivate, as land; to
till, as a farm.
(v. i.) To engage in the business of tilling the soil; to labor as
a farmer.
(v. t.) To vex; to tease; to trouble.
(n.) Vexation; anxiety; care.
(n.) A fixed decree by which the order of things is prescribed;
the immutable law of the universe; inevitable necessity; the force by
which all existence is determined and conditioned.
(n.) Appointed lot; allotted life; arranged or predetermined
event; destiny; especially, the final lot; doom; ruin; death.
(n.) The element of chance in the affairs of life; the unforeseen
and unestimated conitions considered as a force shaping events;
fortune; esp., opposing circumstances against which it is useless to
struggle; as, fate was, or the fates were, against him.
(n.) The three goddesses, Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropos, sometimes
called the Destinies, or Parcaewho were supposed to determine the
course of human life. They are represented, one as holding the distaff,
a second as spinning, and the third as cutting off the thread.
(a.) Fain; glad; delighted.
(v. t.) See Feeze.
(a.) Faithful; loyal.
(n.) A woman; especially, a Dutch or German woman.
(n.) A dirty woman; a slattern.
(n.) A cleaving tool with handle at right angles to the blade, for
splitting cask staves and shingles from the block; a frower.
(a.) Brittle.
(n.) A plump young person or child.
(pl. ) of Fucus
(n.) Any matter used to produce heat by burning; that which feeds
fire; combustible matter used for fires, as wood, coal, peat, etc.
(n.) Anything that serves to feed or increase passion or
excitement.
(v. t.) To feed with fuel.
(v. t.) To store or furnish with fuel or firing.
(v. t. & i.) To puff.
(Compar.) Filled up, having within its limits all that it can
contain; supplied; not empty or vacant; -- said primarily of hollow
vessels, and hence of anything else; as, a cup full of water; a house
full of people.
(Compar.) Abundantly furnished or provided; sufficient in.
quantity, quality, or degree; copious; plenteous; ample; adequate; as,
a full meal; a full supply; a full voice; a full compensation; a house
full of furniture.
(Compar.) Not wanting in any essential quality; complete, entire;
perfect; adequate; as, a full narrative; a person of full age; a full
stop; a full face; the full moon.
(Compar.) Sated; surfeited.
(Compar.) Having the mind filled with ideas; stocked with
knowledge; stored with information.
(Compar.) Having the attention, thoughts, etc., absorbed in any
matter, and the feelings more or less excited by it, as, to be full of
some project.
(Compar.) Filled with emotions.
(Compar.) Impregnated; made pregnant.
(n.) Complete measure; utmost extent; the highest state or degree.
(adv.) Quite; to the same degree; without abatement or diminution;
with the whole force or effect; thoroughly; completely; exactly;
entirely.
(v. i.) To become full or wholly illuminated; as, the moon fulls
at midnight.
(n.) To thicken by moistening, heating, and pressing, as cloth; to
mill; to make compact; to scour, cleanse, and thicken in a mill.
(v. i.) To become fulled or thickened; as, this material fulls
well.
(n.) Exhalation; volatile matter (esp. noxious vapor or smoke)
ascending in a dense body; smoke; vapor; reek; as, the fumes of
tobacco.
(n.) Rage or excitement which deprives the mind of self-control;
as, the fumes of passion.
(n.) Anything vaporlike, unsubstantial, or airy; idle conceit;
vain imagination.
(n.) The incense of praise; inordinate flattery.
(n.) To smoke; to throw off fumes, as in combustion or chemical
action; to rise up, as vapor.
(n.) To be as in a mist; to be dulled and stupefied.
(n.) To pass off in fumes or vapors.
(n.) To be in a rage; to be hot with anger.
(v. t.) To expose to the action of fumes; to treat with vapors,
smoke, etc.; as, to bleach straw by fuming it with sulphur; to fill
with fumes, vapors, odors, etc., as a room.
(v. t.) To praise inordinately; to flatter.
(v. t.) To throw off in vapor, or as in the form of vapor.
(a.) Producing fumes; fumous.
(n.) An aggregation or deposit of resources from which supplies
are or may be drawn for carrying on any work, or for maintaining
existence.
(n.) A stock or capital; a sum of money appropriated as the
foundation of some commercial or other operation undertaken with a view
to profit; that reserve by means of which expenses and credit are
supported; as, the fund of a bank, commercial house, manufacturing
corporation, etc.
(n.) The stock of a national debt; public securities; evidences
(stocks or bonds) of money lent to government, for which interest is
paid at prescribed intervals; -- called also public funds.
(n.) An invested sum, whose income is devoted to a specific
object; as, the fund of an ecclesiastical society; a fund for the
maintenance of lectures or poor students; also, money systematically
collected to meet the expenses of some permanent object.
(n.) A store laid up, from which one may draw at pleasure; a
supply; a full provision of resources; as, a fund of wisdom or good
sense.
(v. t.) To provide and appropriate a fund or permanent revenue for
the payment of the interest of; to make permanent provision of
resources (as by a pledge of revenue from customs) for discharging the
interest of or principal of; as, to fund government notes.
(v. t.) To place in a fund, as money.
(v. t.) To put into the form of bonds or stocks bearing regular
interest; as, to fund the floating debt.
(v. t.) To draw up or gather into close compass; to wrap or roll,
as a sail, close to the yard, stay, or mast, or, as a flag, close to or
around its staff, securing it there by a gasket or line. Totten.
(n.) A tumult; a bustle; unnecessary or annoying ado about
trifles.
(n.) One who is unduly anxious about trifles.
(v. i.) To be overbusy or unduly anxious about trifles; to make a
bustle or ado.
(n.) A strong, musty smell; mustiness.
(v. i.) To become moldy; to smell ill.
(n.) A tube, filled with combustible matter, for exploding a
shell, etc. See Fuse, n.
(v. t.) To make drunk.
(n.) Fine, light particles or fibers; loose, volatile matter.
(v. i.) To fly off in minute particles.
(n.) A long bag net distended by hoops, into which fish can pass
easily, without being able to return; -- called also fyke net.
(v. i.) Alt. of Fyrdung
(n.) The exterior form or appearance of anything; that part which
presents itself to the view; especially, the front or upper part or
surface; that which particularly offers itself to the view of a
spectator.
(n.) That part of a body, having several sides, which may be seen
from one point, or which is presented toward a certain direction; one
of the bounding planes of a solid; as, a cube has six faces.
(n.) The principal dressed surface of a plate, disk, or pulley;
the principal flat surface of a part or object.
(n.) That part of the acting surface of a cog in a cog wheel,
which projects beyond the pitch line.
(n.) The width of a pulley, or the length of a cog from end to
end; as, a pulley or cog wheel of ten inches face.
(n.) The upper surface, or the character upon the surface, of a
type, plate, etc.
(n.) The style or cut of a type or font of type.
(n.) Outside appearance; surface show; look; external aspect,
whether natural, assumed, or acquired.
(n.) That part of the head, esp. of man, in which the eyes,
cheeks, nose, and mouth are situated; visage; countenance.
(n.) Cast of features; expression of countenance; look; air;
appearance.
(n.) Ten degrees in extent of a sign of the zodiac.
(n.) Maintenance of the countenance free from abashment or
confusion; confidence; boldness; shamelessness; effrontery.
(n.) Presence; sight; front; as in the phrases, before the face
of, in the immediate presence of; in the face of, before, in, or
against the front of; as, to fly in the face of danger; to the face of,
directly to; from the face of, from the presence of.
(n.) Mode of regard, whether favorable or unfavorable; favor or
anger; mostly in Scriptural phrases.
(n.) The end or wall of the tunnel, drift, or excavation, at which
work is progressing or was last done.
(n.) The exact amount expressed on a bill, note, bond, or other
mercantile paper, without any addition for interest or reduction for
discount.
(v. t.) To meet in front; to oppose with firmness; to resist, or
to meet for the purpose of stopping or opposing; to confront; to
encounter; as, to face an enemy in the field of battle.
(v. t.) To Confront impudently; to bully.
(v. t.) To stand opposite to; to stand with the face or front
toward; to front upon; as, the apartments of the general faced the
park.
(v. t.) To cover in front, for ornament, protection, etc.; to put
a facing upon; as, a building faced with marble.
(v. t.) To line near the edge, esp. with a different material; as,
to face the front of a coat, or the bottom of a dress.
(v. t.) To cover with better, or better appearing, material than
the mass consists of, for purpose of deception, as the surface of a box
of tea, a barrel of sugar, etc.
(v. t.) To make the surface of (anything) flat or smooth; to dress
the face of (a stone, a casting, etc.); esp., in turning, to shape or
smooth the flat surface of, as distinguished from the cylindrical
surface.
(v. t.) To cause to turn or present a face or front, as in a
particular direction.
(v. i.) To carry a false appearance; to play the hypocrite.
(v. i.) To turn the face; as, to face to the right or left.
(v. i.) To present a face or front.
(n.) A doing, making, or preparing.
(n.) An effect produced or achieved; anything done or that comes
to pass; an act; an event; a circumstance.
(n.) Reality; actuality; truth; as, he, in fact, excelled all the
rest; the fact is, he was beaten.
(n.) The assertion or statement of a thing done or existing;
sometimes, even when false, improperly put, by a transfer of meaning,
for the thing done, or supposed to be done; a thing supposed or
asserted to be done; as, history abounds with false facts.
(a.) Weak; insipid; tasteless; commonplace.
(a.) To become fade; to grow weak; to lose strength; to decay; to
perish gradually; to wither, as a plant.
(a.) To lose freshness, color, or brightness; to become faint in
hue or tint; hence, to be wanting in color.
(a.) To sink away; to disappear gradually; to grow dim; to vanish.
(v. t.) To cause to wither; to deprive of freshness or vigor; to
wear away.
(a.) Faded.
(v. i.) To be wanting; to fall short; to be or become deficient in
any measure or degree up to total absence; to cease to be furnished in
the usual or expected manner, or to be altogether cut off from supply;
to be lacking; as, streams fail; crops fail.
(v. i.) To be affected with want; to come short; to lack; to be
deficient or unprovided; -- used with of.
(v. i.) To fall away; to become diminished; to decline; to decay;
to sink.
(v. i.) To deteriorate in respect to vigor, activity, resources,
etc.; to become weaker; as, a sick man fails.
(v. i.) To perish; to die; -- used of a person.
(v. i.) To be found wanting with respect to an action or a duty to
be performed, a result to be secured, etc.; to miss; not to fulfill
expectation.
(v. i.) To come short of a result or object aimed at or desired ;
to be baffled or frusrated.
(v. i.) To err in judgment; to be mistaken.
(v. i.) To become unable to meet one's engagements; especially, to
be unable to pay one's debts or discharge one's business obligation; to
become bankrupt or insolvent.
(v. t.) To be wanting to ; to be insufficient for; to disappoint;
to desert.
(v. t.) To miss of attaining; to lose.
(v. i.) Miscarriage; failure; deficiency; fault; -- mostly
superseded by failure or failing, except in the phrase without fail.
(v. i.) Death; decease.
(a.) Well-pleased; glad; apt; wont; fond; inclined.
(a.) Satisfied; contented; also, constrained.
(adv.) With joy; gladly; -- with wold.
(v. t. & i.) To be glad ; to wish or desire.
(n.) An act; a deed; an exploit.
(n.) A striking act of strength, skill, or cunning; a trick; as,
feats of horsemanship, or of dexterity.
(v. t.) To form; to fashion.
(n.) Dexterous in movements or service; skillful; neat; nice;
pretty.
(n.) An instrument consisting of a handle with a shank terminating
in two or more prongs or tines, which are usually of metal, parallel
and slightly curved; -- used from piercing, holding, taking up, or
pitching anything.
(n.) Anything furcate or like a fork in shape, or furcate at the
extremity; as, a tuning fork.
(n.) One of the parts into which anything is furcated or divided;
a prong; a branch of a stream, a road, etc.; a barbed point, as of an
arrow.
(n.) The place where a division or a union occurs; the angle or
opening between two branches or limbs; as, the fork of a river, a tree,
or a road.
(n.) The gibbet.
(v. i.) To shoot into blades, as corn.
(v. i.) To divide into two or more branches; as, a road, a tree,
or a stream forks.
(v. t.) To raise, or pitch with a fork, as hay; to dig or turn
over with a fork, as the soil.
(n.) A suffix used to denote in the form / shape of, resembling,
etc.; as, valiform; oviform.
(n.) The shape and structure of anything, as distinguished from
the material of which it is composed; particular disposition or
arrangement of matter, giving it individuality or distinctive
character; configuration; figure; external appearance.
(n.) Constitution; mode of construction, organization, etc.;
system; as, a republican form of government.
(n.) Established method of expression or practice; fixed way of
proceeding; conventional or stated scheme; formula; as, a form of
prayer.
(n.) Show without substance; empty, outside appearance; vain,
trivial, or conventional ceremony; conventionality; formality; as, a
matter of mere form.
(n.) Orderly arrangement; shapeliness; also, comeliness; elegance;
beauty.
(n.) A shape; an image; a phantom.
(n.) That by which shape is given or determined; mold; pattern;
model.
(n.) A long seat; a bench; hence, a rank of students in a school;
a class; also, a class or rank in society.
(n.) The seat or bed of a hare.
(n.) The type or other matter from which an impression is to be
taken, arranged and secured in a chase.
(n.) The boundary line of a material object. In painting, more
generally, the human body.
(n.) The particular shape or structure of a word or part of
speech; as, participial forms; verbal forms.
(n.) The combination of planes included under a general
crystallographic symbol. It is not necessarily a closed solid.
(n.) That assemblage or disposition of qualities which makes a
conception, or that internal constitution which makes an existing thing
to be what it is; -- called essential or substantial form, and
contradistinguished from matter; hence, active or formative nature; law
of being or activity; subjectively viewed, an idea; objectively, a law.
(n.) Mode of acting or manifestation to the senses, or the
intellect; as, water assumes the form of ice or snow. In modern usage,
the elements of a conception furnished by the mind's own activity, as
contrasted with its object or condition, which is called the matter;
subjectively, a mode of apprehension or belief conceived as dependent
on the constitution of the mind; objectively, universal and necessary
accompaniments or elements of every object known or thought of.
(n.) The peculiar characteristics of an organism as a type of
others; also, the structure of the parts of an animal or plant.
(n.) To give form or shape to; to frame; to construct; to make; to
fashion.
(n.) To give a particular shape to; to shape, mold, or fashion
into a certain state or condition; to arrange; to adjust; also, to
model by instruction and discipline; to mold by influence, etc.; to
train.
(n.) To go to make up; to act as constituent of; to be the
essential or constitutive elements of; to answer for; to make the shape
of; -- said of that out of which anything is formed or constituted, in
whole or in part.
(n.) To provide with a form, as a hare. See Form, n., 9.
(n.) To derive by grammatical rules, as by adding the proper
suffixes and affixes.
(v. i.) To take a form, definite shape, or arrangement; as, the
infantry should form in column.
(v. i.) To run to a form, as a hare.
(pl. ) of Forum
(n.) A bird.
(superl.) Covered with, or containing, extraneous matter which is
injurious, noxious, offensive, or obstructive; filthy; dirty; not
clean; polluted; nasty; defiled; as, a foul cloth; foul hands; a foul
chimney; foul air; a ship's bottom is foul when overgrown with
barnacles; a gun becomes foul from repeated firing; a well is foul with
polluted water.
(superl.) Scurrilous; obscene or profane; abusive; as, foul words;
foul language.
(superl.) Hateful; detestable; shameful; odious; wretched.
(superl.) Loathsome; disgusting; as, a foul disease.
(superl.) Ugly; homely; poor.
(superl.) Not favorable; unpropitious; not fair or advantageous;
as, a foul wind; a foul road; cloudy or rainy; stormy; not fair; --
said of the weather, sky, etc.
(superl.) Not conformed to the established rules and customs of a
game, conflict, test, etc.; unfair; dishonest; dishonorable; cheating;
as, foul play.
(superl.) Having freedom of motion interfered with by collision or
entanglement; entangled; -- opposed to clear; as, a rope or cable may
get foul while paying it out.
(v. t.) To make filthy; to defile; to daub; to dirty; to soil; as,
to foul the face or hands with mire.
(v. t.) To incrust (the bore of a gun) with burnt powder in the
process of firing.
(v. t.) To cover (a ship's bottom) with anything that impered its
sailing; as, a bottom fouled with barnacles.
(v. t.) To entangle, so as to impede motion; as, to foul a rope or
cable in paying it out; to come into collision with; as, one boat
fouled the other in a race.
(v. i.) To become clogged with burnt powder in the process of
firing, as a gun.
(v. i.) To become entagled, as ropes; to come into collision with
something; as, the two boats fouled.
(n.) An entanglement; a collision, as in a boat race.
(n.) See Foul ball, under Foul, a.
(n.) Any bird; esp., any large edible bird.
(n.) Any domesticated bird used as food, as a hen, turkey, duck;
in a more restricted sense, the common domestic cock or hen (Gallus
domesticus).
(v. i.) To catch or kill wild fowl, for game or food, as by
shooting, or by decoys, nets, etc.
(a.) Like or pertaining to the fox; foxlike in disposition or
looks; wily.
(a.) Having the color of a fox; of a yellowish or reddish brown
color; -- applied sometimes to paintings when they have too much of
this color.
(a.) Having the odor of a fox; rank; strong smeelling.
(a.) Sour; unpleasant in taste; -- said of wine, beer, etc., not
properly fermented; -- also of grapes which have the coarse flavor of
the fox grape.
(a.) Spongy; soft; fat and puffy.
(v. i. & t.) To scold; to nag.
(v. t.) To draw together; to bind with a view to secure and
strengthen, as a vessel by passing cables around it; to tighten; as a
tackle by drawing the lines together.
(v. t.) To brace by drawing together, as the cords of a drum.
(n.) Affray; broil; contest; combat.
(v. t.) To frighten; to terrify; to alarm.
(v. t.) To bear the expense of; to defray.
(v. t.) To rub; to wear off, or wear into shreds, by rubbing; to
fret, as cloth; as, a deer is said to fray her head.
(v. i.) To rub.
(v. i.) To wear out or into shreads, or to suffer injury by
rubbing, as when the threads of the warp or of the woof wear off so
that the cross threads are loose; to ravel; as, the cloth frays badly.
(n.) A fret or chafe, as in cloth; a place injured by rubbing.
(superl.) Exempt from subjection to the will of others; not under
restraint, control, or compulsion; able to follow one's own impulses,
desires, or inclinations; determining one's own course of action; not
dependent; at liberty.
(superl.) Not under an arbitrary or despotic government; subject
only to fixed laws regularly and fairly administered, and defended by
them from encroachments upon natural or acquired rights; enjoying
political liberty.
(superl.) Liberated, by arriving at a certain age, from the
control of parents, guardian, or master.
() A prefix to verbs, having usually the force of a negative or
privative. It often implies also loss, detriment, or destruction, and
sometimes it is intensive, meaning utterly, quite thoroughly, as in
forbathe.
(n.) Alt. of Fesse
(n.) The fist.
(n.) Alt. of Feste
(n.) A feat.
(n. pl.) Feet.
(n.) A festival.
(v. t.) To feast; to honor with a festival.
(n.) A combination of kindred to avenge injuries or affronts, done
or offered to any of their blood, on the offender and all his race.
(n.) A contention or quarrel; especially, an inveterate strife
between families, clans, or parties; deadly hatred; contention
satisfied only by bloodshed.
(n.) A stipendiary estate in land, held of superior, by service;
the right which a vassal or tenant had to the lands or other immovable
thing of his lord, to use the same and take the profists thereof
hereditarily, rendering to his superior such duties and services as
belong to military tenure, etc., the property of the soil always
remaining in the lord or superior; a fief; a fee.
(n.) One in whom the property of an estate is vested, subject to
the estate of a life renter.
(n.) The price of grain, as legally fixed, in the counties of
Scotland, for the current year.
(n.) An authoritative command or order to do something; an
effectual decree.
(n.) A warrant of a judge for certain processes.
(n.) An authority for certain proceedings given by the Lord
Chancellor's signature.
(n.) A small dog; -- written also fise, fyce, fiste, etc.
(n.) A fig; an insignificant trifle, no more than the snap of
one's thumb; a sign of contempt made by the fingers, expressing. A fig
for you.
(n.) An estate held of a superior on condition of military
service; a fee; a feud. See under Benefice, n., 2.
(n.) See Fyke.
(n.) An orderly succession; a line; a row
(n.) A row of soldiers ranged one behind another; -- in
contradistinction to rank, which designates a row of soldiers standing
abreast; a number consisting the depth of a body of troops, which, in
the ordinary modern formation, consists of two men, the battalion
standing two deep, or in two ranks.
(n.) An orderly collection of papers, arranged in sequence or
classified for preservation and reference; as, files of letters or of
newspapers; this mail brings English files to the 15th instant.
(n.) The line, wire, or other contrivance, by which papers are put
and kept in order.
(n.) A roll or list.
(n.) Course of thought; thread of narration.
(v. t.) To set in order; to arrange, or lay away, esp. as papers
in a methodical manner for preservation and reverence; to place on
file; to insert in its proper place in an arranged body of papers.
(v. t.) To bring before a court or legislative body by presenting
proper papers in a regular way; as, to file a petition or bill.
(v. t.) To put upon the files or among the records of a court; to
note on (a paper) the fact date of its reception in court.
(v. i.) To march in a file or line, as soldiers, not abreast, but
one after another; -- generally with off.
(n.) A steel instrument, having cutting ridges or teeth, made by
indentation with a chisel, used for abrading or smoothing other
substances, as metals, wood, etc.
(n.) Anything employed to smooth, polish, or rasp, literally or
figuratively.
(n.) A shrewd or artful person.
(v. t.) To rub, smooth, or cut away, with a file; to sharpen with
a file; as, to file a saw or a tooth.
(v. t.) To smooth or polish as with a file.
(v. t.) To make foul; to defile.
(n.) One of the thills or shafts of a carriage.
(a.) To make full; to supply with as much as can be held or
contained; to put or pour into, till no more can be received; to occupy
the whole capacity of.
(a.) To furnish an abudant supply to; to furnish with as mush as
is desired or desirable; to occupy the whole of; to swarm in or
overrun.
(a.) To fill or supply fully with food; to feed; to satisfy.
(a.) To possess and perform the duties of; to officiate in, as an
incumbent; to occupy; to hold; as, a king fills a throne; the president
fills the office of chief magistrate; the speaker of the House fills
the chair.
(a.) To supply with an incumbent; as, to fill an office or a
vacancy.
(a.) To press and dilate, as a sail; as, the wind filled the
sails.
(a.) To trim (a yard) so that the wind shall blow on the after
side of the sails.
(a.) To make an embankment in, or raise the level of (a low
place), with earth or gravel.
(v. i.) To become full; to have the whole capacity occupied; to
have an abundant supply; to be satiated; as, corn fills well in a warm
season; the sail fills with the wind.
(v. i.) To fill a cup or glass for drinking.
(v. t.) A full supply, as much as supplies want; as much as gives
complete satisfaction.
(n.) A thin skin; a pellicle; a membranous covering, causing
opacity; hence, any thin, slight covering.
(n.) A slender thread, as that of a cobweb.
(v. t.) To cover with a thin skin or pellicle.
(v. t.) To meet with, or light upon, accidentally; to gain the
first sight or knowledge of, as of something new, or unknown; hence, to
fall in with, as a person.
(v. t.) To learn by experience or trial; to perceive; to
experience; to discover by the intellect or the feelings; to detect; to
feel.
(v. t.) To come upon by seeking; as, to find something lost.
(v. t.) To discover by sounding; as, to find bottom.
(v. t.) To discover by study or experiment direct to an object or
end; as, water is found to be a compound substance.
(v. t.) To gain, as the object of desire or effort; as, to find
leisure; to find means.
(v. t.) To attain to; to arrive at; to acquire.
(v. t.) To provide for; to supply; to furnish; as, to find food
for workemen; he finds his nephew in money.
(v. t.) To arrive at, as a conclusion; to determine as true; to
establish; as, to find a verdict; to find a true bill (of indictment)
against an accused person.
(v. i.) To determine an issue of fact, and to declare such a
determination to a court; as, the jury find for the plaintiff.
(n.) Anything found; a discovery of anything valuable; especially,
a deposit, discovered by archaeologists, of objects of prehistoric or
unknown origin.
(n.) The evolution of light and heat in the combustion of bodies;
combustion; state of ignition.
(n.) Fuel in a state of combustion, as on a hearth, or in a stove
or a furnace.
(n.) The burning of a house or town; a conflagration.
(n.) Anything which destroys or affects like fire.
(n.) Ardor of passion, whether love or hate; excessive warmth;
consuming violence of temper.
(n.) Liveliness of imagination or fancy; intellectual and moral
enthusiasm; capacity for ardor and zeal.
(n.) Splendor; brilliancy; luster; hence, a star.
(n.) Torture by burning; severe trial or affliction.
(n.) The discharge of firearms; firing; as, the troops were
exposed to a heavy fire.
(v. t.) To set on fire; to kindle; as, to fire a house or chimney;
to fire a pile.
(v. t.) To subject to intense heat; to bake; to burn in a kiln;
as, to fire pottery.
(v. t.) To inflame; to irritate, as the passions; as, to fire the
soul with anger, pride, or revenge.
(v. t.) To animate; to give life or spirit to; as, to fire the
genius of a young man.
(v. t.) To feed or serve the fire of; as, to fire a boiler.
(v. t.) To light up as if by fire; to illuminate.
(v. t.) To cause to explode; as, to fire a torpedo; to disharge;
as, to fire a musket or cannon; to fire cannon balls, rockets, etc.
(v. t.) To drive by fire.
(v. t.) To cauterize.
(v. i.) To take fire; to be kindled; to kindle.
(v. i.) To be irritated or inflamed with passion.
(v. i.) To discharge artillery or firearms; as, they fired on the
town.
(v. t.) To beat; to strike; to chastise.
(v. i.) To fly out; to turn out; to go off.
(n.) A freak; trick; quirk.
(superl.) Fixed; hence, closely compressed; compact; substantial;
hard; solid; -- applied to the matter of bodies; as, firm flesh; firm
muscles, firm wood.
(superl.) Not easily excited or disturbed; unchanging in purpose;
fixed; steady; constant; stable; unshaken; not easily changed in
feelings or will; strong; as, a firm believer; a firm friend; a firm
adherent.
(superl.) Solid; -- opposed to fluid; as, firm land.
(superl.) Indicating firmness; as, a firm tread; a firm
countenance.
(a.) The name, title, or style, under which a company transacts
business; a partnership of two or more persons; a commercial house; as,
the firm of Hope & Co.
(a.) To fix; to settle; to confirm; to establish.
(a.) To fix or direct with firmness.
(n.) A public or state treasury.
(n.) The hand with the fingers doubled into the palm; the closed
hand, especially as clinched tightly for the purpose of striking a
blow.
(n.) The talons of a bird of prey.
(n.) the index mark [/], used to direct special attention to the
passage which follows.
(v. t.) To strike with the fist.
(v. t.) To gripe with the fist.
(a.) Four and one added; one more than four.
(n.) The number next greater than four, and less than six; five
units or objects.
(n.) A symbol representing this number, as 5, or V.
(v. i.) To make a hissing sound, as a burning fuse.
(n.) A hissing sound; as, the fizz of a fly.
(v. i.) To hang loose without stiffness; to bend down, as flexible
bodies; to be loose, yielding, limp.
(v. i.) To droop; to grow spiritless; to lose vigor; to languish;
as, the spirits flag; the streugth flags.
(v. t.) To let droop; to suffer to fall, or let fall, into
feebleness; as, to flag the wings.
(v. t.) To enervate; to exhaust the vigor or elasticity of.
(n.) That which flags or hangs down loosely.
(n.) A cloth usually bearing a device or devices and used to
indicate nationality, party, etc., or to give or ask information; --
commonly attached to a staff to be waved by the wind; a standard; a
banner; an ensign; the colors; as, the national flag; a military or a
naval flag.
(n.) A group of feathers on the lower part of the legs of certain
hawks, owls, etc.
(n.) A group of elongated wing feathers in certain hawks.
(n.) The bushy tail of a dog, as of a setter.
(v. t.) To signal to with a flag; as, to flag a train.
(v. t.) To convey, as a message, by means of flag signals; as, to
flag an order to troops or vessels at a distance.
(n.) An aquatic plant, with long, ensiform leaves, belonging to
either of the genera Iris and Acorus.
(v. t.) To furnish or deck out with flags.
(n.) A flat stone used for paving.
(n.) Any hard, evenly stratified sandstone, which splits into
layers suitable for flagstones.
(v. t.) To lay with flags of flat stones.
(v. i.) Journey; way; method of proceeding.
(adv.) In the part that precedes or goes first; -- opposed to aft,
after, back, behind, etc.
(adv.) Formerly; previously; afore.
(adv.) In or towards the bows of a ship.
(adv.) Advanced, as compared with something else; toward the
front; being or coming first, in time, place, order, or importance;
preceding; anterior; antecedent; earlier; forward; -- opposed to back
or behind; as, the fore part of a garment; the fore part of the day;
the fore and of a wagon.
(n.) The front; hence, that which is in front; the future.
(prep.) Before; -- sometimes written 'fore as if a contraction of
afore or before.
(v.) Anything broad and limber that hangs loose, or that is
attached by one side or end and is easily moved; as, the flap of a
garment.
(v.) A hinged leaf, as of a table or shutter.
(v.) The motion of anything broad and loose, or a stroke or sound
made with it; as, the flap of a sail or of a wing.
(v.) A disease in the lips of horses.
(n.) To beat with a flap; to strike.
(n.) To move, as something broad and flaplike; as, to flap the
wings; to let fall, as the brim of a hat.
(v. i.) To move as do wings, or as something broad or loose; to
fly with wings beating the air.
(v. i.) To fall and hang like a flap, as the brim of a hat, or
other broad thing.
(superl.) Having an even and horizontal surface, or nearly so,
without prominences or depressions; level without inclination; plane.
(superl.) Lying at full length, or spread out, upon the ground;
level with the ground or earth; prostrate; as, to lie flat on the
ground; hence, fallen; laid low; ruined; destroyed.
(superl.) Wanting relief; destitute of variety; without points of
prominence and striking interest.
(superl.) Tasteless; stale; vapid; insipid; dead; as, fruit or
drink flat to the taste.
(superl.) Unanimated; dull; uninteresting; without point or
spirit; monotonous; as, a flat speech or composition.
(superl.) Lacking liveliness of commercial exchange and dealings;
depressed; dull; as, the market is flat.
(superl.) Clear; unmistakable; peremptory; absolute; positive;
downright.
(superl.) Below the true pitch; hence, as applied to intervals,
minor, or lower by a half step; as, a flat seventh; A flat.
(superl.) Not sharp or shrill; not acute; as, a flat sound.
(superl.) Sonant; vocal; -- applied to any one of the sonant or
vocal consonants, as distinguished from a nonsonant (or sharp)
consonant.
(adv.) In a flat manner; directly; flatly.
(adv.) Without allowance for accrued interest.
(n.) A level surface, without elevation, relief, or prominences;
an extended plain; specifically, in the United States, a level tract
along the along the banks of a river; as, the Mohawk Flats.
(n.) A level tract lying at little depth below the surface of
water, or alternately covered and left bare by the tide; a shoal; a
shallow; a strand.
(n.) Something broad and flat in form
(n.) A flat-bottomed boat, without keel, and of small draught.
(n.) A straw hat, broad-brimmed and low-crowned.
(n.) A car without a roof, the body of which is a platform without
sides; a platform car.
(n.) A platform on wheel, upon which emblematic designs, etc., are
carried in processions.
(n.) The flat part, or side, of anything; as, the broad side of a
blade, as distinguished from its edge.
(n.) A floor, loft, or story in a building; especially, a floor of
a house, which forms a complete residence in itself.
(n.) A horizontal vein or ore deposit auxiliary to a main vein;
also, any horizontal portion of a vein not elsewhere horizontal.
(n.) A dull fellow; a simpleton; a numskull.
(n.) A character [/] before a note, indicating a tone which is a
half step or semitone lower.
(n.) A homaloid space or extension.
(v. t.) To make flat; to flatten; to level.
(v. t.) To render dull, insipid, or spiritless; to depress.
(v. t.) To depress in tone, as a musical note; especially, to
lower in pitch by half a tone.
(v. i.) To become flat, or flattened; to sink or fall to an even
surface.
(v. i.) To fall form the pitch.
(n.) A crack or breach; a gap or fissure; a defect of continuity
or cohesion; as, a flaw in a knife or a vase.
(n.) A defect; a fault; as, a flaw in reputation; a flaw in a
will, in a deed, or in a statute.
(n.) A sudden burst of noise and disorder; a tumult; uproar; a
quarrel.
(n.) A sudden burst or gust of wind of short duration.
(v. t.) To crack; to make flaws in.
(v. t.) To break; to violate; to make of no effect.
(n.) A plant of the genus Linum, esp. the L. usitatissimum, which
has a single, slender stalk, about a foot and a half high, with blue
flowers. The fiber of the bark is used for making thread and cloth,
called linen, cambric, lawn, lace, etc. Linseed oil is expressed from
the seed.
(n.) The skin or fibrous part of the flax plant, when broken and
cleaned by hatcheling or combing.
(v. t.) To skin; to strip off the skin or surface of; as, to flay
an ox; to flay the green earth.
(v. t.) To flay.
(n.) An insect belonging to the genus Pulex, of the order
Aphaniptera. Fleas are destitute of wings, but have the power of
leaping energetically. The bite is poisonous to most persons. The human
flea (Pulex irritans), abundant in Europe, is rare in America, where
the dog flea (P. canis) takes its place. See Aphaniptera, and Dog flea.
See Illustration in Appendix.
() imp. & p. p. of Flee.
(imp. & p. p.) of Flee
(v. i.) To run away, as from danger or evil; to avoid in an
alarmed or cowardly manner; to hasten off; -- usually with from. This
is sometimes omitted, making the verb transitive.
(p. p.) Skimmed.
() imp. of Fly.
(v. t.) To bend; as, to flex the arm.
(n.) Flax.
(v. i.) To move with celerity through the air; to fly away with a
rapid motion; to dart along; to fleet; as, a bird flits away; a cloud
flits along.
(v. i.) To flutter; to rove on the wing.
(v. i.) To pass rapidly, as a light substance, from one place to
another; to remove; to migrate.
(v. i.) To remove from one place or habitation to another.
(v. i.) To be unstable; to be easily or often moved.
(a.) Nimble; quick; swift. [Obs.] See Fleet.
(n.) Down; fur.
(n.) The flux; dysentery.
(n.) A low, flat mass of floating ice.
(v. t.) To beat or strike with a rod or whip; to whip; to lash; to
chastise with repeated blows.