- froze
- fremd
- frena
- fresh
- frett
- friar
- frier
- frill
- frisk
- frist
- frith
- frize
- frizz
- frock
- frond
- flout
- flowk
- flown
- fluey
- fluff
- fluid
- fluke
- fluky
- flume
- flung
- flunk
- fluo-
- fluor
- flurt
- flush
- flute
- fluty
- flown
- flies
- flyer
- fnese
- foamy
- focal
- focus
- foggy
- fogie
- folio
- folia
- folks
- fomes
- fonly
- foody
- fibre
- feaze
- fecal
- feces
- fecks
- feere
- feeze
- feign
- feint
- felly
- felon
- femme
- femur
- fence
- fenks
- feoff
- feral
- feria
- ferie
- ferly
- ferme
- fairy
- fakir
- famed
- fanal
- fanon
- farad
- farce
- farcy
- fared
- farse
- fasti
- fatal
- fated
- fatly
- fatty
- faugh
- fauld
- fault
- favel
- favor
- favus
- faxed
- fayed
- frons
- front
- frore
- frory
- froth
- frown
- frowy
- froze
- fruit
- frump
- frush
- fuage
- fubby
- fubsy
- fucus
- fudge
- fuffy
- fugle
- fugue
- fully
- fumed
- fumer
- fumet
- fumid
- funge
- fungi
- funic
- funis
- funky
- funny
- furry
- furze
- furzy
- fused
- fusee
- fusel
- fusil
- fussy
- fusty
- fuzzy
- fytte
- fable
- faced
- facet
- facia
- facto
- faded
- fader
- fadge
- fadme
- faery
- fagot
- faham
- faint
- forge
- forgo
- forky
- forte
- forty
- fossa
- fosse
- found
- fourb
- fouty
- fovea
- fowls
- foxes
- foxed
- fract
- foxed
- foxes
- foxly
- foyer
- frail
- franc
- frape
- fraud
- freak
- freck
- foots
- footy
- foray
- forby
- force
- fordo
- forme
- forel
- ferny
- ferry
- fesse
- fetal
- fetch
- feted
- fetid
- fetis
- fetor
- fetus
- feuar
- fever
- fibre
- fiche
- fichu
- fidge
- fiery
- fifed
- fifer
- fifth
- fifty
- fight
- filar
- filch
- filed
- filly
- filmy
- filth
- final
- finch
- found
- findy
- fined
- finew
- finis
- finns
- finos
- fiord
- fired
- firer
- firms
- firry
- first
- fishy
- fitly
- fives
- fixed
- fjord
- flail
- flain
- flake
- flaky
- flame
- flamy
- flang
- flank
- flare
- flash
- flask
- flawn
- flawy
- flaxy
- fleak
- fleam
- flear
- fleer
- flear
- fleme
- flesh
- flews
- flick
- flier
- flung
- fling
- flipe
- flirt
- flisk
- flite
- float
- flock
- flong
- flook
- floor
- flosh
- flota
- flote
- flour
(imp.) of Freeze
(a.) Alt. of Fremed
(pl. ) of Frenum
(superl) Possessed of original life and vigor; new and strong;
unimpaired; sound.
(superl) New; original; additional.
(superl) Lately produced, gathered, or prepared for market; not
stale; not dried or preserved; not wilted, faded, or tainted; in good
condition; as, fresh vegetables, flowers, eggs, meat, fruit, etc.;
recently made or obtained; occurring again; repeated; as, a fresh
supply of goods; fresh tea, raisins, etc.; lately come or made public;
as, fresh news; recently taken from a well or spring; as, fresh water.
(superl) Youthful; florid; as, these fresh nymphs.
(superl) In a raw, green, or untried state; uncultivated;
uncultured; unpracticed; as, a fresh hand on a ship.
(superl) Renewed in vigor, alacrity, or readiness for action; as,
fresh for a combat; hence, tending to renew in vigor; rather strong;
cool or brisk; as, a fresh wind.
(superl) Not salt; as, fresh water, in distinction from that
which is from the sea, or brackish; fresh meat, in distinction from
that which is pickled or salted.
(n.) A stream or spring of fresh water.
(n.) A flood; a freshet.
(n.) The mingling of fresh water with salt in rivers or bays, as
by means of a flood of fresh water flowing toward or into the sea.
(v. t.) To refresh; to freshen.
(n.) The worn side of the bank of a river. See 4th Fret, n., 4.
(n.) A vitreous compound, used by potters in glazing, consisting
of lime, silica, borax, lead, and soda.
(n.) A brother or member of any religious order, but especially
of one of the four mendicant orders, viz: (a) Minors, Gray Friars, or
Franciscans. (b) Augustines. (c) Dominicans or Black Friars. (d) White
Friars or Carmelites. See these names in the Vocabulary.
(n.) A white or pale patch on a printed page.
(n.) An American fish; the silversides.
(n.) One who fries.
(v. i.) To shake or shiver as with cold; as, the hawk frills.
(v. i.) To wrinkle; -- said of the gelatin film.
(v. t.) To provide or decorate with a frill or frills; to turn
back. in crimped plaits; as, to frill a cap.
(v. i.) A ruffing of a bird's feathers from cold.
(v. i.) A ruffle, consisting of a fold of membrane, of hairs, or
of feathers, around the neck of an animal.
(v. i.) A similar ruffle around the legs or other appendages of
animals.
(v. i.) A ruffled varex or fold on certain shells.
(v. i.) A border or edging secured at one edge and left free at
the other, usually fluted or crimped like a very narrow flounce.
(a.) Lively; brisk; frolicsome; frisky.
(a.) A frolic; a fit of wanton gayety; a gambol: a little playful
skip or leap.
(v. i.) To leap, skip, dance, or gambol, in fronc and gayety.
(v. t.) To sell upon credit, as goods.
(n.) A narrow arm of the sea; an estuary; the opening of a river
into the sea; as, the Frith of Forth.
(n.) A kind of weir for catching fish.
(a.) A forest; a woody place.
(a.) A small field taken out of a common, by inclosing it; an
inclosure.
(n.) See 1st Frieze.
(v. t. & n.) See Friz, v. t. & n.
(n.) A loose outer garment; especially, a gown forming a part of
European modern costume for women and children; also, a coarse
shirtlike garment worn by some workmen over their other clothes; a
smock frock; as, a marketman's frock.
(n.) A coarse gown worn by monks or friars, and supposed to take
the place of all, or nearly all, other garments. It has a hood which
can be drawn over the head at pleasure, and is girded by a cord.
(v. t.) To clothe in a frock.
(v. t.) To make a monk of. Cf. Unfrock.
(n.) The organ formed by the combination or union into one body
of stem and leaf, and often bearing the fructification; as, the frond
of a fern or of a lichen or seaweed; also, the peculiar leaf of a palm
tree.
(v. t.) To mock or insult; to treat with contempt.
(v. i.) To practice mocking; to behave with contempt; to sneer;
to fleer; -- often with at.
(n.) A mock; an insult.
(n.) See 1st Fluke.
() p. p. of Fly; -- often used with the auxiliary verb to be; as,
the birds are flown.
(a.) Flushed, inflated.
(a.) Downy; fluffy.
(n.) Nap or down; flue; soft, downy feathers.
(a.) Having particles which easily move and change their relative
position without a separation of the mass, and which easily yield to
pressure; capable of flowing; liquid or gaseous.
(n.) A fluid substance; a body whose particles move easily among
themselves.
(n.) The European flounder. See Flounder.
(n.) A parasitic trematode worm of several species, having a
flat, lanceolate body and two suckers. Two species (Fasciola hepatica
and Distoma lanceolatum) are found in the livers of sheep, and produce
the disease called rot.
(n.) The part of an anchor which fastens in the ground; a flook.
See Anchor.
(n.) One of the lobes of a whale's tail, so called from the
resemblance to the fluke of an anchor.
(n.) An instrument for cleaning out a hole drilled in stone for
blasting.
(n.) An accidental and favorable stroke at billiards (called a
scratch in the United States); hence, any accidental or unexpected
advantage; as, he won by a fluke.
(a.) Formed like, or having, a fluke.
(n.) A stream; especially, a passage channel, or conduit for the
water that drives a mill wheel; or an artifical channel of water for
hydraulic or placer mining; also, a chute for conveying logs or lumber
down a declivity.
() imp. & p. p. of Fling.
(v. i.) To fail, as on a lesson; to back out, as from an
undertaking, through fear.
(v. t.) To fail in; to shirk, as a task or duty.
(n.) A failure or backing out
(n.) a total failure in a recitation.
() A combining form indicating fluorine as an ingredient; as in
fluosilicate, fluobenzene.
(n.) A fluid state.
(n.) Menstrual flux; catamenia; menses.
(n.) See Fluorite.
(n.) A flirt.
(v. i.) To flow and spread suddenly; to rush; as, blood flushes
into the face.
(v. i.) To become suddenly suffused, as the cheeks; to turn red;
to blush.
(v. i.) To snow red; to shine suddenly; to glow.
(v. i.) To start up suddenly; to take wing as a bird.
(v. t.) To cause to be full; to flood; to overflow; to overwhelm
with water; as, to flush the meadows; to flood for the purpose of
cleaning; as, to flush a sewer.
(v. t.) To cause the blood to rush into (the face); to put to the
blush, or to cause to glow with excitement.
(v. t.) To make suddenly or temporarily red or rosy, as if
suffused with blood.
(v. t.) To excite; to animate; to stir.
(v. t.) To cause to start, as a hunter a bird.
(n.) A sudden flowing; a rush which fills or overflows, as of
water for cleansing purposes.
(n.) A suffusion of the face with blood, as from fear, shame,
modesty, or intensity of feeling of any kind; a blush; a glow.
(n.) Any tinge of red color like that produced on the cheeks by a
sudden rush of blood; as, the flush on the side of a peach; the flush
on the clouds at sunset.
(n.) A sudden flood or rush of feeling; a thrill of excitement.
animation, etc.; as, a flush of joy.
(n.) A flock of birds suddenly started up or flushed.
(n.) A hand of cards of the same suit.
(a.) Full of vigor; fresh; glowing; bright.
(a.) Affluent; abounding; well furnished or suppled; hence,
liberal; prodigal.
(a.) Unbroken or even in surface; on a level with the adjacent
surface; forming a continuous surface; as, a flush panel; a flush
joint.
(a.) Consisting of cards of one suit.
(adv.) So as to be level or even.
(v. i.) A musical wind instrument, consisting of a hollow
cylinder or pipe, with holes along its length, stopped by the fingers
or by keys which are opened by the fingers. The modern flute is closed
at the upper end, and blown with the mouth at a lateral hole.
(v. i.) A channel of curved section; -- usually applied to one of
a vertical series of such channels used to decorate columns and
pilasters in classical architecture. See Illust. under Base, n.
(n.) A similar channel or groove made in wood or other material,
esp. in plaited cloth, as in a lady's ruffle.
(n.) A long French breakfast roll.
(n.) A stop in an organ, having a flutelike sound.
(n.) A kind of flyboat; a storeship.
(v. i.) To play on, or as on, a flute; to make a flutelike sound.
(v. t.) To play, whistle, or sing with a clear, soft note, like
that of a flute.
(v. t.) To form flutes or channels in, as in a column, a ruffle,
etc.
(a.) Soft and clear in tone, like a flute.
(p. p.) of Fly
(pl. ) of Fly
(n.) One that uses wings.
(n.) The fly of a flag: See Fly, n., 6.
(n.) Anything that is scattered abroad in great numbers as a
theatrical programme, an advertising leaf, etc.
(n.) One in a flight of steps which are parallel to each other(as
in ordinary stairs), as distinguished from a winder.
(n.) The pair of arms attached to the spindle of a spinning
frame, over which the thread passes to the bobbin; -- so called from
their swift revolution. See Fly, n., 11.
(n.) The fan wheel that rotates the cap of a windmill as the wind
veers.
(n.) A small operation not involving ? considerable part of one's
capital, or not in the line of one's ordinary business; a venture.
(v. i.) To breathe heavily; to snort.
(a.) Covered with foam; frothy; spumy.
(a.) Belonging to,or concerning, a focus; as, a focal point.
(n.) A point in which the rays of light meet, after being
reflected or refrcted, and at which the image is formed; as, the focus
of a lens or mirror.
(n.) A point so related to a conic section and certain straight
line called the directrix that the ratio of the distace between any
point of the curve and the focus to the distance of the same point from
the directrix is constant.
(n.) A central point; a point of concentration.
(v. t.) To bring to a focus; to focalize; as, to focus a camera.
(superl.) Filled or abounding with fog, or watery exhalations;
misty; as, a foggy atmosphere; a foggy morning.
(superl.) Beclouded; dull; obscure; as, foggy ideas.
(n.) See Fogy.
(n.) A leaf of a book or manuscript.
(n.) A sheet of paper once folded.
(n.) A book made of sheets of paper each folded once (four pages
to the sheet); hence, a book of the largest kind. See Note under Paper.
(n.) The page number. The even folios are on the left-hand pages
and the odd folios on the right-hand.
(n.) A page of a book; (Bookkeeping) a page in an account book;
sometimes, two opposite pages bearing the same serial number.
(n.) A leaf containing a certain number of words, hence, a
certain number of words in a writing, as in England, in law proceedings
72, and in chancery, 90; in New York, 100 words.
(pl. ) of Folium
(n. collect. & pl.) In Anglo-Saxon times, the people of a group
of townships or villages; a community; a tribe.
(n. collect. & pl.) People in general, or a separate class of
people; -- generally used in the plural form, and often with a
qualifying adjective; as, the old folks; poor folks.
(n. collect. & pl.) The persons of one's own family; as, our
folks are all well.
(n.) Any substance supposed to be capable of absorbing,
retaining, and transporting contagious or infectious germs; as, woolen
clothes are said to be active fomites.
(adv.) Foolishly; fondly.
(a.) Eatable; fruitful.
() A tough vegetable fiber used as a substitute for bristles in
making brushes. The piassava and the ixtle are both used under this
name.
(v. t.) To untwist; to unravel, as the end of a rope.
(v. t.) To beat; to chastise; also, to humble; to harass; to
worry.
(n.) A state of anxious or fretful excitement; worry; vexation.
(a.) relating to, or containing, dregs, feces, or ordeure;
faecal.
(n. pl.) dregs; sediment; excrement. See FAeces.
(n.) A corruption of the word faith.
(n.) A consort, husband or wife; a companion; a fere.
(v. t.) To turn, as a screw.
(v. t.) To beat; to chastise; to humble; to worry.
(n.) Fretful excitement. [Obs.] See Feaze.
(v. t.) To give a mental existence to, as to something not real
or actual; to imagine; to invent; hence, to pretend; to form and relate
as if true.
(v. t.) To represent by a false appearance of; to pretend; to
counterfeit; as, to feign a sickness.
(v. t.) To dissemble; to conceal.
(a.) Feigned; counterfeit.
(a.) That which is feigned; an assumed or false appearance; a
pretense; a stratagem; a fetch.
(a.) A mock blow or attack on one part when another part is
intended to be struck; -- said of certain movements in fencing, boxing,
war, etc.
(v. i.) To make a feint, or mock attack.
(adv.) In a fell or cruel manner; fiercely; barbarously;
savagely.
(n.) The exterior wooden rim, or a segment of the rim, of a
wheel, supported by the spokes.
(a.) A person who has committed a felony.
(a.) A person guilty or capable of heinous crime.
(a.) A kind of whitlow; a painful imflammation of the periosteum
of a finger, usually of the last joint.
(a.) Characteristic of a felon; malignant; fierce; malicious;
cruel; traitorous; disloyal.
(n.) A woman. See Feme, n.
(n.) The thigh bone.
(n.) The proximal segment of the hind limb containing the thigh
bone; the thigh. See Coxa.
(n.) That which fends off attack or danger; a defense; a
protection; a cover; security; shield.
(n.) An inclosure about a field or other space, or about any
object; especially, an inclosing structure of wood, iron, or other
material, intended to prevent intrusion from without or straying from
within.
(n.) A projection on the bolt, which passes through the tumbler
gates in locking and unlocking.
(n.) Self-defense by the use of the sword; the art and practice
of fencing and sword play; hence, skill in debate and repartee. See
Fencing.
(n.) A receiver of stolen goods, or a place where they are
received.
(v. t.) To fend off danger from; to give security to; to protect;
to guard.
(v. t.) To inclose with a fence or other protection; to secure by
an inclosure.
(v. i.) To make a defense; to guard one's self of anything, as
against an attack; to give protection or security, as by a fence.
(v. i.) To practice the art of attack and defense with the sword
or with the foil, esp. with the smallsword, using the point only.
(v. i.) Hence, to fight or dispute in the manner of fencers, that
is, by thrusting, guarding, parrying, etc.
(n.) The refuse whale blubber, used as a manure, and in the
manufacture of Prussian blue.
(v. t.) To invest with a fee or feud; to give or grant a
corporeal hereditament to; to enfeoff.
(n.) A fief. See Fief.
(a.) Wild; untamed; ferine; not domesticated; -- said of beasts,
birds, and plants.
(a.) Funereal; deadly; fatal; dangerous.
(n.) A week day, esp. a day which is neither a festival nor a
fast.
(n.) A holiday.
(n.) Singular; wonderful; extraordinary.
(n.) A wonder; a marvel.
(n.) Rent for a farm; a farm; also, an abode; a place of
residence; as, he let his land to ferm.
(n.) Enchantment; illusion.
(n.) The country of the fays; land of illusions.
(n.) An imaginary supernatural being or spirit, supposed to
assume a human form (usually diminutive), either male or female, and to
meddle for good or evil in the affairs of mankind; a fay. See Elf, and
Demon.
(n.) An enchantress.
(a.) Of or pertaining to fairies.
(a.) Given by fairies; as, fairy money.
(n.) An Oriental religious ascetic or begging monk.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fame
(n.) A lighthouse, or the apparatus placed in it for giving
light.
(n.) A term applied to various articles, as: (a) A peculiar
striped scarf worn by the pope at mass, and by eastern bishops. (b) A
maniple.
(n.) The standard unit of electrical capacity; the capacity of a
condenser whose charge, having an electro-motive force of one volt, is
equal to the amount of electricity which, with the same electromotive
force, passes through one ohm in one second; the capacity, which,
charged with one coulomb, gives an electro-motive force of one volt.
(v. t.) To stuff with forcemeat; hence, to fill with mingled
ingredients; to fill full; to stuff.
(v. t.) To render fat.
(v. t.) To swell out; to render pompous.
(v. t.) Stuffing, or mixture of viands, like that used on
dressing a fowl; forcemeat.
(v. t.) A low style of comedy; a dramatic composition marked by
low humor, generally written with little regard to regularity or
method, and abounding with ludicrous incidents and expressions.
(v. t.) Ridiculous or empty show; as, a mere farce.
(n.) A contagious disease of horses, associated with painful
ulcerating enlargements, esp. upon the head and limbs. It is of the
same nature as glanders, and is often fatal. Called also farcin, and
farcimen.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fare
(n.) An addition to, or a paraphrase of, some part of the Latin
service in the vernacular; -- common in English before the Reformation.
(n.pl.) The Roman calendar, which gave the days for festivals,
courts, etc., corresponding to a modern almanac.
(n.pl.) Records or registers of important events.
(a.) Proceeding from, or appointed by, fate or destiny;
necessary; inevitable.
(a.) Foreboding death or great disaster.
(a.) Causing death or destruction; deadly; mortal; destructive;
calamitous; as, a fatal wound; a fatal disease; a fatal day; a fatal
error.
(p. p. & a.) Decreed by fate; destined; doomed; as, he was fated
to rule a factious people.
(p. p. & a.) Invested with the power of determining destiny.
(p. p. & a.) Exempted by fate.
(adv.) Grossly; greasily.
(a.) Containing fat, or having the qualities of fat; greasy;
gross; as, a fatty substance.
(interj.) An exclamation of contempt, disgust, or abhorrence.
(n.) The arch over the dam of a blast furnace; the tymp arch.
(n.) Defect; want; lack; default.
(n.) Anything that fails, that is wanting, or that impairs
excellence; a failing; a defect; a blemish.
(n.) A moral failing; a defect or dereliction from duty; a
deviation from propriety; an offense less serious than a crime.
(n.) A dislocation of the strata of the vein.
(n.) In coal seams, coal rendered worthless by impurities in the
seam; as, slate fault, dirt fault, etc.
(n.) A lost scent; act of losing the scent.
(n.) Failure to serve the ball into the proper court.
(v. t.) To charge with a fault; to accuse; to find fault with; to
blame.
(v. t.) To interrupt the continuity of (rock strata) by
displacement along a plane of fracture; -- chiefly used in the p. p.;
as, the coal beds are badly faulted.
(v. i.) To err; to blunder, to commit a fault; to do wrong.
(a.) Yellow; fal/ow; dun.
(n.) A horse of a favel or dun color.
(n.) Flattery; cajolery; deceit.
(n.) Kind regard; propitious aspect; countenance; friendly
disposition; kindness; good will.
(n.) The act of countenancing, or the condition of being
countenanced, or regarded propitiously; support; promotion;
befriending.
(n.) A kind act or office; kindness done or granted; benevolence
shown by word or deed; an act of grace or good will, as distinct from
justice or remuneration.
(n.) Mildness or mitigation of punishment; lenity.
(n.) The object of regard; person or thing favored.
(n.) A gift or represent; something bestowed as an evidence of
good will; a token of love; a knot of ribbons; something worn as a
token of affection; as, a marriage favor is a bunch or knot of white
ribbons or white flowers worn at a wedding.
(n.) Appearance; look; countenance; face.
(n.) Partiality; bias.
(n.) A letter or epistle; -- so called in civility or compliment;
as, your favor of yesterday is received.
(n.) Love locks.
(n.) To regard with kindness; to support; to aid, or to have the
disposition to aid, or to wish success to; to be propitious to; to
countenance; to treat with consideration or tenderness; to show
partiality or unfair bias towards.
(n.) To afford advantages for success to; to facilitate; as, a
weak place favored the entrance of the enemy.
(n.) To resemble in features; to have the aspect or looks of; as,
the child favors his father.
(n.) A disease of the scalp, produced by a vegetable parasite.
(n.) A tile or flagstone cut into an hexagonal shape to produce a
honeycomb pattern, as in a pavement; -- called also favas and sectila.
(a.) Hairy.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fay
(n.) The forehead; the part of the cranium between the orbits and
the vertex.
(n.) The forehead or brow, the part of the face above the eyes;
sometimes, also, the whole face.
(n.) The forehead, countenance, or personal presence, as
expressive of character or temper, and especially, of boldness of
disposition, sometimes of impudence; seeming; as, a bold front; a
hardened front.
(n.) The part or surface of anything which seems to look out, or
to be directed forward; the fore or forward part; the foremost rank;
the van; -- the opposite to back or rear; as, the front of a house; the
front of an army.
(n.) A position directly before the face of a person, or before
the foremost part of a thing; as, in front of un person, of the troops,
or of a house.
(n.) The most conspicuous part.
(n.) That which covers the foremost part of the head: a front
piece of false hair worn by women.
(n.) The beginning.
(a.) Of or relating to the front or forward part; having a
position in front; foremost; as, a front view.
(v. t.) To oppose face to face; to oppose directly; to meet in a
hostile manner.
(v. t.) To appear before; to meet.
(v. t.) To face toward; to have the front toward; to confront;
as, the house fronts the street.
(v. t.) To stand opposed or opposite to, or over against as, his
house fronts the church.
(v. t.) To adorn in front; to supply a front to; as, to front a
house with marble; to front a head with laurel.
(v. t.) To have or turn the face or front in any direction; as,
the house fronts toward the east.
(adv.) Frostily.
(a.) Frozen; stiff with cold.
(a.) Covered with a froth like hoarfrost.
(n.) The bubbles caused in fluids or liquors by fermentation or
agitation; spume; foam; esp., a spume of saliva caused by disease or
nervous excitement.
(n.) Any empty, senseless show of wit or eloquence; rhetoric
without thought.
(n.) Light, unsubstantial matter.
(v. t.) To cause to foam.
(v. t.) To spit, vent, or eject, as froth.
(v. t.) To cover with froth; as, a horse froths his chain.
(v. i.) To throw up or out spume, foam, or bubbles; to foam; as
beer froths; a horse froths.
(v. i.) To contract the brow in displeasure, severity, or
sternness; to scowl; to put on a stern, grim, or surly look.
(v. i.) To manifest displeasure or disapprobation; to look with
disfavor or threateningly; to lower; as, polite society frowns upon
rudeness.
(v. t.) To repress or repel by expressing displeasure or
disapproval; to rebuke with a look; as, frown the impudent fellow into
silence.
(n.) A wrinkling of the face in displeasure, rebuke, etc.; a
sour, severe, or stere look; a scowl.
(n.) Any expression of displeasure; as, the frowns of Providence;
the frowns of Fortune.
(a.) Musty. rancid; as, frowy butter.
() imp. of Freeze.
(v. t.) Whatever is produced for the nourishment or enjoyment of
man or animals by the processes of vegetable growth, as corn, grass,
cotton, flax, etc.; -- commonly used in the plural.
(v. t.) The pulpy, edible seed vessels of certain plants,
especially those grown on branches above ground, as apples, oranges,
grapes, melons, berries, etc. See 3.
(v. t.) The ripened ovary of a flowering plant, with its contents
and whatever parts are consolidated with it.
(v. t.) The spore cases or conceptacles of flowerless plants, as
of ferns, mosses, algae, etc., with the spores contained in them.
(v. t.) The produce of animals; offspring; young; as, the fruit
of the womb, of the loins, of the body.
(v. t.) That which is produced; the effect or consequence of any
action; advantageous or desirable product or result; disadvantageous or
evil consequence or effect; as, the fruits of labor, of self-denial, of
intemperance.
(v. i.) To bear fruit.
(v. t.) To insult; to flout; to mock; to snub.
(n.) A contemptuous speech or piece of conduct; a gibe or flout.
(n.) A cross, old-fashioned person; esp., an old woman; a gossip.
(v. t.) To batter; to break in pieces.
(a.) Easily broken; brittle; crisp.
(n.) Noise; clatter; crash.
(n.) The frog of a horse's foot.
(n.) A discharge of a fetid or ichorous matter from the frog of a
horse's foot; -- also caled thrush.
(n.) Same as Fumage.
(a.) Alt. of Fubsy
(a.) Plump; chubby; short and stuffy; as a fubsy sofa.
(n.) A paint; a dye; also, false show.
(n.) A genus of tough, leathery seaweeds, usually of a dull
brownish green color; rockweed.
(n.) A made-up story; stuff; nonsense; humbug; -- often an
exclamation of contempt.
(v. t.) To make up; to devise; to contrive; to fabricate.
(v. t.) To foist; to interpolate.
(a.) Light; puffy.
(v. i.) To maneuver; to move hither and thither.
(n.) A polyphonic composition, developed from a given theme or
themes, according to strict contrapuntal rules. The theme is first
given out by one voice or part, and then, while that pursues its way,
it is repeated by another at the interval of a fifth or fourth, and so
on, until all the parts have answered one by one, continuing their
several melodies and interweaving them in one complex progressive
whole, in which the theme is often lost and reappears.
(adv.) In a full manner or degree; completely; entirely; without
lack or defect; adequately; satisfactorily; as, to be fully persuaded
of the truth of a proposition.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fume
(n.) One that fumes.
(n.) One who makes or uses perfumes.
(n.) The dung of deer.
(n.) Alt. of Fumette
(a.) Smoky; vaporous.
(n.) A blockhead; a dolt; a fool.
(n. pl.) See Fungus.
(pl. ) of Fungus
(a.) Funicular.
(n.) A cord; specifically, the umbilical cord or navel string.
(a.) Pertaining to, or characterized by, great fear, or funking.
(superl.) Droll; comical; amusing; laughable.
(n.) A clinkerbuit, narrow boat for sculling.
(a.) Covered with fur; dressed in fur.
(a.) Consisting of fur; as, furry spoils.
(a.) Resembling fur.
(n.) A thorny evergreen shrub (Ulex Europaeus), with beautiful
yellow flowers, very common upon the plains and hills of Great Britain;
-- called also gorse, and whin. The dwarf furze is Ulex nanus.
(a. a.) bounding in, or overgrown with, furze; characterized by
furze.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fuse
(n.) A flintlock gun. See 2d Fusil.
(n.) A fuse. See Fuse, n.
(n.) A kind of match for lighting a pipe or cigar.
(n.) A small packet of explosive material with wire appendages
allowing it to be conveniently attached to a railroad track. It will
explode with a loud report when run over by a train, and is used to
provide a warning signal to the engineer.
(n.) The track of a buck.
(n.) The cone or conical wheel of a watch or clock, designed to
equalize the power of the mainspring by having the chain from the
barrel which contains the spring wind in a spiral groove on the surface
of the cone in such a manner that the diameter of the cone at the point
where the chain acts may correspond with the degree of tension of the
spring.
(n.) A similar wheel used in other machinery.
() Alt. of Fusel oil
(v. t.) Capable of being melted or rendered fluid by heat;
fusible.
(v. t.) Running or flowing, as a liquid.
(v. t.) Formed by melting and pouring into a mold; cast; founded.
(n.) A light kind of flintlock musket, formerly in use.
(n.) A bearing of a rhomboidal figure; -- named from its shape,
which resembles that of a spindle.
(superl) Making a fuss; disposed to make an unnecessary ado about
trifles; overnice; fidgety.
(superl) Moldy; musty; ill-smelling; rank.
(superl) Moping.
(n.) Not firmly woven; that ravels.
(n.) Furnished with fuzz; having fuzz; like fuzz; as, the fuzzy
skin of a peach.
(n.) See Fit a song.
G () G is the seventh letter of the English alphabet, and a vocal
consonant. It has two sounds; one simple, as in gave, go, gull; the
other compound (like that of j), as in gem, gin, dingy. See Guide to
Pronunciation, // 231-6, 155, 176, 178, 179, 196, 211, 246.
(n.) A Feigned story or tale, intended to instruct or amuse; a
fictitious narration intended to enforce some useful truth or precept;
an apologue. See the Note under Apologue.
(n.) The plot, story, or connected series of events, forming the
subject of an epic or dramatic poem.
(n.) Any story told to excite wonder; common talk; the theme of
talk.
(n.) Fiction; untruth; falsehood.
(v. i.) To compose fables; hence, to write or speak fiction ; to
write or utter what is not true.
(v. t.) To feign; to invent; to devise, and speak of, as true or
real; to tell of falsely.
(imp. & p. p.) of Face
(a.) Having (such) a face, or (so many) faces; as, smooth-faced,
two-faced.
(n.) A little face; a small, plane surface; as, the facets of a
diamond.
(n.) A smooth circumscribed surface; as, the articular facet of a
bone.
(n.) The narrow plane surface between flutings of a column.
(n.) One of the numerous small eyes which make up the compound
eyes of insects and crustaceans.
(v. t.) To cut facets or small faces upon; as, to facet a
diamond.
(n.) See Fascia.
(adv.) In fact; by the act or fact.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fade
(a.) That has lost freshness, color, or brightness; grown dim.
(n.) Father.
(a.) To fit; to suit; to agree.
(n.) A small flat loaf or thick cake; also, a fagot.
(n.) A fathom.
(n. & a.) Fairy.
(n.) A bundle of sticks, twigs, or small branches of trees, used
for fuel, for raising batteries, filling ditches, or other purposes in
fortification; a fascine.
(n.) A bundle of pieces of wrought iron to be worked over into
bars or other shapes by rolling or hammering at a welding heat; a pile.
(n.) A bassoon. See Fagotto.
(n.) A person hired to take the place of another at the muster of
a company.
(n.) An old shriveled woman.
(v. t.) To make a fagot of; to bind together in a fagot or
bundle; also, to collect promiscuously.
(n.) The leaves of an orchid (Angraecum fragrans), of the islands
of Bourbon and Mauritius, used (in France) as a substitute for Chinese
tea.
(superl.) Lacking strength; weak; languid; inclined to swoon; as,
faint with fatigue, hunger, or thirst.
(superl.) Wanting in courage, spirit, or energy; timorous;
cowardly; dejected; depressed; as, "Faint heart ne'er won fair lady."
(superl.) Lacking distinctness; hardly perceptible; striking the
senses feebly; not bright, or loud, or sharp, or forcible; weak; as, a
faint color, or sound.
(superl.) Performed, done, or acted, in a weak or feeble manner;
not exhibiting vigor, strength, or energy; slight; as, faint efforts;
faint resistance.
(n.) The act of fainting, or the state of one who has fainted; a
swoon. [R.] See Fainting, n.
(v. i.) To become weak or wanting in vigor; to grow feeble; to
lose strength and color, and the control of the bodily or mental
functions; to swoon; -- sometimes with away. See Fainting, n.
(n.) To sink into dejection; to lose courage or spirit; to become
depressed or despondent.
(n.) To decay; to disappear; to vanish.
(v. t.) To cause to faint or become dispirited; to depress; to
weaken.
(n.) A place or establishment where iron or other metals are
wrought by heating and hammering; especially, a furnace, or a shop with
its furnace, etc., where iron is heated and wrought; a smithy.
(n.) The works where wrought iron is produced directly from the
ore, or where iron is rendered malleable by puddling and shingling; a
shingling mill.
(n.) The act of beating or working iron or steel; the manufacture
of metalic bodies.
(n.) To form by heating and hammering; to beat into any
particular shape, as a metal.
(n.) To form or shape out in any way; to produce; to frame; to
invent.
(n.) To coin.
(n.) To make falsely; to produce, as that which is untrue or not
genuine; to fabricate; to counterfeit, as, a signature, or a signed
document.
(v. t.) To commit forgery.
(v. t.) To move heavily and slowly, as a ship after the sails are
furled; to work one's way, as one ship in outsailing another; -- used
especially in the phrase to forge ahead.
(v. t.) To impel forward slowly; as, to forge a ship forward.
(v. i.) To pass by; to leave. See 1st Forego.
(a.) Opening into two or more parts or shoots; forked; furcated.
(n.) The strong point; that in which one excels.
(n.) The stronger part of the blade of a sword; the part of half
nearest the hilt; -- opposed to foible.
(a. & adv.) Loudly; strongly; powerfully.
(a.) Four times ten; thirty-nine and one more.
(n.) The sum of four tens; forty units or objects.
(n.) A symbol expressing forty units; as, 40, or xl.
(n.) A pit, groove, cavity, or depression, of greater or less
depth; as, the temporal fossa on the side of the skull; the nasal
fossae containing the nostrils in most birds.
(n.) A ditch or moat.
(n.) See Fossa.
() imp. & p. p. of Find.
(v. t.) To form by melting a metal, and pouring it into a mold;
to cast.
(n.) A thin, single-cut file for combmakers.
(v. i.) To lay the basis of; to set, or place, as on something
solid, for support; to ground; to establish upon a basis, literal or
figurative; to fix firmly.
(v. i.) To take the ffirst steps or measures in erecting or
building up; to furnish the materials for beginning; to begin to raise;
to originate; as, to found a college; to found a family.
(n.) Alt. of Fourbe
(a.) Despicable.
(n.) A slight depression or pit; a fossa.
(pl. ) of Fowl
(pl. ) of Fox
(imp. & p. p.) of Fox
(v. t.) To break; to violate.
(a.) Discolored or stained; -- said of timber, and also of the
paper of books or engravings.
(a.) Repaired by foxing; as, foxed boots.
(n. pl.) See Fox, n., 7.
(a.) Foxlike.
(n.) A lobby in a theater; a greenroom.
(n.) The crucible or basin in a furnace which receives the molten
metal.
(n.) A basket made of rushes, used chiefly for containing figs
and raisins.
(n.) The quantity of raisins -- about thirty-two, fifty-six, or
seventy-five pounds, -- contained in a frail.
(n.) A rush for weaving baskets.
(superl) Easily broken; fragile; not firm or durable; liable to
fail and perish; easily destroyed; not tenacious of life; weak; infirm.
(superl) Tender.
(superl) Liable to fall from virtue or be led into sin; not
strong against temptation; weak in resolution; also, unchaste; -- often
applied to fallen women.
(a.) A silver coin of France, and since 1795 the unit of the
French monetary system. It has been adopted by Belgium and Swizerland.
It is equivalent to about nineteen cents, or ten pence, and is divided
into 100 centimes.
(n.) A crowd, a rabble.
(n.) Deception deliberately practiced with a view to gaining an
unlawful or unfair advantage; artifice by which the right or interest
of another is injured; injurious stratagem; deceit; trick.
(n.) An intentional perversion of truth for the purpose of
obtaining some valuable thing or promise from another.
(n.) A trap or snare.
(v. t.) To variegate; to checker; to streak.
(n.) A sudden causeless change or turn of the mind; a whim of
fancy; a capricious prank; a vagary or caprice.
(v. t.) To checker; to diversify.
(n. pl.) The settlings of oil, molasses, etc., at the bottom of a
barrel or hogshead.
(a.) Having foots, or settlings; as, footy oil, molasses, etc.
(a.) Poor; mean.
(n.) A sudden or irregular incursion in border warfare; hence,
any irregular incursion for war or spoils; a raid.
(v. t.) To pillage; to ravage.
(adv. & prep.) Near; hard by; along; past.
(v. t.) To stuff; to lard; to farce.
(n.) A waterfall; a cascade.
(n.) Strength or energy of body or mind; active power; vigor;
might; often, an unusual degree of strength or energy; capacity of
exercising an influence or producing an effect; especially, power to
persuade, or convince, or impose obligation; pertinency; validity;
special signification; as, the force of an appeal, an argument, a
contract, or a term.
(n.) Power exerted against will or consent; compulsory power;
violence; coercion.
(n.) Strength or power for war; hence, a body of land or naval
combatants, with their appurtenances, ready for action; -- an armament;
troops; warlike array; -- often in the plural; hence, a body of men
prepared for action in other ways; as, the laboring force of a
plantation.
(n.) Strength or power exercised without law, or contrary to law,
upon persons or things; violence.
(n.) Validity; efficacy.
(n.) Any action between two bodies which changes, or tends to
change, their relative condition as to rest or motion; or, more
generally, which changes, or tends to change, any physical relation
between them, whether mechanical, thermal, chemical, electrical,
magnetic, or of any other kind; as, the force of gravity; cohesive
force; centrifugal force.
(n.) To constrain to do or to forbear, by the exertion of a power
not resistible; to compel by physical, moral, or intellectual means; to
coerce; as, masters force slaves to labor.
(n.) To compel, as by strength of evidence; as, to force
conviction on the mind.
(n.) To do violence to; to overpower, or to compel by violence to
one;s will; especially, to ravish; to violate; to commit rape upon.
(n.) To obtain or win by strength; to take by violence or
struggle; specifically, to capture by assault; to storm, as a fortress.
(n.) To impel, drive, wrest, extort, get, etc., by main strength
or violence; -- with a following adverb, as along, away, from, into,
through, out, etc.
(n.) To put in force; to cause to be executed; to make binding;
to enforce.
(n.) To exert to the utmost; to urge; hence, to strain; to urge
to excessive, unnatural, or untimely action; to produce by unnatural
effort; as, to force a consient or metaphor; to force a laugh; to force
fruits.
(n.) To compel (an adversary or partner) to trump a trick by
leading a suit of which he has none.
(n.) To provide with forces; to reenforce; to strengthen by
soldiers; to man; to garrison.
(n.) To allow the force of; to value; to care for.
(v. i.) To use violence; to make violent effort; to strive; to
endeavor.
(v. i.) To make a difficult matter of anything; to labor; to
hesitate; hence, to force of, to make much account of; to regard.
(v. i.) To be of force, importance, or weight; to matter.
(v. i.) To destroy; to undo; to ruin.
(v. i.) To overcome with fatigue; to exhaust.
(a.) Same as Pate or Patte.
(a.) First.
(n.) A kind of parchment for book covers. See Forrill.
(v. t.) To bind with a forel.
(a.) Abounding in ferns.
(v. t.) To carry or transport over a river, strait, or other
narrow water, in a boat.
(v. i.) To pass over water in a boat or by a ferry.
(v. t.) A place where persons or things are carried across a
river, arm of the sea, etc., in a ferryboat.
(v. t.) A vessel in which passengers and goods are conveyed over
narrow waters; a ferryboat; a wherry.
(v. t.) A franchise or right to maintain a vessel for carrying
passengers and freight across a river, bay, etc., charging tolls.
(n.) A band drawn horizontally across the center of an
escutcheon, and containing in breadth the third part of it; one of the
nine honorable ordinaries.
(a.) Pertaining to, or connected with, a fetus; as, fetal
circulation; fetal membranes.
(v. t.) To bear toward the person speaking, or the person or
thing from whose point of view the action is contemplated; to go and
bring; to get.
(v. t.) To obtain as price or equivalent; to sell for.
(v. t.) To recall from a swoon; to revive; -- sometimes with to;
as, to fetch a man to.
(v. t.) To reduce; to throw.
(v. t.) To bring to accomplishment; to achieve; to make; to
perform, with certain objects; as, to fetch a compass; to fetch a leap;
to fetch a sigh.
(v. t.) To bring or get within reach by going; to reach; to
arrive at; to attain; to reach by sailing.
(v. t.) To cause to come; to bring to a particular state.
(v. i.) To bring one's self; to make headway; to veer; as, to
fetch about; to fetch to windward.
(n.) A stratagem by which a thing is indirectly brought to pass,
or by which one thing seems intended and another is done; a trick; an
artifice.
(n.) The apparation of a living person; a wraith.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fete
(a.) Having an offensive smell; stinking.
(a.) Neat; pretty; well made; graceful.
(n.) A strong, offensive smell; stench; fetidness.
(n.) The young or embryo of an animal in the womb, or in the egg;
often restricted to the later stages in the development of viviparous
and oviparous animals, embryo being applied to the earlier stages.
(n.) One who holds a feu.
(n.) A diseased state of the system, marked by increased heat,
acceleration of the pulse, and a general derangement of the functions,
including usually, thirst and loss of appetite. Many diseases, of which
fever is the most prominent symptom, are denominated fevers; as,
typhoid fever; yellow fever.
(n.) Excessive excitement of the passions in consequence of
strong emotion; a condition of great excitement; as, this quarrel has
set my blood in a fever.
(v. t.) To put into a fever; to affect with fever; as, a fevered
lip.
(n.) One of the delicate, threadlike portions of which the
tissues of plants and animals are in part constituted; as, the fiber of
flax or of muscle.
(n.) Any fine, slender thread, or threadlike substance; as, a
fiber of spun glass; especially, one of the slender rootlets of a
plant.
(n.) Sinew; strength; toughness; as, a man of real fiber.
(n.) A general name for the raw material, such as cotton, flax,
hemp, etc., used in textile manufactures.
(a.) See FitchE.
(n.) A light cape, usually of lace, worn by women, to cover the
neck and throat, and extending to the shoulders.
(n. & i.) See Fidget.
(a.) Consisting of, containing, or resembling, fire; as, the
fiery gulf of Etna; a fiery appearance.
(a.) Vehement; ardent; very active; impetuous.
(a.) Passionate; easily provoked; irritable.
(a.) Unrestrained; fierce; mettlesome; spirited.
(a.) heated by fire, or as if by fire; burning hot; parched;
feverish.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fife
(n.) One who plays on a fife.
(a.) Next in order after the fourth; -- the ordinal of five.
(a.) Consisting of one of five equal divisions of a thing.
(n.) The quotient of a unit divided by five; one of five equal
parts; a fifth part.
(n.) The interval of three tones and a semitone, embracing five
diatonic degrees of the scale; the dominant of any key.
(a.) Five times ten; as, fifty men.
(n.) The sum of five tens; fifty units or objects.
(n.) A symbol representing fifty units, as 50, or l.
(v. i.) To strive or contend for victory, with armies or in
single combat; to attempt to defeat, subdue, or destroy an enemy,
either by blows or weapons; to contend in arms; -- followed by with or
against.
(v. i.) To act in opposition to anything; to struggle against; to
contend; to strive; to make resistance.
(v. t.) To carry on, or wage, as a conflict, or battle; to win or
gain by struggle, as one's way; to sustain by fighting, as a cause.
(v. t.) To contend with in battle; to war against; as, they
fought the enemy in two pitched battles; the sloop fought the frigate
for three hours.
(v. t.) To cause to fight; to manage or maneuver in a fight; as,
to fight cocks; to fight one's ship.
(v. i.) A battle; an engagement; a contest in arms; a combat; a
violent conflict or struggle for victory, between individuals or
between armies, ships, or navies, etc.
(v. i.) A struggle or contest of any kind.
(v. i.) Strength or disposition for fighting; pugnacity; as, he
has a great deal of fight in him.
(v. i.) A screen for the combatants in ships.
(a.) Of or pertaining to a thread or line; characterized by
threads stretched across the field of view; as, a filar microscope; a
filar micrometer.
(v. t.) To steal or take privily (commonly, that which is of
little value); to pilfer.
(imp. & p. p.) of File
(n.) A female foal or colt; a young mare. Cf. Colt, Foal.
(n.) A lively, spirited young girl.
(a.) Composed of film or films.
(n.) Foul matter; anything that soils or defiles; dirt;
nastiness.
(n.) Anything that sullies or defiles the moral character;
corruption; pollution.
(a.) Pertaining to the end or conclusion; last; terminating;
ultimate; as, the final day of a school term.
(a.) Conclusive; decisive; as, a final judgment; the battle of
Waterloo brought the contest to a final issue.
(a.) Respecting an end or object to be gained; respecting the
purpose or ultimate end in view.
(n.) A small singing bird of many genera and species, belonging
to the family Fringillidae.
(imp. & p. p.) of Find
(a.) Full; heavy; firm; solid; substemtial.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fine
(n.) Moldiness.
(n.) An end; conclusion. It is often placed at the end of a book.
(n. pl.) Natives of Finland; Finlanders.
(n. pl.) A branch of the Mongolian race, inhabiting Northern and
Eastern Europe, including the Magyars, Bulgarians, Permians, Lapps, and
Finlanders.
(n. pl.) Second best wool from Merino sheep.
(n.) A narrow inlet of the sea, penetrating between high banks or
rocks, as on the coasts of Norway and Alaska.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fire
(n.) One who fires or sets fire to anything; an incendiary.
(a.) The principal rafters of a roof, especially a pair of
rafters taken together.
(a.) Made of fir; abounding in firs.
(a.) Preceding all others of a series or kind; the ordinal of
one; earliest; as, the first day of a month; the first year of a reign.
(a.) Foremost; in front of, or in advance of, all others.
(a.) Most eminent or exalted; most excellent; chief; highest; as,
Demosthenes was the first orator of Greece.
(adv.) Before any other person or thing in time, space, rank,
etc.; -- much used in composition with adjectives and participles.
(n.) The upper part of a duet, trio, etc., either vocal or
instrumental; -- so called because it generally expresses the air, and
has a preeminence in the combined effect.
(a.) Consisting of fish; fishlike; having the qualities or taste
of fish; abounding in fish.
(a.) Extravagant, like some stories about catching fish;
improbable; also, rank or foul.
(adv.) In a fit manner; suitably; properly; conveniently; as, a
maxim fitly applied.
(n. pl.) A kind of play with a ball against a wall, resembling
tennis; -- so named because three fives, or fifteen, are counted to the
game.
(n.) A disease of the glands under the ear in horses; the vives.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fix
(a.) Securely placed or fastened; settled; established; firm;
imovable; unalterable.
(a.) Stable; non-volatile.
(n.) See Fiord.
(n.) An instrument for threshing or beating grain from the ear by
hand, consisting of a wooden staff or handle, at the end of which a
stouter and shorter pole or club, called a swipe, is so hung as to
swing freely.
(n.) An ancient military weapon, like the common flail, often
having the striking part armed with rows of spikes, or loaded.
() p. p. of Flay.
(n.) A paling; a hurdle.
(n.) A platform of hurdles, or small sticks made fast or
interwoven, supported by stanchions, for drying codfish and other
things.
(n.) A small stage hung over a vessel's side, for workmen to
stand on in calking, etc.
(n.) A loose filmy mass or a thin chiplike layer of anything; a
film; flock; lamina; layer; scale; as, a flake of snow, tallow, or
fish.
(n.) A little particle of lighted or incandescent matter, darted
from a fire; a flash.
(n.) A sort of carnation with only two colors in the flower, the
petals having large stripes.
(v. t.) To form into flakes.
(v. i.) To separate in flakes; to peel or scale off.
(a.) Consisting of flakes or of small, loose masses; lying, or
cleaving off, in flakes or layers; flakelike.
(n.) A stream of burning vapor or gas, emitting light and heat;
darting or streaming fire; a blaze; a fire.
(n.) Burning zeal or passion; elevated and noble enthusiasm;
glowing imagination; passionate excitement or anger.
(n.) Ardor of affection; the passion of love.
(n.) A person beloved; a sweetheart.
(n.) To burn with a flame or blaze; to burn as gas emitted from
bodies in combustion; to blaze.
(n.) To burst forth like flame; to break out in violence of
passion; to be kindled with zeal or ardor.
(v. t.) To kindle; to inflame; to excite.
(a.) Flaming; blazing; flamelike; flame-colored; composed of
flame.
(n.) A miner's two-pointed pick.
(n.) The fleshy or muscular part of the side of an animal,
between the ribs and the hip. See Illust. of Beef.
(n.) The side of an army, or of any division of an army, as of a
brigade, regiment, or battalion; the extreme right or left; as, to
attack an enemy in flank is to attack him on the side.
(n.) That part of a bastion which reaches from the curtain to the
face, and defends the curtain, the flank and face of the opposite
bastion; any part of a work defending another by a fire along the
outside of its parapet.
(n.) The side of any building.
(n.) That part of the acting surface of a gear wheel tooth that
lies within the pitch line.
(v. t.) To stand at the flank or side of; to border upon.
(v. t.) To overlook or command the flank of; to secure or guard
the flank of; to pass around or turn the flank of; to attack, or
threaten to attack; the flank of.
(v. i.) To border; to touch.
(v. i.) To be posted on the side.
(v. i.) To burn with an unsteady or waving flame; as, the candle
flares.
(v. i.) To shine out with a sudden and unsteady light; to emit a
dazzling or painfully bright light.
(v. i.) To shine out with gaudy colors; to flaunt; to be
offensively bright or showy.
(v. i.) To be exposed to too much light.
(v. i.) To open or spread outwards; to project beyond the
perpendicular; as, the sides of a bowl flare; the bows of a ship flare.
(n.) An unsteady, broad, offensive light.
(n.) A spreading outward; as, the flare of a fireplace.
(n.) Leaf of lard.
(v. i.) To burst or break forth with a sudden and transient flood
of flame and light; as, the lighting flashes vividly; the powder
flashed.
(v. i.) To break forth, as a sudden flood of light; to burst
instantly and brightly on the sight; to show a momentary brilliancy; to
come or pass like a flash.
(v. i.) To burst forth like a sudden flame; to break out
violently; to rush hastily.
(v. t.) To send out in flashes; to cause to burst forth with
sudden flame or light.
(v. t.) To convey as by a flash; to light up, as by a sudden
flame or light; as, to flash a message along the wires; to flash
conviction on the mind.
(v. t.) To cover with a thin layer, as objects of glass with
glass of a different color. See Flashing, n., 3 (b).
(n.) To trick up in a showy manner.
(n.) To strike and throw up large bodies of water from the
surface; to splash.
(n.) A sudden burst of light; a flood of light instantaneously
appearing and disappearing; a momentary blaze; as, a flash of
lightning.
(n.) A sudden and brilliant burst, as of wit or genius; a
momentary brightness or show.
(n.) The time during which a flash is visible; an instant; a very
brief period.
(n.) A preparation of capsicum, burnt sugar, etc., for coloring
and giving a fictious strength to liquors.
(a.) Showy, but counterfeit; cheap, pretentious, and vulgar; as,
flash jewelry; flash finery.
(a.) Wearing showy, counterfeit ornaments; vulgarly pretentious;
as, flash people; flash men or women; -- applied especially to thieves,
gamblers, and prostitutes that dress in a showy way and wear much cheap
jewelry.
(n.) Slang or cant of thieves and prostitutes.
(n.) A pool.
(n.) A reservoir and sluiceway beside a navigable stream, just
above a shoal, so that the stream may pour in water as boats pass, and
thus bear them over the shoal.
(n.) A small bottle-shaped vessel for holding fluids; as, a flask
of oil or wine.
(n.) A narrow-necked vessel of metal or glass, used for various
purposes; as of sheet metal, to carry gunpowder in; or of wrought iron,
to contain quicksilver; or of glass, to heat water in, etc.
(n.) A bed in a gun carriage.
(n.) The wooden or iron frame which holds the sand, etc., forming
the mold used in a foundry; it consists of two or more parts; viz., the
cope or top; sometimes, the cheeks, or middle part; and the drag, or
bottom part. When there are one or more cheeks, the flask is called a
three part flask, four part flask, etc.
(n.) A sort of flat custard or pie.
(a.) Full of flaws or cracks; broken; defective; faulty.
(a.) Subject to sudden flaws or gusts of wind.
(a.) Like flax; flaxen.
(n.) A flake; a thread or twist.
(n.) A sharp instrument used for opening veins, lancing gums,
etc.; a kind of lancet.
(v. t. & i.) See Fleer.
(n.) One who flees.
() To make a wry face in contempt, or to grin in scorn; to
deride; to sneer; to mock; to gibe; as, to fleer and flout.
() To grin with an air of civility; to leer.
(v. t.) To mock; to flout at.
(n.) A word or look of derision or mockery.
(n.) A grin of civility; a leer.
(v. t.) To banish; to drive out; to expel.
(n.) The aggregate of the muscles, fat, and other tissues which
cover the framework of bones in man and other animals; especially, the
muscles.
(n.) Animal food, in distinction from vegetable; meat;
especially, the body of beasts and birds used as food, as distinguished
from fish.
(n.) The human body, as distinguished from the soul; the
corporeal person.
(n.) The human eace; mankind; humanity.
(n.) Human nature
(n.) In a good sense, tenderness of feeling; gentleness.
(n.) In a bad sense, tendency to transient or physical pleasure;
desire for sensual gratification; carnality.
(n.) The character under the influence of animal propensities or
selfish passions; the soul unmoved by spiritual influences.
(n.) Kindred; stock; race.
(n.) The soft, pulpy substance of fruit; also, that part of a
root, fruit, and the like, which is fit to be eaten.
(v. t.) To feed with flesh, as an incitement to further exertion;
to initiate; -- from the practice of training hawks and dogs by feeding
them with the first game they take, or other flesh. Hence, to use upon
flesh (as a murderous weapon) so as to draw blood, especially for the
first time.
(v. t.) To glut; to satiate; hence, to harden, to accustom.
(v. t.) To remove flesh, membrance, etc., from, as from hides.
(n. pl.) The pendulous or overhanging lateral parts of the upper
lip of dogs, especially prominent in hounds; -- called also chaps. See
Illust. of Bloodhound.
(v. t.) To whip lightly or with a quick jerk; to flap; as, to
flick a horse; to flick the dirt from boots.
(n.) A flitch; as, a flick of bacon.
(v.) One who flies or flees; a runaway; a fugitive.
(v.) A fly. See Fly, n., 9, and 13 (b).
(n.) See Flyer, n., 5.
(n.) See Flyer, n., 4.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fling
(v. t.) To cast, send, to throw from the hand; to hurl; to dart;
to emit with violence as if thrown from the hand; as, to fing a stone
into the pond.
(v. t.) To shed forth; to emit; to scatter.
(v. t.) To throw; to hurl; to throw off or down; to prostrate;
hence, to baffle; to defeat; as, to fling a party in litigation.
(v. i.) To throw; to wince; to flounce; as, the horse began to
kick and fling.
(v. i.) To cast in the teeth; to utter abusive language; to
sneer; as, the scold began to flout and fling.
(v. i.) To throw one's self in a violent or hasty manner; to rush
or spring with violence or haste.
(n.) A cast from the hand; a throw; also, a flounce; a kick; as,
the fling of a horse.
(n.) A severe or contemptuous remark; an expression of sarcastic
scorn; a gibe; a sarcasm.
(n.) A kind of dance; as, the Highland fling.
(n.) A trifing matter; an object of contempt.
(v. t.) To turn inside out, or with the leg part back over the
foot, as a stocking in pulling off or for putting on.
(v. t.) To throw with a jerk or quick effort; to fling suddenly;
as, they flirt water in each other's faces; he flirted a glove, or a
handkerchief.
(v. t.) To toss or throw about; to move playfully to and fro; as,
to flirt a fan.
(v. t.) To jeer at; to treat with contempt; to mock.
(v. i.) To run and dart about; to act with giddiness, or from a
desire to attract notice; especially, to play the coquette; to play at
courtship; to coquet; as, they flirt with the young men.
(v. i.) To utter contemptuous language, with an air of disdain;
to jeer or gibe.
(n.) A sudden jerk; a quick throw or cast; a darting motion;
hence, a jeer.
(v. t.) One who flirts; esp., a woman who acts with giddiness, or
plays at courtship; a coquette; a pert girl.
(a.) Pert; wanton.
(v. i.) To frisk; to skip; to caper.
(n.) A caper; a spring; a whim.
(v. i.) To scold; to quarrel.
(v. i.) Anything which floats or rests on the surface of a fluid,
as to sustain weight, or to indicate the height of the surface, or mark
the place of, something.
(v. i.) A mass of timber or boards fastened together, and
conveyed down a stream by the current; a raft.
(v. i.) The hollow, metallic ball of a self-acting faucet, which
floats upon the water in a cistern or boiler.
(v. i.) The cork or quill used in angling, to support the bait
line, and indicate the bite of a fish.
(v. i.) Anything used to buoy up whatever is liable to sink; an
inflated bag or pillow used by persons learning to swim; a life
preserver.
(v. i.) A float board. See Float board (below).
(v. i.) A contrivance for affording a copious stream of water to
the heated surface of an object of large bulk, as an anvil or die.
(v. i.) The act of flowing; flux; flow.
(v. i.) A quantity of earth, eighteen feet square and one foot
deep.
(v. i.) The trowel or tool with which the floated coat of
plastering is leveled and smoothed.
(v. i.) A polishing block used in marble working; a runner.
(v. i.) A single-cut file for smoothing; a tool used by
shoemakers for rasping off pegs inside a shoe.
(v. i.) A coal cart.
(v. i.) The sea; a wave. See Flote, n.
(n.) To rest on the surface of any fluid; to swim; to be buoyed
up.
(n.) To move quietly or gently on the water, as a raft; to drift
along; to move or glide without effort or impulse on the surface of a
fluid, or through the air.
(v. t.) To cause to float; to cause to rest or move on the
surface of a fluid; as, the tide floated the ship into the harbor.
(v. t.) To flood; to overflow; to cover with water.
(v. t.) To pass over and level the surface of with a float while
the plastering is kept wet.
(v. t.) To support and sustain the credit of, as a commercial
scheme or a joint-stock company, so as to enable it to go into, or
continue in, operation.
(n.) A company or collection of living creatures; -- especially
applied to sheep and birds, rarely to persons or (except in the plural)
to cattle and other large animals; as, a flock of ravenous fowl.
(n.) A Christian church or congregation; considered in their
relation to the pastor, or minister in charge.
(v. i.) To gather in companies or crowds.
(v. t.) To flock to; to crowd.
(n.) A lock of wool or hair.
(n.) Woolen or cotton refuse (sing. / pl.), old rags, etc.,
reduced to a degree of fineness by machinery, and used for stuffing
unpholstered furniture.
(sing. / pl.) Very fine, sifted, woolen refuse, especially that
from shearing the nap of cloths, used as a coating for wall paper to
give it a velvety or clothlike appearance; also, the dust of vegetable
fiber used for a similar purpose.
(v. t.) To coat with flock, as wall paper; to roughen the surface
of (as glass) so as to give an appearance of being covered with fine
flock.
() imp. & p. p. of Fling.
(n.) A fluke of an anchor.
(n.) The bottom or lower part of any room; the part upon which we
stand and upon which the movables in the room are supported.
(n.) The structure formed of beams, girders, etc., with proper
covering, which divides a building horizontally into stories. Floor in
sense 1 is, then, the upper surface of floor in sense 2.
(n.) The surface, or the platform, of a structure on which we
walk or travel; as, the floor of a bridge.
(n.) A story of a building. See Story.
(n.) The part of the house assigned to the members.
(n.) The right to speak.
(n.) That part of the bottom of a vessel on each side of the
keelson which is most nearly horizontal.
(n.) The rock underlying a stratified or nearly horizontal
deposit.
(n.) A horizontal, flat ore body.
(v. t.) To cover with a floor; to furnish with a floor; as, to
floor a house with pine boards.
(v. t.) To strike down or lay level with the floor; to knock
down; hence, to silence by a conclusive answer or retort; as, to floor
an opponent.
(v. t.) To finish or make an end of; as, to floor a college
examination.
(n.) A hopper-shaped box or /nortar in which ore is placed for
the action of the stamps.
(n.) A fleet; especially, a /eet of Spanish ships which formerly
sailed every year from Cadiz to Vera Cruz, in Mexico, to transport to
Spain the production of Spanish America.
(v. t.) To fleet; to skim.
(n.) A wave.
(n.) The finely ground meal of wheat, or of any other grain;
especially, the finer part of meal separated by bolting; hence, the
fine and soft powder of any substance; as, flour of emery; flour of
mustard.
(v. t.) To grind and bolt; to convert into flour; as, to flour
wheat.
(v. t.) To sprinkle with flour.