- sedge
- sedgy
- seeds
- seedy
- seepy
- segar
- segno
- seise
- septa
- soggy
- scrod
- scrog
- scrow
- scrub
- scudi
- scudo
- scuff
- sculk
- scull
- sculp
- scurf
- scuta
- scute
- scuta
- seamy
- slush
- slyly
- slype
- smack
- smalt
- smash
- smear
- smell
- smerk
- smift
- smile
- smirk
- smote
- smite
- smoky
- smolt
- smore
- smote
- snack
- snail
- snake
- snaky
- snape
- snare
- snarl
- snary
- snast
- snead
- sneap
- sneck
- sneer
- snick
- snide
- snift
- sniff
- snift
- snipe
- snite
- snood
- snore
- snort
- snout
- stale
- stall
- soily
- soken
- solar
- soldi
- soldo
- soled
- stamp
- stood
- stand
- stane
- stang
- soler
- solid
- solus
- solve
- samaj
- stare
- starn
- somne
- start
- soncy
- sonsy
- sonde
- sonsy
- soord
- sooth
- sooty
- sopor
- soppy
- sabot
- sacre
- sacra
- sadly
- soree
- stave
- stove
- stave
- staid
- sorgo
- sorry
- shock
- shode
- shoes
- shoon
- shoer
- shola
- shole
- shone
- shooi
- shook
- shoon
- shoop
- shoot
- shorl
- shorn
- shote
- shout
- shove
- shown
- showy
- shrag
- shram
- shrap
- shred
- shrew
- shrub
- shrug
- shuck
- shunt
- shied
- shyly
- sicca
- sicer
- siker
- sicle
- sided
- sidle
- siege
- sieve
- sifac
- sight
- sigil
- sigla
- siker
- sikhs
- saiga
- sarpo
- silky
- silly
- silty
- simar
- saury
- saute
- saved
- saver
- savin
- savor
- sawed
- sawer
- scald
- scale
- scall
- scalp
- scaly
- scant
- scape
- scare
- scarf
- scarn
- scarp
- scary
- scatt
- scaup
- scaur
- scena
- scene
- scent
- scion
- scobs
- scoff
- scoke
- scold
- scomm
- scoop
- scoot
- scope
- score
- scorn
- scour
- scowl
- scrag
- scrap
- scrat
- scraw
- scray
- scree
- screw
- scrim
- scrip
- scrit
- since
- sinew
- singe
- steak
- steal
- stole
- steal
- sofas
- super
- supra
- sutor
- sutra
- swage
- swale
- swamp
- swang
- swape
- sward
- sware
- swarf
- swarm
- swash
- swath
- sweal
- sware
- sworn
- swear
- sweat
- swept
- sweep
- spirt
- spiry
- spiss
- stram
- strap
- straw
- stray
- stree
- spite
- splay
- strew
- stria
- strid
- spoke
- spong
- spook
- spool
- spoom
- spoon
- strip
- spore
- sport
- spout
- sprad
- sprag
- sprat
- spray
- sprew
- sprig
- sprit
- sprod
- sprue
- sprug
- spuke
- spume
- spumy
- spunk
- spurn
- spurt
- spute
- seity
- seize
- semen
- semi-
- seora
- sense
- snowl
- snowy
- snuff
- soaky
- soapy
- soave
- sober
- senza
- sepal
- sepia
- sepic
- socky
- socle
- sodic
- softa
- sagas
- sagum
- saily
- saith
- sajou
- saker
- salad
- salep
- salmi
- salon
- salse
- salty
- salue
- salve
- sanga
- sangu
- sapid
- sapor
- sappy
- sargo
- sarsa
- sasin
- sasse
- sated
- satin
- satyr
- sauce
- saugh
- sputa
- spied
- spies
- squab
- squad
- squat
- squaw
- serai
- serin
- seron
- serow
- serry
- serum
- serve
- sessa
- setae
- shale
- shalt
- seven
- sever
- squib
- stack
- stade
- staff
- stail
- staid
- stail
- stain
- stair
- stake
- sipid
- sired
- siroc
- sirup
- syrup
- sisel
- sited
- sithe
- situs
- siver
- sixth
- sixty
- sizar
- sized
- sizer
- skald
- skart
- skate
- skean
- skeed
- skeel
- skeet
- skein
- skelp
- skied
- skiey
- skiff
- skimp
- skink
- skirl
- skirr
- skirt
- skive
- skout
- skulk
- skull
- skunk
- skies
- skied
- skyey
- slake
- slang
- slank
- slant
- slape
- slash
- slate
- slaty
- slavs
- slain
- sleek
- slept
- sleer
- sleet
- slent
- slept
- slice
- slich
- slick
- slide
- slily
- slime
- slimy
- sling
- slung
- slang
- slung
- sling
- slunk
- slank
- slunk
- slink
- slish
- slive
- sloat
- slock
- sloke
- sloom
- sloop
- slopy
- slosh
- sloth
- slows
- slued
- slugs
- slung
- slunk
- steal
- steam
- stean
- steed
- steek
- steem
- steer
- stela
- stele
- stell
- sorus
- so-so
- steem
- step-
- soupy
- sours
- souse
- sowed
- sowar
- sowle
- sowse
- spaad
- space
- spade
- stert
- spado
- spaed
- spahi
- spaid
- spake
- spale
- spall
- spalt
- spane
- spang
- spank
- stick
- stuck
- stick
- spare
- stick
- stiff
- spary
- spasm
- spate
- stiff
- spawl
- spawn
- stile
- spawn
- spoke
- spake
- spoke
- speak
- spece
- stilt
- stime
- speck
- sting
- stung
- stang
- sting
- stunk
- stink
- stint
- stipe
- stirk
- stirp
- stith
- stive
- speed
- speir
- spelk
- spell
- spelt
- spell
- spelt
- spent
- spend
- spent
- stoke
- stola
- stole
- spere
- spewy
- spial
- spice
- stoma
- stomp
- stond
- stony
- stood
- stook
- stool
- spice
- spick
- spicy
- stool
- stoop
- spied
- spiky
- spile
- spilt
- stope
- spilt
- store
- sever
- sewed
- sewen
- sewer
- sewin
- sexed
- sexly
- sexto
- shack
- shade
- shady
- shaft
- shake
- shook
- shake
- shako
- shaky
- shall
- shaly
- shame
- shard
- share
- shark
- shave
- shawl
- shawm
- sheaf
- sheal
- shorn
- sheep
- sheer
- sheet
- sheik
- sheld
- shelf
- shent
- shend
- shent
- sherd
- sheth
- shewn
- shide
- shied
- shiel
- seave
- seavy
- sebat
- secco
- secre
- shift
- shilf
- shill
- shily
- shone
- shine
- shiny
- shirr
- shirt
- shist
- shive
- shoad
- shoal
- shoat
- shock
- store
- spine
- stork
- spink
- spiny
- stoup
- stour
- stove
- spire
- strip
- strop
- strow
- stroy
- strum
- strut
- stuck
- study
- stuff
- stull
- stulm
- stump
- stung
- stunk
- stunt
- stupa
- stupe
- sturk
- sties
- stied
- styan
- styca
- style
- suade
- suant
- suave
- succi
- suing
- suent
- suety
- suine
- suing
- suint
- suist
- suite
- sulci
- sulks
- sulky
- sumph
- solos
- sough
- sperm
- spill
- spoil
- swerd
- swing
- swirl
- swish
- swore
- sunup
- swell
- swelt
- swept
- swill
- swine
- swung
- swang
- surah
- sural
- surfy
- surge
- swank
- swonk
- swipe
- surgy
- surly
- swive
- swoln
- swoop
- sword
- sworn
- swung
- sycee
- sylph
- synod
- syren
- syrup
- swore
- shots
- sider
- skyed
- slope
- smelt
- sneak
- stank
- stere
- stank
(n.) Any plant of the genus Carex, perennial, endogenous herbs,
often growing in dense tufts in marshy places. They have triangular
jointless stems, a spiked inflorescence, and long grasslike leaves
which are usually rough on the margins and midrib. There are several
hundred species.
(n.) A flock of herons.
(a.) Overgrown with sedge.
(pl. ) of Seed
(superl.) Abounding with seeds; bearing seeds; having run to
seeds.
(superl.) Having a peculiar flavor supposed to be derived from
the weeds growing among the vines; -- said of certain kinds of French
brandy.
(superl.) Old and worn out; exhausted; spiritless; also, poor and
miserable looking; shabbily clothed; shabby looking; as, he looked
seedy coat.
(a.) Alt. of Sipy
(n.) See Cigar.
(n.) A sign. See Al segno, and Dal segno.
(v. t.) See Seize.
(pl. ) of Septum
(superl.) Filled with water; soft with moisture; sodden; soaked;
wet; as, soggy land or timber.
(n.) Alt. of Scrode
(n.) A stunted shrub, bush, or branch.
(n.) A scroll.
(n.) A clipping from skins; a currier's cuttings.
(v. t.) To rub hard; to wash with rubbing; usually, to rub with a
wet brush, or with something coarse or rough, for the purpose of
cleaning or brightening; as, to scrub a floor, a doorplate.
(v. i.) To rub anything hard, especially with a wet brush; to
scour; hence, to be diligent and penurious; as, to scrub hard for a
living.
(n.) One who labors hard and lives meanly; a mean fellow.
(n.) Something small and mean.
(n.) A worn-out brush.
(n.) A thicket or jungle, often specified by the name of the
prevailing plant; as, oak scrub, palmetto scrub, etc.
(n.) One of the common live stock of a region of no particular
breed or not of pure breed, esp. when inferior in size, etc.
(a.) Mean; dirty; contemptible; scrubby.
(pl. ) of Scudo
(n.) A silver coin, and money of account, used in Italy and
Sicily, varying in value, in different parts, but worth about 4
shillings sterling, or about 96 cents; also, a gold coin worth about
the same.
(n.) A gold coin of Rome, worth 64 shillings 11 pence sterling,
or about $ 15.70.
(n.) The back part of the neck; the scruff.
(v. i.) To walk without lifting the feet; to proceed with a
scraping or dragging movement; to shuffle.
() Alt. of Sculker
(n.) The skull.
(n.) A shoal of fish.
(n.) A boat; a cockboat. See Sculler.
(n.) One of a pair of short oars worked by one person.
(n.) A single oar used at the stern in propelling a boat.
(n.) The common skua gull.
(v. t.) To impel (a boat) with a pair of sculls, or with a single
scull or oar worked over the stern obliquely from side to side.
(v. i.) To impel a boat with a scull or sculls.
(v. t.) To sculpture; to carve; to engrave.
(n.) Thin dry scales or scabs upon the body; especially, thin
scales exfoliated from the cuticle, particularly of the scalp;
dandruff.
(n.) Hence, the foul remains of anything adherent.
(n.) Anything like flakes or scales adhering to a surface.
(n.) Minute membranous scales on the surface of some leaves, as
in the goosefoot.
(n. pl.) See Scutum.
(n.) A small shield.
(n.) An old French gold coin of the value of 3s. 4d. sterling, or
about 80 cents.
(n.) A bony scale of a reptile or fish; a large horny scale on
the leg of a bird, or on the belly of a snake.
(pl. ) of Scutum
(a.) Having a seam; containing seams, or showing them.
(n.) Soft mud.
(n.) A mixture of snow and water; half-melted snow.
(n.) A soft mixture of grease and other materials, used for
lubrication.
(n.) The refuse grease and fat collected in cooking, especially
on shipboard.
(n.) A mixture of white lead and lime, with which the bright
parts of machines, such as the connecting rods of steamboats, are
painted to be preserved from oxidation.
(v. t.) To smear with slush or grease; as, to slush a mast.
(v. t.) To paint with a mixture of white lead and lime.
(adv.) In a sly manner; shrewdly; craftily.
(n.) A narrow passage between two buildings, as between the
transept and chapter house of a monastery.
(n.) A small sailing vessel, commonly rigged as a sloop, used
chiefly in the coasting and fishing trade.
(v. i.) Taste or flavor, esp. a slight taste or flavor; savor;
tincture; as, a smack of bitter in the medicine. Also used
figuratively.
(v. i.) A small quantity; a taste.
(v. i.) A loud kiss; a buss.
(v. i.) A quick, sharp noise, as of the lips when suddenly
separated, or of a whip.
(v. i.) A quick, smart blow; a slap.
(adv.) As if with a smack or slap.
(n.) To have a smack; to be tinctured with any particular taste.
(n.) To have or exhibit indications of the presence of any
character or quality.
(n.) To kiss with a close compression of the lips, so as to make
a sound when they separate; to kiss with a sharp noise; to buss.
(n.) To make a noise by the separation of the lips after tasting
anything.
(v. t.) To kiss with a sharp noise; to buss.
(v. t.) To open, as the lips, with an inarticulate sound made by
a quick compression and separation of the parts of the mouth; to make a
noise with, as the lips, by separating them in the act of kissing or
after tasting.
(v. t.) To make a sharp noise by striking; to crack; as, to smack
a whip.
(v. t.) A deep blue pigment or coloring material used in various
arts. It is a vitreous substance made of cobalt, potash, and calcined
quartz fused, and reduced to a powder.
(v. t.) To break in pieces by violence; to dash to pieces; to
crush.
(v. i.) To break up, or to pieces suddenly, as the result of
collision or pressure.
(n.) A breaking or dashing to pieces; utter destruction; wreck.
(n.) Hence, bankruptcy.
(n.) To overspread with anything unctuous, viscous, or adhesive;
to daub; as, to smear anything with oil.
(n.) To soil in any way; to contaminate; to pollute; to stain
morally; as, to be smeared with infamy.
(n.) A fat, oily substance; oinment.
(n.) Hence, a spot made by, or as by, an unctuous or adhesive
substance; a blot or blotch; a daub; a stain.
(n.) To perceive by the olfactory nerves, or organs of smell; to
have a sensation of, excited through the nasal organs when affected by
the appropriate materials or qualities; to obtain the scent of; as, to
smell a rose; to smell perfumes.
(n.) To detect or perceive, as if by the sense of smell; to scent
out; -- often with out.
(n.) To give heed to.
(v. i.) To affect the olfactory nerves; to have an odor or scent;
-- often followed by of; as, to smell of smoke, or of musk.
(v. i.) To have a particular tincture or smack of any quality; to
savor; as, a report smells of calumny.
(v. i.) To exercise the sense of smell.
(v. i.) To exercise sagacity.
(v. t.) The sense or faculty by which certain qualities of bodies
are perceived through the instrumentally of the olfactory nerves. See
Sense.
(v. t.) The quality of any thing or substance, or emanation
therefrom, which affects the olfactory organs; odor; scent; fragrance;
perfume; as, the smell of mint.
(n. & v.) See Smirk.
(a.) Alt. of Smerky
(n.) A match for firing a charge of powder, as in blasting; a
fuse.
(v. i.) To express amusement, pleasure, moderate joy, or love and
kindness, by the features of the face; to laugh silently.
(v. i.) To express slight contempt by a look implying sarcasm or
pity; to sneer.
(v. i.) To look gay and joyous; to have an appearance suited to
excite joy; as, smiling spring; smiling plenty.
(v. i.) To be propitious or favorable; to favor; to countenance;
-- often with on; as, to smile on one's labors.
(v. t.) To express by a smile; as, to smile consent; to smile a
welcome to visitors.
(v. t.) To affect in a certain way with a smile.
(v. i.) The act of smiling; a peculiar change or brightening of
the face, which expresses pleasure, moderate joy, mirth, approbation,
or kindness; -- opposed to frown.
(v. i.) A somewhat similar expression of countenance, indicative
of satisfaction combined with malevolent feelings, as contempt, scorn,
etc; as, a scornful smile.
(v. i.) Favor; countenance; propitiousness; as, the smiles of
Providence.
(v. i.) Gay or joyous appearance; as, the smiles of spring.
(v. i.) To smile in an affected or conceited manner; to smile
with affected complaisance; to simper.
(n.) A forced or affected smile; a simper.
(a.) Nice,; smart; spruce; affected; simpering.
(imp.) of Smite
() of Smite
(v. t.) To strike; to inflict a blow upon with the hand, or with
any instrument held in the hand, or with a missile thrown by the hand;
as, to smite with the fist, with a rod, sword, spear, or stone.
(v. t.) To cause to strike; to use as an instrument in striking
or hurling.
(v. t.) To destroy the life of by beating, or by weapons of any
kind; to slay by a blow; to kill; as, to smite one with the sword, or
with an arrow or other instrument.
(v. t.) To put to rout in battle; to overthrow by war.
(v. t.) To blast; to destroy the life or vigor of, as by a stroke
or by some visitation.
(v. t.) To afflict; to chasten; to punish.
(v. t.) To strike or affect with passion, as love or fear.
(v. i.) To strike; to collide; to beat.
(n.) The act of smiting; a blow.
(superl.) Emitting smoke, esp. in large quantities or in an
offensive manner; fumid; as, smoky fires.
(superl.) Having the appearance or nature of smoke; as, a smoky
fog.
(superl.) Filled with smoke, or with a vapor resembling smoke;
thick; as, a smoky atmosphere.
(superl.) Subject to be filled with smoke from chimneys or
fireplace; as, a smoky house.
(superl.) Tarnished with smoke; noisome with smoke; as, smoky
rafters; smoky cells.
(superl.) Suspicious; open to suspicion.
(n.) A young salmon two or three years old, when it has acquired
its silvery color.
(v. t.) To smother. See Smoor.
() imp. (/ rare p. p.) of Smite.
(v. t.) A share; a part or portion; -- obsolete, except in the
colloquial phrase, to go snacks, i. e., to share.
(v. t.) A slight, hasty repast.
(n.) Any one of numerous species of terrestrial air-breathing
gastropods belonging to the genus Helix and many allied genera of the
family Helicidae. They are abundant in nearly all parts of the world
except the arctic regions, and feed almost entirely on vegetation; a
land snail.
(n.) Any gastropod having a general resemblance to the true
snails, including fresh-water and marine species. See Pond snail, under
Pond, and Sea snail.
(n.) Hence, a drone; a slow-moving person or thing.
(n.) A spiral cam, or a flat piece of metal of spirally curved
outline, used for giving motion to, or changing the position of,
another part, as the hammer tail of a striking clock.
(n.) A tortoise; in ancient warfare, a movable roof or shed to
protect besiegers; a testudo.
(n.) The pod of the sanil clover.
(n.) Any species of the order Ophidia; an ophidian; a serpent,
whether harmless or venomous. See Ophidia, and Serpent.
(v. t.) To drag or draw, as a snake from a hole; -- often with
out.
(v. t.) To wind round spirally, as a large rope with a smaller,
or with cord, the small rope lying in the spaces between the strands of
the large one; to worm.
(v. i.) To crawl like a snake.
(a.) Of or pertaining to a snake or snakes; resembling a snake;
serpentine; winding.
(a.) Sly; cunning; insinuating; deceitful.
(a.) Covered with serpents; having serpents; as, a snaky rod or
wand.
(v. t.) To bevel the end of a timber to fit against an inclined
surface.
(n.) A contrivance, often consisting of a noose of cord, or the
like, by which a bird or other animal may be entangled and caught; a
trap; a gin.
(n.) Hence, anything by which one is entangled and brought into
trouble.
(n.) The gut or string stretched across the lower head of a drum.
(n.) An instrument, consisting usually of a wireloop or noose,
for removing tumors, etc., by avulsion.
(v. t.) To catch with a snare; to insnare; to entangle; hence, to
bring into unexpected evil, perplexity, or danger.
(v. t.) To form raised work upon the outer surface of (thin metal
ware) by the repercussion of a snarling iron upon the inner surface.
(v. t.) To entangle; to complicate; to involve in knots; as, to
snarl a skein of thread.
(v. t.) To embarrass; to insnare.
(n.) A knot or complication of hair, thread, or the like,
difficult to disentangle; entanglement; hence, intricate complication;
embarrassing difficulty.
(v. i.) To growl, as an angry or surly dog; to gnarl; to utter
grumbling sounds.
(v. i.) To speak crossly; to talk in rude, surly terms.
(n.) The act of snarling; a growl; a surly or peevish expression;
an angry contention.
(a.) Resembling, or consisting of, snares; entangling; insidious.
(v. t.) The snuff, or burnt wick, of a candle.
(n.) A snath.
(n.) A line or cord; a string.
(v. t.) To check; to reprimand; to rebuke; to chide.
(v. t.) To nip; to blast; to blight.
(n.) A reprimand; a rebuke.
(v. t.) To fasten by a hatch; to latch, as a door.
(n.) A door latch.
(v. i.) To show contempt by turning up the nose, or by a
particular facial expression.
(v. i.) To inssinuate contempt by a covert expression; to speak
derisively.
(v. i.) To show mirth awkwardly.
(v. t.) To utter with a grimace or contemptuous expression; to
utter with a sneer; to say sneeringly; as, to sneer fulsome lies at a
person.
(v. t.) To treat with sneers; to affect or move by sneers.
(n.) The act of sneering.
(n.) A smile, grin, or contortion of the face, indicative of
contempt; an indirect expression or insinuation of contempt.
(n.) A small cut or mark.
(n.) A slight hit or tip of the ball, often unintentional.
(n.) A knot or irregularity in yarn.
(n.) A snip or cut, as in the hair of a beast.
(v. t.) To cut slightly; to strike, or strike off, as by cutting.
(v. t.) To hit (a ball) lightly.
(n. & v. t.) See Sneck.
(a.) Tricky; deceptive; contemptible; as, a snide lawyer; snide
goods.
() of Sniff
(v. t.) To draw air audibly up the nose; to snuff; -- sometimes
done as a gesture of suspicion, offense, or contempt.
(v. t.) To draw in with the breath through the nose; as, to sniff
the air of the country.
(v. t.) To perceive as by sniffing; to snuff, to scent; to smell;
as, to sniff danger.
(n.) The act of sniffing; perception by sniffing; that which is
taken by sniffing; as, a sniff of air.
(v. i.) To snort.
(v. i.) To sniff; to snuff; to smell.
(n.) A moment.
(n.) Slight snow; sleet.
(n.) Any one of numerous species of limicoline game birds of the
family Scolopacidae, having a long, slender, nearly straight beak.
(n.) A fool; a blockhead.
(n.) A snipe.
(v. t.) To blow, as the nose; to snuff, as a candle.
(n.) The fillet which binds the hair of a young unmarried woman,
and is emblematic of her maiden character.
(n.) A short line (often of horsehair) connecting a fishing line
with the hook; a snell; a leader.
(v. t.) To bind or braid up, as the hair, with a snood.
(v. i.) To breathe with a rough, hoarse, nasal voice in sleep.
(n.) A harsh nasal noise made in sleep.
(v. i.) To force the air with violence through the nose, so as to
make a noise, as do high-spirited horsed in prancing and play.
(v. i.) To snore.
(v. i.) To laugh out loudly.
(n.) The act of snorting; the sound produced in snorting.
(v. t.) To expel throught the nostrils with a snort; to utter
with a snort.
(n.) The long, projecting nose of a beast, as of swine.
(n.) The nose of a man; -- in contempt.
(n.) The nozzle of a pipe, hose, etc.
(n.) The anterior prolongation of the head of a gastropod; --
called also rostrum.
(n.) The anterior prolongation of the head of weevils and allied
beetles.
(v. t.) To furnish with a nozzle or point.
(n.) The stock or handle of anything; as, the stale of a rake.
(v. i.) Vapid or tasteless from age; having lost its life,
spirit, and flavor, from being long kept; as, stale beer.
(v. i.) Not new; not freshly made; as, stele bread.
(v. i.) Having lost the life or graces of youth; worn out;
decayed.
(v. i.) Worn out by use or familiarity; having lost its novelty
and power of pleasing; trite; common.
(v. t.) To make vapid or tasteless; to destroy the life, beauty,
or use of; to wear out.
(a.) To make water; to discharge urine; -- said especially of
horses and cattle.
(v. i.) That which is stale or worn out by long keeping, or by
use.
(v. i.) A prostitute.
(v. i.) Urine, esp. that of beasts.
(v. t.) Something set, or offered to view, as an allurement to
draw others to any place or purpose; a decoy; a stool pigeon.
(v. t.) A stalking-horse.
(v. t.) A stalemate.
(v. t.) A laughingstock; a dupe.
(v. i.) A stand; a station; a fixed spot; hence, the stand or
place where a horse or an ox kept and fed; the division of a stable, or
the compartment, for one horse, ox, or other animal.
(v. i.) A stable; a place for cattle.
(v. i.) A small apartment or shed in which merchandise is exposed
for sale; as, a butcher's stall; a bookstall.
(v. i.) A bench or table on which small articles of merchandise
are exposed for sale.
(v. i.) A seat in the choir of a church, for one of the
officiating clergy. It is inclosed, either wholly or partially, at the
back and sides. The stalls are frequently very rich, with canopies and
elaborate carving.
(v. i.) In the theater, a seat with arms or otherwise partly
inclosed, as distinguished from the benches, sofas, etc.
(v. i.) The space left by excavation between pillars. See Post
and stall, under Post.
(v. t.) To put into a stall or stable; to keep in a stall or
stalls; as, to stall an ox.
(v. t.) To fatten; as, to stall cattle.
(v. t.) To place in an office with the customary formalities; to
install.
(v. t.) To plunge into mire or snow so as not to be able to get
on; to set; to fix; as, to stall a cart.
(v. t.) To forestall; to anticipitate. Having
(v. t.) To keep close; to keep secret.
(v. i.) To live in, or as in, a stall; to dwell.
(v. i.) To kennel, as dogs.
(v. i.) To be set, as in mire or snow; to stick fast.
(v. i.) To be tired of eating, as cattle.
(a.) Dirty; soiled.
(n.) A toll. See Soc, n., 2.
(n.) A district held by socage.
(a.) A loft or upper chamber; a garret room.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the sun; proceeding from the sun; as,
the solar system; solar light; solar rays; solar influence. See Solar
system, below.
(a.) Born under the predominant influence of the sun.
(a.) Measured by the progress or revolution of the sun in the
ecliptic; as, the solar year.
(a.) Produced by the action of the sun, or peculiarly affected by
its influence.
(pl. ) of Soldo
(n.) A small Italian coin worth a sou or a cent; the twentieth
part of a lira.
(imp. & p. p.) of Sole
(v. i.) To strike beat, or press forcibly with the bottom of the
foot, or by thrusting the foot downward.
(v. i.) To bring down (the foot) forcibly on the ground or floor;
as, he stamped his foot with rage.
(v. i.) To crush; to pulverize; specifically (Metal.), to crush
by the blow of a heavy stamp, as ore in a mill.
(v. i.) To impress with some mark or figure; as, to stamp a plate
with arms or initials.
(v. i.) Fig.: To impress; to imprint; to fix deeply; as, to stamp
virtuous principles on the heart.
(v. i.) To cut out, bend, or indent, as paper, sheet metal, etc.,
into various forms, by a blow or suddenly applied pressure with a stamp
or die, etc.; to mint; to coin.
(v. i.) To put a stamp on, as for postage; as, to stamp a letter;
to stamp a legal document.
(v. i.) To strike; to beat; to crush.
(v. i.) To strike the foot forcibly downward.
(n.) The act of stamping, as with the foot.
(n.) The which stamps; any instrument for making impressions on
other bodies, as a die.
(n.) The mark made by stamping; a mark imprinted; an impression.
(n.) that which is marked; a thing stamped.
(v. t.) A picture cut in wood or metal, or made by impression; a
cut; a plate.
(v. t.) An offical mark set upon things chargeable with a duty or
tax to government, as evidence that the duty or tax is paid; as, the
stamp on a bill of exchange.
(v. t.) Hence, a stamped or printed device, issued by the
government at a fixed price, and required by law to be affixed to, or
stamped on, certain papers, as evidence that the government dues are
paid; as, a postage stamp; a receipt stamp, etc.
(v. t.) An instrument for cutting out, or shaping, materials, as
paper, leather, etc., by a downward pressure.
(v. t.) A character or reputation, good or bad, fixed on anything
as if by an imprinted mark; current value; authority; as, these persons
have the stamp of dishonesty; the Scriptures bear the stamp of a divine
origin.
(v. t.) Make; cast; form; character; as, a man of the same stamp,
or of a different stamp.
(v. t.) A kind of heavy hammer, or pestle, raised by water or
steam power, for beating ores to powder; anything like a pestle, used
for pounding or bathing.
(v. t.) A half-penny.
(v. t.) Money, esp. paper money.
(imp. & p. p.) of Stand
(n.) To be at rest in an erect position; to be fixed in an
upright or firm position
(n.) To be supported on the feet, in an erect or nearly erect
position; -- opposed to lie, sit, kneel, etc.
(n.) To continue upright in a certain locality, as a tree fixed
by the roots, or a building resting on its foundation.
(n.) To occupy or hold a place; to have a situation; to be
situated or located; as, Paris stands on the Seine.
(n.) To cease from progress; not to proceed; to stop; to pause;
to halt; to remain stationary.
(n.) To remain without ruin or injury; to hold good against
tendencies to impair or injure; to be permanent; to endure; to last;
hence, to find endurance, strength, or resources.
(n.) To maintain one's ground; to be acquitted; not to fail or
yield; to be safe.
(n.) To maintain an invincible or permanent attitude; to be
fixed, steady, or firm; to take a position in resistance or opposition.
(n.) To adhere to fixed principles; to maintain moral rectitude;
to keep from falling into error or vice.
(n.) To have or maintain a position, order, or rank; to be in a
particular relation; as, Christian charity, or love, stands first in
the rank of gifts.
(n.) To be in some particular state; to have essence or being; to
be; to consist.
(n.) To be consistent; to agree; to accord.
(n.) To hold a course at sea; as, to stand from the shore; to
stand for the harbor.
(n.) To offer one's self, or to be offered, as a candidate.
(n.) To stagnate; not to flow; to be motionless.
(n.) To measure when erect on the feet.
(n.) To be or remain as it is; to continue in force; to have
efficacy or validity; to abide.
(n.) To appear in court.
(v. t.) To endure; to sustain; to bear; as, I can not stand the
cold or the heat.
(v. t.) To resist, without yielding or receding; to withstand.
(v. t.) To abide by; to submit to; to suffer.
(v. t.) To set upright; to cause to stand; as, to stand a book on
the shelf; to stand a man on his feet.
(v. t.) To be at the expense of; to pay for; as, to stand a
treat.
(v. i.) The act of standing.
(v. i.) A halt or stop for the purpose of defense, resistance, or
opposition; as, to come to, or to make, a stand.
(v. i.) A place or post where one stands; a place where one may
stand while observing or waiting for something.
(v. i.) A station in a city or town where carriages or wagons
stand for hire; as, a cab stand.
(v. i.) A raised platform or station where a race or other
outdoor spectacle may be viewed; as, the judge's or the grand stand at
a race course.
(v. i.) A small table; also, something on or in which anything
may be laid, hung, or placed upright; as, a hat stand; an umbrella
stand; a music stand.
(v. i.) A place where a witness stands to testify in court.
(v. i.) The situation of a shop, store, hotel, etc.; as, a good,
bad, or convenient stand for business.
(v. i.) Rank; post; station; standing.
(v. i.) A state of perplexity or embarrassment; as, to be at a
stand what to do.
(v. i.) A young tree, usually reserved when other trees are cut;
also, a tree growing or standing upon its own root, in distinction from
one produced from a scion set in a stock, either of the same or another
kind of tree.
(v. i.) A weight of from two hundred and fifty to three hundred
pounds, -- used in weighing pitch.
(n.) A stone.
() imp. of Sting.
(n.) A long bar; a pole; a shaft; a stake.
(n.) In land measure, a pole, rod, or perch.
(v. i.) To shoot with pain.
(n.) Alt. of Solere
(a.) Having the constituent parts so compact, or so firmly
adhering, as to resist the impression or penetration of other bodies;
having a fixed form; hard; firm; compact; -- opposed to fluid and
liquid or to plastic, like clay, or to incompact, like sand.
(a.) Not hollow; full of matter; as, a solid globe or cone, as
distinguished from a hollow one; not spongy; dense; hence, sometimes,
heavy.
(a.) Having all the geometrical dimensions; cubic; as, a solid
foot contains 1,728 solid inches.
(a.) Firm; compact; strong; stable; unyielding; as, a solid pier;
a solid pile; a solid wall.
(a.) Applied to a compound word whose parts are closely united
and form an unbroken word; -- opposed to hyphened.
(a.) Fig.: Worthy of credit, trust, or esteem; substantial, as
opposed to frivolous or fallacious; weighty; firm; strong; valid; just;
genuine.
(a.) Sound; not weakly; as, a solid constitution of body.
(a.) Of a fleshy, uniform, undivided substance, as a bulb or
root; not spongy or hollow within, as a stem.
(a.) Impenetrable; resisting or excluding any other material
particle or atom from any given portion of space; -- applied to the
supposed ultimate particles of matter.
(a.) Not having the lines separated by leads; not open.
(a.) United; without division; unanimous; as, the delegation is
solid for a candidate.
(n.) A substance that is held in a fixed form by cohesion among
its particles; a substance not fluid.
(n.) A magnitude which has length, breadth, and thickness; a part
of space bounded on all sides.
(fem. a.) Alt. of Sola
(v. t.) To explain; to resolve; to unfold; to clear up (what is
obscure or difficult to be understood); to work out to a result or
conclusion; as, to solve a doubt; to solve difficulties; to solve a
problem.
(n.) A solution; an explanation.
(n.) A society; a congregation; a worshiping assembly, or church,
esp. of the Brahmo-somaj.
(n.) The starling.
(v. i.) To look with fixed eyes wide open, as through fear,
wonder, surprise, impudence, etc.; to fasten an earnest and prolonged
gaze on some object.
(v. i.) To be very conspicuous on account of size, prominence,
color, or brilliancy; as, staring windows or colors.
(v. i.) To stand out; to project; to bristle.
(v. t.) To look earnestly at; to gaze at.
(n.) The act of staring; a fixed look with eyes wide open.
(n.) The European starling.
(v. t.) To summon.
(v. i.) To leap; to jump.
(v. i.) To move suddenly, as with a spring or leap, from
surprise, pain, or other sudden feeling or emotion, or by a voluntary
act.
(v. i.) To set out; to commence a course, as a race or journey;
to begin; as, to start business.
(v. i.) To become somewhat displaced or loosened; as, a rivet or
a seam may start under strain or pressure.
(v. t.) To cause to move suddenly; to disturb suddenly; to
startle; to alarm; to rouse; to cause to flee or fly; as, the hounds
started a fox.
(v. t.) To bring onto being or into view; to originate; to
invent.
(v. t.) To cause to move or act; to set going, running, or
flowing; as, to start a railway train; to start a mill; to start a
stream of water; to start a rumor; to start a business.
(v. t.) To move suddenly from its place or position; to displace
or loosen; to dislocate; as, to start a bone; the storm started the
bolts in the vessel.
(v. t.) To pour out; to empty; to tap and begin drawing from; as,
to start a water cask.
(n.) The act of starting; a sudden spring, leap, or motion,
caused by surprise, fear, pain, or the like; any sudden motion, or
beginning of motion.
(n.) A convulsive motion, twitch, or spasm; a spasmodic effort.
(n.) A sudden, unexpected movement; a sudden and capricious
impulse; a sally; as, starts of fancy.
(n.) The beginning, as of a journey or a course of action; first
motion from a place; act of setting out; the outset; -- opposed to
finish.
(v. i.) A tail, or anything projecting like a tail.
(v. i.) The handle, or tail, of a plow; also, any long handle.
(v. i.) The curved or inclined front and bottom of a water-wheel
bucket.
(v. i.) The arm, or level, of a gin, drawn around by a horse.
(a.) Alt. of Sonsy
(a.) Lucky; fortunate; thriving; plump.
(v. t.) That which is sent; a message or messenger; hence, also,
a visitation of providence; an affliction or trial.
(a.) See Soncy.
(n.) Skin of bacon.
(superl.) True; faithful; trustworthy.
(superl.) Pleasing; delightful; sweet.
(a.) Truth; reality.
(a.) Augury; prognostication.
(a.) Blandishment; cajolery.
(superl.) Of or pertaining to soot; producing soot; soiled by
soot.
(superl.) Having a dark brown or black color like soot;
fuliginous; dusky; dark.
(v. t.) To black or foul with soot.
(n.) Profound sleep from which a person can be roused only with
difficulty.
(a.) Soaked or saturated with liquid or moisture; very wet or
sloppy.
(n.) A kind of wooden shoe worn by the peasantry in France,
Belgium, Sweden, and some other European countries.
(n.) A thick, circular disk of wood, to which the cartridge bag
and projectile are attached, in fixed ammunition for cannon; also, a
piece of soft metal attached to a projectile to take the groove of the
rifling.
(n.) See Saker.
(v. t.) To consecrate; to make sacred.
(pl. ) of Sacrum
(adv.) Wearily; heavily; firmly.
(adv.) Seriously; soberly; gravely.
(adv.) Grievously; deeply; sorrowfully; miserably.
(n.) Same as Sora.
(n.) One of a number of narrow strips of wood, or narrow iron
plates, placed edge to edge to form the sides, covering, or lining of a
vessel or structure; esp., one of the strips which form the sides of a
cask, a pail, etc.
(n.) One of the cylindrical bars of a lantern wheel; one of the
bars or rounds of a rack, a ladder, etc.
(n.) A metrical portion; a stanza; a staff.
(n.) The five horizontal and parallel lines on and between which
musical notes are written or pointed; the staff.
() of Stave
(n.) To break in a stave or the staves of; to break a hole in; to
burst; -- often with in; as, to stave a cask; to stave in a boat.
(n.) To push, as with a staff; -- with off.
(n.) To delay by force or craft; to drive away; -- usually with
off; as, to stave off the execution of a project.
(n.) To suffer, or cause, to be lost by breaking the cask.
(n.) To furnish with staves or rundles.
(n.) To render impervious or solid by driving with a calking
iron; as, to stave lead, or the joints of pipes into which lead has
been run.
(v. i.) To burst in pieces by striking against something; to dash
into fragments.
() of Stay
(n.) Indian millet and its varieties. See Sorghum.
(a.) Grieved for the loss of some good; pained for some evil;
feeling regret; -- now generally used to express light grief or
affliction, but formerly often used to express deeper feeling.
(a.) Melancholy; dismal; gloomy; mournful.
(a.) Poor; mean; worthless; as, a sorry excuse.
(v. t.) To collect, or make up, into a shock or shocks; to stook;
as, to shock rye.
(v. i.) To be occupied with making shocks.
(n.) A quivering or shaking which is the effect of a blow,
collision, or violent impulse; a blow, impact, or collision; a
concussion; a sudden violent impulse or onset.
(n.) A sudden agitation of the mind or feelings; a sensation of
pleasure or pain caused by something unexpected or overpowering; also,
a sudden agitating or overpowering event.
(n.) A sudden depression of the vital forces of the entire body,
or of a port of it, marking some profound impression produced upon the
nervous system, as by severe injury, overpowering emotion, or the like.
(n.) The sudden convulsion or contraction of the muscles, with
the feeling of a concussion, caused by the discharge, through the
animal system, of electricity from a charged body.
(v.) To give a shock to; to cause to shake or waver; hence, to
strike against suddenly; to encounter with violence.
(v.) To strike with surprise, terror, horror, or disgust; to
cause to recoil; as, his violence shocked his associates.
(v. i.) To meet with a shock; to meet in violent encounter.
(n.) A dog with long hair or shag; -- called also shockdog.
(n.) A thick mass of bushy hair; as, a head covered with a shock
of sandy hair.
(a.) Bushy; shaggy; as, a shock hair.
(v. t.) The parting of the hair on the head.
(v. t.) The top of the head; the head.
() Alt. of Shoding
(pl. ) of Shoe
(pl. ) of Shoe
(n.) One who fits shoes to the feet; one who furnishes or puts on
shoes; as, a shoer of horses.
(n.) See Sola.
(n.) A plank fixed beneath an object, as beneath the rudder of a
vessel, to protect it from injury; a plank on the ground under the end
of a shore or the like.
(n.) See Shoal.
() imp. & p. p. of Shine.
(n.) The Richardson's skua (Stercorarius parasiticus);- so called
from its cry.
() imp. & obs. or poet. p. p. of Shake.
(n.) A set of staves and headings sufficient in number for one
hogshead, cask, barrel, or the like, trimmed, and bound together in
compact form.
(n.) A set of boards for a sugar box.
(n.) The parts of a piece of house furniture, as a bedstead,
packed together.
(v. t.) To pack, as staves, in a shook.
(n.) pl. of Shoe.
() imp. of Shape. Shaped.
(n.) An inclined plane, either artificial or natural, down which
timber, coal, etc., are caused to slide; also, a narrow passage, either
natural or artificial, in a stream, where the water rushes rapidly;
esp., a channel, having a swift current, connecting the ends of a bend
in the stream, so as to shorten the course.
(v. i.) To let fly, or cause to be driven, with force, as an
arrow or a bullet; -- followed by a word denoting the missile, as an
object.
(v. i.) To discharge, causing a missile to be driven forth; --
followed by a word denoting the weapon or instrument, as an object; --
often with off; as, to shoot a gun.
(v. i.) To strike with anything shot; to hit with a missile;
often, to kill or wound with a firearm; -- followed by a word denoting
the person or thing hit, as an object.
(v. i.) To send out or forth, especially with a rapid or sudden
motion; to cast with the hand; to hurl; to discharge; to emit.
(v. i.) To push or thrust forward; to project; to protrude; --
often with out; as, a plant shoots out a bud.
(v. i.) To plane straight; to fit by planing.
(v. i.) To pass rapidly through, over, or under; as, to shoot a
rapid or a bridge; to shoot a sand bar.
(v. i.) To variegate as if by sprinkling or intermingling; to
color in spots or patches.
(v. i.) To cause an engine or weapon to discharge a missile; --
said of a person or an agent; as, they shot at a target; he shoots
better than he rides.
(v. i.) To discharge a missile; -- said of an engine or
instrument; as, the gun shoots well.
(v. i.) To be shot or propelled forcibly; -- said of a missile;
to be emitted or driven; to move or extend swiftly, as if propelled;
as, a shooting star.
(v. i.) To penetrate, as a missile; to dart with a piercing
sensation; as, shooting pains.
(v. i.) To feel a quick, darting pain; to throb in pain.
(v. i.) To germinate; to bud; to sprout.
(v. i.) To grow; to advance; as, to shoot up rapidly.
(v. i.) To change form suddenly; especially, to solidify.
(v. i.) To protrude; to jut; to project; to extend; as, the land
shoots into a promontory.
(v. i.) To move ahead by force of momentum, as a sailing vessel
when the helm is put hard alee.
(n.) The act of shooting; the discharge of a missile; a shot; as,
the shoot of a shuttle.
(n.) A young branch or growth.
(n.) A rush of water; a rapid.
(n.) A vein of ore running in the same general direction as the
lode.
(n.) A weft thread shot through the shed by the shuttle; a pick.
(n.) A shoat; a young hog.
(a.) Alt. of Shorlaceous
() p. p. of Shear.
(v. t.) A fish resembling the trout.
(v. t.) A young hog; a shoat.
(v. i.) To utter a sudden and loud outcry, as in joy, triumph, or
exultation, or to attract attention, to animate soldiers, etc.
(v. t.) To utter with a shout; to cry; -- sometimes with out; as,
to shout, or to shout out, a man's name.
(v. t.) To treat with shouts or clamor.
(n.) A loud burst of voice or voices; a vehement and sudden
outcry, especially of a multitudes expressing joy, triumph, exultation,
or animated courage.
(v. t.) To drive along by the direct and continuous application
of strength; to push; especially, to push (a body) so as to make it
move along the surface of another body; as, to shove a boat on the
water; to shove a table across the floor.
(v. t.) To push along, aside, or away, in a careless or rude
manner; to jostle.
(v. i.) To push or drive forward; to move onward by pushing or
jostling.
(v. i.) To move off or along by an act pushing, as with an oar a
pole used by one in a boat; sometimes with off.
(n.) The act of shoving; a forcible push.
() p. p. of Shove.
(p. p.) of Show
() p. p. of Show.
(a.) Making a show; attracting attention; presenting a marked
appearance; ostentatious; gay; gaudy.
(n.) A twig of a tree cut off.
(v. t.) To trim, as trees; to lop.
(v. t.) To cause to shrink or shrivel with cold; to benumb.
(n.) Alt. of Shrape
(n.) A long, narrow piece cut or torn off; a strip.
(n.) In general, a fragment; a piece; a particle.
(imp. & p. p.) of Shred
(n.) To cut or tear into small pieces, particularly narrow and
long pieces, as of cloth or leather.
(n.) To lop; to prune; to trim.
(a.) Wicked; malicious.
(a.) Originally, a brawling, turbulent, vexatious person of
either sex, but now restricted in use to females; a brawler; a scold.
(a.) Any small insectivore of the genus Sorex and several allied
genera of the family Sorecidae. In form and color they resemble mice,
but they have a longer and more pointed nose. Some of them are the
smallest of all mammals.
(a.) To beshrew; to curse.
(n.) A liquor composed of vegetable acid, especially lemon juice,
and sugar, with spirit to preserve it.
(n.) A woody plant of less size than a tree, and usually with
several stems from the same root.
(v. t.) To lop; to prune.
(v. t.) To draw up or contract (the shoulders), especially by way
of expressing dislike, dread, doubt, or the like.
(v. i.) To raise or draw up the shoulders, as in expressing
dislike, dread, doubt, or the like.
(n.) A drawing up of the shoulders, -- a motion usually
expressing dislike, dread, or doubt.
(n.) A shock of grain.
(n.) A shell, husk, or pod; especially, the outer covering of
such nuts as the hickory nut, butternut, peanut, and chestnut.
(n.) The shell of an oyster or clam.
(v. t.) To deprive of the shucks or husks; as, to shuck walnuts,
Indian corn, oysters, etc.
(v. t.) To shun; to move from.
(v. t.) To cause to move suddenly; to give a sudden start to; to
shove.
(v. t.) To turn off to one side; especially, to turn off, as a
grain or a car upon a side track; to switch off; to shift.
(v. t.) To provide with a shunt; as, to shunt a galvanometer.
(v. i.) To go aside; to turn off.
(v. t.) A turning off to a side or short track, that the
principal track may be left free.
(v. t.) A conducting circuit joining two points in a conductor,
or the terminals of a galvanometer or dynamo, so as to form a parallel
or derived circuit through which a portion of the current may pass, for
the purpose of regulating the amount passing in the main circuit.
(v. t.) The shifting of the studs on a projectile from the deep
to the shallow sides of the grooves in its discharge from a shunt gun.
(imp. & p. p.) of Shy
(adv.) In a shy or timid manner; not familiarly; with reserve.
(n.) A seal; a coining die; -- used adjectively to designate the
silver currency of the Mogul emperors, or the Indian rupee of 192
grains.
(n.) A strong drink; cider.
(a.) Sure; certain; trusty.
(adv.) Surely; certainly.
(n.) A shekel.
(imp. & p. p.) of Side
(a.) Having (such or so many) sides; -- used in composition; as,
one-sided; many-sided.
(v. t.) To go or move with one side foremost; to move sidewise;
as, to sidle through a crowd or narrow opening.
(n.) A seat; especially, a royal seat; a throne.
(n.) Hence, place or situation; seat.
(n.) Rank; grade; station; estimation.
(n.) Passage of excrements; stool; fecal matter.
(n.) The sitting of an army around or before a fortified place
for the purpose of compelling the garrison to surrender; the
surrounding or investing of a place by an army, and approaching it by
passages and advanced works, which cover the besiegers from the enemy's
fire. See the Note under Blockade.
(n.) Hence, a continued attempt to gain possession.
(n.) The floor of a glass-furnace.
(n.) A workman's bench.
(v. t.) To besiege; to beset.
(n.) A utensil for separating the finer and coarser parts of a
pulverized or granulated substance from each other. It consist of a
vessel, usually shallow, with the bottom perforated, or made of hair,
wire, or the like, woven in meshes.
(n.) A kind of coarse basket.
(n.) The white indris of Madagascar. It is regarded by the
natives as sacred.
(v. t.) The act of seeing; perception of objects by the eye;
view; as, to gain sight of land.
(v. t.) The power of seeing; the faculty of vision, or of
perceiving objects by the instrumentality of the eyes.
(v. t.) The state of admitting unobstructed vision; visibility;
open view; region which the eye at one time surveys; space through
which the power of vision extends; as, an object within sight.
(v. t.) A spectacle; a view; a show; something worth seeing.
(v. t.) The instrument of seeing; the eye.
(v. t.) Inspection; examination; as, a letter intended for the
sight of only one person.
(v. t.) Mental view; opinion; judgment; as, in their sight it was
harmless.
(v. t.) A small aperture through which objects are to be seen,
and by which their direction is settled or ascertained; as, the sight
of a quadrant.
(v. t.) A small piece of metal, fixed or movable, on the breech,
muzzle, center, or trunnion of a gun, or on the breech and the muzzle
of a rifle, pistol, etc., by means of which the eye is guided in
aiming.
(v. t.) In a drawing, picture, etc., that part of the surface, as
of paper or canvas, which is within the frame or the border or margin.
In a frame or the like, the open space, the opening.
(v. t.) A great number, quantity, or sum; as, a sight of money.
(v. t.) To get sight of; to see; as, to sight land; to sight a
wreck.
(v. t.) To look at through a sight; to see accurately; as, to
sight an object, as a star.
(v. t.) To apply sights to; to adjust the sights of; also, to
give the proper elevation and direction to by means of a sight; as, to
sight a rifle or a cannon.
(v. i.) To take aim by a sight.
(n.) A seal; a signature.
(n. pl.) The signs, abbreviations, letters, or characters
standing for words, shorthand, etc., in ancient manuscripts, or on
coins, medals, etc.
(n.) Alt. of Sikerness
(n. pl.) A religious sect noted for warlike traits, founded in
the Punjab at the end of the 15th century.
(n.) An antelope (Saiga Tartarica) native of the plains of
Siberia and Eastern Russia. The male has erect annulated horns, and
tufts of long hair beneath the eyes and ears.
(n.) A large toadfish of the Southern United States and the Gulf
of Mexico (Batrachus tau, var. pardus).
(superl.) Of or pertaining to silk; made of, or resembling, silk;
silken; silklike; as, a silky luster.
(superl.) Hence, soft and smooth; as, silky wine.
(superl.) Covered with soft hairs pressed close to the surface,
as a leaf; sericeous.
(n.) Happy; fortunate; blessed.
(n.) Harmless; innocent; inoffensive.
(n.) Weak; helpless; frail.
(n.) Rustic; plain; simple; humble.
(n.) Weak in intellect; destitute of ordinary strength of mind;
foolish; witless; simple; as, a silly woman.
(n.) Proceeding from want of understanding or common judgment;
characterized by weakness or folly; unwise; absurd; stupid; as, silly
conduct; a silly question.
(a.) Full of silt; resembling silt.
(n.) A woman's long dress or robe; also light covering; a scarf.
(n.) A slender marine fish (Scomberesox saurus) of Europe and
America. It has long, thin, beaklike jaws. Called also billfish,
gowdnook, gawnook, skipper, skipjack, skopster, lizard fish, and Egypt
herring.
(n.) An assault.
() p. p. of Sauter.
(imp. & p. p.) of Save
(n.) One who saves.
(n.) Alt. of Savine
(a.) That property of a thing which affects the organs of taste
or smell; taste and odor; flavor; relish; scent; as, the savor of an
orange or a rose; an ill savor.
(a.) Hence, specific flavor or quality; characteristic property;
distinctive temper, tinge, taint, and the like.
(a.) Sense of smell; power to scent, or trace by scent.
(a.) Pleasure; delight; attractiveness.
(n.) To have a particular smell or taste; -- with of.
(n.) To partake of the quality or nature; to indicate the
presence or influence; to smack; -- with of.
(n.) To use the sense of taste.
(v. t.) To perceive by the smell or the taste; hence, to
perceive; to note.
(v. t.) To have the flavor or quality of; to indicate the
presence of.
(v. t.) To taste or smell with pleasure; to delight in; to
relish; to like; to favor.
(imp.) of Saw
(p. p.) of Saw
(n.) One who saws; a sawyer.
(v. t.) To burn with hot liquid or steam; to pain or injure by
contact with, or immersion in, any hot fluid; as, to scald the hand.
(v. t.) To expose to a boiling or violent heat over a fire, or in
hot water or other liquor; as, to scald milk or meat.
(n.) A burn, or injury to the skin or flesh, by some hot liquid,
or by steam.
(a.) Affected with the scab; scabby.
(a.) Scurvy; paltry; as, scald rhymers.
(n.) Scurf on the head. See Scall.
(n.) One of the ancient Scandinavian poets and historiographers;
a reciter and singer of heroic poems, eulogies, etc., among the
Norsemen; more rarely, a bard of any of the ancient Teutonic tribes.
(n.) The dish of a balance; hence, the balance itself; an
instrument or machine for weighing; as, to turn the scale; -- chiefly
used in the plural when applied to the whole instrument or apparatus
for weighing. Also used figuratively.
(n.) The sign or constellation Libra.
(v. t.) To weigh or measure according to a scale; to measure;
also, to grade or vary according to a scale or system.
(n.) One of the small, thin, membranous, bony or horny pieces
which form the covering of many fishes and reptiles, and some mammals,
belonging to the dermal part of the skeleton, or dermoskeleton. See
Cycloid, Ctenoid, and Ganoid.
(n.) Hence, any layer or leaf of metal or other material,
resembling in size and thinness the scale of a fish; as, a scale of
iron, of bone, etc.
(n.) One of the small scalelike structures covering parts of some
invertebrates, as those on the wings of Lepidoptera and on the body of
Thysanura; the elytra of certain annelids. See Lepidoptera.
(n.) A scale insect. (See below.)
(n.) A small appendage like a rudimentary leaf, resembling the
scales of a fish in form, and often in arrangement; as, the scale of a
bud, of a pine cone, and the like. The name is also given to the chaff
on the stems of ferns.
(n.) The thin metallic side plate of the handle of a pocketknife.
See Illust. of Pocketknife.
(n.) An incrustation deposit on the inside of a vessel in which
water is heated, as a steam boiler.
(n.) The thin oxide which forms on the surface of iron forgings.
It consists essentially of the magnetic oxide, Fe3O4. Also, a similar
coating upon other metals.
(v. t.) To strip or clear of scale or scales; as, to scale a
fish; to scale the inside of a boiler.
(v. t.) To take off in thin layers or scales, as tartar from the
teeth; to pare off, as a surface.
(v. t.) To scatter; to spread.
(v. t.) To clean, as the inside of a cannon, by the explosion of
a small quantity of powder.
(v. i.) To separate and come off in thin layers or laminae; as,
some sandstone scales by exposure.
(v. i.) To separate; to scatter.
(n.) A ladder; a series of steps; a means of ascending.
(n.) Hence, anything graduated, especially when employed as a
measure or rule, or marked by lines at regular intervals.
(n.) A mathematical instrument, consisting of a slip of wood,
ivory, or metal, with one or more sets of spaces graduated and numbered
on its surface, for measuring or laying off distances, etc., as in
drawing, plotting, and the like. See Gunter's scale.
(n.) A series of spaces marked by lines, and representing
proportionately larger distances; as, a scale of miles, yards, feet,
etc., for a map or plan.
(n.) A basis for a numeral system; as, the decimal scale; the
binary scale, etc.
(n.) The graduated series of all the tones, ascending or
descending, from the keynote to its octave; -- called also the gamut.
It may be repeated through any number of octaves. See Chromatic scale,
Diatonic scale, Major scale, and Minor scale, under Chromatic,
Diatonic, Major, and Minor.
(n.) Gradation; succession of ascending and descending steps and
degrees; progressive series; scheme of comparative rank or order; as, a
scale of being.
(n.) Relative dimensions, without difference in proportion of
parts; size or degree of the parts or components in any complex thing,
compared with other like things; especially, the relative proportion of
the linear dimensions of the parts of a drawing, map, model, etc., to
the dimensions of the corresponding parts of the object that is
represented; as, a map on a scale of an inch to a mile.
(v. t.) To climb by a ladder, or as if by a ladder; to ascend by
steps or by climbing; to clamber up; as, to scale the wall of a fort.
(v. i.) To lead up by steps; to ascend.
(a.) A scurf or scabby disease, especially of the scalp.
(a.) Scabby; scurfy.
(n.) A bed of oysters or mussels.
(n.) That part of the integument of the head which is usually
covered with hair.
(n.) A part of the skin of the head, with the hair attached, cut
or torn off from an enemy by the Indian warriors of North America, as a
token of victory.
(n.) Fig.: The top; the summit.
(v. t.) To deprive of the scalp; to cut or tear the scalp from
the head of.
(v. t.) To remove the skin of.
(v. t.) To brush the hairs or fuzz from, as wheat grains, in the
process of high milling.
(v. i.) To make a small, quick profit by slight fluctuations of
the market; -- said of brokers who operate in this way on their own
account.
(a.) Covered or abounding with scales; as, a scaly fish.
(a.) Resembling scales, laminae, or layers.
(a.) Mean; low; as, a scaly fellow.
(a.) Composed of scales lying over each other; as, a scaly bulb;
covered with scales; as, a scaly stem.
(superl.) Not full, large, or plentiful; scarcely sufficient;
less than is wanted for the purpose; scanty; meager; not enough; as, a
scant allowance of provisions or water; a scant pattern of cloth for a
garment.
(superl.) Sparing; parsimonious; chary.
(v. t.) To limit; to straiten; to treat illiberally; to stint;
as, to scant one in provisions; to scant ourselves in the use of
necessaries.
(v. t.) To cut short; to make small, narrow, or scanty; to
curtail.
(v. i.) To fail, or become less; to scantle; as, the wind scants.
(adv.) In a scant manner; with difficulty; scarcely; hardly.
(n.) Scantness; scarcity.
(n.) A peduncle rising from the ground or from a subterranean
stem, as in the stemless violets, the bloodroot, and the like.
(n.) The long basal joint of the antennae of an insect.
(n.) The shaft of a column.
(n.) The apophyge of a shaft.
(v. t. & i.) To escape.
(n.) An escape.
(n.) Means of escape; evasion.
(n.) A freak; a slip; a fault; an escapade.
(n.) Loose act of vice or lewdness.
(v. t.) To frighten; to strike with sudden fear; to alarm.
(n.) Fright; esp., sudden fright produced by a trifling cause, or
originating in mistake.
(n.) A cormorant.
(n.) An article of dress of a light and decorative character,
worn loosely over the shoulders or about the neck or the waist; a light
shawl or handkerchief for the neck; also, a cravat; a neckcloth.
(v. t.) To throw on loosely; to put on like a scarf.
(v. t.) To dress with a scarf, or as with a scarf; to cover with
a loose wrapping.
(v. t.) To form a scarf on the end or edge of, as for a joint in
timber, metal rods, etc.
(v. t.) To unite, as two pieces of timber or metal, by a scarf
joint.
(n.) In a piece which is to be united to another by a scarf
joint, the part of the end or edge that is tapered off, rabbeted, or
notched so as to be thinner than the rest of the piece.
(n.) A scarf joint.
(n.) Dung.
(n.) A band in the same position as the bend sinister, but only
half as broad as the latter.
(n.) The slope of the ditch nearest the parapet; the escarp.
(n.) A steep descent or declivity.
(v. t.) To cut down perpendicularly, or nearly so; as, to scarp
the face of a ditch or a rock.
(n.) Barren land having only a thin coat of grass.
(a.) Subject to sudden alarm.
(a.) Causing fright; alarming.
(n.) Tribute.
(n.) A bed or stratum of shellfish; scalp.
(n.) A scaup duck. See below.
(n.) A precipitous bank or rock; a scar.
(n.) A scene in an opera.
(n.) An accompanied dramatic recitative, interspersed with
passages of melody, or followed by a full aria.
(n.) The structure on which a spectacle or play is exhibited; the
part of a theater in which the acting is done, with its adjuncts and
decorations; the stage.
(n.) The decorations and fittings of a stage, representing the
place in which the action is supposed to go on; one of the slides, or
other devices, used to give an appearance of reality to the action of a
play; as, to paint scenes; to shift the scenes; to go behind the
scenes.
(n.) So much of a play as passes without change of locality or
time, or important change of character; hence, a subdivision of an act;
a separate portion of a play, subordinate to the act, but differently
determined in different plays; as, an act of four scenes.
(n.) The place, time, circumstance, etc., in which anything
occurs, or in which the action of a story, play, or the like, is laid;
surroundings amid which anything is set before the imagination; place
of occurrence, exhibition, or action.
(n.) An assemblage of objects presented to the view at once; a
series of actions and events exhibited in their connection; a
spectacle; a show; an exhibition; a view.
(n.) A landscape, or part of a landscape; scenery.
(n.) An exhibition of passionate or strong feeling before others;
often, an artifical or affected action, or course of action, done for
effect; a theatrical display.
(v. t.) To exhibit as a scene; to make a scene of; to display.
(v. t.) To perceive by the olfactory organs; to smell; as, to
scent game, as a hound does.
(v. t.) To imbue or fill with odor; to perfume.
(v. i.) To have a smell.
(v. i.) To hunt animals by means of the sense of smell.
(n.) That which, issuing from a body, affects the olfactory
organs of animals; odor; smell; as, the scent of an orange, or of a
rose; the scent of musk.
(n.) Specifically, the odor left by an animal on the ground in
passing over it; as, dogs find or lose the scent; hence, course of
pursuit; track of discovery.
(n.) The power of smelling; the sense of smell; as, a hound of
nice scent; to divert the scent.
(n.) A shoot or sprout of a plant; a sucker.
(n.) A piece of a slender branch or twig cut for grafting.
(n.) Hence, a descendant; an heir; as, a scion of a royal stock.
(n. sing. & pl.) Raspings of ivory, hartshorn, metals, or other
hard substance.
(n. sing. & pl.) The dross of metals.
(n.) Derision; ridicule; mockery; derisive or mocking expression
of scorn, contempt, or reproach.
(n.) An object of scorn, mockery, or derision.
(n.) To show insolent ridicule or mockery; to manifest contempt
by derisive acts or language; -- often with at.
(v. t.) To treat or address with derision; to assail scornfully;
to mock at.
(n.) Poke (Phytolacca decandra).
(v. i.) To find fault or rail with rude clamor; to brawl; to
utter harsh, rude, boisterous rebuke; to chide sharply or coarsely; --
often with at; as, to scold at a servant.
(v. t.) To chide with rudeness and clamor; to rate; also, to
rebuke or reprove with severity.
(n.) One who scolds, or makes a practice of scolding; esp., a
rude, clamorous woman; a shrew.
(n.) A scolding; a brawl.
(n.) A buffoon.
(n.) A flout; a jeer; a gibe; a taunt.
(n.) A large ladle; a vessel with a long handle, used for dipping
liquids; a utensil for bailing boats.
(n.) A deep shovel, or any similar implement for digging out and
dipping or shoveling up anything; as, a flour scoop; the scoop of a
dredging machine.
(n.) A spoon-shaped instrument, used in extracting certain
substances or foreign bodies.
(n.) A place hollowed out; a basinlike cavity; a hollow.
(n.) A sweep; a stroke; a swoop.
(n.) The act of scooping, or taking with a scoop or ladle; a
motion with a scoop, as in dipping or shoveling.
(n.) To take out or up with, a scoop; to lade out.
(n.) To empty by lading; as, to scoop a well dry.
(n.) To make hollow, as a scoop or dish; to excavate; to dig out;
to form by digging or excavation.
(v. i.) To walk fast; to go quickly; to run hastily away.
(n.) That at which one aims; the thing or end to which the mind
directs its view; that which is purposed to be reached or accomplished;
hence, ultimate design, aim, or purpose; intention; drift; object.
(n.) Room or opportunity for free outlook or aim; space for
action; amplitude of opportunity; free course or vent; liberty; range
of view, intent, or action.
(n.) Extended area.
(n.) Length; extent; sweep; as, scope of cable.
(v. t.) To look at for the purpose of evaluation; usually with
out; as, to scope out the area as a camping site.
(n.) A notch or incision; especially, one that is made as a tally
mark; hence, a mark, or line, made for the purpose of account.
(n.) An account or reckoning; account of dues; bill; hence,
indebtedness.
(n.) Account; reason; motive; sake; behalf.
(n.) The number twenty, as being marked off by a special score or
tally; hence, in pl., a large number.
(n.) A distance of twenty yards; -- a term used in ancient
archery and gunnery.
(n.) A weight of twenty pounds.
(n.) The number of points gained by the contestants, or either of
them, in any game, as in cards or cricket.
(n.) A line drawn; a groove or furrow.
(n.) The original and entire draught, or its transcript, of a
composition, with the parts for all the different instruments or voices
written on staves one above another, so that they can be read at a
glance; -- so called from the bar, which, in its early use, was drawn
through all the parts.
(v. t.) To mark with lines, scratches, or notches; to cut notches
or furrows in; to notch; to scratch; to furrow; as, to score timber for
hewing; to score the back with a lash.
(v. t.) Especially, to mark with significant lines or notches,
for indicating or keeping account of something; as, to score a tally.
(v. t.) To mark or signify by lines or notches; to keep record or
account of; to set down; to record; to charge.
(v. t.) To engrave, as upon a shield.
(v. t.) To make a score of, as points, runs, etc., in a game.
(v. t.) To write down in proper order and arrangement; as, to
score an overture for an orchestra. See Score, n., 9.
(n.) To mark with parallel lines or scratches; as, the rocks of
New England and the Western States were scored in the drift epoch.
(n.) Extreme and lofty contempt; haughty disregard; that disdain
which springs from the opinion of the utter meanness and unworthiness
of an object.
(n.) An act or expression of extreme contempt.
(n.) An object of extreme disdain, contempt, or derision.
(n.) To hold in extreme contempt; to reject as unworthy of
regard; to despise; to contemn; to disdain.
(n.) To treat with extreme contempt; to make the object of
insult; to mock; to scoff at; to deride.
(v. i.) To scoff; to mock; to show contumely, derision, or
reproach; to act disdainfully.
(v. t.) To rub hard with something rough, as sand or Bristol
brick, especially for the purpose of cleaning; to clean by friction; to
make clean or bright; to cleanse from grease, dirt, etc., as articles
of dress.
(v. t.) To purge; as, to scour a horse.
(v. t.) To remove by rubbing or cleansing; to sweep along or off;
to carry away or remove, as by a current of water; -- often with off or
away.
(v. t.) To pass swiftly over; to brush along; to traverse or
search thoroughly; as, to scour the coast.
(v. i.) To clean anything by rubbing.
(v. i.) To cleanse anything.
(v. i.) To be purged freely; to have a diarrhoea.
(v. i.) To run swiftly; to rove or range in pursuit or search of
something; to scamper.
(n.) Diarrhoea or dysentery among cattle.
(v. i.) To wrinkle the brows, as in frowning or displeasure; to
put on a frowning look; to look sour, sullen, severe, or angry.
(v. i.) Hence, to look gloomy, dark, or threatening; to lower.
(v. t.) To look at or repel with a scowl or a frown.
(v. t.) To express by a scowl; as, to scowl defiance.
(n.) The wrinkling of the brows or face in frowing; the
expression of displeasure, sullenness, or discontent in the
countenance; an angry frown.
(n.) Hence, gloom; dark or threatening aspect.
(n.) Something thin, lean, or rough; a bony piece; especially, a
bony neckpiece of meat; hence, humorously or in contempt, the neck.
(n.) A rawboned person.
(n.) A ragged, stunted tree or branch.
(v. t.) Something scraped off; hence, a small piece; a bit; a
fragment; a detached, incomplete portion.
(v. t.) Specifically, a fragment of something written or printed;
a brief excerpt; an unconnected extract.
(v. t.) The crisp substance that remains after drying out animal
fat; as, pork scraps.
(v. t.) Same as Scrap iron, below.
(v. t.) To scratch.
(v. i.) To rake; to search.
(n.) An hermaphrodite.
(n.) A turf.
(n.) A tern; the sea swallow.
(n.) A pebble; a stone; also, a heap of stones or rocky debris.
(n.) A cylinder, or a cylindrical perforation, having a
continuous rib, called the thread, winding round it spirally at a
constant inclination, so as to leave a continuous spiral groove between
one turn and the next, -- used chiefly for producing, when revolved,
motion or pressure in the direction of its axis, by the sliding of the
threads of the cylinder in the grooves between the threads of the
perforation adapted to it, the former being distinguished as the
external, or male screw, or, more usually the screw; the latter as the
internal, or female screw, or, more usually, the nut.
(n.) Specifically, a kind of nail with a spiral thread and a head
with a nick to receive the end of the screw-driver. Screws are much
used to hold together pieces of wood or to fasten something; -- called
also wood screws, and screw nails. See also Screw bolt, below.
(n.) Anything shaped or acting like a screw; esp., a form of
wheel for propelling steam vessels. It is placed at the stern, and
furnished with blades having helicoidal surfaces to act against the
water in the manner of a screw. See Screw propeller, below.
(n.) A steam vesel propelled by a screw instead of wheels; a
screw steamer; a propeller.
(n.) An extortioner; a sharp bargainer; a skinflint; a niggard.
(n.) An instructor who examines with great or unnecessary
severity; also, a searching or strict examination of a student by an
instructor.
(n.) A small packet of tobacco.
(n.) An unsound or worn-out horse, useful as a hack, and commonly
of good appearance.
(n.) A straight line in space with which a definite linear
magnitude termed the pitch is associated (cf. 5th Pitch, 10 (b)). It is
used to express the displacement of a rigid body, which may always be
made to consist of a rotation about an axis combined with a translation
parallel to that axis.
(n.) An amphipod crustacean; as, the skeleton screw (Caprella).
See Sand screw, under Sand.
(v. t.) To turn, as a screw; to apply a screw to; to press,
fasten, or make firm, by means of a screw or screws; as, to screw a
lock on a door; to screw a press.
(v. t.) To force; to squeeze; to press, as by screws.
(v. t.) Hence: To practice extortion upon; to oppress by
unreasonable or extortionate exactions.
(v. t.) To twist; to distort; as, to screw his visage.
(v. t.) To examine rigidly, as a student; to subject to a severe
examination.
(v. i.) To use violent mans in making exactions; to be oppressive
or exacting.
(v. i.) To turn one's self uneasily with a twisting motion; as,
he screws about in his chair.
(n.) A kind of light cotton or linen fabric, often woven in
openwork patterns, -- used for curtains, etc,; -- called also India
scrim.
(n.) Thin canvas glued on the inside of panels to prevent
shrinking, checking, etc.
(n.) A small bag; a wallet; a satchel.
(n.) A small writing, certificate, or schedule; a piece of paper
containing a writing.
(n.) A preliminary certificate of a subscription to the capital
of a bank, railroad, or other company, or for a share of other joint
property, or a loan, stating the amount of the subscription and the
date of the payment of the installments; as, insurance scrip, consol
scrip, etc. When all the installments are paid, the scrip is exchanged
for a bond share certificate.
(n.) Paper fractional currency.
(n.) Writing; document; scroll.
(adv.) From a definite past time until now; as, he went a month
ago, and I have not seen him since.
(adv.) In the time past, counting backward from the present;
before this or now; ago.
(adv.) When or that.
(prep.) From the time of; in or during the time subsequent to;
subsequently to; after; -- usually with a past event or time for the
object.
(conj.) Seeing that; because; considering; -- formerly followed
by that.
(n.) A tendon or tendonous tissue. See Tendon.
(n.) Muscle; nerve.
(n.) Fig.: That which supplies strength or power.
(v. t.) To knit together, or make strong with, or as with,
sinews.
(v. t.) To burn slightly or superficially; to burn the surface
of; to burn the ends or outside of; as, to singe the hair or the skin.
(v. t.) To remove the nap of (cloth), by passing it rapidly over
a red-hot bar, or over a flame, preliminary to dyeing it.
(v. t.) To remove the hair or down from (a plucked chicken or the
like) by passing it over a flame.
(n.) A burning of the surface; a slight burn.
(v. t.) A slice of beef, broiled, or cut for broiling; -- also
extended to the meat of other large animals; as, venison steak; bear
steak; pork steak; turtle steak.
(n.) A handle; a stale, or stele.
(imp.) of Steal
(v. t.) To take and carry away, feloniously; to take without
right or leave, and with intent to keep wrongfully; as, to steal the
personal goods of another.
(v. t.) To withdraw or convey clandestinely (reflexive); hence,
to creep furtively, or to insinuate.
(v. t.) To gain by insinuating arts or covert means.
(v. t.) To get into one's power gradually and by imperceptible
degrees; to take possession of by a gradual and imperceptible
appropriation; -- with away.
(pl. ) of Sofa
(n.) A contraction of Supernumerary, in sense 2.
(adv.) Over; above; before; also, beyond; besides; -- much used
as a prefix.
(n.) A kind of sirup made by the Indians of Arizona from the
fruit of some cactaceous plant (probably the Cereus giganteus).
(n.) A precept; an aphorism; a brief rule.
(n.) A collection of such aphorisms.
(n.) A body of Hindoo literature containing aphorisms on grammar,
meter, law, and philosophy, and forming a connecting link between the
Vedic and later Sanscrit literature.
(v. t. & i.) See Assuage.
(n.) A tool, variously shaped or grooved on the end or face, used
by blacksmiths and other workers in metals, for shaping their work,
whether sheet metal or forging, by holding the swage upon the work, or
the work upon the swage, and striking with a sledge.
(v. t.) To shape by means of a swage; to fashion, as a piece of
iron, by forcing it into a groove or mold having the required shape.
(n.) A valley or low place; a tract of low, and usually wet,
land; a moor; a fen.
(v. i. & t.) To melt and waste away; to singe. See Sweal, v.
(n.) A gutter in a candle.
(n.) Wet, spongy land; soft, low ground saturated with water, but
not usually covered with it; marshy ground away from the seashore.
(v. t.) To plunge or sink into a swamp.
(v. t.) To cause (a boat) to become filled with water; to capsize
or sink by whelming with water.
(v. t.) Fig.: To plunge into difficulties and perils; to
overwhelm; to ruin; to wreck.
(v. i.) To sink or stick in a swamp; figuratively, to become
involved in insuperable difficulties.
(v. i.) To become filled with water, as a boat; to founder; to
capsize or sink; figuratively, to be ruined; to be wrecked.
() imp. of Swing.
(n.) A swamp.
(n.) See Sweep, n., 12.
(n.) Skin; covering.
(n.) The grassy surface of land; that part of the soil which is
filled with the roots of grass; turf.
(v. t. & i.) To produce sward upon; to cover, or be covered, with
sward.
() imp. of Swear.
(v. i.) To grow languid; to faint.
(n.) The grit worn away from grindstones in grinding cutlery wet.
(v. i.) To climb a tree, pole, or the like, by embracing it with
the arms and legs alternately. See Shin.
(n.) A large number or mass of small animals or insects,
especially when in motion.
(n.) Especially, a great number of honeybees which emigrate from
a hive at once, and seek new lodgings under the direction of a queen; a
like body of bees settled permanently in a hive.
(n.) Hence, any great number or multitude, as of people in
motion, or sometimes of inanimate objects; as, a swarm of meteorites.
(v. i.) To collect, and depart from a hive by flight in a body;
-- said of bees; as, bees swarm in warm, clear days in summer.
(v. i.) To appear or collect in a crowd; to throng together; to
congregate in a multitude.
(v. i.) To be crowded; to be thronged with a multitude of beings
in motion.
(v. i.) To abound; to be filled (with).
(v. i.) To breed multitudes.
(v. t.) To crowd or throng.
(v. t.) An oval figure, whose moldings are oblique to the axis of
the work.
(v. t.) Soft, like fruit too ripe; swashy.
(v. i.) To dash or flow noisily, as water; to splash; as, water
swashing on a shallow place.
(v. i.) To fall violently or noisily.
(v. i.) To bluster; to make a great noise; to vapor or brag.
(n.) Impulse of water flowing with violence; a dashing or
splashing of water.
(n.) A narrow sound or channel of water lying within a sand bank,
or between a sand bank and the shore, or a bar over which the sea
washes.
(n.) Liquid filth; wash; hog mash.
(n.) A blustering noise; a swaggering behavior.
(n.) A swaggering fellow; a swasher.
(v. t.) A line of grass or grain cut and thrown together by the
scythe in mowing or cradling.
(v. t.) The whole sweep of a scythe, or the whole breadth from
which grass or grain is cut by a scythe or a machine, in mowing or
cradling; as, to cut a wide swath.
(v. t.) A band or fillet; a swathe.
(v. i.) To melt and run down, as the tallow of a candle; to waste
away without feeding the flame.
(v. t.) To singe; to scorch; to swale; as, to sweal a pig by
singeing off the hair.
() of Swear
(p. p.) of Swear
(v. i.) To affirm or utter a solemn declaration, with an appeal
to God for the truth of what is affirmed; to make a promise, threat, or
resolve on oath; also, to affirm solemnly by some sacred object, or one
regarded as sacred, as the Bible, the Koran, etc.
(v. i.) To give evidence on oath; as, to swear to the truth of a
statement; he swore against the prisoner.
(v. i.) To make an appeal to God in an irreverant manner; to use
the name of God or sacred things profanely; to call upon God in
imprecation; to curse.
(v. t.) To utter or affirm with a solemn appeal to God for the
truth of the declaration; to make (a promise, threat, or resolve) under
oath.
(v. t.) To put to an oath; to cause to take an oath; to
administer an oath to; -- ofetn followed by in or into; as, to swear
witnesses; to swear a jury; to swear in an officer; he was sworn into
office.
(v. t.) To declare or charge upon oath; as, he swore treason
against his friend.
(v. t.) To appeal to by an oath.
(imp. & p. p.) of Sweat
(v. i.) To excrete sensible moisture from the pores of the skin;
to perspire.
(v. i.) Fig.: To perspire in toil; to work hard; to drudge.
(v. i.) To emit moisture, as green plants in a heap.
(v. t.) To cause to excrete moisture from the skin; to cause to
perspire; as, his physicians attempted to sweat him by most powerful
sudorifics.
(v. t.) To emit or suffer to flow from the pores; to exude.
(v. t.) To unite by heating, after the application of soldier.
(v. t.) To get something advantageous, as money, property, or
labor from (any one), by exaction or oppression; as, to sweat a
spendthrift; to sweat laborers.
(v. i.) The fluid which is excreted from the skin of an animal;
the fluid secreted by the sudoriferous glands; a transparent,
colorless, acid liquid with a peculiar odor, containing some fatty
acids and mineral matter; perspiration. See Perspiration.
(v. i.) The act of sweating; or the state of one who sweats;
hence, labor; toil; drudgery.
(v. i.) Moisture issuing from any substance; as, the sweat of hay
or grain in a mow or stack.
(v. i.) The sweating sickness.
(v. i.) A short run by a race horse in exercise.
(imp. & p. p.) of Sweep
(v. i.) To pass a broom across (a surface) so as to remove loose
dirt, dust, etc.; to brush, or rub over, with a broom for the purpose
of cleaning; as, to sweep a floor, the street, or a chimney. Used also
figuratively.
(v. i.) To drive or carry along or off with a broom or a brush,
or as if with a broom; to remove by, or as if by, brushing; as, to
sweep dirt from a floor; the wind sweeps the snow from the hills; a
freshet sweeps away a dam, timber, or rubbish; a pestilence sweeps off
multitudes.
(v. i.) To brush against or over; to rub lightly along.
(v. i.) To carry with a long, swinging, or dragging motion;
hence, to carry in a stately or proud fashion.
(v. i.) To strike with a long stroke.
(v. i.) To draw or drag something over; as, to sweep the bottom
of a river with a net.
(v. i.) To pass over, or traverse, with the eye or with an
instrument of observation; as, to sweep the heavens with a telescope.
(v. i.) To clean rooms, yards, etc., or to clear away dust, dirt,
litter, etc., with a broom, brush, or the like.
(v. i.) To brush swiftly over the surface of anything; to pass
with switness and force, as if brushing the surface of anything; to
move in a stately manner; as, the wind sweeps across the plain; a woman
sweeps through a drawing-room.
(v. i.) To pass over anything comprehensively; to range through
with rapidity; as, his eye sweeps through space.
(n.) The act of sweeping.
(n.) The compass or range of a stroke; as, a long sweep.
(n.) The compass of any turning body or of any motion; as, the
sweep of a door; the sweep of the eye.
(n.) The compass of anything flowing or brushing; as, the flood
carried away everything within its sweep.
(n.) Violent and general destruction; as, the sweep of an
epidemic disease.
(n.) Direction and extent of any motion not rectlinear; as, the
sweep of a compass.
(n.) Direction or departure of a curve, a road, an arch, or the
like, away from a rectlinear line.
(n.) One who sweeps; a sweeper; specifically, a chimney sweeper.
(n.) A movable templet for making molds, in loam molding.
(n.) The mold of a ship when she begins to curve in at the
rungheads; any part of a ship shaped in a segment of a circle.
(n.) A large oar used in small vessels, partly to propel them and
partly to steer them.
(n.) The almond furnace.
(n.) A long pole, or piece of timber, moved on a horizontal
fulcrum fixed to a tall post and used to raise and lower a bucket in a
well for drawing water.
(n.) In the game of casino, a pairing or combining of all the
cards on the board, and so removing them all; in whist, the winning of
all the tricks (thirteen) in a hand; a slam.
(n.) The sweeping of workshops where precious metals are worked,
containing filings, etc.
(v. & n.) Same as Spurt.
(a.) Of a spiral form; wreathed; curled; serpentine.
(a.) Of or pertaining to a spire; like a spire, tall, slender,
and tapering; abounding in spires; as, spiry turrets.
(a.) Thick; crowded; compact; dense.
(v. t.) To spring or recoil with violence.
(v. t.) To dash down; to beat.
(n.) A long, narrow, pliable strip of leather, cloth, or the
like; specifically, a strip of thick leather used in flogging.
(n.) Something made of such a strip, or of a part of one, or a
combination of two or more for a particular use; as, a boot strap,
shawl strap, stirrup strap.
(n.) A piece of leather, or strip of wood covered with a suitable
material, for sharpening a razor; a strop.
(n.) A narrow strip of anything, as of iron or brass.
(n.) A band, plate, or loop of metal for clasping and holding
timbers or parts of a machine.
(n.) A piece of rope or metal passing around a block and used for
fastening it to anything.
(n.) The flat part of the corolla in ligulate florets, as those
of the white circle in the daisy.
(n.) The leaf, exclusive of its sheath, in some grasses.
(n.) A shoulder strap. See under Shoulder.
(v. t.) To beat or chastise with a strap.
(v. t.) To fasten or bind with a strap.
(v. t.) To sharpen by rubbing on a strap, or strop; as, to strap
a razor.
(v. t.) To spread or scatter. See Strew, and Strow.
(n.) A stalk or stem of certain species of grain, pulse, etc.,
especially of wheat, rye, oats, barley, more rarely of buckwheat,
beans, and pease.
(n.) The gathered and thrashed stalks of certain species of
grain, etc.; as, a bundle, or a load, of rye straw.
(n.) Anything proverbially worthless; the least possible thing; a
mere trifle.
(a.) To wander, as from a direct course; to deviate, or go out of
the way.
(a.) To wander from company, or from the proper limits; to rove
at large; to roam; to go astray.
(a.) Figuratively, to wander from the path of duty or rectitude;
to err.
(v. t.) To cause to stray.
(v. i.) Having gone astray; strayed; wandering; as, a strayhorse
or sheep.
(n.) Any domestic animal that has an inclosure, or its proper
place and company, and wanders at large, or is lost; an estray. Used
also figuratively.
(n.) The act of wandering or going astray.
(n.) Straw.
(n.) Ill-will or hatred toward another, accompanied with the
disposition to irritate, annoy, or thwart; petty malice; grudge;
rancor; despite.
(n.) Vexation; chargrin; mortification.
(v. t.) To be angry at; to hate.
(v. t.) To treat maliciously; to try to injure or thwart.
(v. t.) To fill with spite; to offend; to vex.
(v. t.) To display; to spread.
(v. t.) To dislocate, as a shoulder bone.
(v. t.) To spay; to castrate.
(v. t.) To turn on one side; to render oblique; to slope or
slant, as the side of a door, window, etc.
(a.) Displayed; spread out; turned outward; hence, flat;
ungainly; as, splay shoulders.
(a.) A slope or bevel, especially of the sides of a door or
window, by which the opening is made larged at one face of the wall
than at the other, or larger at each of the faces than it is between
them.
(v. t.) To scatter; to spread by scattering; to cast or to throw
loosely apart; -- used of solids, separated or separable into parts or
particles; as, to strew seed in beds; to strew sand on or over a floor;
to strew flowers over a grave.
(v. t.) To cover more or less thickly by scattering something
over or upon; to cover, or lie upon, by having been scattered; as, they
strewed the ground with leaves; leaves strewed the ground.
(v. t.) To spread abroad; to disseminate.
(n.) A minute groove, or channel; a threadlike line, as of color;
a narrow structural band or line; a striation; as, the striae, or
groovings, produced on a rock by a glacier passing over it; the striae
on the surface of a shell; a stria of nervous matter in the brain.
(n.) A fillet between the flutes of columns, pilasters, or the
like.
(n.) A narrow passage between precipitous rocks or banks, which
looks as if it might be crossed at a stride.
() of Stride
() of Stride
() imp. of Speak.
(n.) The radius or ray of a wheel; one of the small bars which
are inserted in the hub, or nave, and which serve to support the rim or
felly.
(n.) A projecting handle of a steering wheel.
(n.) A rung, or round, of a ladder.
(n.) A contrivance for fastening the wheel of a vehicle, to
prevent it from turning in going down a hill.
(v. t.) To furnish with spokes, as a wheel.
(n.) An irregular, narrow, projecting part of a field.
(n.) A spirit; a ghost; an apparition; a hobgoblin.
(n.) The chimaera.
(n.) A piece of cane or red with a knot at each end, or a hollow
cylinder of wood with a ridge at each end, used to wind thread or yarn
upon.
(v. t.) To wind on a spool or spools.
(v. i.) To be driven steadily and swiftly, as before a strong
wind; to be driven before the wind without any sail, or with only a
part of the sails spread; to scud under bare poles.
(v. i.) See Spoom.
(n.) An implement consisting of a small bowl (usually a shallow
oval) with a handle, used especially in preparing or eating food.
(n.) Anything which resembles a spoon in shape; esp. (Fishing), a
spoon bait.
(n.) Fig.: A simpleton; a spooney.
(v. t.) To take up in, or as in, a spoon.
(v. i.) To act with demonstrative or foolish fondness, as one in
love.
(v. t.) To deprive; to bereave; to make destitute; to plunder;
especially, to deprive of a covering; to skin; to peel; as, to strip a
man of his possession, his rights, his privileges, his reputation; to
strip one of his clothes; to strip a beast of his skin; to strip a tree
of its bark.
(v. t.) To divest of clothing; to uncover.
(v. t.) To dismantle; as, to strip a ship of rigging, spars, etc.
(v. t.) To pare off the surface of, as land, in strips.
(v. t.) To deprive of all milk; to milk dry; to draw the last
milk from; hence, to milk with a peculiar movement of the hand on the
teats at the last of a milking; as, to strip a cow.
(v. t.) To pass; to get clear of; to outstrip.
(v. t.) To pull or tear off, as a covering; to remove; to wrest
away; as, to strip the skin from a beast; to strip the bark from a
tree; to strip the clothes from a man's back; to strip away all
disguisses.
(v. t.) To tear off (the thread) from a bolt or nut; as, the
thread is stripped.
(v. t.) To tear off the thread from (a bolt or nut); as, the bolt
is stripped.
(v. t.) To remove the metal coating from (a plated article), as
by acids or electrolytic action.
(n.) One of the minute grains in flowerless plants, which are
analogous to seeds, as serving to reproduce the species.
(n.) An embryo sac or embryonal vesicle in the ovules of
flowering plants.
(n.) A minute grain or germ; a small, round or ovoid body, formed
in certain organisms, and by germination giving rise to a new organism;
as, the reproductive spores of bacteria, etc.
(n.) One of the parts formed by fission in certain Protozoa. See
Spore formation, belw.
(n.) That which diverts, and makes mirth; pastime; amusement.
(n.) Mock; mockery; contemptuous mirth; derision.
(n.) That with which one plays, or which is driven about in play;
a toy; a plaything; an object of mockery.
(n.) Play; idle jingle.
(n.) Diversion of the field, as fowling, hunting, fishing,
racing, games, and the like, esp. when money is staked.
(n.) A plant or an animal, or part of a plant or animal, which
has some peculiarity not usually seen in the species; an abnormal
variety or growth. See Sporting plant, under Sporting.
(n.) A sportsman; a gambler.
(v. i.) To play; to frolic; to wanton.
(v. i.) To practice the diversions of the field or the turf; to
be given to betting, as upon races.
(v. i.) To trifle.
(v. i.) To assume suddenly a new and different character from the
rest of the plant or from the type of the species; -- said of a bud,
shoot, plant, or animal. See Sport, n., 6.
(v. t.) To divert; to amuse; to make merry; -- used with the
reciprocal pronoun.
(v. t.) To represent by any knd of play.
(v. t.) To exhibit, or bring out, in public; to use or wear; as,
to sport a new equipage.
(v. t.) To give utterance to in a sportive manner; to throw out
in an easy and copious manner; -- with off; as, to sport off epigrams.
(v. t.) To throw out forcibly and abudantly, as liquids through
an office or a pipe; to eject in a jet; as, an elephant spouts water
from his trunk.
(v. t.) To utter magniloquently; to recite in an oratorical or
pompous manner.
(v. t.) To pawn; to pledge; as, spout a watch.
(v. i.) To issue with with violence, or in a jet, as a liquid
through a narrow orifice, or from a spout; as, water spouts from a
hole; blood spouts from an artery.
(v. i.) To eject water or liquid in a jet.
(v. i.) To utter a speech, especially in a pompous manner.
(v. t.) That through which anything spouts; a discharging lip,
pipe, or orifice; a tube, pipe, or conductor of any kind through which
a liquid is poured, or by which it is conveyed in a stream from one
place to another; as, the spout of a teapot; a spout for conducting
water from the roof of a building.
(v. t.) A trough for conducting grain, flour, etc., into a
receptacle.
(v. t.) A discharge or jet of water or other liquid, esp. when
rising in a column; also, a waterspout.
() p. p. of Spread.
(n.) A young salmon.
(n.) A billet of wood; a piece of timber used as a prop.
(v. t.) To check the motion of, as a carriage on a steep grade,
by putting a sprag between the spokes of the wheel.
(v. t.) To prop or sustain with a sprag.
(a.) See Sprack, a.
(n.) A small European herring (Clupea sprattus) closely allied to
the common herring and the pilchard; -- called also garvie. The name is
also applied to small herring of different kinds.
(n.) A California surf-fish (Rhacochilus toxotes); -- called also
alfione, and perch.
(n.) A small shoot or branch; a twig.
(n.) A collective body of small branches; as, the tree has a
beautiful spray.
(n.) A side channel or branch of the runner of a flask, made to
distribute the metal in all parts of the mold.
(n.) A group of castings made in the same mold and connected by
sprues formed in the runner and its branches.
(v. t.) Water flying in small drops or particles, as by the force
of wind, or the dashing of waves, or from a waterfall, and the like.
(v. t.) A jet of fine medicated vapor, used either as an
application to a diseased part or to charge the air of a room with a
disinfectant or a deodorizer.
(v. t.) An instrument for applying such a spray; an atomizer.
(v. t.) To let fall in the form of spray.
(v. t.) To throw spray upon; to treat with a liquid in the form
of spray; as, to spray a wound, or a surgical instrument, with carbolic
acid.
(n.) Thrush.
(n.) A small shoot or twig of a tree or other plant; a spray; as,
a sprig of laurel or of parsley.
(n.) A youth; a lad; -- used humorously or in slight
disparagement.
(n.) A brad, or nail without a head.
(n.) A small eyebolt ragged or barbed at the point.
(v. t.) To mark or adorn with the representation of small
branches; to work with sprigs; as, to sprig muslin.
(v. i.) To throw out with force from a narrow orifice; to eject;
to spurt out.
(v. t.) To sprout; to bud; to germinate, as barley steeped for
malt.
(n.) A shoot; a sprout.
(v. i.) A small boom, pole, or spar, which crosses the sail of a
boat diagonally from the mast to the upper aftmost corner, which it is
used to extend and elevate.
(n.) A salmon in its second year.
(n.) Strictly, the hole through which melted metal is poured into
the gate, and thence into the mold.
(n.) The waste piece of metal cast in this hole; hence, dross.
(n.) Same as Sprew.
(v. t.) To make smart.
(n.) See Spook.
(n.) Frothy matter raised on liquids by boiling, effervescence,
or agitation; froth; foam; scum.
(v. i.) To froth; to foam.
(a.) Consisting of, containing, or covered with, froth, scum, or
foam; frothy; foamy.
(n.) Wood that readily takes fire; touchwood; also, a kind of
tinder made from a species of fungus; punk; amadou.
(n.) An inflammable temper; spirit; mettle; pluck; as, a man of
spunk.
(v. t.) To drive back or away, as with the foot; to kick.
(v. t.) To reject with disdain; to scorn to receive or accept; to
treat with contempt.
(v. i.) To kick or toss up the heels.
(v. i.) To manifest disdain in rejecting anything; to make
contemptuous opposition or resistance.
(n.) A kick; a blow with the foot.
(n.) Disdainful rejection; contemptuous tratment.
(n.) A body of coal left to sustain an overhanding mass.
(v. i.) To gush or issue suddenly or violently out in a stream,
as liquor from a cask; to rush from a confined place in a small stream
or jet; to spirt.
(v. t.) To throw out, as a liquid, in a stream or jet; to drive
or force out with violence, as a liquid from a pipe or small orifice;
as, to spurt water from the mouth.
(n.) A sudden and energetic effort, as in an emergency; an
increased exertion for a brief space.
(v. i.) To make a sudden and violent exertion, as in an
emergency.
(v. t.) To dispute; to discuss.
(n.) Something peculiar to one's self.
(v. t.) To fall or rush upon suddenly and lay hold of; to gripe
or grasp suddenly; to reach and grasp.
(v. t.) To take possession of by force.
(v. t.) To invade suddenly; to take sudden hold of; to come upon
suddenly; as, a fever seizes a patient.
(v. t.) To take possession of by virtue of a warrant or other
legal authority; as, the sheriff seized the debtor's goods.
(v. t.) To fasten; to fix.
(v. t.) To grap with the mind; to comprehend fully and
distinctly; as, to seize an idea.
(v. t.) To bind or fasten together with a lashing of small stuff,
as yarn or marline; as, to seize ropes.
(n.) The seed of plants.
(n.) The seed or fecundating fluid of male animals; sperm. It is
a white or whitish viscid fluid secreted by the testes, characterized
by the presence of spermatozoids to which it owes its generative power.
() A prefix signifying half, and sometimes partly or imperfectly;
as, semiannual, half yearly; semitransparent, imperfectly transparent.
(n.) A Spanish title of courtesy given to a lady; Mrs.; Madam;
also, a lady.
(v. t.) A faculty, possessed by animals, of perceiving external
objects by means of impressions made upon certain organs (sensory or
sense organs) of the body, or of perceiving changes in the condition of
the body; as, the senses of sight, smell, hearing, taste, and touch.
See Muscular sense, under Muscular, and Temperature sense, under
Temperature.
(v. t.) Perception by the sensory organs of the body; sensation;
sensibility; feeling.
(v. t.) Perception through the intellect; apprehension;
recognition; understanding; discernment; appreciation.
(v. t.) Sound perception and reasoning; correct judgment; good
mental capacity; understanding; also, that which is sound, true, or
reasonable; rational meaning.
(v. t.) That which is felt or is held as a sentiment, view, or
opinion; judgment; notion; opinion.
(v. t.) Meaning; import; signification; as, the true sense of
words or phrases; the sense of a remark.
(v. t.) Moral perception or appreciation.
(v. t.) One of two opposite directions in which a line, surface,
or volume, may be supposed to be described by the motion of a point,
line, or surface.
(v. t.) To perceive by the senses; to recognize.
(n.) The hooded merganser.
(a.) White like snow.
(a.) Abounding with snow; covered with snow.
(a.) Fig.: Pure; unblemished; unstained; spotless.
(v. t.) The part of a candle wick charred by the flame, whether
burning or not.
(v. t.) To crop the snuff of, as a candle; to take off the end of
the snuff of.
(v. i.) To draw in, or to inhale, forcibly through the nose; to
sniff.
(v. i.) To perceive by the nose; to scent; to smell.
(v. i.) To inhale air through the nose with violence or with
noise, as do dogs and horses.
(v. i.) To turn up the nose and inhale air, as an expression of
contempt; hence, to take offense.
(n.) The act of snuffing; perception by snuffing; a sniff.
(n.) Pulverized tobacco, etc., prepared to be taken into the
nose; also, the amount taken at once.
(n.) Resentment, displeasure, or contempt, expressed by a
snuffing of the nose.
(a.) Full of moisture; wet; soppy.
(superl.) Resembling soap; having the qualities of, or feeling
like, soap; soft and smooth.
(superl.) Smeared with soap; covered with soap.
(a.) Sweet.
(superl.) Temperate in the use of spirituous liquors; habitually
temperate; as, a sober man.
(superl.) Not intoxicated or excited by spirituous liquors; as,
the sot may at times be sober.
(superl.) Not mad or insane; not wild, visionary, or heated with
passion; exercising cool, dispassionate reason; self-controlled;
self-possessed.
(superl.) Not proceeding from, or attended with, passion; calm;
as, sober judgment; a man in his sober senses.
(superl.) Serious or subdued in demeanor, habit, appearance, or
color; solemn; grave; sedate.
(v. t.) To make sober.
(v. i.) To become sober; -- often with down.
(prep.) Without; as, senza stromenti, without instruments.
(n.) A leaf or division of the calyx.
(n.) The common European cuttlefish.
(n.) A genus comprising the common cuttlefish and numerous
similar species. See Illustr. under Cuttlefish.
(n.) A pigment prepared from the ink, or black secretion, of the
sepia, or cuttlefish. Treated with caustic potash, it has a rich brown
color; and this mixed with a red forms Roman sepia. Cf. India ink,
under India.
(a.) Of a dark brown color, with a little red in its composition;
also, made of, or done in, sepia.
(a.) Of or pertaining to sepia; done in sepia; as, a sepic
drawing.
(a.) Wet; soaky.
(n.) A plain block or plinth forming a low pedestal; any base;
especially, the base of a statue, column, or the like. See Plinth.
(n.) A plain face or plinth at the lower part of a wall.
(a.) Of or pertaining to sodium; containing sodium.
(n.) Any one attached to a Mohammedan mosque, esp. a student of
the higher branches of theology in a mosque school.
(pl. ) of Saga
(n.) The military cloak of the Roman soldiers.
(a.) Like a sail.
() 3d pers. sing. pres. of Say.
(n.) Same as Sapajou.
(n.) A falcon (Falco sacer) native of Southern Europe and Asia,
closely resembling the lanner.
(n.) The peregrine falcon.
(n.) A small piece of artillery.
(n.) A preparation of vegetables, as lettuce, celery, water
cress, onions, etc., usually dressed with salt, vinegar, oil, and
spice, and eaten for giving a relish to other food; as, lettuce salad;
tomato salad, etc.
(n.) A dish composed of chopped meat or fish, esp. chicken or
lobster, mixed with lettuce or other vegetables, and seasoned with oil,
vinegar, mustard, and other condiments; as, chicken salad; lobster
salad.
(n.) The dried tubers of various species of Orchis, and Eulophia.
It is used to make a nutritious beverage by treating the powdered
preparation with hot water.
(n.) Same as Salmis.
(n.) An apartment for the reception of company; hence, in the
plural, fashionable parties; circles of fashionable society.
(n.) A mud volcano, the water of which is often impregnated with
salts, whence the name.
(a.) Somewhat salt; saltish.
(v. t.) To salute.
(interj.) Hail!
(v. t.) To say "Salve" to; to greet; to salute.
(n.) An adhesive composition or substance to be applied to wounds
or sores; a healing ointment.
(n.) A soothing remedy or antidote.
(n.) To heal by applications or medicaments; to cure by remedial
treatment; to apply salve to; as, to salve a wound.
(n.) To heal; to remedy; to cure; to make good; to soothe, as
with an ointment, especially by some device, trick, or quibble; to
gloss over.
(v. t. & i.) To save, as a ship or goods, from the perils of the
sea.
(n.) Alt. of Sangu
(n.) The Abyssinian ox (Bos / Bibos, Africanus), noted for the
great length of its horns. It has a hump on its back.
(a.) Having the power of affecting the organs of taste;
possessing savor, or flavor.
(n.) Power of affecting the organs of taste; savor; flavor;
taste.
(superl.) Abounding with sap; full of sap; juicy; succulent.
(superl.) Hence, young, not firm; weak, feeble.
(superl.) Weak in intellect.
(superl.) Abounding in sap; resembling, or consisting largely of,
sapwood.
(a.) Musty; tainted.
(n.) Any one of several species of sparoid fishes belonging to
Sargus, Pomadasys, and related genera; -- called also sar, and saragu.
(n.) Sarsaparilla.
(n.) The Indian antelope (Antilope bezoartica, / cervicapra),
noted for its beauty and swiftness. It has long, spiral, divergent
horns.
(n.) A sluice or lock, as in a river, to make it more navigable.
(imp. & p. p.) of Sate
(n.) A silk cloth, of a thick, close texture, and overshot woof,
which has a glossy surface.
(n.) A sylvan deity or demigod, represented as part man and part
goat, and characterized by riotous merriment and lasciviousness.
(n.) Any one of many species of butterflies belonging to the
family Nymphalidae. Their colors are commonly brown and gray, often
with ocelli on the wings. Called also meadow browns.
(n.) The orang-outang.
(n.) A composition of condiments and appetizing ingredients eaten
with food as a relish; especially, a dressing for meat or fish or for
puddings; as, mint sauce; sweet sauce, etc.
(n.) Any garden vegetables eaten with meat.
(n.) Stewed or preserved fruit eaten with other food as a relish;
as, apple sauce, cranberry sauce, etc.
(n.) Sauciness; impertinence.
(v. t.) To accompany with something intended to give a higher
relish; to supply with appetizing condiments; to season; to flavor.
(v. t.) To cause to relish anything, as if with a sauce; to
tickle or gratify, as the palate; to please; to stimulate; hence, to
cover, mingle, or dress, as if with sauce; to make an application to.
(v. t.) To make poignant; to give zest, flavor or interest to; to
set off; to vary and render attractive.
(v. t.) To treat with bitter, pert, or tart language; to be
impudent or saucy to.
(n.) A soft crayon for use in stump drawing or in shading with
the stump.
() Alt. of Sauh
(pl. ) of Sputum
(imp. & p. p.) of Spy
(pl. ) of Spy
(a.) Fat; thick; plump; bulky.
(a.) Unfledged; unfeathered; as, a squab pigeon.
(n.) A neatling of a pigeon or other similar bird, esp. when very
fat and not fully fledged.
(n.) A person of a short, fat figure.
(n.) A thickly stuffed cushion; especially, one used for the seat
of a sofa, couch, or chair; also, a sofa.
(adv.) With a heavy fall; plump.
(v. i.) To fall plump; to strike at one dash, or with a heavy
stroke.
(n.) A small party of men assembled for drill, inspection, or
other purposes.
(n.) Hence, any small party.
(n.) Sloppy mud.
(n.) The angel fish (Squatina angelus).
(v. t.) To sit down upon the hams or heels; as, the savages
squatted near the fire.
(v. t.) To sit close to the ground; to cower; to stoop, or lie
close, to escape observation, as a partridge or rabbit.
(v. t.) To settle on another's land without title; also, to
settle on common or public lands.
(v. t.) To bruise or make flat by a fall.
(a.) Sitting on the hams or heels; sitting close to the ground;
cowering; crouching.
(a.) Short and thick, like the figure of an animal squatting.
(n.) The posture of one that sits on his heels or hams, or close
to the ground.
(n.) A sudden or crushing fall.
(n.) A small vein of ore.
(n.) A mineral consisting of tin ore and spar.
(n.) A female; a woman; -- in the language of Indian tribes of
the Algonquin family, correlative of sannup.
(n.) A palace; a seraglio; also, in the East, a place for the
accommodation of travelers; a caravansary, or rest house.
(n.) A European finch (Serinus hortulanus) closely related to the
canary.
(n.) Alt. of Seroon
(n.) Alt. of Surrow
(v. t.) To crowd; to press together.
(n.) The watery portion of certain animal fluids, as blood, milk,
etc.
(n.) A thin watery fluid, containing more or less albumin,
secreted by the serous membranes of the body, such as the pericardium
and peritoneum.
(v. t.) To work for; to labor in behalf of; to exert one's self
continuously or statedly for the benefit of; to do service for; to be
in the employment of, as an inferior, domestic, serf, slave, hired
assistant, official helper, etc.; specifically, in a religious sense,
to obey and worship.
(v. t.) To be subordinate to; to act a secondary part under; to
appear as the inferior of; to minister to.
(v. t.) To be suitor to; to profess love to.
(v. t.) To wait upon; to supply the wants of; to attend;
specifically, to wait upon at table; to attend at meals; to supply with
food; as, to serve customers in a shop.
(v. t.) Hence, to bring forward, arrange, deal, or distribute, as
a portion of anything, especially of food prepared for eating; -- often
with up; formerly with in.
(v. t.) To perform the duties belonging to, or required in or
for; hence, to be of use to; as, a curate may serve two churches; to
serve one's country.
(v. t.) To contribute or conduce to; to promote; to be sufficient
for; to satisfy; as, to serve one's turn.
(v. t.) To answer or be (in the place of something) to; as, a
sofa serves one for a seat and a couch.
(v. t.) To treat; to behave one's self to; to requite; to act
toward; as, he served me very ill.
(v. t.) To work; to operate; as, to serve the guns.
(v. t.) To bring to notice, deliver, or execute, either actually
or constructively, in such manner as the law requires; as, to serve a
summons.
(v. t.) To make legal service opon (a person named in a writ,
summons, etc.); as, to serve a witness with a subp/na.
(v. t.) To pass or spend, as time, esp. time of punishment; as,
to serve a term in prison.
(v. t.) To copulate with; to cover; as, a horse serves a mare; --
said of the male.
(v. t.) To lead off in delivering (the ball).
(v. t.) To wind spun yarn, or the like, tightly around (a rope or
cable, etc.) so as to protect it from chafing or from the weather. See
under Serving.
(v. i.) To be a servant or a slave; to be employed in labor or
other business for another; to be in subjection or bondage; to render
menial service.
(v. i.) To perform domestic offices; to be occupied with
household affairs; to prepare and dish up food, etc.
(v. i.) To be in service; to do duty; to discharge the
requirements of an office or employment. Specifically, to act in the
public service, as a soldier, seaman. etc.
(v. i.) To be of use; to answer a purpose; to suffice; to suit;
to be convenient or favorable.
(v. i.) To lead off in delivering the ball.
(interj.) Hurry; run.
(pl. ) of Seta
(n.) A shell or husk; a cod or pod.
(n.) A fine-grained sedimentary rock of a thin, laminated, and
often friable, structure.
(v. t.) To take off the shell or coat of; to shell.
() 2d per. sing. of Shall.
(a.) One more than six; six and one added; as, seven days make
one week.
(n.) The number greater by one than six; seven units or objects.
(n.) A symbol representing seven units, as 7, or vii.
(v. t.) To separate, as one from another; to cut off from
something; to divide; to part in any way, especially by violence, as by
cutting, rending, etc.; as, to sever the head from the body.
(a.) A little pipe, or hollow cylinder of paper, filled with
powder or combustible matter, to be thrown into the air while burning,
so as to burst there with a crack.
(a.) A kind of slow match or safety fuse.
(a.) A sarcastic speech or publication; a petty lampoon; a brief,
witty essay.
(a.) A writer of lampoons.
(a.) A paltry fellow.
(v. i.) To throw squibs; to utter sarcatic or severe reflections;
to contend in petty dispute; as, to squib a little debate.
(a.) A large pile of hay, grain, straw, or the like, usually of a
nearly conical form, but sometimes rectangular or oblong, contracted at
the top to a point or ridge, and sometimes covered with thatch.
(a.) A pile of poles or wood, indefinite in quantity.
(a.) A pile of wood containing 108 cubic feet.
(a.) A number of flues embodied in one structure, rising above
the roof. Hence:
(a.) Any single insulated and prominent structure, or upright
pipe, which affords a conduit for smoke; as, the brick smokestack of a
factory; the smokestack of a steam vessel.
(a.) A section of memory in a computer used for temporary storage
of data, in which the last datum stored is the first retrieved.
(a.) A data structure within random-access memory used to
simulate a hardware stack; as, a push-down stack.
(n.) To lay in a conical or other pile; to make into a large
pile; as, to stack hay, cornstalks, or grain; to stack or place wood.
(n.) A stadium.
(n.) A landing place or wharf.
(n.) A long piece of wood; a stick; the long handle of an
instrument or weapon; a pole or srick, used for many purposes; as, a
surveyor's staff; the staff of a spear or pike.
(n.) A stick carried in the hand for support or defense by a
person walking; hence, a support; that which props or upholds.
(n.) A pole, stick, or wand borne as an ensign of authority; a
badge of office; as, a constable's staff.
(n.) A pole upon which a flag is supported and displayed.
(n.) The round of a ladder.
(n.) A series of verses so disposed that, when it is concluded,
the same order begins again; a stanza; a stave.
(n.) The five lines and the spaces on which music is written; --
formerly called stave.
(n.) An arbor, as of a wheel or a pinion of a watch.
(n.) The grooved director for the gorget, or knife, used in
cutting for stone in the bladder.
(n.) An establishment of officers in various departments attached
to an army, to a section of an army, or to the commander of an army.
The general's staff consists of those officers about his person who are
employed in carrying his commands into execution. See Etat Major.
(n.) Hence: A body of assistants serving to carry into effect the
plans of a superintendant or manager; as, the staff of a newspaper.
() imp. & p. p. of Stay.
(a.) Sober; grave; steady; sedate; composed; regular; not wild,
volatile, or fanciful.
(n.) A handle, as of a mop; a stale.
(v. t.) To discolor by the application of foreign matter; to make
foul; to spot; as, to stain the hand with dye; armor stained with
blood.
(v. t.) To color, as wood, glass, paper, cloth, or the like, by
processess affecting, chemically or otherwise, the material itself; to
tinge with a color or colors combining with, or penetrating, the
substance; to dye; as, to stain wood with acids, colored washes, paint
rubbed in, etc.; to stain glass.
(v. t.) To spot with guilt or infamy; to bring reproach on; to
blot; to soil; to tarnish.
(v. t.) To cause to seem inferior or soiled by comparison.
(v. i.) To give or receive a stain; to grow dim.
(n.) A discoloration by foreign matter; a spot; as, a stain on a
garment or cloth.
(n.) A natural spot of a color different from the gound.
(n.) Taint of guilt; tarnish; disgrace; reproach.
(n.) Cause of reproach; shame.
(n.) A tincture; a tinge.
(n.) One step of a series for ascending or descending to a
different level; -- commonly applied to those within a building.
(n.) A series of steps, as for passing from one story of a house
to another; -- commonly used in the plural; but originally used in the
singular only.
(v. t.) A piece of wood, usually long and slender, pointed at one
end so as to be easily driven into the ground as a support or stay; as,
a stake to support vines, fences, hedges, etc.
(v. t.) A stick inserted upright in a lop, eye, or mortise, at
the side or end of a cart, a flat car, or the like, to prevent goods
from falling off.
(v. t.) The piece of timber to which a martyr was affixed to be
burned; hence, martyrdom by fire.
(v. t.) A small anvil usually furnished with a tang to enter a
hole in a bench top, -- used by tinsmiths, blacksmiths, etc., for light
work, punching upon, etc.
(v. t.) That which is laid down as a wager; that which is staked
or hazarded; a pledge.
(v. t.) To fasten, support, or defend with stakes; as, to stake
vines or plants.
(v. t.) To mark the limits of by stakes; -- with out; as, to
stake out land; to stake out a new road.
(v. t.) To put at hazard upon the issue of competition, or upon a
future contingency; to wager; to pledge.
(v. t.) To pierce or wound with a stake.
(a.) Having a taste or flavorl savory; sapid.
(imp. & p. p.) of Sire
(n.) See Sirocco.
(n.) Alt. of Syrup
(n.) A thick and viscid liquid made from the juice of fruits,
herbs, etc., boiled with sugar.
(n.) A thick and viscid saccharine solution of superior quality
(as sugarhouse sirup or molasses, maple sirup); specifically, in
pharmacy and often in cookery, a saturated solution of sugar and water
(simple sirup), or such a solution flavored or medicated.
(n.) The suslik.
(a.) Having a site; situated.
(n.) Time.
(v. i.) To sigh.
(n.) A scythe.
(v. t.) To cut with a scythe; to scythe.
(n.) The method in which the parts of a plant are arranged; also,
the position of the parts.
(v. i.) To simmer.
(a.) First after the fifth; next in order after the fifth.
(a.) Constituting or being one of six equal parts into which
anything is divided.
(n.) The quotient of a unit divided by six; one of six equal
parts which form a whole.
(n.) The next in order after the fifth.
(n.) The interval embracing six diatonic degrees of the scale.
(a.) Six times ten; fifty-nine and one more; threescore.
(n.) The sum of six times ten; sixty units or objects.
(n.) A symbol representing sixty units, as 60, lx., or LX.
(n.) One of a body of students in the universities of Cambridge
(Eng.) and Dublin, who, having passed a certain examination, are
exempted from paying college fees and charges. A sizar corresponded to
a servitor at Oxford.
(imp. & p. p.) of Size
(a.) Adjusted according to size.
(a.) Having a particular size or magnitude; -- chiefly used in
compounds; as, large-sized; common-sized.
(n.) See Sizar.
(n.) An instrument or contrivance to size articles, or to
determine their size by a standard, or to separate and distribute them
according to size.
(n.) An instrument or tool for bringing anything to an exact
size.
(n.) See 5th Scald.
(n.) The shag.
(n.) A metallic runner with a frame shaped to fit the sole of a
shoe, -- made to be fastened under the foot, and used for moving
rapidly on ice.
(v. i.) To move on skates.
(n.) Any one of numerous species of large, flat elasmobranch
fishes of the genus Raia, having a long, slender tail, terminated by a
small caudal fin. The pectoral fins, which are large and broad and
united to the sides of the body and head, give a somewhat rhombic form
to these fishes. The skin is more or less spinose.
(n.) A knife or short dagger, esp. that in use among the
Highlanders of Scotland. [Variously spelt.]
(n.) See Skid.
(n.) A shallow wooden vessel for holding milk or cream.
(n.) A scoop with a long handle, used to wash the sides of a
vessel, and formerly to wet the sails or deck.
(n.) A quantity of yarn, thread, or the like, put up together,
after it is taken from the reel, -- usually tied in a sort of knot.
(n.) A metallic strengthening band or thimble on the wooden arm
of an axle.
(n.) A flight of wild fowl (wild geese or the like).
(n.) A blow; a smart stroke.
(n.) A squall; also, a heavy fall of rain.
(v. t.) To strike; to slap.
(n.) A wrought-iron plate from which a gun barrel or pipe is made
by bending and welding the edges together, and drawing the thick tube
thus formed.
() imp. & p. p. of Sky, v. t.
(a.) See Skyey.
(n.) A small, light boat.
(v. t.) To navigate in a skiff.
(v. t.) To slight; to do carelessly; to scamp.
(v. t.) To make insufficient allowance for; to scant; to scrimp.
(v. i.) To save; to be parsimonious or niggardly.
(a.) Scanty.
(n.) Any one of numerous species of regularly scaled harmless
lizards of the family Scincidae, common in the warmer parts of all the
continents.
(v. t.) To draw or serve, as drink.
(v. i.) To serve or draw liquor.
(n.) Drink; also, pottage.
(v. t.& i.) To utter in a shrill tone; to scream.
(n.) A shrill cry or sound.
(v. t.) To ramble over in order to clear; to scour.
(v. i.) To scour; to scud; to run.
(n.) A tern.
(n.) The lower and loose part of a coat, dress, or other like
garment; the part below the waist; as, the skirt of a coat, a dress, or
a mantle.
(n.) A loose edging to any part of a dress.
(n.) Border; edge; margin; extreme part of anything
(n.) A petticoat.
(n.) The diaphragm, or midriff, in animals.
(v. t.) To cover with a skirt; to surround.
(v. t.) To border; to form the border or edge of; to run along
the edge of; as, the plain was skirted by rows of trees.
(v. t.) To be on the border; to live near the border, or
extremity.
(n.) The iron lap used by diamond polishers in finishing the
facets of the gem.
(v. t.) To pare or shave off the rough or thick parts of (hides
or leather).
(n.) A guillemot.
(v. i.) To hide, or get out of the way, in a sneaking manner; to
lie close, or to move in a furtive way; to lurk.
(n.) A number of foxes together.
(n.) Alt. of Skulker
(n.) A school, company, or shoal.
(n.) The skeleton of the head of a vertebrate animal, including
the brain case, or cranium, and the bones and cartilages of the face
and mouth. See Illusts. of Carnivora, of Facial angles under Facial,
and of Skeleton, in Appendix.
(n.) The head or brain; the seat of intelligence; mind.
(n.) A covering for the head; a skullcap.
(n.) A sort of oar. See Scull.
(n.) Any one of several species of American musteline carnivores
of the genus Mephitis and allied genera. They have two glands near the
anus, secreting an extremely fetid liquid, which the animal ejects at
pleasure as a means of defense.
(v. t.) In games of chance and skill: To defeat (an opponent) (as
in cards) so that he fails to gain a point, or (in checkers) to get a
king.
(pl. ) of Sky
(imp. & p. p.) of Sky
(a.) Like the sky; ethereal; being in the sky.
(a.) To allay; to quench; to extinguish; as, to slake thirst.
(a.) To mix with water, so that a true chemical combination shall
take place; to slack; as, to slake lime.
(v. i.) To go out; to become extinct.
(v. i.) To abate; to become less decided.
(v. i.) To slacken; to become relaxed.
(v. i.) To become mixed with water, so that a true chemical
combination takes place; as, the lime slakes.
() imp. of Sling. Slung.
(n.) Any long, narrow piece of land; a promontory.
(n.) A fetter worn on the leg by a convict.
(n.) Low, vulgar, unauthorized language; a popular but
unauthorized word, phrase, or mode of expression; also, the jargon of
some particular calling or class in society; low popular cant; as, the
slang of the theater, of college, of sailors, etc.
(v. t.) To address with slang or ribaldry; to insult with vulgar
language.
() imp. & p. p. of Slink.
(v. i.) To be turned or inclined from a right line or level; to
lie obliquely; to slope.
(v. t.) To turn from a direct line; to give an oblique or sloping
direction to; as, to slant a line.
(n.) A slanting direction or plane; a slope; as, it lies on a
slant.
(n.) An oblique reflection or gibe; a sarcastic remark.
(v. i.) Inclined from a direct line, whether horizontal or
perpendicular; sloping; oblique.
(a.) Slippery; smooth; crafty; hypocritical.
(v. t.) To cut by striking violently and at random; to cut in
long slits.
(v. t.) To lash; to ply the whip to.
(v. t.) To crack or snap, as a whip.
(v. i.) To strike violently and at random, esp. with an edged
instrument; to lay about one indiscriminately with blows; to cut
hastily and carelessly.
(n.) A long cut; a cut made at random.
(n.) A large slit in the material of any garment, made to show
the lining through the openings.
(n.) Swampy or wet lands overgrown with bushes.
(v. t.) An argillaceous rock which readily splits into thin
plates; argillite; argillaceous schist.
(v. t.) Any rock or stone having a slaty structure.
(v. t.) A prepared piece of such stone.
(v. t.) A thin, flat piece, for roofing or covering houses, etc.
(v. t.) A tablet for writing upon.
(v. t.) An artificial material, resembling slate, and used for
the above purposes.
(v. t.) A thin plate of any material; a flake.
(v. t.) A list of candidates, prepared for nomination or for
election; a list of candidates, or a programme of action, devised
beforehand.
(v. t.) To cover with slate, or with a substance resembling
slate; as, to slate a roof; to slate a globe.
(v. t.) To register (as on a slate and subject to revision), for
an appointment.
(v. t.) To set a dog upon; to bait; to slat. See 2d Slat, 3.
(a.) Resembling slate; having the nature, appearance, or
properties, of slate; composed of thin parallel plates, capable of
being separated by splitting; as, a slaty color or texture.
(pl. ) of Slav
(p. p.) of Slay
(superl.) Having an even, smooth surface; smooth; hence, glossy;
as, sleek hair.
(superl.) Not rough or harsh.
(adv.) With ease and dexterity.
(n.) That which makes smooth; varnish.
(v. t.) To make even and smooth; to render smooth, soft, and
glossy; to smooth over.
(imp. & p. p.) of Sleep
(n.) A slayer.
(n.) The part of a mortar extending from the chamber to the
trunnions.
(n.) Hail or snow, mingled with rain, usually falling, or driven
by the wind, in fine particles.
(v. i.) To snow or hail with a mixture of rain.
(n. & v.) See Slant.
() imp. & p. p. of Sleep.
(v. t.) A thin, broad piece cut off; as, a slice of bacon; a
slice of cheese; a slice of bread.
(v. t.) That which is thin and broad, like a slice.
(v. t.) A broad, thin piece of plaster.
(v. t.) A salver, platter, or tray.
(v. t.) A knife with a thin, broad blade for taking up or serving
fish; also, a spatula for spreading anything, as paint or ink.
(v. t.) A plate of iron with a handle, forming a kind of chisel,
or a spadelike implement, variously proportioned, and used for various
purposes, as for stripping the planking from a vessel's side, for
cutting blubber from a whale, or for stirring a fire of coals; a slice
bar; a peel; a fire shovel.
(v. t.) One of the wedges by which the cradle and the ship are
lifted clear of the building blocks to prepare for launching.
(v. t.) A removable sliding bottom to galley.
(v. t.) To cut into thin pieces, or to cut off a thin, broad
piece from.
(v. t.) To cut into parts; to divide.
(v. t.) To clear by means of a slice bar, as a fire or the grate
bars of a furnace.
(n.) Alt. of Slick
(n.) See Schlich.
(a.) Sleek; smooth.
(v. t.) To make sleek or smoth.
(n.) A wide paring chisel.
(v. t.) To move along the surface of any body by slipping, or
without walking or rolling; to slip; to glide; as, snow slides down the
mountain's side.
(v. t.) Especially, to move over snow or ice with a smooth,
uninterrupted motion, as on a sled moving by the force of gravity, or
on the feet.
(v. t.) To pass inadvertently.
(v. t.) To pass along smoothly or unobservedly; to move gently
onward without friction or hindrance; as, a ship or boat slides through
the water.
(v. t.) To slip when walking or standing; to fall.
(v. t.) To pass from one note to another with no perceptible
cassation of sound.
(v. t.) To pass out of one's thought as not being of any
consequence.
(v. t.) To cause to slide; to thrust along; as, to slide one
piece of timber along another.
(v. t.) To pass or put imperceptibly; to slip; as, to slide in a
word to vary the sense of a question.
(n.) The act of sliding; as, a slide on the ice.
(n.) Smooth, even passage or progress.
(n.) That on which anything moves by sliding.
(n.) An inclined plane on which heavy bodies slide by the force
of gravity, esp. one constructed on a mountain side for conveying logs
by sliding them down.
(n.) A surface of ice or snow on which children slide for
amusement.
(n.) That which operates by sliding.
(n.) A cover which opens or closes an aperture by sliding over
it.
(n.) A moving piece which is guided by a part or parts along
which it slides.
(n.) A clasp or brooch for a belt, or the like.
(n.) A plate or slip of glass on which is a picture or
delineation to be exhibited by means of a magic lantern, stereopticon,
or the like; a plate on which is an object to be examined with a
microscope.
(n.) The descent of a mass of earth, rock, or snow down a hill or
mountain side; as, a land slide, or a snow slide; also, the track of
bare rock left by a land slide.
(n.) A small dislocation in beds of rock along a line of fissure.
(n.) A grace consisting of two or more small notes moving by
conjoint degrees, and leading to a principal note either above or
below.
(n.) An apparatus in the trumpet and trombone by which the
sounding tube is lengthened and shortened so as to produce the tones
between the fundamental and its harmonics.
(n.) A sound which, by a gradual change in the position of the
vocal organs, passes imperceptibly into another sound.
(n.) Same as Guide bar, under Guide.
(n.) A slide valve.
(adv.) See Slyly.
(n.) Soft, moist earth or clay, having an adhesive quality;
viscous mud.
(n.) Any mucilaginous substance; any substance of a dirty nature,
that is moist, soft, and adhesive.
(n.) Bitumen.
(n.) Mud containing metallic ore, obtained in the preparatory
dressing.
(n.) A mucuslike substance which exudes from the bodies of
certain animals.
(v. t.) To smear with slime.
(superl.) Of or pertaining to slime; resembling slime; of the
nature of slime; viscous; glutinous; also, covered or daubed with
slime; yielding, or abounding in, slime.
(v. t.) An instrument for throwing stones or other missiles,
consisting of a short strap with two strings fastened to its ends, or
with a string fastened to one end and a light stick to the other. The
missile being lodged in a hole in the strap, the ends of the string are
taken in the hand, and the whole whirled rapidly round until, by
loosing one end, the missile is let fly with centrifugal force.
(v. t.) The act or motion of hurling as with a sling; a throw;
figuratively, a stroke.
(v. t.) A contrivance for sustaining anything by suspension
(v. t.) A kind of hanging bandage put around the neck, in which a
wounded arm or hand is supported.
(v. t.) A loop of rope, or a rope or chain with hooks, for
suspending a barrel, bale, or other heavy object, in hoisting or
lowering.
(v. t.) A strap attached to a firearm, for suspending it from the
shoulder.
(v. t.) A band of rope or iron for securing a yard to a mast; --
chiefly in the plural.
(imp.) of Sling
() of Sling
(p. p.) of Sling
(v. t.) To throw with a sling.
(v. t.) To throw; to hurl; to cast.
(v. t.) To hang so as to swing; as, to sling a pack.
(v. t.) To pass a rope round, as a cask, gun, etc., preparatory
to attaching a hoisting or lowering tackle.
(n.) A drink composed of spirit (usually gin) and water
sweetened.
(imp.) of Slink
() of Slink
(p. p.) of Slink
(a.) To creep away meanly; to steal away; to sneak.
(a.) To miscarry; -- said of female beasts.
(v. t.) To cast prematurely; -- said of female beasts; as, a cow
that slinks her calf.
(a.) Produced prematurely; as, a slink calf.
(a.) Thin; lean.
(n.) The young of a beast brought forth prematurely, esp. a calf
brought forth before its time.
(n.) A thievish fellow; a sneak.
(n.) A cut; as, slish and slash.
(v. i.) To sneak.
(v. t.) To cut; to split; to separate.
(n.) A narrow piece of timber which holds together large pieces;
a slat; as, the sloats of a cart.
(v. t.) Alt. of Slocken
(n.) See Sloakan.
(n.) Slumber.
(n.) A vessel having one mast and fore-and-aft rig, consisting of
a boom-and-gaff mainsail, jibs, staysail, and gaff topsail. The typical
sloop has a fixed bowsprit, topmast, and standing rigging, while those
of a cutter are capable of being readily shifted. The sloop usually
carries a centerboard, and depends for stability upon breadth of beam
rather than depth of keel. The two types have rapidly approximated
since 1880. One radical distinction is that a slop may carry a
centerboard. See Cutter, and Illustration in Appendix.
(a.) Sloping; inclined.
() Alt. of Sloshy
(n.) Slowness; tardiness.
(n.) Disinclination to action or labor; sluggishness; laziness;
idleness.
(n.) Any one of several species of arboreal edentates
constituting the family Bradypodidae, and the suborder Tardigrada. They
have long exserted limbs and long prehensile claws. Both jaws are
furnished with teeth (see Illust. of Edentata), and the ears and tail
are rudimentary. They inhabit South and Central America and Mexico.
(v. i.) To be idle.
(n.) Milk sickness.
(imp. & p. p.) of Slue
(n. pl.) Half-roasted ore.
() imp. & p. p. of Sling.
() imp. & p. p. of Slink.
(v. t.) To accomplish in a concealed or unobserved manner; to try
to carry out secretly; as, to steal a look.
(v. i.) To practice, or be guilty of, theft; to commit larceny or
theft.
(v. i.) To withdraw, or pass privily; to slip in, along, or away,
unperceived; to go or come furtively.
(n.) The elastic, aeriform fluid into which water is converted
when heated to the boiling points; water in the state of vapor.
(n.) The mist formed by condensed vapor; visible vapor; -- so
called in popular usage.
(n.) Any exhalation.
(v. i.) To emit steam or vapor.
(v. i.) To rise in vapor; to issue, or pass off, as vapor.
(v. i.) To move or travel by the agency of steam.
(v. i.) To generate steam; as, the boiler steams well.
(v. t.) To exhale.
(v. t.) To expose to the action of steam; to apply steam to for
softening, dressing, or preparing; as, to steam wood; to steamcloth; to
steam food, etc.
(n. & v.) See Steen.
(n.) A horse, especially a spirited horse for state of war; --
used chiefly in poetry or stately prose.
(v. t.) Alt. of Steik
(n. & v.) See Esteem.
(n. & v.) See 1st and 2nd Stem.
(a.) A young male of the ox kind; especially, a common ox; a
castrated taurine male from two to four years old. See the Note under
Ox.
(v. t.) To castrate; -- said of male calves.
(n.) To direct the course of; to guide; to govern; -- applied
especially to a vessel in the water.
(v. i.) To direct a vessel in its course; to direct one's course.
(v. i.) To be directed and governed; to take a direction, or
course; to obey the helm; as, the boat steers easily.
(v. i.) To conduct one's self; to take or pursue a course of
action.
(v. t.) A rudder or helm.
(n.) A helmsman, a pilot.
(n.) A small column or pillar, used as a monument, milestone,
etc.
(n.) Same as Stela.
(n.) A stale, or handle; a stalk.
(v. t.) To place or fix firmly or permanently.
(v. t.) A prop; a support, as for the feet in standing or
cilmbing.
(v. t.) A partial inclosure made by a wall or trees, to serve as
a shelter for sheep or cattle.
(n.) One of the fruit dots, or small clusters of sporangia, on
the back of the fronds of ferns.
(a.) Neither very good nor very bad; middling; passable;
tolerable; indifferent.
(adv.) Tolerably; passably.
(v. i.) To gleam.
(n.) A gleam of light; flame.
() A prefix used before father, mother, brother, sister, son,
daughter, child, etc., to indicate that the person thus spoken of is
not a blood relative, but is a relative by the marriage of a parent;
as, a stepmother to X is the wife of the father of X, married by him
after the death of the mother of X. See Stepchild, Stepdaughter,
Stepson, etc.
(a.) Resembling soup; souplike.
(n.) Source. See Source.
(n.) A corrupt form of Sou.
(n.) Pickle made with salt.
(n.) Something kept or steeped in pickle; esp., the pickled ears,
feet, etc., of swine.
(n.) The ear; especially, a hog's ear.
(n.) The act of sousing; a plunging into water.
(v. t.) To steep in pickle; to pickle.
(v. t.) To plunge or immerse in water or any liquid.
(v. t.) To drench, as by an immersion; to wet throughly.
(v. t.) To swoop or plunge, as a bird upon its prey; to fall
suddenly; to rush with speed; to make a sudden attack.
(v. t.) To pounce upon.
(n.) The act of sousing, or swooping.
(adv.) With a sudden swoop; violently.
(imp.) of Sow
() of Sow
(n.) In India, a mounted soldier.
(v. t.) To pull by the ears; to drag about.
(n. & v.) See Souse.
(n.) A kind of spar; earth flax, or amianthus.
(n.) Extension, considered independently of anything which it may
contain; that which makes extended objects conceivable and possible.
(n.) Place, having more or less extension; room.
(n.) A quantity or portion of extension; distance from one thing
to another; an interval between any two or more objects; as, the space
between two stars or two hills; the sound was heard for the space of a
mile.
(n.) Quantity of time; an interval between two points of time;
duration; time.
(n.) A short time; a while.
(n.) Walk; track; path; course.
(n.) A small piece of metal cast lower than a face type, so as
not to receive the ink in printing, -- used to separate words or
letters.
(n.) The distance or interval between words or letters in the
lines, or between lines, as in books.
(n.) One of the intervals, or open places, between the lines of
the staff.
(n.) To walk; to rove; to roam.
(n.) To arrange or adjust the spaces in or between; as, to space
words, lines, or letters.
(n.) A hart or stag three years old.
(n.) A castrated man or beast.
(n.) An implement for digging or cutting the ground, consisting
usually of an oblong and nearly rectangular blade of iron, with a
handle like that of a shovel.
(n.) One of that suit of cards each of which bears one or more
figures resembling a spade.
(n.) A cutting instrument used in flensing a whale.
(v. t.) To dig with a spade; to pare off the sward of, as land,
with a spade.
(p. p.) Started.
(n.) Same as Spade, 2.
(n.) An impotent person.
(imp. & p. p.) of Spae
(n.) Alt. of Spahee
(n.) See 1st Spade.
() imp. of Speak.
(n.) A lath; a shaving or chip, as of wood or stone.
(n.) A strengthening cross timber.
(n.) The shoulder.
(n.) A chip or fragment, especially a chip of stone as struck off
the block by the hammer, having at least one feather-edge.
(v. t.) To break into small pieces, as ore, for the purpose of
separating from rock.
(v. t.) To reduce, as irregular blocks of stone, to an
approximately level surface by hammering.
(v. i.) To give off spalls, or wedge-shaped chips; -- said of
stone, as when badly set, with the weight thrown too much on the outer
surface.
(n.) Spelter.
(a.) Liable to break or split; brittle; as, spalt timber.
(a.) Heedless; clumsy; pert; saucy.
(a.) To split off; to cleave off, as chips from a piece of
timber, with an ax.
(v. t.) To wean.
(v. t.) To spangle.
(v. i.) To spring; to bound; to leap.
(n.) A bound or spring.
(n.) A spangle or shining ornament.
(v. t.) To strike, as the breech, with the open hand; to slap.
(n.) A blow with the open hand; a slap.
(v. i.) To move with a quick, lively step between a trot and
gallop; to move quickly.
(v. t.) A small shoot, or branch, separated, as by a cutting,
from a tree or shrub; also, any stem or branch of a tree, of any size,
cut for fuel or timber.
(v. t.) Any long and comparatively slender piece of wood, whether
in natural form or shaped with tools; a rod; a wand; a staff; as, the
stick of a rocket; a walking stick.
(v. t.) Anything shaped like a stick; as, a stick of wax.
(v. t.) A derogatory expression for a person; one who is inert or
stupid; as, an odd stick; a poor stick.
(v. t.) A composing stick. See under Composing. It is usually a
frame of metal, but for posters, handbills, etc., one made of wood is
used.
(v. t.) A thrust with a pointed instrument; a stab.
(imp. & p. p.) of Stick
(n.) To penetrate with a pointed instrument; to pierce; to stab;
hence, to kill by piercing; as, to stick a beast.
(n.) To cause to penetrate; to push, thrust, or drive, so as to
pierce; as, to stick a needle into one's finger.
(n.) To fasten, attach, or cause to remain, by thrusting in;
hence, also, to adorn or deck with things fastened on as by piercing;
as, to stick a pin on the sleeve.
(n.) To set; to fix in; as, to stick card teeth.
(n.) To set with something pointed; as, to stick cards.
(n.) To fix on a pointed instrument; to impale; as, to stick an
apple on a fork.
(n.) To attach by causing to adhere to the surface; as, to stick
on a plaster; to stick a stamp on an envelope; also, to attach in any
manner.
(n.) To compose; to set, or arrange, in a composing stick; as, to
stick type.
(n.) To run or plane (moldings) in a machine, in
contradistinction to working them by hand. Such moldings are said to be
stuck.
(n.) To cause to stick; to bring to a stand; to pose; to puzzle;
as, to stick one with a hard problem.
(n.) To impose upon; to compel to pay; sometimes, to cheat.
(v. i.) To adhere; as, glue sticks to the fingers; paste sticks
to the wall.
(a.) To use frugally or stintingly, as that which is scarce or
valuable; to retain or keep unused; to save.
(a.) To keep to one's self; to forbear to impart or give.
(a.) To preserve from danger or punishment; to forbear to punish,
injure, or harm; to show mercy to.
(a.) To save or gain, as by frugality; to reserve, as from some
occupation, use, or duty.
(a.) To deprive one's self of, as by being frugal; to do without;
to dispense with; to give up; to part with.
(v. i.) To be frugal; not to be profuse; to live frugally; to be
parsimonious.
(v. i.) To refrain from inflicting harm; to use mercy or
forbearance.
(v. i.) To desist; to stop; to refrain.
(v. t.) Scanty; not abundant or plentiful; as, a spare diet.
(v. t.) Sparing; frugal; parsimonious; chary.
(v. t.) Being over and above what is necessary, or what must be
used or reserved; not wanted, or not used; superfluous; as, I have no
spare time.
(v. t.) Held in reserve, to be used in an emergency; as, a spare
anchor; a spare bed or room.
(v. t.) Lean; wanting flesh; meager; thin; gaunt.
(v. t.) Slow.
(n.) The act of sparing; moderation; restraint.
(n.) Parsimony; frugal use.
(n.) An opening in a petticoat or gown; a placket.
(n.) That which has not been used or expended.
(n.) The right of bowling again at a full set of pins, after
having knocked all the pins down in less than three bowls. If all the
pins are knocked down in one bowl it is a double spare; in two bowls, a
single spare.
(v. i.) To remain where placed; to be fixed; to hold fast to any
position so as to be moved with difficulty; to cling; to abide; to
cleave; to be united closely.
(v. i.) To be prevented from going farther; to stop by reason of
some obstacle; to be stayed.
(v. i.) To be embarrassed or puzzled; to hesitate; to be
deterred, as by scruples; to scruple; -- often with at.
(v. i.) To cause difficulties, scruples, or hesitation.
(superl.) Not easily bent; not flexible or pliant; not limber or
flaccid; rigid; firm; as, stiff wood, paper, joints.
(superl.) Not liquid or fluid; thick and tenacious; inspissated;
neither soft nor hard; as, the paste is stiff.
(superl.) Firm; strong; violent; difficult to oppose; as, a stiff
gale or breeze.
(superl.) Not easily subdued; unyielding; stubborn; obstinate;
pertinacious; as, a stiff adversary.
(superl.) Not natural and easy; formal; constrained; affected;
starched; as, stiff behavior; a stiff style.
(a.) Sparing; parsimonious.
(v. t.) An involuntary and unnatural contraction of one or more
muscles or muscular fibers.
(v. t.) A sudden, violent, and temporary effort or emotion; as, a
spasm of repentance.
(n.) A river flood; an overflow or inundation.
(superl.) Harsh; disagreeable; severe; hard to bear.
(superl.) Bearing a press of canvas without careening much; as, a
stiff vessel; -- opposed to crank.
(superl.) Very large, strong, or costly; powerful; as, a stiff
charge; a stiff price.
(n.) A splinter or fragment, as of wood or stone. See Spall.
(n.) Scattered or ejected spittle.
(v. i. & t.) To scatter spittle from the mouth; to spit, as
saliva.
(v. t.) To produce or deposit (eggs), as fishes or frogs do.
(v. t.) To bring forth; to generate; -- used in contempt.
(v. i.) To deposit eggs, as fish or frogs do.
(v. i.) To issue, as offspring; -- used contemptuously.
(v. t.) The ova, or eggs, of fishes, oysters, and other aquatic
animals.
(n.) A pin set on the face of a dial, to cast a shadow; a style.
See Style.
(n.) Mode of composition. See Style.
(v. i.) A step, or set of steps, for ascending and descending, in
passing a fence or wall.
(v. i.) One of the upright pieces in a frame; one of the primary
members of a frame, into which the secondary members are mortised.
(v. t.) Any product or offspring; -- used contemptuously.
(v. t.) The buds or branches produced from underground stems.
(v. t.) The white fibrous matter forming the matrix from which
fungi.
(imp.) of Speak
() of Speak
() of Speak
(v. i.) To utter words or articulate sounds, as human beings; to
express thoughts by words; as, the organs may be so obstructed that a
man may not be able to speak.
(v. i.) To express opinions; to say; to talk; to converse.
(v. i.) To utter a speech, discourse, or harangue; to adress a
public assembly formally.
(v. i.) To discourse; to make mention; to tell.
(v. i.) To give sound; to sound.
(v. i.) To convey sentiments, ideas, or intelligence as if by
utterance; as, features that speak of self-will.
(v. t.) To utter with the mouth; to pronounce; to utter
articulately, as human beings.
(v. t.) To utter in a word or words; to say; to tell; to declare
orally; as, to speak the truth; to speak sense.
(v. t.) To declare; to proclaim; to publish; to make known; to
exhibit; to express in any way.
(v. t.) To talk or converse in; to utter or pronounce, as in
conversation; as, to speak Latin.
(v. t.) To address; to accost; to speak to.
(n.) Species; kind.
(n.) A pole, or piece of wood, constructed with a step or loop to
raise the foot above the ground in walking. It is sometimes lashed to
the leg, and sometimes prolonged upward so as to be steadied by the
hand or arm.
(n.) A crutch; also, the handle of a plow.
(n.) Any species of limicoline birds belonging to Himantopus and
allied genera, in which the legs are remarkably long and slender.
Called also longshanks, stiltbird, stilt plover, and lawyer.
(v. t.) To raise on stilts, or as if on stilts.
(n.) A slight gleam or glimmer; a glimpse.
(n.) The blubber of whales or other marine mammals; also, the fat
of the hippopotamus.
(n.) A small discolored place in or on anything, or a small place
of a color different from that of the main substance; a spot; a stain;
a blemish; as, a speck on paper or loth; specks of decay in fruit.
(n.) A very small thing; a particle; a mite; as, specks of dust;
he has not a speck of money.
(n.) A small etheostomoid fish (Ulocentra stigmaea) common in the
Eastern United States.
(v. t.) To cause the presence of specks upon or in, especially
specks regarded as defects or blemishes; to spot; to speckle; as, paper
specked by impurities in the water used in its manufacture.
(v. t.) Any sharp organ of offense and defense, especially when
connected with a poison gland, and adapted to inflict a wound by
piercing; as the caudal sting of a scorpion. The sting of a bee or wasp
is a modified ovipositor. The caudal sting, or spine, of a sting ray is
a modified dorsal fin ray. The term is sometimes applied to the fang of
a serpent. See Illust. of Scorpion.
(v. t.) A sharp-pointed hollow hair seated on a gland which
secrets an acrid fluid, as in nettles. The points of these hairs
usually break off in the wound, and the acrid fluid is pressed into it.
(v. t.) Anything that gives acute pain, bodily or mental; as, the
stings of remorse; the stings of reproach.
(v. t.) The thrust of a sting into the flesh; the act of
stinging; a wound inflicted by stinging.
(v. t.) A goad; incitement.
(v. t.) The point of an epigram or other sarcastic saying.
(imp. & p. p.) of Sting
() of Sting
(v. t.) To pierce or wound with a sting; as, bees will sting an
animal that irritates them; the nettles stung his hands.
(v. t.) To pain acutely; as, the conscience is stung with
remorse; to bite.
(v. t.) To goad; to incite, as by taunts or reproaches.
(imp. & p. p.) of Stink
(v. i.) To emit a strong, offensive smell; to send out a
disgusting odor.
(v. t.) To cause to stink; to affect by a stink.
(n.) A strong, offensive smell; a disgusting odor; a stench.
(n.) Any one of several species of small sandpipers, as the
sanderling of Europe and America, the dunlin, the little stint of India
(Tringa minuta), etc. Called also pume.
(n.) A phalarope.
(v. t.) To restrain within certain limits; to bound; to confine;
to restrain; to restrict to a scant allowance.
(v. t.) To put an end to; to stop.
(v. t.) To assign a certain (i. e., limited) task to (a person),
upon the performance of which one is excused from further labor for the
day or for a certain time; to stent.
(v. t.) To serve successfully; to get with foal; -- said of
mares.
(v. i.) To stop; to cease.
(v. t.) Limit; bound; restraint; extent.
(v. t.) Quantity or task assigned; proportion allotted.
(n.) The stalk or petiole of a frond, as of a fern.
(n.) The stalk of a pistil.
(n.) The trunk of a tree.
(n.) The stem of a fungus or mushroom.
(n.) A young bullock or heifer.
(n.) Stock; race; family.
(a.) Strong; stiff; rigid.
(n.) An anvil; a stithy.
(v. t.) To stuff; to crowd; to fill full; hence, to make hot and
close; to render stifling.
(v. i.) To be stifled or suffocated.
(n.) The floating dust in flour mills caused by the operation or
grinding.
(n.) Prosperity in an undertaking; favorable issue; success.
(n.) The act or state of moving swiftly; swiftness; velocity;
rapidly; rate of motion; dispatch; as, the speed a horse or a vessel.
(n.) One who, or that which, causes or promotes speed or success.
(n.) To go; to fare.
(n.) To experience in going; to have any condition, good or ill;
to fare.
(n.) To fare well; to have success; to prosper.
(n.) To make haste; to move with celerity.
(n.) To be expedient.
(v. t.) To cause to be successful, or to prosper; hence, to aid;
to favor.
(v. t.) To cause to make haste; to dispatch with celerity; to
drive at full speed; hence, to hasten; to hurry.
(v. t.) To hasten to a conclusion; to expedite.
(v. t.) To hurry to destruction; to put an end to; to ruin; to
undo.
(v. t.) To wish success or god fortune to, in any undertaking,
especially in setting out upon a journey.
(v. i.) To ask. See Spere.
(n.) A small stick or rod used as a spike in thatching; a
splinter.
(n.) A spelk, or splinter.
(v. t.) To supply the place of for a time; to take the turn of,
at work; to relieve; as, to spell the helmsman.
(n.) The relief of one person by another in any piece of work or
watching; also, a turn at work which is carried on by one person or
gang relieving another; as, a spell at the pumps; a spell at the
masthead.
(n.) The time during which one person or gang works until
relieved; hence, any relatively short period of time, whether a few
hours, days, or weeks.
(n.) One of two or more persons or gangs who work by spells.
(n.) A gratuitous helping forward of another's work; as, a
logging spell.
(n.) A story; a tale.
(n.) A stanza, verse, or phrase supposed to be endowed with
magical power; an incantation; hence, any charm.
() of Spell
(v. t.) To tell; to relate; to teach.
(v. t.) To put under the influence of a spell; to affect by a
spell; to bewitch; to fascinate; to charm.
(v. t.) To constitute; to measure.
(v. t.) To tell or name in their proper order letters of, as a
word; to write or print in order the letters of, esp. the proper
letters; to form, as words, by correct orthography.
(v. t.) To discover by characters or marks; to read with
difficulty; -- usually with out; as, to spell out the sense of an
author; to spell out a verse in the Bible.
(v. i.) To form words with letters, esp. with the proper letters,
either orally or in writing.
(v. i.) To study by noting characters; to gain knowledge or learn
the meaning of anything, by study.
() imp. & p. p. of Spell. Spelled.
(n.) A species of grain (Triticum Spelta) much cultivated for
food in Germany and Switzerland; -- called also German wheat.
(n.) Spelter.
(v. t. & i.) To split; to break; to spalt.
(imp. & p. p.) of Spend
(v. t.) To weigh or lay out; to dispose of; to part with; as, to
spend money for clothing.
(v. t.) To bestow; to employ; -- often with on or upon.
(v. t.) To consume; to waste; to squander; to exhaust; as, to
spend an estate in gaming or other vices.
(v. t.) To pass, as time; to suffer to pass away; as, to spend a
day idly; to spend winter abroad.
(v. t.) To exhaust of force or strength; to waste; to wear away;
as, the violence of the waves was spent.
(v. i.) To expend money or any other possession; to consume, use,
waste, or part with, anything; as, he who gets easily spends freely.
(v. i.) To waste or wear away; to be consumed; to lose force or
strength; to vanish; as, energy spends in the using of it.
(v. i.) To be diffused; to spread.
(v. i.) To break ground; to continue working.
(a.) Exhausted; worn out; having lost energy or motive force.
(a.) Exhausted of spawn or sperm; -- said especially of fishes.
(v. t.) To stick; to thrust; to stab.
(v. t.) To poke or stir up, as a fire; hence, to tend, as the
fire of a furnace, boiler, etc.
(v. i.) To poke or stir up a fire; hence, to tend the fires of
furnaces, steamers, etc.
(n.) A long garment, descending to the ankles, worn by Roman
women.
() imp. of Steal.
(n.) A stolon.
(n.) A long, loose garment reaching to the feet.
(n.) A narrow band of silk or stuff, sometimes enriched with
embroidery and jewels, worn on the left shoulder of deacons, and across
both shoulders of bishops and priests, pendent on each side nearly to
the ground. At Mass, it is worn crossed on the breast by priests. It is
used in various sacred functions.
(v. i.) To search; to pry; to ask; to inquire.
(n.) A sphere.
(a.) Wet; soggy; inclined to spew.
(n.) A spy; a scout.
(n.) Species; kind.
(n.) A vegetable production of many kinds, fragrant or aromatic
and pungent to the taste, as pepper, cinnamon, nutmeg, mace, allspice,
ginger, cloves, etc., which are used in cookery and to flavor sauces,
pickles, etc.
(n.) Figuratively, that which enriches or alters the quality of a
thing in a small degree, as spice alters the taste of food; that which
gives zest or pungency; a slight flavoring; a relish; hence, a small
quantity or admixture; a sprinkling; as, a spice of mischief.
(v. t.) To season with spice, or as with spice; to mix aromatic
or pungent substances with; to flavor; to season; as, to spice wine; to
spice one's words with wit.
(n.) One of the minute apertures between the cells in many serous
membranes.
(n.) The minute breathing pores of leaves or other organs opening
into the intercellular spaces, and usually bordered by two contractile
cells.
(n.) The line of dehiscence of the sporangium of a fern. It is
usually marked by two transversely elongated cells. See Illust. of
Sporangium.
(n.) A stigma. See Stigma, n., 6 (a) & (b).
(v. i.) To stamp with the foot.
(n.) Stop; halt; hindrance.
(n.) A stand; a post; a station.
(v. i.) To stand.
(superl.) Of or pertaining to stone, consisting of, or abounding
in, stone or stones; resembling stone; hard; as, a stony tower; a stony
cave; stony ground; a stony crust.
(superl.) Converting into stone; petrifying; petrific.
(superl.) Inflexible; cruel; unrelenting; pitiless; obdurate;
perverse; cold; morally hard; appearing as if petrified; as, a stony
heart; a stony gaze.
() imp. & p. p. of Stand.
(n.) A small collection of sheaves set up in the field; a shock;
in England, twelve sheaves.
(v. t.) To set up, as sheaves of grain, in stooks.
(n.) A plant from which layers are propagated by bending its
branches into the soil.
(v. i.) To ramfy; to tiller, as grain; to shoot out suckers.
(n.) A single seat with three or four legs and without a back,
made in various forms for various uses.
(n.) A seat used in evacuating the bowels; hence, an evacuation;
a discharge from the bowels.
(n.) A stool pigeon, or decoy bird.
(n.) A small channel on the side of a vessel, for the dead-eyes
of the backstays.
(v. t.) To fill or impregnate with the odor of spices.
(v. t.) To render nice or dainty; hence, to render scrupulous.
(n.) A spike or nail.
(superl.) Flavored with, or containing, spice or spices;
fragrant; aromatic; as, spicy breezes.
(superl.) Producing, or abounding with, spices.
(superl.) Fig.: Piquant; racy; as, a spicy debate.
(n.) A bishop's seat or see; a bishop-stool.
(n.) A bench or form for resting the feet or the knees; a
footstool; as, a kneeling stool.
(n.) Material, such as oyster shells, spread on the sea bottom
for oyster spat to adhere to.
(n.) Originally, a covered porch with seats, at a house door; the
Dutch stoep as introduced by the Dutch into New York. Afterward, an
out-of-door flight of stairs of from seven to fourteen steps, with
platform and parapets, leading to an entrance door some distance above
the street; the French perron. Hence, any porch, platform, entrance
stairway, or small veranda, at a house door.
(n.) A vessel of liquor; a flagon.
(n.) A post fixed in the earth.
(v. i.) To bend the upper part of the body downward and forward;
to bend or lean forward; to incline forward in standing or walking; to
assume habitually a bent position.
(v. i.) To yield; to submit; to bend, as by compulsion; to assume
a position of humility or subjection.
(v. i.) To descend from rank or dignity; to condescend.
(v. i.) To come down as a hawk does on its prey; to pounce; to
souse; to swoop.
(v. i.) To sink when on the wing; to alight.
(v. t.) To bend forward and downward; to bow down; as, to stoop
the body.
(v. t.) To cause to incline downward; to slant; as, to stoop a
cask of liquor.
(v. t.) To cause to submit; to prostrate.
(v. t.) To degrade.
(n.) The act of stooping, or bending the body forward;
inclination forward; also, an habitual bend of the back and shoulders.
(n.) Descent, as from dignity or superiority; condescension; an
act or position of humiliation.
(n.) The fall of a bird on its prey; a swoop.
() imp. & p. p. of Spy.
(a.) Like a spike; spikelike.
(a.) Having a sharp point, or sharp points; furnished or armed
with spikes.
(n.) A small plug or wooden pin, used to stop a vent, as in a
cask.
(n.) A small tube or spout inserted in a tree for conducting sap,
as from a sugar maple.
(n.) A large stake driven into the ground as a support for some
superstructure; a pile.
(v. t.) To supply with a spile or a spigot; to make a small vent
in, as a cask.
(imp. & p. p.) of Spill
() of Spill
(v. i.) A horizontal working forming one of a series, the working
faces of which present the appearance of a flight of steps.
(v. t.) To excavate in the form of stopes.
(v. t.) To fill in with rubbish, as a space from which the ore
has been worked out.
(p. p.) Alt. of Stopen
() imp. & p. p. of Spill. Spilled.
(v. t.) That which is accumulated, or massed together; a source
from which supplies may be drawn; hence, an abundance; a great
quantity, or a great number.
(v. t.) To cut or break open or apart; to divide into parts; to
cut through; to disjoin; as, to sever the arm or leg.
(v. t.) To keep distinct or apart; to except; to exempt.
(v. t.) To disunite; to disconnect; to terminate; as, to sever an
estate in joint tenancy.
(v. i.) To suffer disjunction; to be parted, or rent asunder; to
be separated; to part; to separate.
(v. i.) To make a separation or distinction; to distinguish.
(imp.) of Sew
(p. p.) of Sew
(n.) A British trout usually regarded as a variety (var.
Cambricus) of the salmon trout.
(n.) One who sews, or stitches.
(n.) A small tortricid moth whose larva sews together the edges
of a leaf by means of silk; as, the apple-leaf sewer (Phoxopteris
nubeculana)
(n.) A drain or passage to carry off water and filth under
ground; a subterraneous channel, particularly in cities.
(n.) Formerly, an upper servant, or household officer, who set on
and removed the dishes at a feast, and who also brought water for the
hands of the guests.
(n.) Same as Sewen.
(a.) Belonging to sex; having sex; distinctively male of female;
as, the sexed condition.
(a.) Pertaining to sex.
(n.) A book consisting of sheets each of which is folded into six
leaves.
(v. t.) To shed or fall, as corn or grain at harvest.
(v. t.) To feed in stubble, or upon waste corn.
(v. t.) To wander as a vagabond or a tramp.
(n.) The grain left after harvest or gleaning; also, nuts which
have fallen to the ground.
(n.) Liberty of winter pasturage.
(n.) A shiftless fellow; a low, itinerant beggar; a vagabond; a
tramp.
(n.) Comparative obscurity owing to interception or interruption
of the rays of light; partial darkness caused by the intervention of
something between the space contemplated and the source of light.
(n.) Darkness; obscurity; -- often in the plural.
(n.) An obscure place; a spot not exposed to light; hence, a
secluded retreat.
(n.) That which intercepts, or shelters from, light or the direct
rays of the sun; hence, also, that which protects from heat or currents
of air; a screen; protection; shelter; cover; as, a lamp shade.
(n.) Shadow.
(n.) The soul after its separation from the body; -- so called
because the ancients it to be perceptible to the sight, though not to
the touch; a spirit; a ghost; as, the shades of departed heroes.
(n.) The darker portion of a picture; a less illuminated part.
See Def. 1, above.
(n.) Degree or variation of color, as darker or lighter, stronger
or paler; as, a delicate shade of pink.
(n.) A minute difference or variation, as of thought, belief,
expression, etc.; also, the quality or degree of anything which is
distinguished from others similar by slight differences; as, the shades
of meaning in synonyms.
(v. t.) To shelter or screen by intercepting the rays of light;
to keep off illumination from.
(v. t.) To shelter; to cover from injury; to protect; to screen;
to hide; as, to shade one's eyes.
(v. t.) To obscure; to dim the brightness of.
(v. t.) To pain in obscure colors; to darken.
(v. t.) To mark with gradations of light or color.
(v. t.) To present a shadow or image of; to shadow forth; to
represent.
(superl.) Abounding in shade or shades; overspread with shade;
causing shade.
(superl.) Sheltered from the glare of light or sultry heat.
(superl.) Of or pertaining to shade or darkness; hence, unfit to
be seen or known; equivocal; dubious or corrupt.
(n.) The slender, smooth stem of an arrow; hence, an arrow.
(n.) The long handle of a spear or similar weapon; hence, the
weapon itself; (Fig.) anything regarded as a shaft to be thrown or
darted; as, shafts of light.
(n.) That which resembles in some degree the stem or handle of an
arrow or a spear; a long, slender part, especially when cylindrical.
(n.) The trunk, stem, or stalk of a plant.
(n.) The stem or midrib of a feather.
(n.) The pole, or tongue, of a vehicle; also, a thill.
(n.) The part of a candlestick which supports its branches.
(n.) The handle or helve of certain tools, instruments, etc., as
a hammer, a whip, etc.
(n.) A pole, especially a Maypole.
(n.) The body of a column; the cylindrical pillar between the
capital and base (see Illust. of Column). Also, the part of a chimney
above the roof. Also, the spire of a steeple.
(n.) A column, an obelisk, or other spire-shaped or columnar
monument.
(n.) A rod at the end of a heddle.
(n.) A solid or hollow cylinder or bar, having one or more
journals on which it rests and revolves, and intended to carry one or
more wheels or other revolving parts and to transmit power or motion;
as, the shaft of a steam engine.
(n.) A humming bird (Thaumastura cora) having two of the tail
feathers next to the middle ones very long in the male; -- called also
cora humming bird.
(n.) A well-like excavation in the earth, perpendicular or nearly
so, made for reaching and raising ore, for raising water, etc.
(n.) A long passage for the admission or outlet of air; an air
shaft.
(n.) The chamber of a blast furnace.
() obs. p. p. of Shake.
(imp.) of Shake
() of Shake
(v.) To cause to move with quick or violent vibrations; to move
rapidly one way and the other; to make to tremble or shiver; to
agitate.
(v.) Fig.: To move from firmness; to weaken the stability of; to
cause to waver; to impair the resolution of.
(v.) To give a tremulous tone to; to trill; as, to shake a note
in music.
(v.) To move or remove by agitating; to throw off by a jolting or
vibrating motion; to rid one's self of; -- generally with an adverb, as
off, out, etc.; as, to shake fruit down from a tree.
(v. i.) To be agitated with a waving or vibratory motion; to
tremble; to shiver; to quake; to totter.
(n.) The act or result of shaking; a vacillating or wavering
motion; a rapid motion one way and other; a trembling, quaking, or
shivering; agitation.
(n.) A fissure or crack in timber, caused by its being dried too
suddenly.
(n.) A fissure in rock or earth.
(n.) A rapid alternation of a principal tone with another
represented on the next degree of the staff above or below it; a trill.
(n.) One of the staves of a hogshead or barrel taken apart.
(n.) A shook of staves and headings.
(n.) The redshank; -- so called from the nodding of its head
while on the ground.
(n.) A kind of military cap or headdress.
(superl.) Shaking or trembling; as, a shaky spot in a marsh; a
shaky hand.
(superl.) Full of shakes or cracks; cracked; as, shaky timber.
(superl.) Easily shaken; tottering; unsound; as, a shaky
constitution; shaky business credit.
(v. i. & auxiliary.) To owe; to be under obligation for.
(v. i. & auxiliary.) To be obliged; must.
(v. i. & auxiliary.) As an auxiliary, shall indicates a duty or
necessity whose obligation is derived from the person speaking; as, you
shall go; he shall go; that is, I order or promise your going. It thus
ordinarily expresses, in the second and third persons, a command, a
threat, or a promise. If the auxillary be emphasized, the command is
made more imperative, the promise or that more positive and sure. It is
also employed in the language of prophecy; as, "the day shall come when
. . . , " since a promise or threat and an authoritative prophecy
nearly coincide in significance. In shall with the first person, the
necessity of the action is sometimes implied as residing elsewhere than
in the speaker; as, I shall suffer; we shall see; and there is always a
less distinct and positive assertion of his volition than is indicated
by will. "I shall go" implies nearly a simple futurity; more exactly, a
foretelling or an expectation of my going, in which, naturally enough,
a certain degree of plan or intention may be included; emphasize the
shall, and the event is described as certain to occur, and the
expression approximates in meaning to our emphatic "I will go." In a
question, the relation of speaker and source of obligation is of course
transferred to the person addressed; as, "Shall you go?" (answer, "I
shall go"); "Shall he go?" i. e., "Do you require or promise his
going?" (answer, "He shall go".) The same relation is transferred to
either second or third person in such phrases as "You say, or think,
you shall go;" "He says, or thinks, he shall go." After a conditional
conjunction (as if, whether) shall is used in all persons to express
futurity simply; as, if I, you, or he shall say they are right. Should
is everywhere used in the same connection and the same senses as shall,
as its imperfect. It also expresses duty or moral obligation; as, he
should do it whether he will or not. In the early English, and hence in
our English Bible, shall is the auxiliary mainly used, in all the
persons, to express simple futurity. (Cf. Will, v. t.) Shall may be
used elliptically; thus, with an adverb or other word expressive of
motion go may be omitted.
(a.) Resembling shale in structure.
(n.) A painful sensation excited by a consciousness of guilt or
impropriety, or of having done something which injures reputation, or
of the exposure of that which nature or modesty prompts us to conceal.
(n.) Reproach incurred or suffered; dishonor; ignominy; derision;
contempt.
(n.) The cause or reason of shame; that which brings reproach,
and degrades a person in the estimation of others; disgrace.
(n.) The parts which modesty requires to be covered; the private
parts.
(v. t.) To make ashamed; to excite in (a person) a comsciousness
of guilt or impropriety, or of conduct derogatory to reputation; to put
to shame.
(v. t.) To cover with reproach or ignominy; to dishonor; to
disgrace.
(v. t.) To mock at; to deride.
(n.) To be ashamed; to feel shame.
(n.) A plant; chard.
(n.) A piece or fragment of an earthen vessel, or a like brittle
substance, as the shell of an egg or snail.
(n.) The hard wing case of a beetle.
(n.) A gap in a fence.
(n.) A boundary; a division.
(n.) The part (usually an iron or steel plate) of a plow which
cuts the ground at the bottom of a furrow; a plowshare.
(n.) The part which opens the ground for the reception of the
seed, in a machine for sowing seed.
(v.) A certain quantity; a portion; a part; a division; as, a
small share of prudence.
(v.) Especially, the part allotted or belonging to one, of any
property or interest owned by a number; a portion among others; an
apportioned lot; an allotment; a dividend.
(v.) Hence, one of a certain number of equal portions into which
any property or invested capital is divided; as, a ship owned in ten
shares.
(v.) The pubes; the sharebone.
(v. t.) To part among two or more; to distribute in portions; to
divide.
(v. t.) To partake of, use, or experience, with others; to have a
portion of; to take and possess in common; as, to share a shelter with
another.
(v. t.) To cut; to shear; to cleave; to divide.
(v. i.) To have part; to receive a portion; to partake, enjoy, or
suffer with others.
(v. t. & i.) Any one of numerous species of elasmobranch fishes
of the order Plagiostomi, found in all seas.
(v. t. & i.) A rapacious, artful person; a sharper.
(v. t. & i.) Trickery; fraud; petty rapine; as, to live upon the
shark.
(v. t.) To pick or gather indiscriminately or covertly.
(v. i.) To play the petty thief; to practice fraud or trickery;
to swindle.
(v. i.) To live by shifts and stratagems.
() obs. p. p. of Shave.
(v. t.) To cut or pare off from the surface of a body with a
razor or other edged instrument; to cut off closely, as with a razor;
as, to shave the beard.
(v. t.) To make bare or smooth by cutting off closely the
surface, or surface covering, of; especially, to remove the hair from
with a razor or other sharp instrument; to take off the beard or hair
of; as, to shave the face or the crown of the head; he shaved himself.
(v. t.) To cut off thin slices from; to cut in thin slices.
(v. t.) To skim along or near the surface of; to pass close to,
or touch lightly, in passing.
(v. t.) To strip; to plunder; to fleece.
(v. i.) To use a razor for removing the beard; to cut closely;
hence, to be hard and severe in a bargain; to practice extortion; to
cheat.
(v. t.) A thin slice; a shaving.
(v. t.) A cutting of the beard; the operation of shaving.
(v. t.) An exorbitant discount on a note.
(v. t.) A premium paid for an extension of the time of delivery
or payment, or for the right to vary a stock contract in any
particular.
(v. t.) A hand tool consisting of a sharp blade with a handle at
each end; a drawing knife; a spokeshave.
(v. t.) The act of passing very near to, so as almost to graze;
as, the bullet missed by a close shave.
(n.) A square or oblong cloth of wool, cotton, silk, or other
textile or netted fabric, used, especially by women, as a loose
covering for the neck and shoulders.
(v. t.) To wrap in a shawl.
(n.) A wind instrument of music, formerly in use, supposed to
have resembled either the clarinet or the hautboy in form.
(n.) A sheave.
(n.) A quantity of the stalks and ears of wheat, rye, or other
grain, bound together; a bundle of grain or straw.
(n.) Any collection of things bound together; a bundle;
specifically, a bundle of arrows sufficient to fill a quiver, or the
allowance of each archer, -- usually twenty-four.
(v. t.) To gather and bind into a sheaf; to make into sheaves;
as, to sheaf wheat.
(v. i.) To collect and bind cut grain, or the like; to make
sheaves.
(n.) Same as Sheeling.
(v. t.) To put under a sheal or shelter.
(v. t.) To take the husks or pods off from; to shell; to empty of
its contents, as a husk or a pod.
(n.) A shell or pod.
() of Shear
(n. sing. & pl.) Any one of several species of ruminants of the
genus Ovis, native of the higher mountains of both hemispheres, but
most numerous in Asia.
(n. sing. & pl.) A weak, bashful, silly fellow.
(n. sing. & pl.) Fig.: The people of God, as being under the
government and protection of Christ, the great Shepherd.
(v. i.) Bright; clear; pure; unmixed.
(v. i.) Very thin or transparent; -- applied to fabrics; as,
sheer muslin.
(v. i.) Being only what it seems to be; obvious; simple; mere;
downright; as, sheer folly; sheer nonsense.
(v. i.) Stright up and down; vertical; prpendicular.
(adv.) Clean; quite; at once.
(v. t.) To shear.
(v. i.) To decline or deviate from the line of the proper course;
to turn aside; to swerve; as, a ship sheers from her course; a horse
sheers at a bicycle.
(n.) The longitudinal upward curvature of the deck, gunwale, and
lines of a vessel, as when viewed from the side.
(n.) The position of a vessel riding at single anchor and
swinging clear of it.
(n.) A turn or change in a course.
(n.) Shears See Shear.
(v. t.) In general, a large, broad piece of anything thin, as
paper, cloth, etc.; a broad, thin portion of any substance; an expanded
superficies.
(v. t.) A broad piece of cloth, usually linen or cotton, used for
wrapping the body or for a covering; especially, one used as an article
of bedding next to the body.
(v. t.) A broad piece of paper, whether folded or unfolded,
whether blank or written or printed upon; hence, a letter; a newspaper,
etc.
(v. t.) A single signature of a book or a pamphlet;
(v. t.) the book itself.
(v. t.) A broad, thinly expanded portion of metal or other
substance; as, a sheet of copper, of glass, or the like; a plate; a
leaf.
(v. t.) A broad expanse of water, or the like.
(v. t.) A sail.
(v. t.) An extensive bed of an eruptive rock intruded between, or
overlying, other strata.
(v. t.) A rope or chain which regulates the angle of adjustment
of a sail in relation in relation to the wind; -- usually attached to
the lower corner of a sail, or to a yard or a boom.
(v. t.) The space in the forward or the after part of a boat
where there are no rowers; as, fore sheets; stern sheets.
(v. t.) To furnish with a sheet or sheets; to wrap in, or cover
with, a sheet, or as with a sheet.
(v. t.) To expand, as a sheet.
(n.) The head of an Arab family, or of a clan or a tribe; also,
the chief magistrate of an Arab village. The name is also applied to
Mohammedan ecclesiastics of a high grade.
(a.) Variegated; spotted; speckled; piebald.
(v. i.) A flat tablet or ledge of any material set horizontally
at a distance from the floor, to hold objects of use or ornament.
(v. i.) A sand bank in the sea, or a rock, or ledge of rocks,
rendering the water shallow, and dangerous to ships.
(v. i.) A stratum lying in a very even manner; a flat, projecting
layer of rock.
(v. i.) A piece of timber running the whole length of a vessel
inside the timberheads.
(imp. & p. p.) of Shend
(n.) To injure, mar, spoil, or harm.
(n.) To blame, reproach, or revile; to degrade, disgrace, or put
to shame.
() obs. 3d pers. sing. pres. of Shend, for shendeth.
(v. t.) To shend.
(n.) A fragment; -- now used only in composition, as in potsherd.
See Shard.
(n.) The part of a plow which projects downward beneath the beam,
for holding the share and other working parts; -- also called standard,
or post.
() p. p. of Shew.
(n.) A thin board; a billet of wood; a splinter.
() imp. & p. p. of Shy.
(n.) A sheeling.
(n.) A rush.
(a.) Overgrown with rushes.
(n.) The eleventh month of the ancient Hebrew year, approximately
corresponding with February.
(a.) Dry.
(a.) Secret; secretive; faithful to a secret.
(n.) A secret.
(v. t.) To divide; to distribute; to apportion.
(v. t.) To change the place of; to move or remove from one place
to another; as, to shift a burden from one shoulder to another; to
shift the blame.
(v. t.) To change the position of; to alter the bearings of; to
turn; as, to shift the helm or sails.
(v. t.) To exchange for another of the same class; to remove and
to put some similar thing in its place; to change; as, to shift the
clothes; to shift the scenes.
(v. t.) To change the clothing of; -- used reflexively.
(v. t.) To put off or out of the way by some expedient.
(v. t.) The act of shifting.
(v. t.) The act of putting one thing in the place of another, or
of changing the place of a thing; change; substitution.
(v. t.) Something frequently shifted; especially, a woman's
under-garment; a chemise.
(v. t.) The change of one set of workmen for another; hence, a
spell, or turn, of work; also, a set of workmen who work in turn with
other sets; as, a night shift.
(v. t.) In building, the extent, or arrangement, of the
overlapping of plank, brick, stones, etc., that are placed in courses
so as to break joints.
(v. t.) A breaking off and dislocation of a seam; a fault.
(v. t.) A change of the position of the hand on the finger board,
in playing the violin.
(n.) Straw.
(v. t.) To shell.
(v. t.) To put under cover; to sheal.
(adv.) See Shyly.
(imp. & p. p.) of Shine
(v. i.) To emit rays of light; to give light; to beam with steady
radiance; to exhibit brightness or splendor; as, the sun shines by day;
the moon shines by night.
(v. i.) To be bright by reflection of light; to gleam; to be
glossy; as, to shine like polished silver.
(v. i.) To be effulgent in splendor or beauty.
(v. i.) To be eminent, conspicuous, or distinguished; to exhibit
brilliant intellectual powers; as, to shine in courts; to shine in
conversation.
(v. t.) To cause to shine, as a light.
(v. t.) To make bright; to cause to shine by reflected light; as,
in hunting, to shine the eyes of a deer at night by throwing a light on
them.
(n.) The quality or state of shining; brightness; luster, gloss;
polish; sheen.
(n.) Sunshine; fair weather.
(n.) A liking for a person; a fancy.
(n.) Caper; antic; row.
(v. i.) Shining; sheen.
(superl.) Bright; luminous; clear; unclouded.
(n.) A series of close parallel runnings which are drawn up so as
to make the material between them set full by gatherings; -- called
also shirring, and gauging.
(n.) A loose under-garment for the upper part of the body, made
of cotton, linen, or other material; -- formerly used of the
under-garment of either sex, now commonly restricted to that worn by
men and boys.
(v. t. & i.) To cover or clothe with a shirt, or as with a shirt.
() Alt. of Shistose
(n.) A slice; as, a shive of bread.
(n.) A thin piece or fragment; specifically, one of the scales or
pieces of the woody part of flax removed by the operation of breaking.
(n.) A thin, flat cork used for stopping a wide-mouthed bottle;
also, a thin wooden bung for casks.
(n.) A train of vein material mixed with rubbish; fragments of
ore which have become separated by the action of water or the weather,
and serve to direct in the discovery of mines.
(n.) A great multitude assembled; a crowd; a throng; -- said
especially of fish; as, a shoal of bass.
(v. i.) To assemble in a multitude; to throng; as, the fishes
shoaled about the place.
(a.) Having little depth; shallow; as, shoal water.
(n.) A place where the water of a sea, lake, river, pond, etc.,
is shallow; a shallow.
(n.) A sandbank or bar which makes the water shoal.
(v. i.) To become shallow; as, the color of the water shows where
it shoals.
(v. t.) To cause to become more shallow; to come to a more
shallow part of; as, a ship shoals her water by advancing into that
which is less deep.
(n.) A young hog. Same as Shote.
(n.) A pile or assemblage of sheaves of grain, as wheat, rye, or
the like, set up in a field, the sheaves varying in number from twelve
to sixteen; a stook.
(n.) A lot consisting of sixty pieces; -- a term applied in some
Baltic ports to loose goods.
(v. t.) A place of deposit for goods, esp. for large quantities;
a storehouse; a warehouse; a magazine.
(v. t.) Any place where goods are sold, whether by wholesale or
retail; a shop.
(v. t.) Articles, especially of food, accumulated for some
specific object; supplies, as of provisions, arms, ammunition, and the
like; as, the stores of an army, of a ship, of a family.
(a.) Accumulated; hoarded.
(v. t.) To collect as a reserved supply; to accumulate; to lay
away.
(v. t.) To furnish; to supply; to replenish; esp., to stock or
furnish against a future time.
(v. t.) To deposit in a store, warehouse, or other building, for
preservation; to warehouse; as, to store goods.
(n.) A sharp appendage to any of a plant; a thorn.
(n.) A rigid and sharp projection upon any part of an animal.
(n.) One of the rigid and undivided fin rays of a fish.
(n.) The backbone, or spinal column, of an animal; -- so called
from the projecting processes upon the vertebrae.
(n.) Anything resembling the spine or backbone; a ridge.
(n.) Any one of several species of large wading birds of the
family Ciconidae, having long legs and a long, pointed bill. They are
found both in the Old World and in America, and belong to Ciconia and
several allied genera. The European white stork (Ciconia alba) is the
best known. It commonly makes its nests on the top of a building, a
chimney, a church spire, or a pillar. The black stork (C. nigra) is
native of Asia, Africa, and Europe.
(n.) The chaffinch.
(a.) Full of spines; thorny; as, a spiny tree.
(a.) Like a spine in shape; slender.
(a.) Fig.: Abounding with difficulties or annoyances.
(n.) See Spinny.
(n.) A flagon; a vessel or measure for liquids.
(n.) A basin at the entrance of Roman Catholic churches for
containing the holy water with which those who enter, dipping their
fingers in it, cross themselves; -- called also holy-water stoup.
(n.) A battle or tumult; encounter; combat; disturbance; passion.
(a.) Tall; strong; stern.
() imp. of Stave.
(n.) A house or room artificially warmed or heated; a forcing
house, or hothouse; a drying room; -- formerly, designating an
artificially warmed dwelling or room, a parlor, or a bathroom, but now
restricted, in this sense, to heated houses or rooms used for
horticultural purposes or in the processes of the arts.
(n.) An apparatus, consisting essentially of a receptacle for
fuel, made of iron, brick, stone, or tiles, and variously constructed,
in which fire is made or kept for warming a room or a house, or for
culinary or other purposes.
(v. t.) To keep warm, in a house or room, by artificial heat; as,
to stove orange trees.
(v. t.) To heat or dry, as in a stove; as, to stove feathers.
(v. i.) To breathe.
(n.) A slender stalk or blade in vegetation; as, a spire grass or
of wheat.
(n.) A tapering body that shoots up or out to a point in a
conical or pyramidal form. Specifically (Arch.), the roof of a tower
when of a pyramidal form and high in proportion to its width; also, the
pyramidal or aspiring termination of a tower which can not be said to
have a roof, such as that of Strasburg cathedral; the tapering part of
a steeple, or the steeple itself.
(n.) A tube or fuse for communicating fire to the chargen in
blasting.
(n.) The top, or uppermost point, of anything; the summit.
(v. i.) To shoot forth, or up in, or as if in, a spire.
(n.) A spiral; a curl; a whorl; a twist.
(n.) The part of a spiral generated in one revolution of the
straight line about the pole. See Spiral, n.
(v. t.) To remove fiber, flock, or lint from; -- said of the
teeth of a card when it becomes partly clogged.
(v. t.) To pick the cured leaves from the stalks of (tobacco) and
tie them into "hands"; to remove the midrib from (tobacco leaves).
(v. i.) To take off, or become divested of, clothes or covering;
to undress.
(v. i.) To fail in the thread; to lose the thread, as a bolt,
screw, or nut. See Strip, v. t., 8.
(n.) A narrow piece, or one comparatively long; as, a strip of
cloth; a strip of land.
(n.) A trough for washing ore.
(n.) The issuing of a projectile from a rifled gun without
acquiring the spiral motion.
(n.) A strap; specifically, same as Strap, 3.
(v. t.) To draw over, or rub upon, a strop with a view to
sharpen; as, to strop a razor.
(n.) A piece of rope spliced into a circular wreath, and put
round a block for hanging it.
(v. t.) Same as Strew.
(v. i.) To destroy.
(v. t. & i.) To play on an instrument of music, or as on an
instrument, in an unskillful or noisy way; to thrum; as, to strum a
piano.
(v. t.) To swell; to bulge out.
(v. t.) To walk with a lofty, proud gait, and erect head; to walk
with affected dignity.
(n.) The act of strutting; a pompous step or walk.
(n.) In general, any piece of a frame which resists thrust or
pressure in the direction of its own length. See Brace, and Illust. of
Frame, and Roof.
(n.) Any part of a machine or structure, of which the principal
function is to hold things apart; a brace subjected to compressive
stress; -- the opposite of stay, and tie.
(v. t.) To hold apart. Cf. Strut, n., 3.
(a.) Protuberant.
() imp. & p. p. of Stick.
(n.) A thrust.
(v. i.) A setting of the mind or thoughts upon a subject; hence,
application of mind to books, arts, or science, or to any subject, for
the purpose of acquiring knowledge.
(v. i.) Mental occupation; absorbed or thoughtful attention;
meditation; contemplation.
(v. i.) Any particular branch of learning that is studied; any
object of attentive consideration.
(v. i.) A building or apartment devoted to study or to literary
work.
(v. i.) A representation or rendering of any object or scene
intended, not for exhibition as an original work of art, but for the
information, instruction, or assistance of the maker; as, a study of
heads or of hands for a figure picture.
(v. i.) A piece for special practice. See Etude.
(n.) To fix the mind closely upon a subject; to dwell upon
anything in thought; to muse; to ponder.
(n.) To apply the mind to books or learning.
(n.) To endeavor diligently; to be zealous.
(v. t.) To apply the mind to; to read and examine for the purpose
of learning and understanding; as, to study law or theology; to study
languages.
(v. t.) To consider attentively; to examine closely; as, to study
the work of nature.
(v. t.) To form or arrange by previous thought; to con over, as
in committing to memory; as, to study a speech.
(v. t.) To make an object of study; to aim at sedulously; to
devote one's thoughts to; as, to study the welfare of others; to study
variety in composition.
(v. t.) Material which is to be worked up in any process of
manufacture.
(v. t.) The fundamental material of which anything is made up;
elemental part; essence.
(v. t.) Woven material not made into garments; fabric of any
kind; specifically, any one of various fabrics of wool or worsted;
sometimes, worsted fiber.
(v. t.) Furniture; goods; domestic vessels or utensils.
(v. t.) A medicine or mixture; a potion.
(v. t.) Refuse or worthless matter; hence, also, foolish or
irrational language; nonsense; trash.
(v. t.) A melted mass of turpentine, tallow, etc., with which the
masts, sides, and bottom of a ship are smeared for lubrication.
(v. t.) Paper stock ground ready for use.
(n.) To fill by crowding something into; to cram with something;
to load to excess; as, to stuff a bedtick.
(n.) To thrust or crowd; to press; to pack.
(n.) To fill by being pressed or packed into.
(n.) To fill with a seasoning composition of bread, meat,
condiments, etc.; as, to stuff a turkey.
(n.) To obstruct, as any of the organs; to affect with some
obstruction in the organs of sense or respiration.
(n.) To fill the skin of, for the purpose of preserving as a
specimen; -- said of birds or other animals.
(n.) To form or fashion by packing with the necessary material.
(n.) To crowd with facts; to cram the mind of; sometimes, to
crowd or fill with false or idle tales or fancies.
(n.) To put fraudulent votes into (a ballot box).
(v. i.) To feed gluttonously; to cram.
(n.) A framework of timber covered with boards to support
rubbish; also, a framework of boards to protect miners from falling
stones.
(n.) A shaft or gallery to drain a mine.
(n.) The part of a tree or plant remaining in the earth after the
stem or trunk is cut off; the stub.
(n.) The part of a limb or other body remaining after a part is
amputated or destroyed; a fixed or rooted remnant; a stub; as, the
stump of a leg, a finger, a tooth, or a broom.
(n.) The legs; as, to stir one's stumps.
(n.) One of the three pointed rods stuck in the ground to form a
wicket and support the bails.
(n.) A short, thick roll of leather or paper, cut to a point, or
any similar implement, used to rub down the lines of a crayon or pencil
drawing, in shading it, or for shading drawings by producing tints and
gradations from crayon, etc., in powder.
(n.) A pin in a tumbler lock which forms an obstruction to
throwing the bolt, except when the gates of the tumblers are properly
arranged, as by the key; a fence; also, a pin or projection in a lock
to form a guide for a movable piece.
(v. t.) To cut off a part of; to reduce to a stump; to lop.
(v. t.) To strike, as the toes, against a stone or something
fixed; to stub.
(v. t.) To challenge; also, to nonplus.
(v. t.) To travel over, delivering speeches for electioneering
purposes; as, to stump a State, or a district. See To go on the stump,
under Stump, n.
(n.) To put (a batsman) out of play by knocking off the bail, or
knocking down the stumps of the wicket he is defending while he is off
his allotted ground; -- sometimes with out.
(n.) To bowl down the stumps of, as, of a wicket.
(v. i.) To walk clumsily, as if on stumps.
() imp. & p. p. of Sting.
() imp. & p. p. of Stink.
(v. t.) To hinder from growing to the natural size; to prevent
the growth of; to stint, to dwarf; as, to stunt a child; to stunt a
plant.
(n.) A check in growth; also, that which has been checked in
growth; a stunted animal or thing.
(n.) Specifically: A whale two years old, which, having been
weaned, is lean, and yields but little blubber.
(n.) A mound or monument commemorative of Buddha.
(n.) See 1st Stupe.
(v. t.) Cloth or flax dipped in warm water or medicaments and
applied to a hurt or sore.
(v. t.) To foment with a stupe.
(n.) A stupid person.
(n.) See Stirk.
(pl. ) of Sty
(imp. & p. p.) of Sty
(n.) See Sty, a boil.
(n.) An anglo-Saxon copper coin of the lowest value, being worth
half a farthing.
(v. t.) An instrument used by the ancients in writing on tablets
covered with wax, having one of its ends sharp, and the other blunt,
and somewhat expanded, for the purpose of making erasures by smoothing
the wax.
(v. t.) Hence, anything resembling the ancient style in shape or
use.
(v. t.) A pen; an author's pen.
(v. t.) A sharp-pointed tool used in engraving; a graver.
(v. t.) A kind of blunt-pointed surgical instrument.
(v. t.) A long, slender, bristlelike process, as the anal styles
of insects.
(v. t.) The pin, or gnomon, of a dial, the shadow of which
indicates the hour. See Gnomon.
(v. t.) The elongated part of a pistil between the ovary and the
stigma. See Illust. of Stamen, and of Pistil.
(v. t.) Mode of expressing thought in language, whether oral or
written; especially, such use of language in the expression of thought
as exhibits the spirit and faculty of an artist; choice or arrangement
of words in discourse; rhetorical expression.
(v. t.) Mode of presentation, especially in music or any of the
fine arts; a characteristic of peculiar mode of developing in idea or
accomplishing a result.
(v. t.) Conformity to a recognized standard; manner which is
deemed elegant and appropriate, especially in social demeanor; fashion.
(v. t.) Mode or phrase by which anything is formally designated;
the title; the official designation of any important body; mode of
address; as, the style of Majesty.
(v. t.) A mode of reckoning time, with regard to the Julian and
Gregorian calendars.
(v. t.) To entitle; to term, name, or call; to denominate.
(v. t.) To persuade.
(a.) Spread equally over the surface; uniform; even.
(a.) Sweet; pleasant; delightful; gracious or agreeable in
manner; bland.
(pl. ) of Succus
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Sue
(a.) Uniformly or evenly distributed or spread; even; smooth. See
Suant.
(a.) Consisting of, or resembling, suet; as, a suety substance.
(n.) A mixture of oleomargarine with lard or other fatty
ingredients. It is used as a substitute for butter. See Butterine.
(n.) The process of soaking through anything.
(n.) A peculiar substance obtained from the wool of sheep,
consisting largely of potash mixed with fatty and earthy matters. It is
used as a source of potash and also for the manufacture of gas.
(n.) One who seeks for things which gratify merely himself; a
selfish person; a selfist.
(n.) A retinue or company of attendants, as of a distinguished
personage; as, the suite of an ambassador. See Suit, n., 5.
(n.) A connected series or succession of objects; a number of
things used or clessed together; a set; as, a suite of rooms; a suite
of minerals. See Suit, n., 6.
(n.) One of the old musical forms, before the time of the more
compact sonata, consisting of a string or series of pieces all in the
same key, mostly in various dance rhythms, with sometimes an elaborate
prelude. Some composers of the present day affect the suite form.
(pl. ) of Sulcus
(n. pl.) The condition of being sulky; a sulky mood or humor; as,
to be in the sulks.
(n.) Moodly silent; sullen; sour; obstinate; morose; splenetic.
(a.) A light two-wheeled carriage for a single person.
(n.) A dunce; a blockhead.
(pl. ) of Solo
(n.) A sow.
(n.) A small drain; an adit.
(v. i.) The sound produced by soughing; a hollow murmur or
roaring.
(v. i.) Hence, a vague rumor or flying report.
(v. i.) A cant or whining mode of speaking, especially in
preaching or praying.
(v. i.) To whistle or sigh, as the wind.
(n.) The male fecundating fluid; semen. See Semen.
(n.) Spermaceti.
(n.) A bit of wood split off; a splinter.
(n.) A slender piece of anything.
(n.) A peg or pin for plugging a hole, as in a cask; a spile.
(n.) A metallic rod or pin.
(n.) A small roll of paper, or slip of wood, used as a
lamplighter, etc.
(n.) One of the thick laths or poles driven horizontally ahead of
the main timbering in advancing a level in loose ground.
(n.) A little sum of money.
(v. t.) To cover or decorate with slender pieces of wood, metal,
ivory, etc.; to inlay.
(v. t.) To destroy; to kill; to put an end to.
(v. t.) To mar; to injure; to deface; hence, to destroy by
misuse; to waste.
(v. t.) To suffer to fall or run out of a vessel; to lose, or
suffer to be scattered; -- applied to fluids and to substances whose
particles are small and loose; as, to spill water from a pail; to spill
quicksilver from a vessel; to spill powder from a paper; to spill sand
or flour.
(v. t.) To cause to flow out and be lost or wasted; to shed, or
suffer to be shed, as in battle or in manslaughter; as, a man spills
another's blood, or his own blood.
(v. t.) To relieve a sail from the pressure of the wind, so that
it can be more easily reefed or furled, or to lessen the strain.
(v. i.) To be destroyed, ruined, or wasted; to come to ruin; to
perish; to waste.
(v. i.) To be shed; to run over; to fall out, and be lost or
wasted.
(v. t.) To plunder; to strip by violence; to pillage; to rob; --
with of before the name of the thing taken; as, to spoil one of his
goods or possession.
(v. t.) To seize by violence;; to take by force; to plunder.
(v. t.) To cause to decay and perish; to corrput; to vitiate; to
mar.
(v. t.) To render useless by injury; to injure fatally; to ruin;
to destroy; as, to spoil paper; to have the crops spoiled by insects;
to spoil the eyes by reading.
(v. i.) To practice plunder or robbery.
(v. i.) To lose the valuable qualities; to be corrupted; to
decay; as, fruit will soon spoil in warm weather.
(n.) That which is taken from another by violence; especially,
the plunder taken from an enemy; pillage; booty.
(n.) Public offices and their emoluments regarded as the peculiar
property of a successful party or faction, to be bestowed for its own
advantage; -- commonly in the plural; as to the victor belong the
spoils.
(n.) That which is gained by strength or effort.
(n.) The act or practice of plundering; robbery; aste.
(n.) Corruption; cause of corruption.
(n.) The slough, or cast skin, of a serpent or other animal.
(n. & v.) See Sward, n. & v.
(n.) Sword.
(v. i.) To move to and fro, as a body suspended in the air; to
wave; to vibrate; to oscillate.
(v. i.) To sway or move from one side or direction to another;
as, the door swung open.
(v. i.) To use a swing; as, a boy swings for exercise or
pleasure. See Swing, n., 3.
(n.) To turn round by action of wind or tide when at anchor; as,
a ship swings with the tide.
(n.) To be hanged.
(v. t.) To cause to swing or vibrate; to cause to move backward
and forward, or from one side to the other.
(v. t.) To give a circular movement to; to whirl; to brandish;
as, to swing a sword; to swing a club; hence, colloquially, to manage;
as, to swing a business.
(v. t.) To admit or turn (anything) for the purpose of shaping
it; -- said of a lathe; as, the lathe can swing a pulley of 12 inches
diameter.
(n.) The act of swinging; a waving, oscillating, or vibratory
motion of a hanging or pivoted object; oscillation; as, the swing of a
pendulum.
(n.) Swaying motion from one side or direction to the other; as,
some men walk with a swing.
(n.) A line, cord, or other thing suspended and hanging loose,
upon which anything may swing; especially, an apparatus for recreation
by swinging, commonly consisting of a rope, the two ends of which are
attached overhead, as to the bough of a tree, a seat being placed in
the loop at the bottom; also, any contrivance by which a similar motion
is produced for amusement or exercise.
(n.) Influence of power of a body put in swaying motion.
(n.) Capacity of a turning lathe, as determined by the diameter
of the largest object that can be turned in it.
(n.) Free course; unrestrained liberty or license; tendency.
(n.) To whirl, or cause to whirl, as in an eddy.
(n.) A whirling motion; an eddy, as of water; a whirl.
(v. t.) To flourish, so as to make the sound swish.
(v. t.) To flog; to lash.
(v. i.) To dash; to swash.
(n.) A sound of quick movement, as of something whirled through
the air.
(n.) Light driven spray.
() imp. of Swear.
(n.) Sunrise.
(v. i.) To grow larger; to dilate or extend the exterior surface
or dimensions, by matter added within, or by expansion of the inclosed
substance; as, the legs swell in dropsy; a bruised part swells; a
bladder swells by inflation.
(v. i.) To increase in size or extent by any addition; to
increase in volume or force; as, a river swells, and overflows its
banks; sounds swell or diminish.
(v. i.) To rise or be driven into waves or billows; to heave; as,
in tempest, the ocean swells into waves.
(v. i.) To be puffed up or bloated; as, to swell with pride.
(v. i.) To be inflated; to belly; as, the sails swell.
(v. i.) To be turgid, bombastic, or extravagant; as, swelling
words; a swelling style.
(v. i.) To protuberate; to bulge out; as, a cask swells in the
middle.
(v. i.) To be elated; to rise arrogantly.
(v. i.) To grow upon the view; to become larger; to expand.
(v. i.) To become larger in amount; as, many little debts added,
swell to a great amount.
(v. i.) To act in a pompous, ostentatious, or arrogant manner; to
strut; to look big.
(v. t.) To increase the size, bulk, or dimensions of; to cause to
rise, dilate, or increase; as, rains and dissolving snow swell the
rivers in spring; immigration swells the population.
(v. t.) To aggravate; to heighten.
(v. t.) To raise to arrogance; to puff up; to inflate; as, to be
swelled with pride or haughtiness.
(v. t.) To augment gradually in force or loudness, as the sound
of a note.
(n.) The act of swelling.
(n.) Gradual increase.
(n.) Increase or augmentation in bulk; protuberance.
(n.) Increase in height; elevation; rise.
(n.) Increase of force, intensity, or volume of sound.
(n.) Increase of power in style, or of rhetorical force.
(n.) A gradual ascent, or rounded elevation, of land; as, an
extensive plain abounding with little swells.
(n.) A wave, or billow; especially, a succession of large waves;
the roll of the sea after a storm; as, a heavy swell sets into the
harbor.
(n.) A gradual increase and decrease of the volume of sound; the
crescendo and diminuendo combined; -- generally indicated by the sign.
(n.) A showy, dashing person; a dandy.
(a.) Having the characteristics of a person of rank and
importance; showy; dandified; distinguished; as, a swell person; a
swell neighborhood.
() imp. of Swell.
(v. i.) To die; to perish.
(v. i.) To faint; to swoon.
(v. t.) To overpower, as with heat; to cause to faint; to
swelter.
() imp. & p. p. of Sweep.
(v. t.) To wash; to drench.
(n.) To drink in great draughts; to swallow greedily.
(n.) To inebriate; to fill with drink.
(v. i.) To drink greedily or swinishly; to drink to excess.
(n.) The wash, or mixture of liquid substances, given to swine;
hogwash; -- called also swillings.
(n.) Large draughts of liquor; drink taken in excessive
quantities.
(n.) Any animal of the hog kind, especially one of the domestical
species. Swine secrete a large amount of subcutaneous fat, which, when
extracted, is known as lard. The male is specifically called boar, the
female, sow, and the young, pig. See Hog.
(imp. & p. p.) of Swing
(Archaic imp.) of Swing
(n.) A soft twilled silk fabric much used for women's dresses; --
called also surah silk.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the calf of the leg; as, the sural
arteries.
(a.) Consisting of, abounding in, or resembling, surf; as, a
surfy shore.
(n.) A spring; a fountain.
(n.) A large wave or billow; a great, rolling swell of water,
produced generally by a high wind.
(n.) The motion of, or produced by, a great wave.
(n.) The tapered part of a windlass barrel or a capstan, upon
which the cable surges, or slips.
(v. i.) To swell; to rise hifg and roll.
(v. i.) To slip along a windlass.
(n.) To let go or slacken suddenly, as a rope; as, to surge a
hawser or messenger; also, to slacken the rope about (a capstan).
(imp.) of Swink
() of Swink
(n.) A swape or sweep. See Sweep.
(n.) A strong blow given with a sweeping motion, as with a bat or
club.
(n.) Poor, weak beer; small beer.
(v. t.) To give a swipe to; to strike forcibly with a sweeping
motion, as a ball.
(v. t.) To pluck; to snatch; to steal.
(a.) Rising in surges or billows; full of surges; resembling
surges in motion or appearance; swelling.
(a.) Arrogant; haughty.
(a.) Gloomily morose; ill-natured, abrupt, and rude; severe;
sour; crabbed; rough; sullen; gloomy; as, a surly groom; a surly dog;
surly language; a surly look.
(a.) Rough; dark; tempestuous.
(v. t.) To copulate with (a woman).
() Contraction of Swollen, p. p.
(n.) To fall on at once and seize; to catch while on the wing;
as, a hawk swoops a chicken.
(n.) To seize; to catch up; to take with a sweep.
(v. i.) To descend with closed wings from a height upon prey, as
a hawk; to swoop.
(v. i.) To pass with pomp; to sweep.
(n.) A falling on and seizing, as the prey of a rapacious bird;
the act of swooping.
(n.) An offensive weapon, having a long and usually sharp/pointed
blade with a cutting edge or edges. It is the general term, including
the small sword, rapier, saber, scimiter, and many other varieties.
(n.) Hence, the emblem of judicial vengeance or punishment, or of
authority and power.
(n.) Destruction by the sword, or in battle; war; dissension.
(n.) The military power of a country.
(n.) One of the end bars by which the lay of a hand loom is
suspended.
() p. p. of Swear.
() imp. & p. p. of Swing.
(n.) Silver, pounded into ingots of the shape of a shoe, and used
as currency. The most common weight is about one pound troy.
(n.) An imaginary being inhabiting the air; a fairy.
(n.) Fig.: A slender, graceful woman.
(n.) Any one of several species of very brilliant South American
humming birds, having a very long and deeply-forked tail; as, the
blue-tailed sylph (Cynanthus cyanurus).
(n.) An ecclesiastic council or meeting to consult on church
matters.
(n.) An assembly or council having civil authority; a legislative
body.
(n.) A conjunction of two or more of the heavenly bodies.
(n.) See Siren.
(a.) Alt. of Syrupy
(imp.) of Swear
(pl. ) of Shot
(n. pl.) The refuse of cattle taken from a drove.
(n.) One who takes a side.
(n.) Cider.
() of Sky
(a.) Surrounded by sky.
(v. i.) An oblique direction; a line or direction including from
a horizontal line or direction; also, sometimes, an inclination, as of
one line or surface to another.
(v. i.) Any ground whose surface forms an angle with the plane of
the horizon.
(a.) Sloping.
(adv.) In a sloping manner.
(v. t.) To form with a slope; to give an oblique or slanting
direction to; to direct obliquely; to incline; to slant; as, to slope
the ground in a garden; to slope a piece of cloth in cutting a garment.
(v. i.) To take an oblique direction; to be at an angle with the
plane of the horizon; to incline; as, the ground slopes.
(v. i.) To depart; to disappear suddenly.
() of Smell
() imp. & p. p. of Smell.
(n.) Any one of numerous species of small silvery salmonoid
fishes of the genus Osmerus and allied genera, which ascend rivers to
spawn, and sometimes become landlocked in lakes. They are esteemed as
food, and have a peculiar odor and taste.
(n.) A gull; a simpleton.
(v. i.) To melt or fuse, as, ore, for the purpose of separating
and refining the metal; hence, to reduce; to refine; to flux or
scorify; as, to smelt tin.
(v. i.) To creep or steal (away or about) privately; to come or
go meanly, as a person afraid or ashamed to be seen; as, to sneak away
from company.
(imp. & p. p.) To act in a stealthy and cowardly manner; to
behave with meanness and servility; to crouch.
(v. t.) To hide, esp. in a mean or cowardly manner.
(n.) A mean, sneaking fellow.
(n.) A ball bowled so as to roll along the ground; -- called also
grub.
(a.) Weak; worn out.
(v. i.) To sigh.
(imp.) Stunk.
(n.) Water retained by an embankment; a pool water.
(n.) A dam or mound to stop water.
(n.) A unit of cubic measure in the metric system, being a cubic
meter, or kiloliter, and equal to 35.3 cubic feet, or nearly 1/ cubic
yards.
(v. t. & i.) To stir.
(n.) A rudder. See 5th Steer.
(n.) Helmsman. See 6th Steer.
() of Stink