- dancy
- drive
- dough
- dimit
- dimly
- dimmy
- doura
- douse
- dinar
- dined
- diner
- dingy
- dingo
- dingy
- dowdy
- dowel
- dower
- downy
- dowry
- dowse
- dowve
- doyly
- dozed
- diota
- dozen
- dozer
- draff
- draft
- drail
- drama
- drank
- drawn
- drawl
- drawn
- dread
- drear
- drent
- drest
- dress
- drest
- dirge
- dirty
- dried
- drier
- drift
- drill
- drily
- drank
- drunk
- drink
- dript
- drove
- droil
- droit
- droll
- drome
- drone
- drony
- drool
- droop
- dropt
- disci
- depot
- depth
- deray
- derma
- derth
- ditch
- ditty
- deter
- demi-
- dropt
- dross
- drove
- drovy
- drown
- drunk
- drupe
- druxy
- dried
- dryad
- dryer
- dryly
- dryth
- ducat
- duchy
- dulia
- dully
- dulse
- dummy
- dumpy
- dunce
- dungy
- dunny
- duomo
- duped
- duper
- duple
- dansk
- dared
- darer
- daric
- darky
- daroo
- dashy
- dated
- dater
- datum
- dauby
- daunt
- davit
- dazed
- deads
- dealt
- deare
- dearn
- deave
- debar
- debel
- debit
- debut
- deca-
- decad
- decil
- decoy
- decry
- decyl
- deedy
- dural
- durra
- dusky
- dwang
- dwarf
- dwelt
- dwell
- dwelt
- dwine
- dying
- dette
- detur
- deuce
- deut-
- devex
- devow
- dewed
- dhole
- divan
- dived
- divel
- divet
- divot
- dizen
- dizzy
- diary
- doing
- doand
- dogal
- diced
- dicer
- dogma
- doily
- doing
- dolce
- doled
- dicta
- didal
- didos
- didst
- didym
- dying
- dolor
- dolus
- domal
- domed
- donat
- donax
- donee
- donor
- dooly
- doree
- dight
- digit
- digne
- dorse
- dosed
- dotal
- doted
- digue
- diked
- diker
- doted
- doter
- douar
- dildo
- doubt
- douce
- deess
- defer
- defix
- deify
- deign
- deism
- deist
- deka-
- dekle
- delay
- deled
- daddy
- dagos
- daily
- daint
- delit
- dairy
- daker
- dakir
- dally
- deloo
- delph
- dally
- delve
- dampy
- dance
- demit
- demur
- denay
- denim
- dense
- disme
- drive
- dynam
(a.) Same as Dancette.
(v. t.) To impel or urge onward by force in a direction away from
one, or along before one; to push forward; to compel to move on; to
communicate motion to; as, to drive cattle; to drive a nail; smoke
drives persons from a room.
(v. t.) To urge on and direct the motions of, as the beasts which
draw a vehicle, or the vehicle borne by them; hence, also, to take in a
carriage; to convey in a vehicle drawn by beasts; as, to drive a pair
of horses or a stage; to drive a person to his own door.
(v. t.) To urge, impel, or hurry forward; to force; to constrain;
to urge, press, or bring to a point or state; as, to drive a person by
necessity, by persuasion, by force of circumstances, by argument, and
the like.
(v. t.) To carry or; to keep in motion; to conduct; to prosecute.
(v. t.) To clear, by forcing away what is contained.
(v. t.) To dig Horizontally; to cut a horizontal gallery or
tunnel.
(v. t.) To pass away; -- said of time.
(v. i.) To rush and press with violence; to move furiously.
(v. i.) To be forced along; to be impelled; to be moved by any
physical force or agent; to be driven.
(n.) Paste of bread; a soft mass of moistened flour or meal,
kneaded or unkneaded, but not yet baked; as, to knead dough.
(n.) Anything of the consistency of such paste.
(v. t.) To dismiss, let go, or release.
(adv.) In a dim or obscure manner; not brightly or clearly; with
imperfect sight.
(a.) Somewhat dim; as, dimmish eyes.
(n.) A kind of millet. See Durra.
(v. t.) To plunge suddenly into water; to duck; to immerse; to
dowse.
(v. t.) To strike or lower in haste; to slacken suddenly; as,
douse the topsail.
(v. i.) To fall suddenly into water.
(v. t.) To put out; to extinguish.
(n.) A petty money of accounts of Persia.
(n.) An ancient gold coin of the East.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dine
(n.) One who dines.
(n.) Alt. of Dinghy
(n.) A wild dog found in Australia, but supposed to have
introduced at a very early period. It has a wolflike face, bushy tail,
and a reddish brown color.
(superl.) Soiled; sullied; of a dark or dusky color; dark brown;
dirty.
(superl.) Showing a vulgar taste in dress; awkward and slovenly
in dress; vulgar-looking.
(n.) An awkward, vulgarly dressed, inelegant woman.
(n.) A pin, or block, of wood or metal, fitting into holes in the
abutting portions of two pieces, and being partly in one piece and
partly in the other, to keep them in their proper relative position.
(n.) A piece of wood driven into a wall, so that other pieces may
be nailed to it.
(v. t.) To fasten together by dowels; to furnish with dowels; as,
a cooper dowels pieces for the head of a cask.
(n.) That with which one is gifted or endowed; endowment; gift.
(n.) The property with which a woman is endowed
(n.) That which a woman brings to a husband in marriage; dowry.
(n.) That portion of the real estate of a man which his widow
enjoys during her life, or to which a woman is entitled after the death
of her husband.
(a.) Covered with down, or with pubescence or soft hairs.
(a.) Made of, or resembling, down. Hence, figuratively: Soft;
placid; soothing; quiet.
(a.) Cunning; wary.
(n.) A gift; endowment.
(n.) The money, goods, or estate, which a woman brings to her
husband in marriage; a bride's portion on her marriage. See Note under
Dower.
(n.) A gift or presents for the bride, on espousal. See Dower.
(v. t.) To plunge, or duck into water; to immerse; to douse.
(v. t.) To beat or thrash.
(v. i.) To use the dipping or divining rod, as in search of
water, ore, etc.
(n.) A blow on the face.
(n.) A dove.
(n.) See Doily.
(imp. & p. p.) of Doze
(n.) A vase or drinking cup having two handles or ears.
(pl. ) of Dozen
(n.) A collection of twelve objects; a tale or set of twelve;
with or without of before the substantive which follows.
(n.) An indefinite small number.
(n.) One who dozes or drowses.
(n.) Refuse; lees; dregs; the wash given to swine or cows;
hogwash; waste matter.
(n.) The act of drawing; also, the thing drawn. Same as Draught.
(n.) A selecting or detaching of soldiers from an army, or from
any part of it, or from a military post; also from any district, or any
company or collection of persons, or from the people at large; also,
the body of men thus drafted.
(n.) An order from one person or party to another, directing the
payment of money; a bill of exchange.
(n.) An allowance or deduction made from the gross veight of
goods.
(n.) A drawing of lines for a plan; a plan delineated, or drawn
in outline; a delineation. See Draught.
(n.) The form of any writing as first drawn up; the first rough
sketch of written composition, to be filled in, or completed. See
Draught.
(n.) A narrow border left on a finished stone, worked differently
from the rest of its face.
(n.) A narrow border worked to a plane surface along the edge of
a stone, or across its face, as a guide to the stone-cutter.
(n.) The slant given to the furrows in the dress of a millstone.
(n.) Depth of water necessary to float a ship. See Draught.
(n.) A current of air. Same as Draught.
(a.) Pertaining to, or used for, drawing or pulling (as vehicles,
loads, etc.). Same as Draught.
(a.) Relating to, or characterized by, a draft, or current of
air. Same as Draught.
(v. t.) To draw the outline of; to delineate.
(v. t.) To compose and write; as, to draft a memorial.
(v. t.) To draw from a military band or post, or from any
district, company, or society; to detach; to select.
(v. t.) To transfer by draft.
(v. t. & i.) To trail; to draggle.
(n.) A composition, in prose or poetry, accommodated to action,
and intended to exhibit a picture of human life, or to depict a series
of grave or humorous actions of more than ordinary interest, tending
toward some striking result. It is commonly designed to be spoken and
represented by actors on the stage.
(n.) A series of real events invested with a dramatic unity and
interest.
(n.) Dramatic composition and the literature pertaining to or
illustrating it; dramatic literature.
(imp.) of Drink.
(n.) Wild oats, or darnel grass. See Drake a plant.
(p. p.) of Draw
(v. t.) To utter in a slow, lengthened tone.
(v. i.) To speak with slow and lingering utterance, from
laziness, lack of spirit, affectation, etc.
(n.) A lengthened, slow monotonous utterance.
(p. p. & a.) See Draw, v. t. & i.
(v. t.) To fear in a great degree; to regard, or look forward to,
with terrific apprehension.
(v. i.) To be in dread, or great fear.
(n.) Great fear in view of impending evil; fearful apprehension
of danger; anticipatory terror.
(n.) Reverential or respectful fear; awe.
(n.) An object of terrified apprehension.
(n.) A person highly revered.
(n.) Fury; dreadfulness.
(n.) Doubt; as, out of dread.
(a.) Exciting great fear or apprehension; causing terror;
frightful; dreadful.
(a.) Inspiring with reverential fear; awful' venerable; as, dread
sovereign; dread majesty; dread tribunal.
(a.) Dismal; gloomy with solitude.
(n.) Sadness; dismalness.
(p. p.) Drenched; drowned.
() of Dress
(v. t.) To direct; to put right or straight; to regulate; to
order.
(v. t.) To arrange in exact continuity of line, as soldiers;
commonly to adjust to a straight line and at proper distance; to align;
as, to dress the ranks.
(v. t.) To treat methodically with remedies, bandages, or
curative appliances, as a sore, an ulcer, a wound, or a wounded or
diseased part.
(v. t.) To adjust; to put in good order; to arrange;
specifically: (a) To prepare for use; to fit for any use; to render
suitable for an intended purpose; to get ready; as, to dress a slain
animal; to dress meat; to dress leather or cloth; to dress or trim a
lamp; to dress a garden; to dress a horse, by currying and rubbing; to
dress grain, by cleansing it; in mining and metallurgy, to dress ores,
by sorting and separating them.
(v. t.) To cut to proper dimensions, or give proper shape to, as
to a tool by hammering; also, to smooth or finish.
(v. t.) To put in proper condition by appareling, as the body; to
put clothes upon; to apparel; to invest with garments or rich
decorations; to clothe; to deck.
(v. t.) To break and train for use, as a horse or other animal.
(v. i.) To arrange one's self in due position in a line of
soldiers; -- the word of command to form alignment in ranks; as, Right,
dress!
(v. i.) To clothe or apparel one's self; to put on one's
garments; to pay particular regard to dress; as, to dress quickly.
(n.) That which is used as the covering or ornament of the body;
clothes; garments; habit; apparel.
(n.) A lady's gown; as, silk or a velvet dress.
(n.) Attention to apparel, or skill in adjusting it.
(n.) The system of furrows on the face of a millstone.
(p. p.) of Dress.
(a.) A piece of music of a mournful character, to accompany
funeral rites; a funeral hymn.
(superl.) Defiled with dirt; foul; nasty; filthy; not clean or
pure; serving to defile; as, dirty hands; dirty water; a dirty white.
(superl.) Sullied; clouded; -- applied to color.
(superl.) Sordid; base; groveling; as, a dirty fellow.
(superl.) Sleety; gusty; stormy; as, dirty weather.
(v. t.) To foul; to make filthy; to soil; as, to dirty the
clothes or hands.
(v. t.) To tarnish; to sully; to scandalize; -- said of
reputation, character, etc.
(imp. & p. p.) of Day. Also adj.; as, dried apples.
(n.) One who, or that which, dries; that which may expel or
absorb moisture; a desiccative; as, the sun and a northwesterly wind
are great driers of the earth.
(n.) Drying oil; a substance mingled with the oil used in oil
painting to make it dry quickly.
(superl.) Alt. of Driest
(n.) A driving; a violent movement.
(n.) The act or motion of drifting; the force which impels or
drives; an overpowering influence or impulse.
(n.) Course or direction along which anything is driven; setting.
(n.) The tendency of an act, argument, course of conduct, or the
like; object aimed at or intended; intention; hence, also, import or
meaning of a sentence or discourse; aim.
(n.) That which is driven, forced, or urged along
(n.) Anything driven at random.
(n.) A mass of matter which has been driven or forced onward
together in a body, or thrown together in a heap, etc., esp. by wind or
water; as, a drift of snow, of ice, of sand, and the like.
(n.) A drove or flock, as of cattle, sheep, birds.
(n.) The horizontal thrust or pressure of an arch or vault upon
the abutments.
(n.) A collection of loose earth and rocks, or boulders, which
have been distributed over large portions of the earth's surface,
especially in latitudes north of forty degrees, by the agency of ice.
(n.) In South Africa, a ford in a river.
(n.) A slightly tapered tool of steel for enlarging or shaping a
hole in metal, by being forced or driven into or through it; a broach.
(n.) A tool used in driving down compactly the composition
contained in a rocket, or like firework.
(n.) A deviation from the line of fire, peculiar to oblong
projectiles.
(n.) A passage driven or cut between shaft and shaft; a driftway;
a small subterranean gallery; an adit or tunnel.
(n.) The distance through which a current flows in a given time.
(n.) The angle which the line of a ship's motion makes with the
meridian, in drifting.
(n.) The distance to which a vessel is carried off from her
desired course by the wind, currents, or other causes.
(n.) The place in a deep-waisted vessel where the sheer is raised
and the rail is cut off, and usually terminated with a scroll, or
driftpiece.
(n.) The distance between the two blocks of a tackle.
(n.) The difference between the size of a bolt and the hole into
which it is driven, or between the circumference of a hoop and that of
the mast on which it is to be driven.
(v. i.) To float or be driven along by, or as by, a current of
water or air; as, the ship drifted astern; a raft drifted ashore; the
balloon drifts slowly east.
(v. i.) To accumulate in heaps by the force of wind; to be driven
into heaps; as, snow or sand drifts.
(v. i.) to make a drift; to examine a vein or ledge for the
purpose of ascertaining the presence of metals or ores; to follow a
vein; to prospect.
(v. t.) To drive or carry, as currents do a floating body.
(v. t.) To drive into heaps; as, a current of wind drifts snow or
sand.
(v. t.) To enlarge or shape, as a hole, with a drift.
(a.) That causes drifting or that is drifted; movable by wind or
currents; as, drift currents; drift ice; drift mud.
(v. t.) To pierce or bore with a drill, or a with a drill; to
perforate; as, to drill a hole into a rock; to drill a piece of metal.
(v. t.) To train in the military art; to exercise diligently, as
soldiers, in military evolutions and exercises; hence, to instruct
thoroughly in the rudiments of any art or branch of knowledge; to
discipline.
(v. i.) To practice an exercise or exercises; to train one's
self.
(n.) An instrument with an edged or pointed end used for making
holes in hard substances; strictly, a tool that cuts with its end, by
revolving, as in drilling metals, or by a succession of blows, as in
drilling stone; also, a drill press.
(n.) The act or exercise of training soldiers in the military
art, as in the manual of arms, in the execution of evolutions, and the
like; hence, diligent and strict instruction and exercise in the
rudiments and methods of any business; a kind or method of military
exercises; as, infantry drill; battalion drill; artillery drill.
(n.) Any exercise, physical or mental, enforced with regularity
and by constant repetition; as, a severe drill in Latin grammar.
(n.) A marine gastropod, of several species, which kills oysters
and other bivalves by drilling holes through the shell. The most
destructive kind is Urosalpinx cinerea.
(v. t.) To cause to flow in drills or rills or by trickling; to
drain by trickling; as, waters drilled through a sandy stratum.
(v. t.) To sow, as seeds, by dribbling them along a furrow or in
a row, like a trickling rill of water.
(v. t.) To entice; to allure from step; to decoy; -- with on.
(v. t.) To cause to slip or waste away by degrees.
(v. i.) To trickle.
(v. i.) To sow in drills.
(n.) A small trickling stream; a rill.
(n.) An implement for making holes for sowing seed, and sometimes
so formed as to contain seeds and drop them into the hole made.
(n.) A light furrow or channel made to put seed into sowing.
(n.) A row of seed sown in a furrow.
(n.) A large African baboon (Cynocephalus leucophaeus).
(n.) Same as Drilling.
(adv.) See Dryly.
(imp.) of Drink
() of Drink
(p. p.) of Drink
(v. i.) To swallow anything liquid, for quenching thirst or other
purpose; to imbibe; to receive or partake of, as if in satisfaction of
thirst; as, to drink from a spring.
(v. i.) To quaff exhilarating or intoxicating liquors, in
merriment or feasting; to carouse; to revel; hence, to lake alcoholic
liquors to excess; to be intemperate in the /se of intoxicating or
spirituous liquors; to tipple.
(v. t.) To swallow (a liquid); to receive, as a fluid, into the
stomach; to imbibe; as, to drink milk or water.
(v. t.) To take in (a liquid), in any manner; to suck up; to
absorb; to imbibe.
(v. t.) To take in; to receive within one, through the senses; to
inhale; to hear; to see.
(v. t.) To smoke, as tobacco.
(n.) Liquid to be swallowed; any fluid to be taken into the
stomach for quenching thirst or for other purposes, as water, coffee,
or decoctions.
(n.) Specifically, intoxicating liquor; as, when drink is on, wit
is out.
() of Drip
(imp.) of Drive
(v. i.) To work sluggishly or slowly; to plod.
(n.) A drudge.
(n.) Mean labor; toil.
(n.) A right; law in its aspect of the foundation of rights;
also, in old law, the writ of right.
(superl.) Queer, and fitted to provoke laughter; ludicrous from
oddity; amusing and strange.
(n.) One whose practice it is to raise mirth by odd tricks; a
jester; a buffoon; a merry-andrew.
(n.) Something exhibited to raise mirth or sport, as a puppet, a
farce, and the like.
(v. i.) To jest; to play the buffoon.
(v. t.) To lead or influence by jest or trick; to banter or jest;
to cajole.
(v. t.) To make a jest of; to set in a comical light.
(n.) The crab plover (Dromas ardeola), a peculiar North African
bird, allied to the oyster catcher.
(v. i.) The male of bees, esp. of the honeybee. It gathers no
honey. See Honeybee.
(v. i.) One who lives on the labors of others; a lazy, idle
fellow; a sluggard.
(v. i.) That which gives out a grave or monotonous tone or dull
sound; as: (a) A drum. [Obs.] Halliwell. (b) The part of the bagpipe
containing the two lowest tubes, which always sound the key note and
the fifth.
(v. i.) A humming or deep murmuring sound.
(v. i.) A monotonous bass, as in a pastoral composition.
(n.) To utter or make a low, dull, monotonous, humming or
murmuring sound.
(n.) To love in idleness; to do nothing.
(a.) Like a drone; sluggish; lazy.
(v. i.) To drivel, or drop saliva; as, the child drools.
(v. i.) To hang bending downward; to sink or hang down, as an
animal, plant, etc., from physical inability or exhaustion, want of
nourishment, or the like.
(v. i.) To grow weak or faint with disappointment, grief, or like
causes; to be dispirited or depressed; to languish; as, her spirits
drooped.
(v. i.) To proceed downward, or toward a close; to decline.
(v. t.) To let droop or sink.
(n.) A drooping; as, a droop of the eye.
() of Drop
(pl. ) of Discus
(n.) A place of deposit for the storing of goods; a warehouse; a
storehouse.
(n.) A military station where stores and provisions are kept, or
where recruits are assembled and drilled.
(n.) The headquarters of a regiment, where all supplies are
received and distributed, recruits are assembled and instructed, infirm
or disabled soldiers are taken care of, and all the wants of the
regiment are provided for.
(n.) A railway station; a building for the accommodation and
protection of railway passengers or freight.
(n.) The quality of being deep; deepness; perpendicular
measurement downward from the surface, or horizontal measurement
backward from the front; as, the depth of a river; the depth of a body
of troops.
(n.) Profoundness; extent or degree of intensity; abundance;
completeness; as, depth of knowledge, or color.
(n.) Lowness; as, depth of sound.
(n.) That which is deep; a deep, or the deepest, part or place;
the deep; the middle part; as, the depth of night, or of winter.
(n.) The number of simple elements which an abstract conception
or notion includes; the comprehension or content.
(n.) A pair of toothed wheels which work together.
(n.) Disorder; merriment.
(n.) See Dermis.
(n.) Dearth; scarcity.
(n.) A trench made in the earth by digging, particularly a trench
for draining wet land, for guarding or fencing inclosures, or for
preventing an approach to a town or fortress. In the latter sense, it
is called also a moat or a fosse.
(n.) Any long, narrow receptacle for water on the surface of the
earth.
(v. t.) To dig a ditch or ditches in; to drain by a ditch or
ditches; as, to ditch moist land.
(v. t.) To surround with a ditch.
(v. t.) To throw into a ditch; as, the engine was ditched and
turned on its side.
(v. i.) To dig a ditch or ditches.
(v. t.) A saying or utterance; especially, one that is short and
frequently repeated; a theme.
(v. t.) A song; a lay; a little poem intended to be sung.
(v. i.) To sing; to warble a little tune.
(v. t.) To prevent by fear; hence, to hinder or prevent from
action by fear of consequences, or difficulty, risk, etc.
() A prefix, signifying half.
() imp. & p. p. of Drop, v.
(n.) The scum or refuse matter which is thrown off, or falls
from, metals in smelting the ore, or in the process of melting;
recrement.
(n.) Rust of metals.
(n.) Waste matter; any worthless matter separated from the better
part; leavings; dregs; refuse.
(imp.) of Drive.
(n.) A collection of cattle driven, or cattle collected for
driving; a number of animals, as oxen, sheep, or swine, driven in a
body.
(n.) Any collection of irrational animals, moving or driving
forward; as, a finny drove.
(n.) A crowd of people in motion.
(n.) A road for driving cattle; a driftway.
(n.) A narrow drain or channel used in the irrigation of land.
(n.) A broad chisel used to bring stone to a nearly smooth
surface; -- called also drove chisel.
(n.) The grooved surface of stone finished by the drove chisel;
-- called also drove work.
(a.) Turbid; muddy; filthy.
(v. i.) To be suffocated in water or other fluid; to perish in
water.
(v. t.) To overwhelm in water; to submerge; to inundate.
(v. t.) To deprive of life by immersion in water or other liquid.
(v. t.) To overpower; to overcome; to extinguish; -- said
especially of sound.
(a.) Intoxicated with, or as with, strong drink; inebriated;
drunken; -- never used attributively, but always predicatively; as, the
man is drunk (not, a drunk man).
(a.) Drenched or saturated with moisture or liquid.
(n.) A drunken condition; a spree.
(n.) A fruit consisting of pulpy, coriaceous, or fibrous exocarp,
without valves, containing a nut or stone with a kernel. The exocarp is
succulent in the plum, cherry, apricot, peach, etc.; dry and
subcoriaceous in the almond; and fibrous in the cocoanut.
(a.) Having decayed spots or streaks of a whitish color; -- said
of timber.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dry
(n.) A wood nymph; a nymph whose life was bound up with that of
her tree.
(n.) See Drier.
(adv.) In a dry manner; not succulently; without interest;
without sympathy; coldly.
(n.) Alt. of Drith
(n.) A coin, either of gold or silver, of several countries in
Europe; originally, one struck in the dominions of a duke.
(n.) The territory or dominions of a duke; a dukedom.
(n.) An inferior kind of veneration or worship, given to the
angels and saints as the servants of God.
(adv.) In a dull manner; stupidly; slowly; sluggishly; without
life or spirit.
(n.) A seaweed of a reddish brown color, which is sometimes
eaten, as in Scotland. The true dulse is Sarcophyllis edulis; the
common is Rhodymenia. [Written also dillisk.]
(a.) Silent; mute; noiseless; as a dummy engine.
(a.) Fictitious or sham; feigned; as, a dummy watch.
(n.) One who is dumb.
(n.) A sham package in a shop, or one which does not contain what
its exterior indicates.
(n.) An imitation or copy of something, to be used as a
substitute; a model; a lay figure; as, a figure on which clothing is
exhibited in shop windows; a blank paper copy used to show the size of
the future book, etc.
(n.) One who plays a merely nominal part in any action; a sham
character.
(n.) A thick-witted person; a dolt.
(n.) A locomotive with condensing engines, and, hence, without
the noise of escaping steam; also, a dummy car.
(n.) The fourth or exposed hand when three persons play at a
four-handed game of cards.
(n.) A floating barge connected with a pier.
(superl.) Short and thick; of low stature and disproportionately
stout.
(superl.) Sullen or discontented.
(n.) One backward in book learning; a child or other person dull
or weak in intellect; a dullard; a dolt.
(a.) Full of dung; filthy; vile; low.
(a.) Deaf; stupid.
(n.) A cathedral. See Dome, 2.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dupe
(n.) One who dupes another.
(a.) Double.
(a.) Danish.
() of Dare
(p. p.) of Dare
(imp. & p. p.) of Dare
(n.) One who dares or defies.
(n.) A gold coin of ancient Persia, weighing usually a little
more than 128 grains, and bearing on one side the figure of an archer.
(n.) A silver coin of about 86 grains, having the figure of an
archer, and hence, in modern times, called a daric.
(n.) Any very pure gold coin.
(n.) A negro.
(n.) The Egyptian sycamore (Ficus Sycamorus). See Sycamore.
(a.) Calculated to arrest attention; ostentatiously fashionable;
showy.
(imp. & p. p.) of Date
(n.) One who dates.
(n.) Something given or admitted; a fact or principle granted;
that upon which an inference or an argument is based; -- used chiefly
in the plural.
(n.) The quantities or relations which are assumed to be given in
any problem.
(a.) Smeary; viscous; glutinous; adhesive.
(v. t.) To overcome; to conquer.
(v. t.) To repress or subdue the courage of; to check by fear of
danger; to cow; to intimidate; to dishearten.
(n.) A spar formerly used on board of ships, as a crane to hoist
the flukes of the anchor to the top of the bow, without injuring the
sides of the ship; -- called also the fish davit.
(n.) Curved arms of timber or iron, projecting over a ship's side
of stern, having tackle to raise or lower a boat, swing it in on deck,
rig it out for lowering, etc.; -- called also boat davits.
(imp. & p. p.) of Daze
(n. pl.) The substances which inclose the ore on every side.
(imp. & p. p.) of Deal
() variant of Dere, v. t. & n.
(a.) Secret; lonely; solitary; dreadful.
(v. t.) Same as Darn.
(v. t.) To stun or stupefy with noise; to deafen.
(v. t.) To cut off from entrance, as if by a bar or barrier; to
preclude; to hinder from approach, entry, or enjoyment; to shut out or
exclude; to deny or refuse; -- with from, and sometimes with of.
(v. t.) To conquer.
(n.) A debt; an entry on the debtor (Dr.) side of an account; --
mostly used adjectively; as, the debit side of an account.
(v. t.) To charge with debt; -- the opposite of, and correlative
to, credit; as, to debit a purchaser for the goods sold.
(v. t.) To enter on the debtor (Dr.) side of an account; as, to
debit the amount of goods sold.
(n.) A beginning or first attempt; hence, a first appearance
before the public, as of an actor or public speaker.
() A prefix, from Gr. de`ka, signifying ten; specifically (Metric
System), a prefix signifying the weight or measure that is ten times
the principal unit.
(n.) A decade.
(n.) Alt. of Decile
(v. t.) To lead into danger by artifice; to lure into a net or
snare; to entrap; to insnare; to allure; to entice; as, to decoy troops
into an ambush; to decoy ducks into a net.
(n.) Anything intended to lead into a snare; a lure that deceives
and misleads into danger, or into the power of an enemy; a bait.
(n.) A fowl, or the likeness of one, used by sportsmen to entice
other fowl into a net or within shot.
(n.) A place into which wild fowl, esp. ducks, are enticed in
order to take or shoot them.
(n.) A person employed by officers of justice, or parties exposed
to injury, to induce a suspected person to commit an offense under
circumstances that will lead to his detection.
(v. t.) To cry down; to censure as faulty, mean, or worthless; to
clamor against; to blame clamorously; to discredit; to disparage.
(n.) A hydrocarbon radical, C10H21, never existing alone, but
regarded as the characteristic constituent of a number of compounds of
the paraffin series.
(a.) Industrious; active.
(a.) Pertaining to the dura, or dura mater.
(n.) A kind of millet, cultivated throughout Asia, and introduced
into the south of Europe; a variety of Sorghum vulgare; -- called also
Indian millet, and Guinea corn.
(a.) Partially dark or obscure; not luminous; dusk; as, a dusky
valley.
(a.) Tending to blackness in color; partially black;
dark-colored; not bright; as, a dusky brown.
(a.) Gloomy; sad; melancholy.
(a.) Intellectually clouded.
(n.) A piece of wood set between two studs, posts, etc., to
stiffen and support them.
(n.) A kind of crowbar.
(n.) A large wrench.
(n.) An animal or plant which is much below the ordinary size of
its species or kind; especially, a diminutive human being.
(v. t.) To hinder from growing to the natural size; to make or
keep small; to stunt.
(v. i.) To become small; to diminish in size.
() of Dwell
(v. i.) To delay; to linger.
(v. i.) To abide; to remain; to continue.
(v. i.) To abide as a permanent resident, or for a time; to live
in a place; to reside.
(v. t.) To inhabit.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dwell.
(v. i.) To waste away; to pine; to languish.
(a.) In the act of dying; destined to death; mortal; perishable;
as, dying bodies.
(a.) Of or pertaining to dying or death; as, dying bed; dying
day; dying words; also, simulating a dying state.
(n.) The act of expiring; passage from life to death; loss of
life.
(n.) Debt.
(n.) A present of books given to a meritorious undergraduate
student as a prize.
(n.) Two; a card or a die with two spots; as, the deuce of
hearts.
(n.) A condition of the score beginning whenever each side has
won three strokes in the same game (also reckoned "40 all"), and
reverted to as often as a tie is made until one of the sides secures
two successive strokes following a tie or deuce, which decides the
game.
(n.) The devil; a demon.
() A prefix which formerly properly indicated the second in a
regular series of compound in the series, and not to its composition,
but which is now generally employed in the same sense as bi-or di-,
although little used.
(a.) Bending down; sloping.
(n.) Devexity.
(v. t.) To give up; to devote.
(v. t.) To disavow; to disclaim.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dew
(n.) A fierce, wild dog (Canis Dukhunensis), found in the
mountains of India. It is remarkable for its propensity to hunt the
tiger and other wild animals in packs.
(n.) A book; esp., a collection of poems written by one author;
as, the divan of Hafiz.
(n.) In Turkey and other Oriental countries: A council of state;
a royal court. Also used by the poets for a grand deliberative council
or assembly.
(n.) A chief officer of state.
(n.) A saloon or hall where a council is held, in Oriental
countries, the state reception room in places, and in the houses of the
richer citizens. Cushions on the floor or on benches are ranged round
the room.
(n.) A cushioned seat, or a large, low sofa or couch; especially,
one fixed to its place, and not movable.
(n.) A coffee and smoking saloon.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dive
(v. t.) To rend apart.
(n.) See Divot.
(n.) A thin, oblong turf used for covering cottages, and also for
fuel.
(v. t.) To dress; to attire.
(v. t.) To dress gaudily; to overdress; to bedizen; to deck out.
(superl.) Having in the head a sensation of whirling, with a
tendency to fall; vertiginous; giddy; hence, confused; indistinct.
(superl.) Causing, or tending to cause, giddiness or vertigo.
(superl.) Without distinct thought; unreflecting; thoughtless;
heedless.
(v. t.) To make dizzy or giddy; to give the vertigo to; to
confuse.
(n.) A register of daily events or transactions; a daily record;
a journal; a blank book dated for the record of daily memoranda; as, a
diary of the weather; a physician's diary.
(a.) lasting for one day; as, a diary fever.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Do
(p. pr.) Doing.
(a.) Of or pertaining to a doge.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dice
(n.) A player at dice; a dice player; a gamester.
(n.) That which is held as an opinion; a tenet; a doctrine.
(n.) A formally stated and authoritatively settled doctrine; a
definite, established, and authoritative tenet.
(n.) A doctrinal notion asserted without regard to evidence or
truth; an arbitrary dictum.
(n.) A kind of woolen stuff.
(n.) A small napkin, used at table with the fruit, etc.; --
commonly colored and fringed.
(n.) Anything done; a deed; an action good or bad; hence, in the
plural, conduct; behavior. See Do.
(adv.) Alt. of Dolcemente
(imp. & p. p.) of Dole
(n. pl.) See Dictum.
(pl. ) of Dictum
(n.) A kind of triangular spade.
(pl. ) of Dido
() the 2d pers. sing. imp. of Do.
(n.) See Didymium.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Die
(n.) Pain; grief; distress; anguish.
(n.) Evil intent, embracing both malice and fraud. See Culpa.
(a.) Pertaining to a house.
(a.) Furnished with a dome; shaped like a dome.
(n.) A grammar.
(n.) A canelike grass of southern Europe (Arundo Donax), used for
fishing rods, etc.
(n.) The person to whom a gift or donation is made.
(n.) Anciently, one to whom lands were given; in later use, one
to whom lands and tenements are given in tail; in modern use, one on
whom a power is conferred for execution; -- sometimes called the
appointor.
(n.) One who gives or bestows; one who confers anything
gratuitously; a benefactor.
(n.) One who grants an estate; in later use, one who confers a
power; -- the opposite of donee.
(n.) A kind of litter suspended from men's shoulders, for
carrying persons or things; a palanquin.
(n.) A European marine fish (Zeus faber), of a yellow color. See
Illust. of John Doree.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dight
(v. t.) To prepare; to put in order; hence, to dress, or put on;
to array; to adorn.
(v. t.) To have sexual intercourse with.
(n.) One of the terminal divisions of a limb appendage; a finger
or toe.
(n.) A finger's breadth, commonly estimated to be three fourths
of an inch.
(n.) One of the ten figures or symbols, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7,
8, 9, by which all numbers are expressed; -- so called because of the
use of the fingers in counting and computing.
(n.) One twelfth part of the diameter of the sun or moon; -- a
term used to express the quantity of an eclipse; as, an eclipse of
eight digits is one which hides two thirds of the diameter of the disk.
(v. t.) To point at or out with the finger.
(a.) Worthy; honorable; deserving.
(a.) Suitable; adequate; fit.
(a.) Haughty; disdainful.
(n.) Same as dorsal, n.
(n.) The back of a book.
(n.) The Baltic or variable cod (Gadus callarias), by some
believed to be the young of the common codfish.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dose
(a.) Pertaining to dower, or a woman's marriage portion;
constituting dower, or comprised in it.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dote
(n.) A bank; a dike.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dike
(n.) A ditcher.
(n.) One who builds stone walls; usually, one who builds them
without lime.
(a.) Stupid; foolish.
(a.) Half-rotten; as, doted wood.
(n.) One who dotes; a man whose understanding is enfeebled by
age; a dotard.
(n.) One excessively fond, or weak in love.
(n.) A village composed of Arab tents arranged in streets.
(n.) A burden in popular songs.
(n.) A columnar cactaceous plant of the West Indies (Cereus
Swartzii).
(v. i.) To waver in opinion or judgment; to be in uncertainty as
to belief respecting anything; to hesitate in belief; to be undecided
as to the truth of the negative or the affirmative proposition; to b e
undetermined.
(v. i.) To suspect; to fear; to be apprehensive.
(v. t.) To question or hold questionable; to withhold assent to;
to hesitate to believe, or to be inclined not to believe; to withhold
confidence from; to distrust; as, I have heard the story, but I doubt
the truth of it.
(v. t.) To suspect; to fear; to be apprehensive of.
(v. t.) To fill with fear; to affright.
(v. i.) A fluctuation of mind arising from defect of knowledge or
evidence; uncertainty of judgment or mind; unsettled state of opinion
concerning the reality of an event, or the truth of an assertion, etc.;
hesitation.
(v. i.) Uncertainty of condition.
(v. i.) Suspicion; fear; apprehension; dread.
(v. i.) Difficulty expressed or urged for solution; point
unsettled; objection.
(a.) Sweet; pleasant.
(a.) Sober; prudent; sedate; modest.
(n.) A goddess.
(v. t.) To put off; to postpone to a future time; to delay the
execution of; to delay; to withhold.
(v. i.) To put off; to delay to act; to wait.
(v. t.) To render or offer.
(v. t.) To lay before; to submit in a respectful manner; to
refer; -- with to.
(v. i.) To yield deference to the wishes of another; to submit to
the opinion of another, or to authority; -- with to.
(v. t.) To fix; to fasten; to establish.
(v. t.) To make a god of; to exalt to the rank of a deity; to
enroll among the deities; to apotheosize; as, Julius Caesar was
deified.
(v. t.) To praise or revere as a deity; to treat as an object of
supreme regard; as, to deify money.
(v. t.) To render godlike.
(v. t.) To esteem worthy; to consider worth notice; -- opposed to
disdain.
(v. t.) To condescend to give or bestow; to stoop to furnish; to
vouchsafe; to allow; to grant.
(v. i.) To think worthy; to vouchsafe; to condescend; - -
followed by an infinitive.
(n.) The doctrine or creed of a deist; the belief or system of
those who acknowledge the existence of one God, but deny revelation.
(n.) One who believes in the existence of a God, but denies
revealed religion; a freethinker.
() A prefix signifying ten. See Deca-.
(n.) See Deckle.
(v.) A putting off or deferring; procrastination; lingering
inactivity; stop; detention; hindrance.
(n.) To put off; to defer; to procrastinate; to prolong the time
of or before.
(n.) To retard; to stop, detain, or hinder, for a time; to retard
the motion, or time of arrival, of; as, the mail is delayed by a heavy
fall of snow.
(n.) To allay; to temper.
(v. i.) To move slowly; to stop for a time; to linger; to tarry.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dele
(n.) Diminutive of Dad.
(pl. ) of Dago
(a.) Happening, or belonging to, each successive day; diurnal;
as, daily labor; a daily bulletin.
(n.) A publication which appears regularly every day; as, the
morning dailies.
(adv.) Every day; day by day; as, a thing happens daily.
(n.) Something of exquisite taste; a dainty.
(a.) Dainty.
(n.) Delight.
(n.) The place, room, or house where milk is kept, and converted
into butter or cheese.
(n.) That department of farming which is concerned in the
production of milk, and its conversion into butter and cheese.
(n.) A dairy farm.
(n.) Alt. of Dakir
(n.) A measure of certain commodities by number, usually ten or
twelve, but sometimes twenty; as, a daker of hides consisted of ten
skins; a daker of gloves of ten pairs.
(v. i.) To waste time in effeminate or voluptuous pleasures, or
in idleness; to fool away time; to delay unnecessarily; to tarry; to
trifle.
(n.) The duykerbok.
(n.) Delftware.
(n.) The drain on the land side of a sea embankment.
(v. i.) To interchange caresses, especially with one of the
opposite sex; to use fondling; to wanton; to sport.
(v. t.) To delay unnecessarily; to while away.
(v. t.) To dig; to open (the ground) as with a spade.
(v. t.) To dig into; to penetrate; to trace out; to fathom.
(v. i.) To dig or labor with a spade, or as with a spade; to
labor as a drudge.
(v. t.) A place dug; a pit; a ditch; a den; a cave.
(a.) Somewhat damp.
(a.) Dejected; gloomy; sorrowful.
(v. i.) To move with measured steps, or to a musical
accompaniment; to go through, either alone or in company with others,
with a regulated succession of movements, (commonly) to the sound of
music; to trip or leap rhythmically.
(v. i.) To move nimbly or merrily; to express pleasure by motion;
to caper; to frisk; to skip about.
(v. t.) To cause to dance, or move nimbly or merrily about, or up
and down; to dandle.
(v. i.) The leaping, tripping, or measured stepping of one who
dances; an amusement, in which the movements of the persons are
regulated by art, in figures and in accord with music.
(v. i.) A tune by which dancing is regulated, as the minuet, the
waltz, the cotillon, etc.
(v. t.) To let fall; to depress.
(v. t.) To yield or submit; to humble; to lower; as, to demit
one's self to humble duties.
(v. t.) To lay down, as an office; to resign.
(v. i.) To linger; to stay; to tarry.
(v. i.) To delay; to pause; to suspend proceedings or judgment in
view of a doubt or difficulty; to hesitate; to put off the
determination or conclusion of an affair.
(v. i.) To scruple or object; to take exception; as, I demur to
that statement.
(v. i.) To interpose a demurrer. See Demurrer, 2.
(v. t.) To suspend judgment concerning; to doubt of or hesitate
about.
(v. t.) To cause delay to; to put off.
(v. i.) Stop; pause; hesitation as to proceeding; suspense of
decision or action; scruple.
(v. t.) To deny.
(n.) Denial; refusal.
(n.) A coarse cotton drilling used for overalls, etc.
(a.) Having the constituent parts massed or crowded together;
close; compact; thick; containing much matter in a small space; heavy;
opaque; as, a dense crowd; a dense forest; a dense fog.
(a.) Stupid; gross; crass; as, dense ignorance.
(n.) A tenth; a tenth part; a tithe.
(v. i.) To go by carriage; to pass in a carriage; to proceed by
directing or urging on a vehicle or the animals that draw it; as, the
coachman drove to my door.
(v. i.) To press forward; to aim, or tend, to a point; to make an
effort; to strive; -- usually with at.
(v. i.) To distrain for rent.
(p. p.) Driven.
(n.) The act of driving; a trip or an excursion in a carriage, as
for exercise or pleasure; -- distinguished from a ride taken on
horseback.
(n.) A place suitable or agreeable for driving; a road prepared
for driving.
(n.) Violent or rapid motion; a rushing onward or away; esp., a
forced or hurried dispatch of business.
(n.) In type founding and forging, an impression or matrix,
formed by a punch drift.
(n.) A collection of objects that are driven; a mass of logs to
be floated down a river.
(n.) A unit of measure for dynamical effect or work; a foot
pound. See Foot pound.