- purre
- pursy
- putid
- putty
- pygal
- pylon
- pyoid
- pyral
- papaw
- paper
- plane
- papal
- plash
- paged
- pains
- paint
- pacos
- padge
- paean
- pagan
- pagod
- paced
- pacer
- pacha
- panel
- pedo-
- para-
- panel
- pyro-
- pedal
- predy
- preen
- prees
- pungy
- plash
- panel
- pacha
- perdy
- perch
- punka
- punto
- punty
- pupas
- param
- pappy
- perch
- pulse
- pugil
- puked
- puker
- pulas
- prest
- polka
- phlox
- phoca
- poly-
- preve
- photo
- polyp
- prick
- pried
- prier
- prill
- prime
- primp
- primy
- phyle
- phyla
- phyma
- prink
- pomel
- pomey
- pomme
- piano
- prise
- picra
- picul
- piece
- piend
- piety
- pight
- piked
- pilau
- pilch
- piled
- piler
- piles
- pilei
- privy
- prize
- porch
- pored
- porer
- porgy
- pilot
- probe
- pinax
- pinch
- pined
- piney
- pinic
- pinky
- prodd
- plant
- posed
- poser
- posit
- proem
- pious
- piped
- posse
- post-
- puled
- puler
- pulli
- pulpy
- pudgy
- pudic
- puffy
- pubes
- pubic
- pubis
- pshaw
- pried
- psalm
- psoas
- psora
- proxy
- prude
- prune
- psalm
- prowl
- prate
- prawn
- prank
- prase
- prae-
- prove
- poxed
- poyou
- praam
- prove
- powan
- potto
- pouch
- poulp
- poult
- potch
- potoo
- prosy
- plasm
- platy
- plumb
- props
- prose
- prore
- proof
- pedi-
- phono
- prone
- prong
- proke
- penal
- paise
- pelta
- peert
- palmy
- paled
- palea
- paled
- palsy
- pitch
- pishu
- piste
- palpi
- paned
- panel
- paste
- pasty
- patas
- patch
- pated
- patee
- paths
- patio
- patly
- patte
- pause
- pauxi
- pavan
- paved
- paven
- pavid
- pavin
- pawed
- pawky
- payee
- payen
- payer
- payor
- peach
- peage
- peaky
- peart
- peaty
- pecan
- plain
- plaid
- plain
- peril
- plaud
- playa
- parch
- parde
- plaza
- plead
- pleat
- plebe
- pared
- parer
- perky
- pari-
- parle
- plica
- plied
- ploce
- plait
- pitch
- palpi
- palsy
- peise
- pekan
- pekoe
- parol
- pluck
- pluff
- parse
- pluff
- pluma
- plump
- plumy
- plush
- plied
- pedes
- pesky
- party
- pasan
- pasha
- plyer
- poach
- pocan
- petal
- pocky
- podge
- podgy
- podia
- podo-
- petre
- poesy
- poggy
- poind
- petto
- pewee
- pewit
- paste
- panel
- phane
- pharo
- poise
- phase
- phasm
- poked
- poker
- pokey
- polar
- pheon
- phial
- poled
- poley
- peri-
- peris
- panda
- place
- plack
- plaga
- plage
- pithy
- pivot
- pixie
- pitch
- pupal
- pupil
- pured
- puree
- purge
- puppy
- palet
- penis
- palet
- pique
- pisay
- pipit
(n.) The dunlin.
(a.) Fat and short-breathed; fat, short, and thick; swelled with
pampering; as, pursy insolence.
(a.) Rotten; fetid; stinking; base; worthless. Jer. Taylor.
(n.) A kind of thick paste or cement compounded of whiting, or
soft carbonate of lime, and linseed oil, when applied beaten or kneaded
to the consistence of dough, -- used in fastening glass in sashes,
stopping crevices, and for similar purposes.
(v. t.) To cement, or stop, with putty.
(a.) Situated in the region of the rump, or posterior end of the
backbone; -- applied especially to the posterior median plates in the
carapace of chelonians.
(n.) A low tower, having a truncated pyramidal form, and flanking
an ancient Egyptian gateway.
(n.) An Egyptian gateway to a large building (with or without
flanking towers).
(a.) Of or pertaining to pus; of the nature of, or like, pus.
(a.) Of or pertaining to a pyre.
(n.) A tree (Carica Papaya) of tropical America, belonging to the
order Passifloreae. It has a soft, spongy stem, eighteen or twenty feet
high, crowned with a tuft of large, long-stalked, palmately lobed
leaves. The milky juice of the plant is said to have the property of
making meat tender. Also, its dull orange-colored, melon-shaped fruit,
which is eaten both raw and cooked or pickled.
(n.) A tree of the genus Asimina (A. triloba), growing in the
western and southern parts of the United States, and producing a sweet
edible fruit; also, the fruit itself.
(n.) A substance in the form of thin sheets or leaves intended to
be written or printed on, or to be used in wrapping. It is made of
rags, straw, bark, wood, or other fibrous material, which is first
reduced to pulp, then molded, pressed, and dried.
(n.) A sheet, leaf, or piece of such substance.
(n.) A printed or written instrument; a document, essay, or the
like; a writing; as, a paper read before a scientific society.
(n.) A printed sheet appearing periodically; a newspaper; a
journal; as, a daily paper.
(n.) Negotiable evidences of indebtedness; notes; bills of
exchange, and the like; as, the bank holds a large amount of his paper.
(n.) Decorated hangings or coverings for walls, made of paper.
See Paper hangings, below.
(n.) A paper containing (usually) a definite quantity; as, a
paper of pins, tacks, opium, etc.
(n.) A medicinal preparation spread upon paper, intended for
external application; as, cantharides paper.
(a.) Of or pertaining to paper; made of paper; resembling paper;
existing only on paper; unsubstantial; as, a paper box; a paper army.
(v. t.) To cover with paper; to furnish with paper hangings; as,
to paper a room or a house.
(v. t.) To fold or inclose in paper.
(v. t.) To put on paper; to make a memorandum of.
(n.) Any tree of the genus Platanus.
(a.) Without elevations or depressions; even; level; flat; lying
in, or constituting, a plane; as, a plane surface.
(a.) A surface, real or imaginary, in which, if any two points
are taken, the straight line which joins them lies wholly in that
surface; or a surface, any section of which by a like surface is a
straight line; a surface without curvature.
(a.) An ideal surface, conceived as coinciding with, or
containing, some designated astronomical line, circle, or other curve;
as, the plane of an orbit; the plane of the ecliptic, or of the
equator.
(a.) A block or plate having a perfectly flat surface, used as a
standard of flatness; a surface plate.
(a.) A tool for smoothing boards or other surfaces of wood, for
forming moldings, etc. It consists of a smooth-soled stock, usually of
wood, from the under side or face of which projects slightly the steel
cutting edge of a chisel, called the iron, which inclines backward,
with an apperture in front for the escape of shavings; as, the jack
plane; the smoothing plane; the molding plane, etc.
(a.) To make smooth; to level; to pare off the inequalities of
the surface of, as of a board or other piece of wood, by the use of a
plane; as, to plane a plank.
(a.) To efface or remove.
(a.) Figuratively, to make plain or smooth.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the pope of Rome; proceeding from the
pope; ordered or pronounced by the pope; as, papal jurisdiction; a
papal edict; the papal benediction.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the Roman Catholic Church.
(v.) A small pool of standing water; a puddle.
(v.) A dash of water; a splash.
(imp. & p. p.) of Page
(n.) Labor; toilsome effort; care or trouble taken; -- plural in
form, but used with a singular or plural verb, commonly the former.
(v. t.) To cover with coloring matter; to apply paint to; as, to
paint a house, a signboard, etc.
(v. t.) Fig.: To color, stain, or tinge; to adorn or beautify
with colors; to diversify with colors.
(v. t.) To form in colors a figure or likeness of on a flat
surface, as upon canvas; to represent by means of colors or hues; to
exhibit in a tinted image; to portray with paints; as, to paint a
portrait or a landscape.
(v. t.) Fig.: To represent or exhibit to the mind; to describe
vividly; to delineate; to image; to depict.
(v. t.) To practice the art of painting; as, the artist paints
well.
(v. t.) To color one's face by way of beautifying it.
(n.) A pigment or coloring substance.
(n.) The same prepared with a vehicle, as oil, water with gum, or
the like, for application to a surface.
(n.) A cosmetic; rouge.
(n.) Same as Alpaca.
(n.) An earthy-looking ore, consisting of brown oxide of iron
with minute particles of native silver.
(n.) The barn owl; -- called also pudge, and pudge owl.
(n.) An ancient Greek hymn in honor of Apollo as a healing deity,
and, later, a song addressed to other deities.
(n.) Any loud and joyous song; a song of triumph.
(n.) See Paeon.
(n.) One who worships false gods; an idolater; a heathen; one who
is neither a Christian, a Mohammedan, nor a Jew.
(n.) Of or pertaining to pagans; relating to the worship or the
worshipers of false goods; heathen; idolatrous, as, pagan tribes or
superstitions.
(n.) A pagoda. [R.] "Or some queer pagod."
(n.) An idol.
(imp. & p. p.) of Pace
(a.) Having, or trained in, [such] a pace or gait; trained; --
used in composition; as, slow-paced; a thorough-paced villain.
(n.) One who, or that which, paces; especially, a horse that
paces.
(n.) See Pasha.
(v. t.) To form in or with panels; as, to panel a wainscot.
() Combining forms from L. pes, pedis, foot, as pedipalp,
pedireme, pedometer.
() A prefix signifying alongside of, beside, beyond, against,
amiss; as parable, literally, a placing beside; paradox, that which is
contrary to opinion; parachronism.
() A prefix denoting: (a) Likeness, similarity, or connection, or
that the substance resembles, but is distinct from, that to the name of
which it is prefixed; as paraldehyde, paraconine, etc.; also, an
isomeric modification. (b) Specifically: (Organ. Chem.) That two groups
or radicals substituted in the benzene nucleus are opposite, or in the
respective positions 1 and 4; 2 and 5; or 3 and 6, as paraxylene;
paroxybenzoic acid. Cf. Ortho-, and Meta-. Also used adjectively.
(n.) Formerly, a piece of cloth serving as a saddle; hence, a
soft pad beneath a saddletree to prevent chafing.
(n.) A board having its edges inserted in the groove of a
surrounding frame; as, the panel of a door.
() Alt. of Pyr-
(a.) Of or pertaining to the foot, or to feet, literally or
figuratively; specifically (Zool.), pertaining to the foot of a
mollusk; as, the pedal ganglion.
(a.) Of or pertaining to a pedal; having pedals.
(a.) A lever or key acted on by the foot, as in the pianoforte to
raise the dampers, or in the organ to open and close certain pipes; a
treadle, as in a lathe or a bicycle.
(a.) A pedal curve or surface.
(a.) Cleared and ready for engagement, as a ship.
(n.) A forked tool used by clothiers in dressing cloth.
(n.) To dress with, or as with, a preen; to trim or dress with
the beak, as the feathers; -- said of birds.
(n.) To trim up, as trees.
(n.) Press; throng.
(n.) A small sloop or shallop, or a large boat with sails.
(v. i.) To dabble in water; to splash.
(v. t.) To splash, as water.
(v. t.) To splash or sprinkle with coloring matter; as, to plash
a wall in imitation of granite.
(v. t.) To cut partly, or to bend and intertwine the branches of;
as, to plash a hedge.
(n.) The branch of a tree partly cut or bent, and bound to, or
intertwined with, other branches.
(n.) One of the faces of a hewn stone.
(n.) A slab or plank of wood upon which, instead of canvas, a
picture is painted.
(n.) A heap of dressed ore.
(n.) A sunken compartment with raised margins, molded or
otherwise, as in ceilings, wainscotings, etc.
() The chief admiral of the Turkish fleet.
(adv.) Truly. See Parde.
(n.) A measure of length containing five and a half yards; a rod,
or pole.
(n.) In land or square measure: A square rod; the 160th part of
an acre.
(n.) In solid measure: A mass 16/ feet long, 1 foot in height,
and 1/ feet in breadth, or 24/ cubic feet (in local use, from 22 to 25
cubic feet); -- used in measuring stonework.
(n.) A pole connecting the fore gear and hind gear of a spring
carriage; a reach.
(v. i.) To alight or settle, as a bird; to sit or roost.
(v. t.) To place or to set on, or as on, a perch.
(v. t.) To occupy as a perch.
(n.) A machine for fanning a room, usually a movable fanlike
frame covered with canvas, and suspended from the ceiling. It is kept
in motion by pulling a cord.
(n.) A point or hit.
(n.) See Pontee.
(pl. ) of Pupa
(n.) A white crystalline nitrogenous substance (C2H4N4); --
called also dicyandiamide.
(a.) Like pap; soft; succulent; tender.
(n.) Any fresh-water fish of the genus Perca and of several other
allied genera of the family Percidae, as the common American or yellow
perch (Perca flavescens, / Americana), and the European perch (P.
fluviatilis).
(n.) Any one of numerous species of spiny-finned fishes belonging
to the Percidae, Serranidae, and related families, and resembling, more
or less, the true perches.
(n.) A pole; a long staff; a rod; esp., a pole or other support
for fowls to roost on or to rest on; a roost; figuratively, any
elevated resting place or seat.
(n.) Leguminous plants, or their seeds, as beans, pease, etc.
(n.) The beating or throbbing of the heart or blood vessels,
especially of the arteries.
(n.) Any measured or regular beat; any short, quick motion,
regularly repeated, as of a medium in the transmission of light, sound,
etc.; oscillation; vibration; pulsation; impulse; beat; movement.
(v. i.) To beat, as the arteries; to move in pulses or beats; to
pulsate; to throb.
(v. t.) To drive by a pulsation; to cause to pulsate.
(n.) As much as is taken up between the thumb and two first
fingers.
(imp. & p. p.) of Puke
(n.) One who pukes, vomits.
(n.) That which causes vomiting.
(n.) The East Indian leguminous tree Butea frondosa. See Gum
Butea, under Gum.
() imp. & p. p. of Press.
(a.) Ready; prompt; prepared.
(a.) Neat; tidy; proper.
(n.) Ready money; a loan of money.
(n.) A duty in money formerly paid by the sheriff on his account
in the exchequer, or for money left or remaining in his hands.
(v. t.) To give as a loan; to lend.
(n.) A dance of Polish origin, but now common everywhere. It is
performed by two persons in common time.
(n.) A lively Bohemian or Polish dance tune in 2-4 measure, with
the third quaver accented.
(n.) A genus of American herbs, having showy red, white, or
purple flowers.
(n.) A genus of seals. It includes the common harbor seal and
allied species. See Seal.
(a.) A combining form or prefix from Gr. poly`s, many; as,
polygon, a figure of many angles; polyatomic, having many atoms;
polychord, polyconic.
(v. i. & i.) To prove.
(n.) Proof.
(n.) A contraction of Photograph.
(n.) One of the feeding or nutritive zooids of a hydroid or
coral.
(n.) One of the Anthozoa.
(n.) Same as Anthozoa. See Anthozoa, Madreporaria, Hydroid.
(v.) That which pricks, penetrates, or punctures; a sharp and
slender thing; a pointed instrument; a goad; a spur, etc.; a point; a
skewer.
(v.) The act of pricking, or the sensation of being pricked; a
sharp, stinging pain; figuratively, remorse.
(v.) A mark made by a pointed instrument; a puncture; a point.
(v.) A point or mark on the dial, noting the hour.
(v.) The point on a target at which an archer aims; the mark; the
pin.
(v.) A mark denoting degree; degree; pitch.
(v.) A mathematical point; -- regularly used in old English
translations of Euclid.
(v.) The footprint of a hare.
(v.) A small roll; as, a prick of spun yarn; a prick of tobacco.
(n.) To pierce slightly with a sharp-pointed instrument or
substance; to make a puncture in, or to make by puncturing; to drive a
fine point into; as, to prick one with a pin, needle, etc.; to prick a
card; to prick holes in paper.
(n.) To fix by the point; to attach or hang by puncturing; as, to
prick a knife into a board.
(n.) To mark or denote by a puncture; to designate by pricking;
to choose; to mark; -- sometimes with off.
(n.) To mark the outline of by puncturing; to trace or form by
pricking; to mark by punctured dots; as, to prick a pattern for
embroidery; to prick the notes of a musical composition.
(n.) To ride or guide with spurs; to spur; to goad; to incite; to
urge on; -- sometimes with on, or off.
(n.) To affect with sharp pain; to sting, as with remorse.
(n.) To make sharp; to erect into a point; to raise, as something
pointed; -- said especially of the ears of an animal, as a horse or
dog; and usually followed by up; -- hence, to prick up the ears, to
listen sharply; to have the attention and interest strongly engaged.
(n.) To render acid or pungent.
(n.) To dress; to prink; -- usually with up.
(n.) To run a middle seam through, as the cloth of a sail.
(n.) To trace on a chart, as a ship's course.
(n.) To drive a nail into (a horse's foot), so as to cause
lameness.
(n.) To nick.
(v. i.) To be punctured; to suffer or feel a sharp pain, as by
puncture; as, a sore finger pricks.
(v. i.) To spur onward; to ride on horseback.
(v. i.) To become sharp or acid; to turn sour, as wine.
(v. i.) To aim at a point or mark.
() imp. & p. p. of Pry.
(n.) One who pries; one who inquires narrowly and searches, or is
inquisitive.
(n.) The brill.
(v. i.) To flow.
(n.) A stream.
(n.) A nugget of virgin metal.
(n.) Ore selected for excellence.
(n.) The button of metal from an assay.
(#) Donne (#) (pl. ) of Prima donna
(a.) First in order of time; original; primeval; primitive;
primary.
(a.) First in rank, degree, dignity, authority, or importance;
as, prime minister.
(a.) First in excellence; of highest quality; as, prime wheat; a
prime quality of cloth.
(a.) Early; blooming; being in the first stage.
(a.) Lecherous; lustful; lewd.
(a.) Marked or distinguished by a mark (') called a prime mark.
(n.) The first part; the earliest stage; the beginning or
opening, as of the day, the year, etc.; hence, the dawn; the spring.
(n.) The spring of life; youth; hence, full health, strength, or
beauty; perfection.
(n.) That which is first in quantity; the most excellent portion;
the best part.
(a.) The morning; specifically (R. C. Ch.), the first canonical
hour, succeeding to lauds.
(a.) The first of the chief guards.
(a.) Any number expressing the combining weight or equivalent of
any particular element; -- so called because these numbers were
respectively reduced to their lowest relative terms on the fixed
standard of hydrogen as 1.
(a.) A prime number. See under Prime, a.
(a.) An inch, as composed of twelve seconds in the duodecimal
system; -- denoted by [']. See 2d Inch, n., 1.
(a.) To apply priming to, as a musket or a cannon; to apply a
primer to, as a metallic cartridge.
(a.) To lay the first color, coating, or preparation upon (a
surface), as in painting; as, to prime a canvas, a wall.
(a.) To prepare; to make ready; to instruct beforehand; to post;
to coach; as, to prime a witness; the boys are primed for mischief.
(a.) To trim or prune, as trees.
(a.) To mark with a prime mark.
(v. i.) To be renewed, or as at first.
(v. i.) To serve as priming for the charge of a gun.
(v. i.) To work so that foaming occurs from too violent
ebullition, which causes water to become mixed with, and be carried
along with, the steam that is formed; -- said of a steam boiler.
(a.) To be formal or affected in dress or manners; -- often with
up.
(a.) Being in its prime.
(n.) A local division of the people in ancient Athens; a clan; a
tribe.
(pl. ) of Phylon
(pl. ) of Phylum
(n.) A tubercle on any external part of the body.
(v. t.) To dress or adjust one's self for show; to prank.
(v. t.) To prank or dress up; to deck fantastically.
(v. t.) To fix or impress, as a stamp, mark, character, idea,
etc., into or upon something.
(v. t.) To stamp something in or upon; to make an impression or
mark upon by pressure, or as by pressure.
(v. t.) To strike off an impression or impressions of, from type,
or from stereotype, electrotype, or engraved plates, or the like; in a
wider sense, to do the typesetting, presswork, etc., of (a book or
other publication); as, to print books, newspapers, pictures; to print
an edition of a book.
(v. t.) To stamp or impress with colored figures or patterns; as,
to print calico.
(v. t.) To take (a copy, a positive picture, etc.), from a
negative, a transparent drawing, or the like, by the action of light
upon a sensitized surface.
(v. i.) To use or practice the art of typography; to take
impressions of letters, figures, or electrotypes, engraved plates, or
the like.
(n.) A pommel.
(n.) A figure supposed to resemble an apple; a roundel, -- always
of a green color.
(a.) Having the ends terminating in rounded protuberances or
single balls; -- said of a cross.
(v. i.) To publish a book or an article.
(n.) A mark made by impression; a line, character, figure, or
indentation, made by the pressure of one thing on another; as, the
print of teeth or nails in flesh; the print of the foot in sand or
snow.
(n.) A stamp or die for molding or impressing an ornamental
design upon an object; as, a butter print.
(n.) That which receives an impression, as from a stamp or mold;
as, a print of butter.
(n.) Printed letters; the impression taken from type, as to
excellence, form, size, etc.; as, small print; large print; this line
is in print.
(n.) That which is produced by printing.
(n.) An impression taken from anything, as from an engraved
plate.
(n.) A printed publication, more especially a newspaper or other
periodical.
(n.) A printed cloth; a fabric figured by stamping, especially
calico or cotton cloth.
(n.) A photographic copy, or positive picture, on prepared paper,
as from a negative, or from a drawing on transparent paper.
(n.) A core print. See under Core.
(a. & adv.) Soft; -- a direction to the performer to execute a
certain passage softly, and with diminished volume of tone. (Abbrev.
p.)
(a.) Alt. of Pianoforte
(n.) An enterprise.
(n. & v.) See Prize, n., 5. Also Prize, v. t.
(n.) The powder of aloes with canella, formerly officinal,
employed as a cathartic.
(n.) A commercial weight varying in different countries and for
different commodities. In Borneo it is 135/ lbs.; in China and Sumatra,
133/ lbs.; in Japan, 133/ lbs.; but sometimes 130 lbs., etc. Called
also, by the Chinese, tan.
(n.) A fragment or part of anything separated from the whole, in
any manner, as by cutting, splitting, breaking, or tearing; a part; a
portion; as, a piece of sugar; to break in pieces.
(n.) A definite portion or quantity, as of goods or work; as, a
piece of broadcloth; a piece of wall paper.
(n.) Any one thing conceived of as apart from other things of the
same kind; an individual article; a distinct single effort of a series;
a definite performance
(n.) A literary or artistic composition; as, a piece of poetry,
music, or statuary.
(n.) A musket, gun, or cannon; as, a battery of six pieces; a
following piece.
(n.) A coin; as, a sixpenny piece; -- formerly applied
specifically to an English gold coin worth 22 shillings.
(n.) A fact; an item; as, a piece of news; a piece of knowledge.
(n.) An individual; -- applied to a person as being of a certain
nature or quality; often, but not always, used slightingly or in
contempt.
(n.) One of the superior men, distinguished from a pawn.
(n.) A castle; a fortified building.
(v. t.) To make, enlarge, or repair, by the addition of a piece
or pieces; to patch; as, to piece a garment; -- often with out.
(v. t.) To unite; to join; to combine.
(v. i.) To unite by a coalescence of parts; to fit together; to
join.
(n.) See Peen.
(n.) Veneration or reverence of the Supreme Being, and love of
his character; loving obedience to the will of God, and earnest
devotion to his service.
(n.) Duty; dutifulness; filial reverence and devotion;
affectionate reverence and service shown toward parents, relatives,
benefactors, country, etc.
(imp. & p. p.) Pitched; fixed; determined.
(a.) Furnished with a pike; ending in a point; peaked; pointed.
(n.) See Pillau.
(n.) A gown or case of skin, or one trimmed or lined with fur.
(imp. & p. p.) of Pile
(a.) Having a pile or point; pointed.
(a.) Having a pile or nap.
(a.) Formed from a pile or fagot; as, piled iron.
(n.) One who places things in a pile.
(n. pl.) The small, troublesome tumors or swellings about the
anus and lower part of the rectum which are technically called
hemorrhoids. See Hemorrhoids. [The singular pile is sometimes used.]
(pl. ) of Pileus
(a.) Of or pertaining to some person exclusively; assigned to
private uses; not public; private; as, the privy purse.
(a.) Secret; clandestine.
(a.) Appropriated to retirement; private; not open to the public.
(a.) Admitted to knowledge of a secret transaction; secretly
cognizant; privately knowing.
(n.) A partaker; a person having an interest in any action or
thing; one who has an interest in an estate created by another; a
person having an interest derived from a contract or conveyance to
which he is not himself a party. The term, in its proper sense, is
distinguished from party.
(n.) A necessary house or place; a backhouse.
(n.) That which is taken from another; something captured; a
thing seized by force, stratagem, or superior power.
(n.) Anything captured by a belligerent using the rights of war;
esp., property captured at sea in virtue of the rights of war, as a
vessel.
(n.) An honor or reward striven for in a competitive contest;
anything offered to be competed for, or as an inducement to, or reward
of, effort.
(n.) That which may be won by chance, as in a lottery.
(n.) Anything worth striving for; a valuable possession held or
in prospect.
(n.) A contest for a reward; competition.
(n.) A lever; a pry; also, the hold of a lever.
(v. t.) To move with a lever; to force up or open; to pry.
(v. t.) To set or estimate the value of; to appraise; to price;
to rate.
(v. t.) To value highly; to estimate to be of great worth; to
esteem.
(n.) Estimation; valuation.
(n.) A covered and inclosed entrance to a building, whether taken
from the interior, and forming a sort of vestibule within the main
wall, or projecting without and with a separate roof. Sometimes the
porch is large enough to serve as a covered walk. See also Carriage
porch, under Carriage, and Loggia.
(n.) A portico; a covered walk.
(imp. & p. p.) of Pore
(n.) One who pores.
(n.) The scup.
(n.) The sailor's choice, or pinfish.
(n.) The margate fish.
(n.) The spadefish.
(n.) Any one of several species of embiotocoids, or surf fishes,
of the Pacific coast. The name is also given locally to several other
fishes, as the bur fish.
(n.) One employed to steer a vessel; a helmsman; a steersman.
(n.) Specifically, a person duly qualified, and licensed by
authority, to conduct vessels into and out of a port, or in certain
waters, for a fixed rate of fees.
(n.) Figuratively: A guide; a director of another through a
difficult or unknown course.
(n.) An instrument for detecting the compass error.
(n.) The cowcatcher of a locomotive.
(v. t.) To direct the course of, as of a ship, where navigation
is dangerous.
(v. t.) Figuratively: To guide, as through dangers or
difficulties.
(v. t.) To examine, as a wound, an ulcer, or some cavity of the
body, with a probe.
(v. t.) Fig.: to search to the bottom; to scrutinize or examine
thoroughly.
(n.) An instrument for examining the depth or other circumstances
of a wound, ulcer, or cavity, or the direction of a sinus, of for
exploring for bullets, for stones in the bladder, etc.
(n.) A tablet; a register; hence, a list or scheme inscribed on a
tablet.
(v. t.) To press hard or squeeze between the ends of the fingers,
between teeth or claws, or between the jaws of an instrument; to
squeeze or compress, as between any two hard bodies.
(v. t.) o seize; to grip; to bite; -- said of animals.
(v. t.) To plait.
(v. t.) Figuratively: To cramp; to straiten; to oppress; to
starve; to distress; as, to be pinched for money.
(v. t.) To move, as a railroad car, by prying the wheels with a
pinch. See Pinch, n., 4.
(v. i.) To act with pressing force; to compress; to squeeze; as,
the shoe pinches.
(v. i.) To take hold; to grip, as a dog does.
(v. i.) To spare; to be niggardly; to be covetous.
(n.) A close compression, as with the ends of the fingers, or
with an instrument; a nip.
(n.) As much as may be taken between the finger and thumb; any
very small quantity; as, a pinch of snuff.
(n.) Pian; pang.
(n.) A lever having a projection at one end, acting as a fulcrum,
-- used chiefly to roll heavy wheels, etc. Called also pinch bar.
(imp. & p. p.) of Pine
(a.) See Piny.
(a.) A term used in designating an East Indian tree (the Vateria
Indica or piney tree, of the order Dipterocarpeae, which grows in
Malabar, etc.) or its products.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the pine; obtained from the pine;
formerly, designating an acid which is the chief constituent of common
resin, -- now called abietic, or sylvic, acid.
(n.) See 1st Pink.
(n.) A crossbow. See Prod, 3.
(n.) A vegetable; an organized living being, generally without
feeling and voluntary motion, and having, when complete, a root, stem,
and leaves, though consisting sometimes only of a single leafy
expansion, or a series of cellules, or even a single cellule.
(n.) A bush, or young tree; a sapling; hence, a stick or staff.
(n.) The sole of the foot.
(n.) The whole machinery and apparatus employed in carrying on a
trade or mechanical business; also, sometimes including real estate,
and whatever represents investment of capital in the means of carrying
on a business, but not including material worked upon or finished
products; as, the plant of a foundry, a mill, or a railroad.
(n.) A plan; an artifice; a swindle; a trick.
(n.) An oyster which has been bedded, in distinction from one of
natural growth.
(n.) A young oyster suitable for transplanting.
(n.) To put in the ground and cover, as seed for growth; as, to
plant maize.
(n.) To set in the ground for growth, as a young tree, or a
vegetable with roots.
(n.) To furnish, or fit out, with plants; as, to plant a garden,
an orchard, or a forest.
(n.) To engender; to generate; to set the germ of.
(n.) To furnish with a fixed and organized population; to settle;
to establish; as, to plant a colony.
(n.) To introduce and establish the principles or seeds of; as,
to plant Christianity among the heathen.
(n.) To set firmly; to fix; to set and direct, or point; as, to
plant cannon against a fort; to plant a standard in any place; to plant
one's feet on solid ground; to plant one's fist in another's face.
(n.) To set up; to install; to instate.
(v. i.) To perform the act of planting.
(imp. & p. p.) of Pose
(a.) Firm; determined; fixed.
(n.) One who, or that which, puzzles; a difficult or inexplicable
question or fact.
(v. t.) To dispose or set firmly or fixedly; to place or dispose
in relation to other objects.
(v. t.) To assume as real or conceded; as, to posit a principle.
(n.) Preface; introduction; preliminary observations; prelude.
(v. t.) To preface.
(a.) Of or pertaining to piety; exhibiting piety; reverential;
dutiful; religious; devout; godly.
(a.) Practiced under the pretext of religion; prompted by
mistaken piety; as, pious errors; pious frauds.
(imp. & p. p.) of Pipe
(a.) Formed with a pipe; having pipe or pipes; tubular.
(n.) See Posse comitatus.
() A prefix signifying behind, back, after; as, postcommissure,
postdot, postscript.
(imp. & p. p.) of Pule
(n.) One who pules; one who whines or complains; a weak person.
(pl. ) of Pullus
(n.) Like pulp; consisting of pulp; soft; fleshy; succulent; as,
the pulpy covering of a nut; the pulpy substance of a peach or a
cherry.
(a.) Short and fat or sturdy; dumpy; podgy; as, a short, pudgy
little man; a pudgy little hand.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the external organs of generation.
(a.) Swelled with air, or any soft matter; tumid with a soft
substance; bloated; fleshy; as, a puffy tumor.
(a.) Hence, inflated; bombastic; as, a puffy style.
(n.) The hair which appears upon the lower part of the
hypogastric region at the age of puberty.
(n.) Hence (as more commonly used), the lower part of the
hypogastric region; the pubic region.
(n.) The down of plants; a downy or villous substance which grows
on plants; pubescence.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the pubes; in the region of the pubes;
as, the pubic bone; the pubic region, or the lower part of the
hypogastric region. See Pubes.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the pubis.
(n.) The ventral and anterior of the three principal bones
composing either half of the pelvis; sharebone; pubic bone.
(interj.) Pish! pooch! -- an exclamation used as an expression of
contempt, disdain, dislike, etc.
(v. i.) To express disgust or contemptuous disapprobation, as by
the exclamation " Pshaw!"
(imp. & p. p.) of Pry
(n.) A sacred song; a poetical composition for use in the praise
or worship of God.
(n.) An internal muscle arising from the lumbar vertebrae and
inserted into the femur. In man there are usually two on each side, and
the larger one, or great psoas, forms a part of the iliopsoas.
(n.) A cutaneous disease; especially, the itch.
(n.) The agency for another who acts through the agent; authority
to act for another, esp. to vote in a legislative or corporate
capacity.
(n.) The person who is substituted or deputed to act or vote for
another.
(n.) A writing by which one person authorizes another to vote in
his stead, as in a corporation meeting.
(n.) The written appointment of a proctor in suits in the
ecclesiastical courts.
(n.) See Procuration.
(v. i.) To act or vote by proxy; to do anything by the agency of
another.
(a.) A woman of affected modesty, reserve, or coyness; one who is
overscrupulous or sensitive; one who affects extraordinary prudence in
conduct and speech.
(v. t.) To lop or cut off the superfluous parts, branches, or
shoots of; to clear of useless material; to shape or smooth by
trimming; to trim: as, to prune trees; to prune an essay.
(v. t.) To cut off or cut out, as useless parts.
(v. t.) To preen; to prepare; to dress.
(v. i.) To dress; to prink; -used humorously or in contempt.
(n.) A plum; esp., a dried plum, used in cookery; as, French or
Turkish prunes; California prunes.
(n.) Especially, one of the hymns by David and others, collected
into one book of the Old Testament, or a modern metrical version of
such a hymn for public worship.
(v. t.) To extol in psalms; to sing; as, psalming his praises.
(v. t.) To rove over, through, or about in a stealthy manner;
esp., to search in, as for prey or booty.
(v. t.) To collect by plunder; as, to prowl money.
(v. i.) To rove or wander stealthily, esp. for prey, as a wild
beast; hence, to prey; to plunder.
(n.) The act of prowling.
(v. i.) To talk much and to little purpose; to be loquacious; to
speak foolishly; to babble.
(v. t.) To utter foolishly; to speak without reason or purpose;
to chatter, or babble.
(n.) Talk to little purpose; trifling talk; unmeaning loquacity.
(n.) Any one of numerous species of large shrimplike Crustacea
having slender legs and long antennae. They mostly belong to the genera
Pandalus, Palaemon, Palaemonetes, and Peneus, and are much used as
food. The common English prawn is Palaemon serratus.
(v. t.) To adorn in a showy manner; to dress or equip
ostentatiously; -- often followed by up; as, to prank up the body. See
Prink.
(v. i.) To make ostentatious show.
(n.) A gay or sportive action; a ludicrous, merry, or mischievous
trick; a caper; a frolic.
(a.) Full of gambols or tricks.
(n.) A variety of cryptocrystalline of a leek-green color.
() A prefix. See Pre-.
(v. t.) To try or to ascertain by an experiment, or by a test or
standard; to test; as, to prove the strength of gunpowder or of
ordnance; to prove the contents of a vessel by a standard measure.
(v. t.) To evince, establish, or ascertain, as truth, reality, or
fact, by argument, testimony, or other evidence.
(v. t.) To ascertain or establish the genuineness or validity of;
to verify; as, to prove a will.
(v. t.) To gain experience of the good or evil of; to know by
trial; to experience; to suffer.
(v. t.) To test, evince, ascertain, or verify, as the correctness
of any operation or result; thus, in subtraction, if the difference
between two numbers, added to the lesser number, makes a sum equal to
the greater, the correctness of the subtraction is proved.
(v. t.) To take a trial impression of; to take a proof of; as, to
prove a page.
(v. i.) To make trial; to essay.
(v. i.) To be found by experience, trial, or result; to turn out
to be; as, a medicine proves salutary; the report proves false.
(imp. & p. p.) of Pox
(n.) A South American armadillo (Dasypus sexcinctus). Called also
sixbanded armadillo.
(n.) A flat-bottomed boat or lighter, -- used in Holland and the
Baltic, and sometimes armed in case of war.
(v. i.) To succeed; to turn out as expected.
(n.) Alt. of Powen
(n.) A nocturnal mammal (Perodictius potto) of the Lemur family,
found in West Africa. It has rudimentary forefingers. Called also
aposoro, and bush dog.
(n.) The kinkajou.
(n.) A small bag; usually, a leathern bag; as, a pouch for money;
a shot pouch; a mail pouch, etc.
(n.) That which is shaped like, or used as, a pouch
(n.) A protuberant belly; a paunch; -- so called in ridicule.
(n.) A sac or bag for carrying food or young; as, the cheek
pouches of certain rodents, and the pouch of marsupials.
(n.) A cyst or sac containing fluid.
(n.) A silicle, or short pod, as of the shepherd's purse.
(n.) A bulkhead in the hold of a vessel, to prevent grain, etc.,
from shifting.
(v. t.) To put or take into a pouch.
(v. t.) To swallow; -- said of fowls.
(v. t.) To pout.
(v. t.) To pocket; to put up with.
(n.) Alt. of Poulpe
(n.) A young chicken, partridge, grouse, or the like.
(v. i.) To thrust; to push.
(v. t.) See Poach, to cook.
(n.) A large South American goatsucker (Nyctibius grandis).
(superl.) Of or pertaining to prose; like prose.
(superl.) Dull and tedious in discourse or writing; prosaic.
(n.) A mold or matrix in which anything is cast or formed to a
particular shape.
(n.) Same as Plasma.
(a.) Like a plate; consisting of plates.
(n.) A little mass or weight of lead, or the like, attached to a
line, and used by builders, etc., to indicate a vertical direction; a
plummet; a plumb bob. See Plumb line, below.
(a.) Perpendicular; vertical; conforming the direction of a line
attached to a plumb; as, the wall is plumb.
(adv.) In a plumb direction; perpendicularly.
(v. t.) To adjust by a plumb line; to cause to be perpendicular;
as, to plumb a building or a wall.
(v. t.) To sound with a plumb or plummet, as the depth of water;
hence, to examine by test; to ascertain the depth, quality, dimension,
etc.; to sound; to fathom; to test.
(v. t.) To seal with lead; as, to plumb a drainpipe.
(v. t.) To supply, as a building, with a system of plumbing.
(n. pl.) A game of chance, in which four sea shells, each called
a prop, are used instead of dice.
(n.) The ordinary language of men in speaking or writing;
language not cast in poetical measure or rhythm; -- contradistinguished
from verse, or metrical composition.
(n.) Hence, language which evinces little imagination or
animation; dull and commonplace discourse.
(n.) A hymn with no regular meter, sometimes introduced into the
Mass. See Sequence.
(a.) Pertaining to, or composed of, prose; not in verse; as,
prose composition.
(a.) Possessing or exhibiting unpoetical characteristics; plain;
dull; prosaic; as, the prose duties of life.
(v. t.) To write in prose.
(v. t.) To write or repeat in a dull, tedious, or prosy way.
(v. i.) To write prose.
(n.) The prow or fore part of a ship.
(n.) Firmness of mind; stability not to be shaken.
(n.) A trial impression, as from type, taken for correction or
examination; -- called also proof sheet.
(n.) A process for testing the accuracy of an operation
performed. Cf. Prove, v. t., 5.
(v. t.) Armor of excellent or tried quality, and deemed
impenetrable; properly, armor of proof.
(a.) Used in proving or testing; as, a proof load, or proof
charge.
(a.) Firm or successful in resisting; as, proof against harm;
waterproof; bombproof.
(a.) Being of a certain standard as to strength; -- said of
alcoholic liquors.
(n.) Any effort, process, or operation designed to establish or
discover a fact or truth; an act of testing; a test; a trial.
(n.) That degree of evidence which convinces the mind of any
truth or fact, and produces belief; a test by facts or arguments that
induce, or tend to induce, certainty of the judgment; conclusive
evidence; demonstration.
(n.) The quality or state of having been proved or tried;
firmness or hardness that resists impression, or does not yield to
force; impenetrability of physical bodies.
() Alt. of Pedo-
(n.) A South American butterfly (Ithonia phono) having nearly
transparent wings.
(a.) Bending forward; inclined; not erect.
(a.) Prostrate; flat; esp., lying with the face down; -- opposed
to supine.
(a.) Headlong; running downward or headlong.
(a.) Sloping, with reference to a line or surface; declivous;
inclined; not level.
(a.) Inclined; propense; disposed; -- applied to the mind or
affections, usually in an ill sense. Followed by to.
(n.) A sharp-pointed instrument.
(n.) The tine of a fork, or of a similar instrument; as, a fork
of two or three prongs.
(n.) A sharp projection, as of an antler.
(n.) The fang of a tooth.
(v. i.) To poke; to thrust.
(a.) Of or pertaining to punishment, to penalties, or to crimes
and offenses; pertaining to criminal jurisprudence
(a.) Enacting or threatening punishment; as, a penal statue; the
penal code.
(a.) Incurring punishment; subject to a penalty; as, a penalact
of offense.
(a.) Inflicted as punishment; used as a means of punishment; as,
a penal colony or settlement.
(n.) See Poise.
(n.) A small shield, especially one of an approximately elliptic
form, or crescent-shaped.
(n.) A flat apothecium having no rim.
(a.) Same as Peart.
(a.) Bearing palms; abounding in palms; derived from palms; as, a
palmy shore.
(a.) Worthy of the palm; flourishing; prosperous.
(imp. & p. p.) of Pale
(n.) The interior chaff or husk of grasses.
(n.) One of the chaffy scales or bractlets growing on the
receptacle of many compound flowers, as the Coreopsis, the sunflower,
etc.
(n.) A pendulous process of the skin on the throat of a bird, as
in the turkey; a dewlap.
(a.) Striped.
(a.) Inclosed with a paling.
(v. t.) To affect with palsy, or as with palsy; to deprive of
action or energy; to paralyze.
(v. t.) To thrust or plant in the ground, as stakes or poles;
hence, to fix firmly, as by means of poles; to establish; to arrange;
as, to pitch a tent; to pitch a camp.
(v. t.) To set, face, or pave with rubble or undressed stones, as
an embankment or a roadway.
(n.) The Canada lynx.
(n.) The track or tread a horseman makes upon the ground he goes
over.
(n.) pl. of Palpus. (Zool.) See Palpus.
(a.) Having panes; provided with panes; also, having openings;
as, a paned window; paned window sash.
(a.) Having flat sides or surfaces; as, a six/paned nut.
(n.) A piece of parchment or a schedule, containing the names of
persons summoned as jurors by the sheriff; hence, more generally, the
whole jury.
(n.) A prisoner arraigned for trial at the bar of a criminal
court.
(n.) Specifically, in cookery, a dough prepared for the crust of
pies and the like; pastry dough.
(n.) A kind of cement made of flour and water, starch and water,
or the like, -- used for uniting paper or other substances, as in
bookbinding, etc., -- also used in calico printing as a vehicle for
mordant or color.
(n.) A highly refractive vitreous composition, variously colored,
used in making imitations of precious stones or gems. See Strass.
(n.) A soft confection made of the inspissated juice of fruit,
licorice, or the like, with sugar, etc.
(n.) The mineral substance in which other minerals are imbedded.
(v. t.) To unite with paste; to fasten or join by means of paste.
(a.) Like paste, as in color, softness, stickness.
(n.) A pie consisting usually of meat wholly surrounded with a
crust made of a sheet of paste, and often baked without a dish; a meat
pie.
(n.) A West African long-tailed monkey (Cercopithecus ruber); the
red monkey.
(n.) A piece of cloth, or other suitable material, sewed or
otherwise fixed upon a garment to repair or strengthen it, esp. upon an
old garment to cover a hole.
(n.) A small piece of anything used to repair a breach; as, a
patch on a kettle, a roof, etc.
(n.) A small piece of black silk stuck on the face, or neck, to
hide a defect, or to heighten beauty.
(n.) A piece of greased cloth or leather used as wrapping for a
rifle ball, to make it fit the bore.
(n.) Fig.: Anything regarded as a patch; a small piece of ground;
a tract; a plot; as, scattered patches of trees or growing corn.
(n.) A block on the muzzle of a gun, to do away with the effect
of dispart, in sighting.
(n.) A paltry fellow; a rogue; a ninny; a fool.
(v. t.) To mend by sewing on a piece or pieces of cloth, leather,
or the like; as, to patch a coat.
(v. t.) To mend with pieces; to repair with pieces festened on;
to repair clumsily; as, to patch the roof of a house.
(v. t.) To adorn, as the face, with a patch or patches.
(v. t.) To make of pieces or patches; to repair as with patches;
to arrange in a hasty or clumsy manner; -- generally with up; as, to
patch up a truce.
(a.) Having a pate; -- used only in composition; as, long-pated;
shallow-pated.
(n.) See Pattee.
(pl. ) of Path
(n.) A paved yard or floor where ores are cleaned and sorted, or
where ore, salt, mercury, etc., are trampled by horses, to effect
intermixture and amalgamation.
(adv.) Fitly; seasonably.
(a.) Alt. of Pattee
(n.) A temporary stop or rest; an intermission of action;
interruption; suspension; cessation.
(n.) Temporary inaction or waiting; hesitation; suspence; doubt.
(n.) In speaking or reading aloud, a brief arrest or suspension
of voice, to indicate the limits and relations of sentences and their
parts.
(n.) In writing and printing, a mark indicating the place and
nature of an arrest of voice in reading; a punctuation point; as, teach
the pupil to mind the pauses.
(n.) A break or paragraph in writing.
(n.) A hold. See 4th Hold, 7.
(n.) To make a short stop; to cease for a time; to intermit
speaking or acting; to stop; to wait; to rest.
(n.) To be intermitted; to cease; as, the music pauses.
(n.) To hesitate; to hold back; to delay.
(n.) To stop in order to consider; hence, to consider; to
reflect.
(v. t.) To cause to stop or rest; -- used reflexively.
(n.) A curassow (Ourax pauxi), which, in South America, is often
domesticated.
(n.) A stately and formal Spanish dance for which full state
costume is worn; -- so called from the resemblance of its movements to
those of the peacock.
(imp. & p. p.) of Pave
(n.) See Pavan.
(a.) Timid; fearful.
(n.) See Pavan.
(imp. & p. p.) of Paw
(a.) Arch; cunning; sly.
(n.) The person to whom money is to be, or has been, paid; the
person named in a bill or note, to whom, or to whose order, the amount
is promised or directed to be paid. See Bill of exchange, under Bill.
(n. & a.) Pagan.
(n.) One who pays; specifically, the person by whom a bill or
note has been, or should be, paid.
(n.) See Payer.
(v. t.) To accuse of crime; to inform against.
(v. i.) To turn informer; to betray one's accomplice.
(n.) A well-known high-flavored juicy fruit, containing one or
two seeds in a hard almond-like endocarp or stone; also, the tree which
bears it (Prunus, / Amygdalus Persica). In the wild stock the fruit is
hard and inedible.
(n.) See Paage.
(a.) Having a peak or peaks.
(a.) Sickly; peaked.
(a.) Active; lively; brisk; smart; -- often applied to
convalescents; as, she is quite peart to-day.
(a.) Composed of peat; abounding in peat; resembling peat.
(n.) A species of hickory (Carya olivaeformis), growing in North
America, chiefly in the Mississippi valley and in Texas, where it is
one of the largest of forest trees; also, its fruit, a smooth, oblong
nut, an inch or an inch and a half long, with a thin shell and
well-flavored meat.
(superl.) Not intricate or difficult; evident; manifest; obvious;
clear; unmistakable.
(superl.) Void of extraneous beauty or ornament; without
conspicious embellishment; not rich; simple.
(superl.) Not highly cultivated; unsophisticated; free from show
or pretension; simple; natural; homely; common.
(superl.) Free from affectation or disguise; candid; sincere;
artless; honest; frank.
(superl.) Not luxurious; not highly seasoned; simple; as, plain
food.
(superl.) Without beauty; not handsome; homely; as, a plain
woman.
(superl.) Not variegated, dyed, or figured; as, plain muslin.
(superl.) Not much varied by modulations; as, a plain tune.
(adv.) In a plain manner; plainly.
(a.) Level land; usually, an open field or a broad stretch of
land with an even surface, or a surface little varied by inequalities;
as, the plain of Jordan; the American plains, or prairies.
(a.) A field of battle.
(v.) To plane or level; to make plain or even on the surface.
(v.) To make plain or manifest; to explain.
(n.) A rectangular garment or piece of cloth, usually made of the
checkered material called tartan, but sometimes of plain gray, or gray
with black stripes. It is worn by both sexes in Scotland.
(n.) Goods of any quality or material of the pattern of a plaid
or tartan; a checkered cloth or pattern.
(a.) Having a pattern or colors which resemble a Scotch plaid;
checkered or marked with bars or stripes at right angles to one
another; as, plaid muslin.
(v. i.) To lament; to bewail; to complain.
(v. t.) To lament; to mourn over; as, to plain a loss.
(superl.) Without elevations or depressions; flat; level; smooth;
even. See Plane.
(superl.) Open; clear; unencumbered; equal; fair.
(n.) Danger; risk; hazard; jeopardy; exposure of person or
property to injury, loss, or destruction.
(v. t.) To expose to danger; to hazard; to risk; as, to peril
one's life.
(v. i.) To be in danger.
(v. t.) To applaud.
(n.) A beach; a strand; in the plains and deserts of Texas, New
Mexico, and Arizona, a broad, level spot, on which subsequently becomes
dry by evaporation.
(v. t.) To burn the surface of; to scorch; to roast over the
fire, as dry grain; as, to parch the skin; to parch corn.
(v. t.) To dry to extremity; to shrivel with heat; as, the mouth
is parched from fever.
(v. i.) To become scorched or superficially burnt; to be very
dry.
(adv. / interj.) Alt. of Pardie
(n.) A public square in a city or town.
() of Plead
(v. t.) To argue in support of a claim, or in defense against the
claim of another; to urge reasons for or against a thing; to attempt to
persuade one by argument or supplication; to speak by way of
persuasion; as, to plead for the life of a criminal; to plead with a
judge or with a father.
(v. t.) To present an answer, by allegation of fact, to the
declaration of a plaintiff; to deny the plaintiff's declaration and
demand, or to allege facts which show that ought not to recover in the
suit; in a less strict sense, to make an allegation of fact in a cause;
to carry on the allegations of the respective parties in a cause; to
carry on a suit or plea.
(v. t.) To contend; to struggle.
(v. t.) To discuss, defend, and attempt to maintain by arguments
or reasons presented to a tribunal or person having uthority to
determine; to argue at the bar; as, to plead a cause before a court or
jury.
(v. t.) To allege or cite in a legal plea or defense, or for
repelling a demand in law; to answer to an indictment; as, to plead
usury; to plead statute of limitations; to plead not guilty.
(v. t.) To allege or adduce in proof, support, or vendication; to
offer in excuse; as, the law of nations may be pleaded in favor of the
rights of ambassadors.
(n. & v. t.) See Plait.
(n.) The common people; the mob.
(n.) A member of the lowest class in the military academy at West
Point.
(imp. & p. p.) of Pare
(v. t.) One who, or that which, pares; an instrument for paring.
(a.) Perk; pert; jaunty; trim.
() A combining form signifying equal; as, paridigitate,
paripinnate.
(v. i.) To talk; to converse; to parley.
(n.) Conversation; talk; parley.
(v.) A disease of the hair (Plica polonica), in which it becomes
twisted and matted together. The disease is of Polish origin, and is
hence called also Polish plait.
(v.) A diseased state in plants in which there is an excessive
development of small entangled twigs, instead of ordinary branches.
(v.) The bend of the wing of a bird.
() imp. & p. p. of Ply.
(n.) A figure in which a word is separated or repeated by way of
emphasis, so as not only to signify the individual thing denoted by it,
but also its peculiar attribute or quality; as, "His wife's a wife
indeed."
(n.) A flat fold; a doubling, as of cloth; a pleat; as, a box
plait.
(n.) A braid, as of hair or straw; a plat.
(v. t.) To fold; to double in narrow folds; to pleat; as, to
plait a ruffle.
(v. t.) To interweave the strands or locks of; to braid; to plat;
as, to plait hair; to plait rope.
(n.) A thick, black, lustrous, and sticky substance obtained by
boiling down tar. It is used in calking the seams of ships; also in
coating rope, canvas, wood, ironwork, etc., to preserve them.
(n.) See Pitchstone.
(n.) To cover over or smear with pitch.
(n.) Fig.: To darken; to blacken; to obscure.
(v. t.) To throw, generally with a definite aim or purpose; to
cast; to hurl; to toss; as, to pitch quoits; to pitch hay; to pitch a
ball.
(pl. ) of Palpus
(n.) Paralysis, complete or partial. See Paralysis.
(n.) A weight; a poise.
(v. t.) To poise or weight.
(n.) See Fisher, 2.
(n.) A kind of black tea.
(n.) A word; an oral utterance.
(n.) Oral declaration; word of mouth; also, a writing not under
seal.
(a.) Given or done by word of mouth; oral; also, given by a
writing not under seal; as, parol evidence.
(v. t.) To pull; to draw.
(v. t.) Especially, to pull with sudden force or effort, or to
pull off or out from something, with a twitch; to twitch; also, to
gather, to pick; as, to pluck feathers from a fowl; to pluck hair or
wool from a skin; to pluck grapes.
(v. t.) To strip of, or as of, feathers; as, to pluck a fowl.
(v. t.) To reject at an examination for degrees.
(v. i.) To make a motion of pulling or twitching; -- usually with
at; as, to pluck at one's gown.
(n.) The act of plucking; a pull; a twitch.
(n.) The heart, liver, and lights of an animal.
(n.) Spirit; courage; indomitable resolution; fortitude.
(n.) The act of plucking, or the state of being plucked, at
college. See Pluck, v. t., 4.
(v. t.) The lyrie.
(v. t.) To throw out, as smoke, dust, etc., in puffs.
(n.) To resolve into its elements, as a sentence, pointing out
the several parts of speech, and their relation to each other by
government or agreement; to analyze and describe grammatically.
(n.) A puff, as of smoke from a pipe, or of dust from a puffball;
a slight explosion, as of a small quantity of gunpowder.
(n.) A hairdresser's powder puff; also, the act of using it.
(n.) A feather.
(adv.) Well rounded or filled out; full; fleshy; fat; as, a plump
baby; plump cheeks.
(n.) A knot; a cluster; a group; a crowd; a flock; as, a plump of
trees, fowls, or spears.
(a.) To grow plump; to swell out; as, her cheeks have plumped.
(a.) To drop or fall suddenly or heavily, all at once.
(a.) To give a plumper. See Plumper, 2.
(v. t.) To make plump; to fill (out) or support; -- often with
up.
(v. t.) To cast or let drop all at once, suddenly and heavily;
as, to plump a stone into water.
(v. t.) To give (a vote), as a plumper. See Plumper, 2.
(a. & v.) Directly; suddenly; perpendicularly.
(a.) Covered or adorned with plumes, or as with plumes; feathery.
(n.) A textile fabric with a nap or shag on one side, longer and
softer than the nap of velvet.
(imp. & p. p.) of Ply
(pl. ) of Pes
(a.) Pestering; vexatious; troublesome. Used also as an
intensive.
(v.) A part or portion.
(v.) A number of persons united in opinion or action, as
distinguished from, or opposed to, the rest of a community or
association; esp., one of the parts into which a people is divided on
questions of public policy.
(v.) A part of a larger body of company; a detachment; especially
(Mil.), a small body of troops dispatched on special service.
(v.) A number of persons invited to a social entertainment; a
select company; as, a dinner party; also, the entertainment itself; as,
to give a party.
(v.) One concerned or interested in an affair; one who takes part
with others; a participator; as, he was a party to the plot; a party to
the contract.
(v.) The plaintiff or the defendant in a lawsuit, whether an
individual, a firm, or corporation; a litigant.
(v.) Hence, any certain person who is regarded as being opposed
or antagonistic to another.
(v.) Cause; side; interest.
(v.) A person; as, he is a queer party.
(v.) Parted or divided, as in the direction or form of one of the
ordinaries; as, an escutcheon party per pale.
(v.) Partial; favoring one party.
(adv.) Partly.
(n.) The gemsbok.
(n.) An honorary title given to officers of high rank in Turkey,
as to governers of provinces, military commanders, etc. The earlier
form was bashaw.
(n.) One who, or that which, plies
(n.) A kind of balance used in raising and letting down a
drawbridge. It consists of timbers joined in the form of a St. Andrew's
cross.
(n.) See Pliers.
(v. & n.) To cook, as eggs, by breaking them into boiling water;
also, to cook with butter after breaking in a vessel.
(v. & n.) To rob of game; to pocket and convey away by stealth,
as game; hence, to plunder.
(v. i.) To steal or pocket game, or to carry it away privately,
as in a bag; to kill or destroy game contrary to law, especially by
night; to hunt or fish unlawfully; as, to poach for rabbits or for
salmon.
(v. t.) To stab; to pierce; to spear, \as fish.
(v. t.) To force, drive, or plunge into anything.
(v. t.) To make soft or muddy by trampling
(v. t.) To begin and not complete.
(v. i.) To become soft or muddy.
(n.) The poke (Phytolacca decandra); -- called also pocan bush.
(n.) One of the leaves of the corolla, or the colored leaves of a
flower. See Corolla, and Illust. of Flower.
(n.) One of the expanded ambulacra which form a rosette on the
black of certain Echini.
(superl.) Full of pocks; affected with smallpox or other eruptive
disease.
(n.) A puddle; a plash.
(n.) Porridge.
(a.) Fat and short; pudgy.
(pl. ) of Podium
() A combining form or prefix from Gr. poy`s, podo`s, foot; as,
podocarp, podocephalous, podology.
(n.) See Saltpeter.
(n.) The art of composing poems; poetical skill or faculty; as,
the heavenly gift of poesy.
(n.) Poetry; metrical composition; poems.
(n.) A short conceit or motto engraved on a ring or other thing;
a posy.
(n.) See Porgy.
(n.) A small whale.
(v. t.) To impound, as cattle.
(v. t.) To distrain.
(n.) The breast.
(n.) A common American tyrant flycatcher (Sayornis phoebe, or S.
fuscus). Called also pewit, and phoebe.
(n.) The woodcock.
(n.) The lapwing.
(n.) The European black-headed, or laughing, gull (Xema
ridibundus). See under Laughing.
(n.) The pewee.
(n.) A soft composition, as of flour moistened with water or
milk, or of earth moistened to the consistence of dough, as in making
potter's ware.
(n.) One of the districts divided by pillars of extra size, into
which a mine is laid off in one system of extracting coal.
(n.) A plain strip or band, as of velvet or plush, placed at
intervals lengthwise on the skirt of a dress, for ornament.
(n.) A portion of a framed structure between adjacent posts or
struts, as in a bridge truss.
(n.) See Fane.
(n.) A pharos; a lighthouse.
(n.) See Faro.
(v.) Weight; gravity; that which causes a body to descend;
heaviness.
(v.) The weight, or mass of metal, used in weighing, to balance
the substance weighed.
(v.) The state of being balanced by equal weight or power;
equipoise; balance; equilibrium; rest.
(v.) That which causes a balance; a counterweight.
(n.) To balance; to make of equal weight; as, to poise the scales
of a balance.
(n.) To hold or place in equilibrium or equiponderance.
(n.) To counterpoise; to counterbalance.
(n.) To ascertain, as by the balance; to weigh.
(n.) To weigh (down); to oppress.
(v. i.) To hang in equilibrium; to be balanced or suspended;
hence, to be in suspense or doubt.
(n.) That which is exhibited to the eye; the appearance which
anything manifests, especially any one among different and varying
appearances of the same object.
(n.) Any appearance or aspect of an object of mental apprehension
or view; as, the problem has many phases.
(n.) A particular appearance or state in a regularly recurring
cycle of changes with respect to quantity of illumination or form of
enlightened disk; as, the phases of the moon or planets. See Illust.
under Moon.
(n.) Any one point or portion in a recurring series of changes,
as in the changes of motion of one of the particles constituting a wave
or vibration; one portion of a series of such changes, in distinction
from a contrasted portion, as the portion on one side of a position of
equilibrium, in contrast with that on the opposite side.
(n.) Alt. of Phasma
(imp. & p. p.) of Poke
(n.) One who pokes.
(n.) That which pokes or is used in poking, especially a metal
bar or rod used in stirring a fire of coals.
(n.) A poking-stick.
(n.) The poachard.
(n.) A game at cards derived from brag, and first played about
1835 in the Southwestern United States.
(n.) Any imagined frightful object, especially one supposed to
haunt the darkness; a bugbear.
(a.) See Poky.
(a.) Of or pertaining to one of the poles of the earth, or of a
sphere; situated near, or proceeding from, one of the poles; as, polar
regions; polar seas; polar winds.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the magnetic pole, or to the point to
which the magnetic needle is directed.
(a.) Pertaining to, reckoned from, or having a common radiating
point; as, polar coordinates.
(n.) The right line drawn through the two points of contact of
the two tangents drawn from a given point to a given conic section. The
given point is called the pole of the line. If the given point lies
within the curve so that the two tangents become imaginary, there is
still a real polar line which does not meet the curve, but which
possesses other properties of the polar. Thus the focus and directrix
are pole and polar. There are also poles and polar curves to curves of
higher degree than the second, and poles and polar planes to surfaces
of the second degree.
(n.) A bearing representing the head of a dart or javelin, with
long barbs which are engrailed on the inner edge.
(n.) A glass vessel or bottle, especially a small bottle for
medicines; a vial.
(v. t.) To put or keep in, or as in, a phial.
(imp. & p. p.) of Pole
(n.) See Poly.
(a.) Without horns; polled.
() A prefix used to signify around, by, near, over, beyond, or to
give an intensive sense; as, perimeter, the measure around; perigee,
point near the earth; periergy, work beyond what is needed;
perispherical, quite spherical.
(pl. ) of Peri
(n.) A small Asiatic mammal (Ailurus fulgens) having fine soft
fur. It is related to the bears, and inhabits the mountains of Northern
India.
(n.) Any portion of space regarded as measured off or distinct
from all other space, or appropriated to some definite object or use;
position; ground; site; spot; rarely, unbounded space.
(n.) A broad way in a city; an open space; an area; a court or
short part of a street open only at one end.
(n.) A position which is occupied and held; a dwelling; a
mansion; a village, town, or city; a fortified town or post; a
stronghold; a region or country.
(n.) Rank; degree; grade; order of priority, advancement,
dignity, or importance; especially, social rank or position; condition;
also, official station; occupation; calling.
(n.) Vacated or relinquished space; room; stead (the departure or
removal of another being or thing being implied).
(n.) A definite position or passage of a document.
(n.) Ordinal relation; position in the order of proceeding; as,
he said in the first place.
(n.) Reception; effect; -- implying the making room for.
(n.) Position in the heavens, as of a heavenly body; -- usually
defined by its right ascension and declination, or by its latitude and
longitude.
(n.) To assign a place to; to put in a particular spot or place,
or in a certain relative position; to direct to a particular place; to
fix; to settle; to locate; as, to place a book on a shelf; to place
balls in tennis.
(n.) To put or set in a particular rank, office, or position; to
surround with particular circumstances or relations in life; to appoint
to certain station or condition of life; as, in whatever sphere one is
placed.
(n.) To put out at interest; to invest; to loan; as, to place
money in a bank.
(n.) To set; to fix; to repose; as, to place confidence in a
friend.
(n.) To attribute; to ascribe; to set down.
(n.) A small copper coin formerly current in Scotland, worth less
than a cent.
(n.) A stripe of color.
(n.) A region; country.
(superl.) Consisting wholly, or in part, of pith; abounding in
pith; as, a pithy stem; a pithy fruit.
(superl.) Having nervous energy; forceful; cogent.
(n.) A fixed pin or short axis, on the end of which a wheel or
other body turns.
(n.) The end of a shaft or arbor which rests and turns in a
support; as, the pivot of an arbor in a watch.
(n.) Hence, figuratively: A turning point or condition; that on
which important results depend; as, the pivot of an enterprise.
(n.) The officer or soldier who simply turns in his place whike
the company or line moves around him in wheeling; -- called also pivot
man.
(v. t.) To place on a pivot.
(n.) An old English name for a fairy; an elf.
(n.) A low creeping evergreen plant (Pyxidanthera barbulata),
with mosslike leaves and little white blossoms, found in New Jersey and
southward, where it flowers in earliest spring.
(v. t.) To fix or set the tone of; as, to pitch a tune.
(v. t.) To set or fix, as a price or value.
(v. i.) To fix or place a tent or temporary habitation; to
encamp.
(v. i.) To light; to settle; to come to rest from flight.
(v. i.) To fix one's choise; -- with on or upon.
(v. i.) To plunge or fall; esp., to fall forward; to decline or
slope; as, to pitch from a precipice; the vessel pitches in a heavy
sea; the field pitches toward the east.
(n.) A throw; a toss; a cast, as of something from the hand; as,
a good pitch in quoits.
(n.) That point of the ground on which the ball pitches or lights
when bowled.
(n.) A point or peak; the extreme point or degree of elevation or
depression; hence, a limit or bound.
(n.) Height; stature.
(n.) A descent; a fall; a thrusting down.
(n.) The point where a declivity begins; hence, the declivity
itself; a descending slope; the degree or rate of descent or slope;
slant; as, a steep pitch in the road; the pitch of a roof.
(n.) The relative acuteness or gravity of a tone, determined by
the number of vibrations which produce it; the place of any tone upon a
scale of high and low.
(n.) The limit of ground set to a miner who receives a share of
the ore taken out.
(n.) The distance from center to center of any two adjacent teeth
of gearing, measured on the pitch line; -- called also circular pitch.
(n.) The length, measured along the axis, of a complete turn of
the thread of a screw, or of the helical lines of the blades of a screw
propeller.
(n.) The distance between the centers of holes, as of rivet holes
in boiler plates.
(a.) Of or pertaining to a pupa, or the condition of a pupa.
(n.) The aperture in the iris; the sight, apple, or black of the
eye. See the Note under Eye, and Iris.
(n.) A youth or scholar of either sex under the care of an
instructor or tutor.
(n.) A person under a guardian; a ward.
(n.) A boy or a girl under the age of puberty, that is, under
fourteen if a male, and under twelve if a female.
(a.) Purified; refined.
(n.) A dish made by boiling any article of food to a pulp and
rubbing it through a sieve; as, a puree of fish, or of potatoes;
especially, a soup the thickening of which is so treated.
(v. t.) To cleanse, clear, or purify by separating and carrying
off whatever is impure, heterogeneous, foreign, or superfluous.
(v. t.) To operate on as, or by means of, a cathartic medicine,
or in a similar manner.
(v. t.) To clarify; to defecate, as liquors.
(v. t.) To clear of sediment, as a boiler, or of air, as a steam
pipe, by driving off or permitting escape.
(v. t.) To clear from guilt, or from moral or ceremonial
defilement; as, to purge one of guilt or crime.
(v. t.) To clear from accusation, or the charge of a crime or
misdemeanor, as by oath or in ordeal.
(v. t.) To remove in cleansing; to deterge; to wash away; --
often followed by away.
(v. i.) To become pure, as by clarification.
(v. i.) To have or produce frequent evacuations from the
intestines, as by means of a cathartic.
(v. t.) The act of purging.
(v. t.) That which purges; especially, a medicine that evacuates
the intestines; a cathartic.
(n.) The young of a canine animal, esp. of the common dog; a
whelp.
(n.) A name of contemptuous reproach for a conceited and
impertinent person.
(v. i.) To bring forth whelps; to pup.
(n.) A perpendicular band upon an escutcheon, one half the
breadth of the pale.
(n.) The male member, or organ of generation.
(n.) Same as Palea.
(n.) A cotton fabric, figured in the loom, -- used as a dress
goods for women and children, and for vestings, etc.
(n.) The jigger. See Jigger.
(n.) A feeling of hurt, vexation, or resentment, awakened by a
social slight or injury; irritation of the feelings, as through wounded
pride; stinging vexation.
(n.) Keenly felt desire; a longing.
(n.) In piquet, the right of the elder hand to count thirty in
hand, or to play before the adversary counts one.
(v. t.) To wound the pride of; to sting; to nettle; to irritate;
to fret; to offend; to excite to anger.
(v. t.) To excite to action by causing resentment or jealousy; to
stimulate; to prick; as, to pique ambition, or curiosity.
(v. t.) To pride or value; -- used reflexively.
(v. i.) To cause annoyance or irritation.
(n.) See Pise.
(n.) Any one of numerous species of small singing birds belonging
to Anthus and allied genera, of the family Motacillidae. They strongly
resemble the true larks in habits, colors, and the great length of the
hind claw. They are, therefore, often called titlarks, and pipit larks.