- anenst
- anetic
- angina
- angio-
- angled
- angler
- angust
- anhang
- anhele
- anhima
- anicut
- anight
- afflux
- afford
- affrap
- affray
- affret
- abacus
- affuse
- affied
- afield
- aflame
- afloat
- arrach
- arrack
- arrant
- aflush
- afraid
- afreet
- afresh
- afrite
- afreet
- afront
- anilic
- animal
- animus
- anisic
- ankled
- anklet
- anlace
- annals
- annats
- anneal
- annual
- annuli
- anoint
- anomal
- anonym
- anopsy
- anotta
- anoura
- answer
- anteal
- anthem
- anther
- arrear
- arrect
- arrest
- antiae
- antiar
- arride
- arrish
- arrive
- arroba
- arrowy
- arroyo
- arsine
- artery
- artful
- artiad
- artist
- agamis
- agamic
- ascend
- ascent
- ascian
- antler
- ashame
- antral
- antrum
- ashery
- ashine
- ashlar
- ashler
- ashore
- agapae
- agaric
- aghast
- agazed
- agedly
- agency
- agenda
- aggest
- asitia
- asking
- askant
- asking
- aslake
- aslant
- asleep
- aslope
- anyhow
- anyone
- anyway
- aorist
- aortic
- aoudad
- apathy
- apepsy
- aperea
- apexes
- apices
- aspect
- aghast
- agible
- aphony
- aphtha
- apiary
- apical
- apices
- apiece
- agleam
- aiglet
- agnail
- agnate
- agnize
- agoing
- agones
- agonic
- agouta
- agouti
- agouty
- agrace
- aplomb
- apnoea
- agreed
- agreer
- agrief
- agrise
- agrope
- apodal
- apodan
- apogee
- apoise
- apolar
- aguilt
- aguise
- aguish
- ablins
- aiding
- aidant
- aidful
- aiglet
- aigret
- ailing
- aiming
- aporia
- airing
- airily
- airing
- aisled
- aketon
- akimbo
- alarum
- apozem
- appair
- appall
- alated
- alaunt
- albata
- albedo
- albeit
- albino
- albite
- albugo
- alburn
- appeal
- appear
- alcade
- alcaid
- appear
- alcove
- alcyon
- append
- aldern
- alegar
- aleger
- appete
- alevin
- aceric
- acetal
- acetic
- admire
- assail
- assart
- amulet
- amused
- amuser
- amylic
- amyous
- anadem
- assent
- assert
- assess
- assets
- assign
- assish
- assist
- assize
- assoil
- assort
- assume
- ananas
- anarch
- assure
- astate
- anatto
- anbury
- ambury
- astern
- astert
- asthma
- astond
- astone
- anchor
- astony
- astoop
- astral
- astray
- ancile
- ancome
- ancone
- astro-
- ancony
- aneath
- astute
- aswail
- asweve
- asylum
- atabal
- ataman
- ataunt
- atavic
- ataxia
- ataxic
- atazir
- athink
- atomic
- atoned
- atoner
- atonic
- atrede
- atrial
- atrium
- atrous
- attach
- attain
- attame
- attask
- attend
- attent
- attest
- attire
- attorn
- attrap
- attune
- atween
- atwirl
- atwite
- atwixt
- atypic
- aubade
- augite
- augrim
- augury
- aumail
- aumbry
- aumery
- auncel
- aunter
- auntre
- auntie
- aurate
- aurist
- aurous
- applot
- algate
- algoid
- appose
- algous
- alible
- aliene
- alight
- aliner
- aliped
- alkali
- aptate
- allect
- aptote
- allege
- aquose
- arabin
- arable
- alleys
- allice
- araise
- arango
- arbute
- arcade
- arcane
- arcana
- arched
- allude
- allure
- arched
- archi-
- archil
- almery
- almner
- almose
- almost
- almuce
- almude
- alnage
- archly
- archon
- alpaca
- arcual
- ardent
- alpaca
- alpist
- alsike
- arenae
- areola
- areole
- altern
- abanet
- abanga
- abaser
- abassi
- abated
- abater
- abatis
- abator
- abbacy
- abbess
- abdest
- abduce
- abduct
- argali
- argala
- abegge
- aludel
- alular
- alumen
- alumna
- alumni
- alveus
- alvine
- always
- amadou
- argosy
- argued
- arguer
- argufy
- amazed
- ambigu
- ambled
- ambush
- argute
- ambush
- amende
- amends
- amenta
- amerce
- aright
- ariled
- ariose
- arioso
- arisen
- amidin
- amidst
- amnion
- arming
- amnios
- amoeba
- amomum
- armful
- arming
- armlet
- amotus
- amount
- amphi-
- armory
- armpit
- armure
- arnica
- aroint
- around
- arouse
- aroynt
- arpent
- amphid
- aspire
- aspish
- asquat
- author
- avatar
- avaunt
- avener
- avenge
- avenue
- averse
- abider
- abject
- aviary
- avocat
- avocet
- avoset
- avouch
- avowed
- avowal
- avowed
- avower
- avowry
- avoyer
- avulse
- awaked
- awaken
- awoken
- awaken
- aweary
- aweigh
- awhape
- awhile
- awless
- awning
- awrong
- axeman
- axilla
- axtree
- axunge
- azonic
- azotic
- abjure
- ablaut
- ablaze
- accrue
- accumb
- asmear
- absist
- absorb
- accuse
- admove
- adnate
- adnoun
- adorer
- adread
- adrift
- adatis
- adaunt
- adding
- addeem
- addice
- addict
- absume
- absurd
- aburst
- abused
- abuser
- acacin
- acajou
- acater
- acates
- accede
- accend
- accent
- accept
- ablins
- abloom
- ablude
- ablush
- aboard
- aboral
- abound
- abrade
- abraid
- abrase
- abraum
- abroad
- abrood
- abrook
- abrupt
- absent
- arenas
- astart
- astrut
- aswing
- aswoon
- attack
- atwain
- awreak
- azured
- access
- accite
- accloy
- accoil
- addled
- addoom
- adduce
- adduct
- adempt
- adeno-
- adroit
- advene
- adverb
- advert
- advice
- advise
- adviso
- advoke
- adward
- affect
- affeer
- affile
- acnode
- acopic
- acquit
- acraze
- acrasy
- acrisy
- acrite
- acrity
- acrook
- across
- accord
- accost
- acetin
- acetyl
- achate
- aching
- achene
- aching
- acidic
- acidly
- acinus
- acknow
- affine
- affirm
- across
- acting
- action
- active
- actual
- acture
- acuate
- acuity
- aculei
- acumen
- adesmy
- adhere
- adhort
- adieus
- adight
- adipic
- adipsy
- adject
- adjoin
- adjure
- adagio
- adytum
- aedile
- aerate
- aerial
- aerify
- aerose
- aerugo
- aether
- afeard
- affair
- adjust
- adjute
- abased
- abbeys
- acanth
- adance
- adoors
(a.) Alt. of Anent
(a.) Soothing.
(n.) Any inflammatory affection of the throat or faces, as the
quinsy, malignant sore throat, croup, etc., especially such as tends to
produce suffocation, choking, or shortness of breath.
() A prefix, or combining form, in numerous compounds, usually
relating to seed or blood vessels, or to something contained in, or
covered by, a vessel.
(imp. & p. p.) of Angle
(a.) Having an angle or angles; -- used in compounds; as,
right-angled, many-angled, etc.
(n.) One who angles.
(n.) A fish (Lophius piscatorius), of Europe and America, having
a large, broad, and depressed head, with the mouth very large. Peculiar
appendages on the head are said to be used to entice fishes within
reach. Called also fishing frog, frogfish, toadfish, goosefish,
allmouth, monkfish, etc.
(a.) Narrow; strait.
(v. t.) To hang.
(v. i.) To pant; to be breathlessly anxious or eager (for).
(n.) A South American aquatic bird; the horned screamer or
kamichi (Palamedea cornuta). See Kamichi.
(n.) Alt. of Annicut
(adv.) Alt. of Anights
(n.) A flowing towards; that which flows to; as, an afflux of
blood to the head.
(v. t.) To give forth; to supply, yield, or produce as the
natural result, fruit, or issue; as, grapes afford wine; olives afford
oil; the earth affords fruit; the sea affords an abundant supply of
fish.
(v. t.) To give, grant, or confer, with a remoter reference to
its being the natural result; to provide; to furnish; as, a good life
affords consolation in old age.
(v. t.) To offer, provide, or supply, as in selling, granting,
expending, with profit, or without loss or too great injury; as, A
affords his goods cheaper than B; a man can afford a sum yearly in
charity.
(v. t.) To incur, stand, or bear without serious detriment, as
an act which might under other circumstances be injurious; -- with an
auxiliary, as can, could, might, etc.; to be able or rich enough.
(v. t. & i.) To strike, or strike down.
(v. t.) To startle from quiet; to alarm.
(v. t.) To frighten; to scare; to frighten away.
(v. t.) The act of suddenly disturbing any one; an assault or
attack.
(v. t.) Alarm; terror; fright.
(v. t.) A tumultuous assault or quarrel; a brawl; a fray.
(v. t.) The fighting of two or more persons, in a public place,
to the terror of others.
(n.) A furious onset or attack.
(n.) A table or tray strewn with sand, anciently used for
drawing, calculating, etc.
(n.) A calculating table or frame; an instrument for performing
arithmetical calculations by balls sliding on wires, or counters in
grooves, the lowest line representing units, the second line, tens,
etc. It is still employed in China.
(n.) The uppermost member or division of the capital of a
column, immediately under the architrave. See Column.
(n.) A tablet, panel, or compartment in ornamented or mosaic
work.
(n.) A board, tray, or table, divided into perforated
compartments, for holding cups, bottles, or the like; a kind of
cupboard, buffet, or sideboard.
(v. t.) To pour out or upon.
(imp. & p. p.) of Affy
(adv.) To, in, or on the field.
(adv.) Out of the way; astray.
(adv. & a.) Inflames; glowing with light or passion; ablaze.
(adv. & a.) Borne on the water; floating; on board ship.
(adv. & a.) Moving; passing from place to place; in general
circulation; as, a rumor is afloat.
(adv. & a.) Unfixed; moving without guide or control; adrift;
as, our affairs are all afloat.
(n.) See Orach.
(n.) A name in the East Indies and the Indian islands for all
ardent spirits. Arrack is often distilled from a fermented mixture of
rice, molasses, and palm wine of the cocoanut tree or the date palm,
etc.
(a.) Notoriously or preeminently bad; thorough or downright, in
a bad sense; shameless; unmitigated; as, an arrant rogue or coward.
(a.) Thorough or downright, in a good sense.
(adv. & a.) In a flushed or blushing state.
(adv. & a.) On a level.
(p. a.) Impressed with fear or apprehension; in fear;
apprehensive.
(n.) Same as Afrit.
(adv.) Anew; again; once more; newly.
(n.) Alt. of Afreet
(n.) A powerful evil jinnee, demon, or monstrous giant.
(adv.) In front; face to face.
(prep.) In front of.
(a.) Pertaining to, or obtained from, anil; indigotic; --
applied to an acid formed by the action of nitric acid on indigo.
(n.) An organized living being endowed with sensation and the
power of voluntary motion, and also characterized by taking its food
into an internal cavity or stomach for digestion; by giving carbonic
acid to the air and taking oxygen in the process of respiration; and by
increasing in motive power or active aggressive force with progress to
maturity.
(n.) One of the lower animals; a brute or beast, as
distinguished from man; as, men and animals.
(a.) Of or relating to animals; as, animal functions.
(a.) Pertaining to the merely sentient part of a creature, as
distinguished from the intellectual, rational, or spiritual part; as,
the animal passions or appetites.
(a.) Consisting of the flesh of animals; as, animal food.
(n.) Animating spirit; intention; temper.
(a.) Of or derived from anise; as, anisic acid; anisic alcohol.
(a.) Having ankles; -- used in composition; as, well-ankled.
(n.) An ornament or a fetter for the ankle; an ankle ring.
(n.) A broad dagger formerly worn at the girdle.
(n. pl.) A relation of events in chronological order, each event
being recorded under the year in which it happened.
(n. pl.) Historical records; chronicles; history.
(n. pl.) The record of a single event or item.
(n. pl.) A periodic publication, containing records of
discoveries, transactions of societies, etc.; as "Annals of Science."
(n. pl.) Alt. of Annates
(v. t.) To subject to great heat, and then cool slowly, as
glass, cast iron, steel, or other metal, for the purpose of rendering
it less brittle; to temper; to toughen.
(v. t.) To heat, as glass, tiles, or earthenware, in order to
fix the colors laid on them.
(a.) Of or pertaining to a year; returning every year; coming or
happening once in the year; yearly.
(a.) Performed or accomplished in a year; reckoned by the year;
as, the annual motion of the earth.
(a.) Lasting or continuing only one year or one growing season;
requiring to be renewed every year; as, an annual plant; annual
tickets.
(n.) A thing happening or returning yearly; esp. a literary work
published once a year.
(n.) Anything, especially a plant, that lasts but one year or
season; an annual plant.
(n.) A Mass for a deceased person or for some special object,
said daily for a year or on the anniversary day.
(pl. ) of Annulus
(v. t.) To smear or rub over with oil or an unctuous substance;
also, to spread over, as oil.
(v. t.) To apply oil to or to pour oil upon, etc., as a sacred
rite, especially for consecration.
(p. p.) Anointed.
(n.) Anything anomalous.
(n.) One who is anonymous; also sometimes used for "pseudonym."
(n.) A notion which has no name, or which can not be expressed
by a single English word.
(a.) Want or defect of sight; blindness.
(n.) See Annotto.
(n.) See Anura.
(n.) To speak in defense against; to reply to in defense; as, to
answer a charge; to answer an accusation.
(n.) To speak or write in return to, as in return to a call or
question, or to a speech, declaration, argument, or the like; to reply
to (a question, remark, etc.); to respond to.
(n.) To respond to satisfactorily; to meet successfully by way
of explanation, argument, or justification, and the like; to refute.
(n.) To be or act in return or response to.
(n.) To be or act in compliance with, in fulfillment or
satisfaction of, as an order, obligation, demand; as, he answered my
claim upon him; the servant answered the bell.
(n.) To render account to or for.
(n.) To atone; to be punished for.
(n.) To be opposite to; to face.
(n.) To be or act an equivalent to, or as adequate or sufficient
for; to serve for; to repay.
(n.) To be or act in accommodation, conformity, relation, or
proportion to; to correspond to; to suit.
(v. i.) To speak or write by way of return (originally, to a
charge), or in reply; to make response.
(v. i.) To make a satisfactory response or return.
(v. i.) To render account, or to be responsible; to be
accountable; to make amends; as, the man must answer to his employer
for the money intrusted to his care.
(v. i.) To be or act in return.
(v. i.) To be or act by way of compliance, fulfillment,
reciprocation, or satisfaction; to serve the purpose; as, gypsum
answers as a manure on some soils.
(v. i.) To be opposite, or to act in opposition.
(v. i.) To be or act as an equivalent, or as adequate or
sufficient; as, a very few will answer.
(v. i.) To be or act in conformity, or by way of accommodation,
correspondence, relation, or proportion; to conform; to correspond; to
suit; -- usually with to.
(n.) A reply to a change; a defense.
(n.) Something said or written in reply to a question, a call,
an argument, an address, or the like; a reply.
(n.) Something done in return for, or in consequence of,
something else; a responsive action.
(n.) A solution, the result of a mathematical operation; as, the
answer to a problem.
(n.) A counter-statement of facts in a course of pleadings; a
confutation of what the other party has alleged; a responsive
declaration by a witness in reply to a question. In Equity, it is the
usual form of defense to the complainant's charges in his bill.
(a.) Being before, or in front.
(n.) Formerly, a hymn sung in alternate parts, in present usage,
a selection from the Psalms, or other parts of the Scriptures or the
liturgy, set to sacred music.
(n.) A song or hymn of praise.
(v. t.) To celebrate with anthems.
(n.) That part of the stamen containing the pollen, or
fertilizing dust, which, when mature, is emitted for the impregnation
of the ovary.
(adv.) To or in the rear; behind; backwards.
(n.) That which is behind in payment, or which remains unpaid,
though due; esp. a remainder, or balance which remains due when some
part has been paid; arrearage; -- commonly used in the plural, as,
arrears of rent, wages, or taxes.
(a.) Alt. of Arrected
(v. t.) To direct.
(v. t.) To impute.
(v. t.) To stop; to check or hinder the motion or action of; as,
to arrest the current of a river; to arrest the senses.
(v. t.) To take, seize, or apprehend by authority of law; as, to
arrest one for debt, or for a crime.
(v. t.) To seize on and fix; to hold; to catch; as, to arrest
the eyes or attention.
(v. t.) To rest or fasten; to fix; to concentrate.
(v. i.) To tarry; to rest.
(v. t.) The act of stopping, or restraining from further motion,
etc.; stoppage; hindrance; restraint; as, an arrest of development.
(v. t.) The taking or apprehending of a person by authority of
law; legal restraint; custody. Also, a decree, mandate, or warrant.
(v. t.) Any seizure by power, physical or moral.
(v. t.) A scurfiness of the back part of the hind leg of a
horse; -- also named rat-tails.
(n. pl.) The two projecting feathered angles of the forehead of
some birds; the frontal points.
(n.) A Virulent poison prepared in Java from the gum resin of
one species of the upas tree (Antiaris toxicaria).
(v. t.) To please; to gratify.
(n.) The stubble of wheat or grass; a stubble field; eddish.
(v. i.) To come to the shore or bank. In present usage: To come
in progress by water, or by traveling on land; to reach by water or by
land; -- followed by at (formerly sometimes by to), also by in and
from.
(v. i.) To reach a point by progressive motion; to gain or
compass an object by effort, practice, study, inquiry, reasoning, or
experiment.
(v. i.) To come; said of time; as, the time arrived.
(v. i.) To happen or occur.
(v. t.) To bring to shore.
(v. t.) To reach; to come to.
(n.) Arrival.
(n.) A Spanish weight used in Mexico and South America = 25.36
lbs. avoir.; also, an old Portuguese weight, used in Brazil = 32.38
lbs. avoir.
(n.) A Spanish liquid measure for wine = 3.54 imp. gallons, and
for oil = 2.78 imp. gallons.
(a.) Consisting of arrows.
(a.) Formed or moving like, or in any respect resembling, an
arrow; swift; darting; piercing.
(n.) A water course; a rivulet.
(n.) The dry bed of a small stream.
(n.) A compound of arsenic and hydrogen, AsH3, a colorless and
exceedingly poisonous gas, having an odor like garlic; arseniureted
hydrogen.
(n.) The trachea or windpipe.
(n.) One of the vessels or tubes which carry either venous or
arterial blood from the heart. They have tricker and more muscular
walls than veins, and are connected with them by capillaries.
(n.) Hence: Any continuous or ramified channel of communication;
as, arteries of trade or commerce.
(a.) Performed with, or characterized by, art or skill.
(a.) Artificial; imitative.
(a.) Using or exhibiting much art, skill, or contrivance;
dexterous; skillful.
(a.) Cunning; disposed to cunning indirectness of dealing;
crafty; as, an artful boy. [The usual sense.]
(a.) Even; not odd; -- said of elementary substances and of
radicals the valence of which is divisible by two without a remainder.
(n.) One who practices some mechanic art or craft; an artisan.
(n.) One who professes and practices an art in which science and
taste preside over the manual execution.
(n.) One who shows trained skill or rare taste in any manual art
or occupation.
(n.) An artful person; a schemer.
(pl. ) of Agami
(a.) Produced without sexual union; as, agamic or unfertilized
eggs.
(a.) Not having visible organs of reproduction, as flowerless
plants; agamous.
(v. i.) To move upward; to mount; to go up; to rise; -- opposed
to descend.
(v. i.) To rise, in a figurative sense; to proceed from an
inferior to a superior degree, from mean to noble objects, from
particulars to generals, from modern to ancient times, from one note to
another more acute, etc.; as, our inquiries ascend to the remotest
antiquity; to ascend to our first progenitor.
(v. t.) To go or move upward upon or along; to climb; to mount;
to go up the top of; as, to ascend a hill, a ladder, a tree, a river, a
throne.
() The act of rising; motion upward; rise; a mounting upward;
as, he made a tedious ascent; the ascent of vapors from the earth.
() The way or means by which one ascends.
() An eminence, hill, or high place.
() The degree of elevation of an object, or the angle it makes
with a horizontal line; inclination; rising grade; as, a road has an
ascent of five degrees.
(n.) One of the Ascii.
(n.) The entire horn, or any branch of the horn, of a cervine
animal, as of a stag.
(v. t.) To shame.
(a.) Relating to an antrum.
(n.) A cavern or cavity, esp. an anatomical cavity or sinus
(n.) A depository for ashes.
(n.) A place where potash is made.
(a.) Shining; radiant.
(n.) Alt. of Ashler
(n.) Hewn or squared stone; also, masonry made of squared or
hewn stone.
(n.) In the United States especially, a thin facing of squared
and dressed stone upon a wall of rubble or brick.
(adv.) On shore or on land; on the land adjacent to water; to
the shore; to the land; aground (when applied to a ship); -- sometimes
opposed to aboard or afloat.
(pl. ) of Agape
(n.) A fungus of the genus Agaricus, of many species, of which
the common mushroom is an example.
(n.) An old name for several species of Polyporus, corky fungi
growing on decaying wood.
(v. t.) To affright; to terrify.
(p. p.) Gazing with astonishment; amazed.
(adv.) In the manner of an aged person.
(n.) The faculty of acting or of exerting power; the state of
being in action; action; instrumentality.
(n.) The office of an agent, or factor; the relation between a
principal and his agent; business of one intrusted with the concerns of
another.
(n.) The place of business of am agent.
(pl. ) of Agendum
(v. t.) To heap up.
(n.) Want of appetite; loathing of food.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Ask
(adv.) Sideways; obliquely; with a side glance; with disdain,
envy, or suspicion.
(n.) The act of inquiring or requesting; a petition;
solicitation.
(n.) The publishing of banns.
(v. t. & i.) To mitigate; to moderate; to appease; to abate; to
diminish.
(adv. & a.) Toward one side; in a slanting direction; obliquely.
(prep.) In a slanting direction over; athwart.
(a. & adv.) In a state of sleep; in sleep; dormant.
(a. & adv.) In the sleep of the grave; dead.
(a. & adv.) Numbed, and, usually, tingling.
(adv. & a.) Slopingly; aslant; declining from an upright
direction; sloping.
(adv.) In any way or manner whatever; at any rate; in any event.
(n.) One taken at random rather than by selection; anybody.
[Commonly written as two words.]
(adv.) Alt. of Anyways
(n.) A tense in the Greek language, which expresses an action as
completed in past time, but leaves it, in other respects, wholly
indeterminate.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the aorta.
(n.) An African sheeplike quadruped (the Ammotragus tragelaphus)
having a long mane on the breast and fore legs. It is, perhaps, the
chamois of the Old Testament.
(n.) Want of feeling; privation of passion, emotion, or
excitement; dispassion; -- applied either to the body or the mind. As
applied to the mind, it is a calmness, indolence, or state of
indifference, incapable of being ruffled or roused to active interest
or exertion by pleasure, pain, or passion.
(n.) Defective digestion, indigestion.
(n.) The wild Guinea pig of Brazil (Cavia aperea).
(pl. ) of Apex
(pl. ) of Apex
(n.) The act of looking; vision; gaze; glance.
(n.) Look, or particular appearance of the face; countenance;
mien; air.
(n.) Appearance to the eye or the mind; look; view.
(n.) Position or situation with regard to seeing; that position
which enables one to look in a particular direction; position in
relation to the points of the compass; as, a house has a southern
aspect, that is, a position which faces the south.
(n.) Prospect; outlook.
(n.) The situation of planets or stars with respect to one
another, or the angle formed by the rays of light proceeding from them
and meeting at the eye; the joint look of planets or stars upon each
other or upon the earth.
(n.) The influence of the stars for good or evil; as, an ill
aspect.
(n.) To behold; to look at.
(v. t.) See Agast, v. t.
(a & p. p.) Terrified; struck with amazement; showing signs of
terror or horror.
(a.) Possible to be done; practicable.
(n.) Loss of voice or vocal utterance.
(n.) One of the whitish specks called aphthae.
(n.) The disease, also called thrush.
(n.) A place where bees are kept; a stand or shed for bees; a
beehouse.
(a.) At or belonging to an apex, tip, or summit.
(n. pl.) See Apex.
(adv.) Each by itself; by the single one; to each; as the share
of each; as, these melons cost a shilling apiece.
(adv. & a.) Gleaming; as, faces agleam.
(n.) A tag of a lace or of the points, braids, or cords formerly
used in dress. They were sometimes formed into small images. Hence,
"aglet baby" (Shak.), an aglet image.
(n.) A round white staylace.
(n.) A corn on the toe or foot.
(n.) An inflammation or sore under or around the nail; also, a
hangnail.
(a.) Related or akin by the father's side; also, sprung from the
same male ancestor.
(a.) Allied; akin.
(n.) A relative whose relationship can be traced exclusively
through males.
(v. t.) To recognize; to acknowledge.
(adv.) In motion; in the act of going; as, to set a mill agoing.
(pl. ) of Agon
(a.) Not forming an angle.
(n.) A small insectivorous mammal (Solenodon paradoxus), allied
to the moles, found only in Hayti.
(n.) Alt. of Agouty
(n.) A rodent of the genus Dasyprocta, about the size of a
rabbit, peculiar to South America and the West Indies. The most common
species is the Dasyprocta agouti.
(n. & v.) See Aggrace.
(n.) Assurance of manner or of action; self-possession.
(n.) Partial privation or suspension of breath; suffocation.
(imp. & p. p.) of Agree
(n.) One who agrees.
(adv.) In grief; amiss.
(v. i.) To shudder with terror; to tremble with fear.
(v. t.) To shudder at; to abhor; to dread; to loathe.
(v. t.) To terrify; to affright.
(adv. & a.) In the act of groping.
(n.) Without feet; footless.
(n.) Destitute of the ventral fin, as the eels.
(a.) Apodal.
(n.) That point in the orbit of the moon which is at the
greatest distance from the earth.
(n.) Fig.: The farthest or highest point; culmination.
(adv.) Balanced.
(a.) Having no radiating processes; -- applied particularly to
certain nerve cells.
(v. t.) To be guilty of; to offend; to sin against; to wrong.
(n.) Dress.
(v. t.) To dress; to attire; to adorn.
(a.) Having the qualities of an ague; somewhat cold or
shivering; chilly; shaky.
(a.) Productive of, or affected by, ague; as, the aguish
districts of England.
(adv.) Perhaps; possibly.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Aid
(a.) Helping; helpful; supplying aid.
(a.) Helpful.
(n.) Same as Aglet.
(n.) Alt. of Aigrette
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Ail
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Aim
(n.) A figure in which the speaker professes to be at a loss
what course to pursue, where to begin to end, what to say, etc.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Air
(adv.) In an airy manner; lightly; gaily; jauntily; flippantly.
(n.) A walk or a ride in the open air; a short excursion for
health's sake.
(n.) An exposure to air, or to a fire, for warming, drying,
etc.; as, the airing of linen, or of a room.
(a.) Furnished with an aisle or aisles.
(n.) See Acton.
(a.) With a crook or bend; with the hand on the hip and elbow
turned outward.
(n.) See Alarm.
(n.) A decoction or infusion.
(v. t. & i.) To impair; to grow worse.
(a.) To make pale; to blanch.
(a.) To weaken; to enfeeble; to reduce; as, an old appalled
wight.
(a.) To depress or discourage with fear; to impress with fear in
such a manner that the mind shrinks, or loses its firmness; to overcome
with sudden terror or horror; to dismay; as, the sight appalled the
stoutest heart.
(v. i.) To grow faint; to become weak; to become dismayed or
discouraged.
(v. i.) To lose flavor or become stale.
(n.) Terror; dismay.
(a.) Winged; having wings, or side appendages like wings.
(n.) See Alan.
(n.) A white metallic alloy; which is made into spoons, forks,
teapots, etc. British plate or German silver. See German silver, under
German.
(n.) Whiteness. Specifically: (Astron.) The ratio which the
light reflected from an unpolished surface bears to the total light
falling upon that surface.
(conj.) Even though; although; notwithstanding.
(n.) A person, whether negro, Indian, or white, in whom by some
defect of organization the substance which gives color to the skin,
hair, and eyes is deficient or in a morbid state. An albino has a skin
of a milky hue, with hair of the same color, and eyes with deep red
pupil and pink or blue iris. The term is also used of the lower
animals, as white mice, elephants, etc.; and of plants in a whitish
condition from the absence of chlorophyll.
(n.) A mineral of the feldspar family, triclinic in
crystallization, and in composition a silicate of alumina and soda. It
is a common constituent of granite and of various igneous rocks. See
Feldspar.
(n.) Same as Leucoma.
(n.) The bleak, a small European fish having scales of a
peculiarly silvery color which are used in making artificial pearls.
(v. t.) To make application for the removal of (a cause) from an
inferior to a superior judge or court for a rehearing or review on
account of alleged injustice or illegality in the trial below. We say,
the cause was appealed from an inferior court.
(v. t.) To charge with a crime; to accuse; to institute a
private criminal prosecution against for some heinous crime; as, to
appeal a person of felony.
(v. t.) To summon; to challenge.
(v. t.) To invoke.
(v. t.) To apply for the removal of a cause from an inferior to
a superior judge or court for the purpose of reexamination of for
decision.
(v. t.) To call upon another to decide a question controverted,
to corroborate a statement, to vindicate one's rights, etc.; as, I
appeal to all mankind for the truth of what is alleged. Hence: To call
on one for aid; to make earnest request.
(v. t.) An application for the removal of a cause or suit from
an inferior to a superior judge or court for reexamination or review.
(v. t.) The mode of proceeding by which such removal is
effected.
(v. t.) The right of appeal.
(v. t.) An accusation; a process which formerly might be
instituted by one private person against another for some heinous crime
demanding punishment for the particular injury suffered, rather than
for the offense against the public.
(v. t.) An accusation of a felon at common law by one of his
accomplices, which accomplice was then called an approver. See
Approvement.
(v. t.) A summons to answer to a charge.
(v. t.) A call upon a person or an authority for proof or
decision, in one's favor; reference to another as witness; a call for
help or a favor; entreaty.
(v. t.) Resort to physical means; recourse.
(v. i.) To come or be in sight; to be in view; to become
visible.
(v. i.) To come before the public; as, a great writer appeared
at that time.
(v. i.) To stand in presence of some authority, tribunal, or
superior person, to answer a charge, plead a cause, or the like; to
present one's self as a party or advocate before a court, or as a
person to be tried.
(v. i.) To become visible to the apprehension of the mind; to be
known as a subject of observation or comprehension, or as a thing
proved; to be obvious or manifest.
(n.) Same as Alcaid.
(n.) Alt. of Alcayde
(v. i.) To seem; to have a certain semblance; to look.
(n.) Appearance.
(n.) A recessed portion of a room, or a small room opening into
a larger one; especially, a recess to contain a bed; a lateral recess
in a library.
(n.) A small ornamental building with seats, or an arched seat,
in a pleasure ground; a garden bower.
(n.) Any natural recess analogous to an alcove or recess in an
apartment.
(n.) See Halcyon.
(v. t.) To hang or attach to, as by a string, so that the thing
is suspended; as, a seal appended to a record; the inscription was
appended to the column.
(v. t.) To add, as an accessory to the principal thing; to
annex; as, notes appended to this chapter.
(a.) Made of alder.
(n.) Sour ale; vinegar made of ale.
(a.) Gay; cheerful; sprightly.
(v. t.) To seek for; to desire.
(n.) Young fish; fry.
(a.) Pertaining to, or obtained from, the maple; as, aceric
acid.
(n.) A limpid, colorless, inflammable liquid from the slow
oxidation of alcohol under the influence of platinum black.
(a.) Of a pertaining to vinegar; producing vinegar; producing
vinegar; as, acetic fermentation.
(a.) Pertaining to, containing, or derived from, acetyl, as
acetic ether, acetic acid. The latter is the acid to which the sour
taste of vinegar is due.
(v. t.) To regard with wonder or astonishment; to view with
surprise; to marvel at.
(v. t.) To regard with wonder and delight; to look upon with an
elevated feeling of pleasure, as something which calls out approbation,
esteem, love, or reverence; to estimate or prize highly; as, to admire
a person of high moral worth, to admire a landscape.
(v. i.) To wonder; to marvel; to be affected with surprise; --
sometimes with at.
(v. t.) To attack with violence, or in a vehement and hostile
manner; to assault; to molest; as, to assail a man with blows; to
assail a city with artillery.
(v. t.) To encounter or meet purposely with the view of
mastering, as an obstacle, difficulty, or the like.
(v. t.) To attack morally, or with a view to produce changes in
the feelings, character, conduct, existing usages, institutions; to
attack by words, hostile influence, etc.; as, to assail one with
appeals, arguments, abuse, ridicule, and the like.
(n.) The act or offense of grubbing up trees and bushes, and
thus destroying the thickets or coverts of a forest.
(n.) A piece of land cleared of trees and bushes, and fitted for
cultivation; a clearing.
(v. t.) To grub up, as trees; to commit an assart upon; as, to
assart land or trees.
(n.) An ornament, gem, or scroll, or a package containing a
relic, etc., worn as a charm or preservative against evils or mischief,
such as diseases and witchcraft, and generally inscribed with mystic
forms or characters. [Also used figuratively.]
(imp. & p. p.) of Amuse
(a.) Diverted.
(a.) Expressing amusement; as, an amused look.
(n.) One who amuses.
(a.) Pertaining to, or derived from, amyl; as, amylic ether.
(a.) Wanting in muscle; without flesh.
(n.) A garland or fillet; a chaplet or wreath.
(v. t.) To admit a thing as true; to express one's agreement,
acquiescence, concurrence, or concession.
(v.) The act of assenting; the act of the mind in admitting or
agreeing to anything; concurrence with approval; consent; agreement;
acquiescence.
(v. t.) To affirm; to declare with assurance, or plainly and
strongly; to state positively; to aver; to asseverate.
(v. t.) To maintain; to defend.
(v. t.) To maintain or defend, as a cause or a claim, by words
or measures; to vindicate a claim or title to; as, to assert our rights
and liberties.
(v.) To value; to make a valuation or official estimate of for
the purpose of taxation.
(v.) To apportion a sum to be paid by (a person, a community, or
an estate), in the nature of a tax, fine, etc.; to impose a tax upon (a
person, an estate, or an income) according to a rate or apportionment.
(v.) To determine and impose a tax or fine upon (a person,
community, estate, or income); to tax; as, the club assessed each
member twenty-five cents.
(v.) To fix or determine the rate or amount of.
(n. pl.) Property of a deceased person, subject by law to the
payment of his debts and legacies; -- called assets because sufficient
to render the executor or administrator liable to the creditors and
legatees, so far as such goods or estate may extend.
(n. pl.) Effects of an insolvent debtor or bankrupt, applicable
to the payment of debts.
(n. pl.) The entire property of all sorts, belonging to a
person, a corporation, or an estate; as, the assets of a merchant or a
trading association; -- opposed to liabilities.
(v. t.) To appoint; to allot; to apportion; to make over.
(v. t.) To fix, specify, select, or designate; to point out
authoritatively or exactly; as, to assign a limit; to assign counsel
for a prisoner; to assign a day for trial.
(v. t.) To transfer, or make over to another, esp. to transfer
to, and vest in, certain persons, called assignees, for the benefit of
creditors.
(v.) A thing pertaining or belonging to something else; an
appurtenance.
(n.) A person to whom property or an interest is transferred;
as, a deed to a man and his heirs and assigns.
(a.) Resembling an ass; asinine; stupid or obstinate.
(v. t.) To give support to in some undertaking or effort, or in
time of distress; to help; to aid; to succor.
(v. i.) To lend aid; to help.
(v. i.) To be present as a spectator; as, to assist at a public
meeting.
(n.) An assembly of knights and other substantial men, with a
bailiff or justice, in a certain place and at a certain time, for
public business.
(n.) A special kind of jury or inquest.
(n.) A kind of writ or real action.
(n.) A verdict or finding of a jury upon such writ.
(n.) A statute or ordinance in general. Specifically: (1) A
statute regulating the weight, measure, and proportions of ingredients
and the price of articles sold in the market; as, the assize of bread
and other provisions; (2) A statute fixing the standard of weights and
measures.
(n.) Anything fixed or reduced to a certainty in point of time,
number, quantity, quality, weight, measure, etc.; as, rent of assize.
(n.) A court, the sitting or session of a court, for the trial
of processes, whether civil or criminal, by a judge and jury.
(n.) The periodical sessions of the judges of the superior
courts in every county of England for the purpose of administering
justice in the trial and determination of civil and criminal cases; --
usually in the plural.
(n.) The time or place of holding the court of assize; --
generally in the plural, assizes.
(n.) Measure; dimension; size.
(v.) To assess; to value; to rate.
(v.) To fix the weight, measure, or price of, by an ordinance or
regulation of authority.
(v. t.) To set free; to release.
(v. t.) To solve; to clear up.
(v. t.) To set free from guilt; to absolve.
(v. t.) To expiate; to atone for.
(v. t.) To remove; to put off.
(v. t.) To soil; to stain.
(v. t.) To separate and distribute into classes, as things of a
like kind, nature, or quality, or which are suited to a like purpose;
to classify; as, to assort goods. [Rarely applied to persons.]
(v. t.) To furnish with, or make up of, various sorts or a
variety of goods; as, to assort a cargo.
(v. i.) To agree; to be in accordance; to be adapted; to suit;
to fall into a class or place.
(v. t.) To take to or upon one's self; to take formally and
demonstratively; sometimes, to appropriate or take unjustly.
(v. t.) To take for granted, or without proof; to suppose as a
fact; to suppose or take arbitrarily or tentatively.
(v. t.) To pretend to possess; to take in appearance.
(v. t.) To receive or adopt.
(v. i.) To be arrogant or pretentious; to claim more than is
due.
(v. i.) To undertake, as by a promise.
(n.) The pineapple (Ananassa sativa).
(n.) The author of anarchy; one who excites revolt.
(v. t.) To make sure or certain; to render confident by a
promise, declaration, or other evidence.
(v. t.) To declare to, solemnly; to assert to (any one) with the
design of inspiring belief or confidence.
(v. t.) To confirm; to make certain or secure.
(v. t.) To affiance; to betroth.
(v. t.) To insure; to covenant to indemnify for loss, or to pay
a specified sum at death. See Insure.
(n.) Estate; state.
(n.) Same as Annotto.
(n.) Alt. of Ambury
(n.) A soft tumor or bloody wart on horses or oxen.
(n.) A disease of the roots of turnips, etc.; -- called also
fingers and toes.
(adv.) In or at the hinder part of a ship; toward the hinder
part, or stern; backward; as, to go astern.
(adv.) Behind a ship; in the rear.
(v. t.) To start up; to befall; to escape; to shun.
(v. i.) To escape.
(n.) A disease, characterized by difficulty of breathing (due to
a spasmodic contraction of the bronchi), recurring at intervals,
accompanied with a wheezing sound, a sense of constriction in the
chest, a cough, and expectoration.
() of Astone
(v. t.) To stun; to astonish; to stupefy.
(n.) A iron instrument which is attached to a ship by a cable
(rope or chain), and which, being cast overboard, lays hold of the
earth by a fluke or hook and thus retains the ship in a particular
station.
(n.) Any instrument or contrivance serving a purpose like that
of a ship's anchor, as an arrangement of timber to hold a dam fast; a
contrivance to hold the end of a bridge cable, or other similar part; a
contrivance used by founders to hold the core of a mold in place.
(n.) Fig.: That which gives stability or security; that on which
we place dependence for safety.
(n.) An emblem of hope.
(n.) A metal tie holding adjoining parts of a building together.
(n.) Carved work, somewhat resembling an anchor or arrowhead; --
a part of the ornaments of certain moldings. It is seen in the echinus,
or egg-and-anchor (called also egg-and-dart, egg-and-tongue) ornament.
(n.) One of the anchor-shaped spicules of certain sponges; also,
one of the calcareous spinules of certain Holothurians, as in species
of Synapta.
(v. t.) To place at anchor; to secure by an anchor; as, to
anchor a ship.
(v. t.) To fix or fasten; to fix in a stable condition; as, to
anchor the cables of a suspension bridge.
(v. i.) To cast anchor; to come to anchor; as, our ship (or the
captain) anchored in the stream.
(v. i.) To stop; to fix or rest.
(n.) An anchoret.
(v. t.) To stun; to bewilder; to astonish; to dismay.
(adv.) In a stooping or inclined position.
(a.) Pertaining to, coming from, or resembling, the stars;
starry; starlike.
(adv. & a.) Out of the right, either in a literal or in a
figurative sense; wandering; as, to lead one astray.
(n.) The sacred shield of the Romans, said to have-fallen from
heaven in the reign of Numa. It was the palladium of Rome.
(n.) A small ulcerous swelling, coming suddenly; also, a
whitlow.
(n.) The corner or quoin of a wall, cross-beam, or rafter.
(n.) A bracket supporting a cornice; a console.
() The combining form of the Greek word 'a`stron, meaning star.
(n.) A piece of malleable iron, wrought into the shape of a bar
in the middle, but unwrought at the ends.
(prep. & adv.) Beneath.
(a.) Critically discerning; sagacious; shrewd; subtle; crafty.
(n.) The sloth bear (Melursus labiatus) of India.
(v. t.) To stupefy.
(n.) A sanctuary or place of refuge and protection, where
criminals and debtors found shelter, and from which they could not be
forcibly taken without sacrilege.
(n.) Any place of retreat and security.
(n.) An institution for the protection or relief of some class
of destitute, unfortunate, or afflicted persons; as, an asylum for the
aged, for the blind, or for the insane; a lunatic asylum; an orphan
asylum.
(n.) A kettledrum; a kind of tabor, used by the Moors.
(n.) A hetman, or chief of the Cossacks.
(adv.) Alt. of Ataunto
(a.) Pertaining to a remote ancestor, or to atavism.
(n.) Alt. of Ataxy
(a.) Characterized by ataxy, that is, (a) by great irregularity
of functions or symptoms, or (b) by a want of coordinating power in
movements.
(n.) The influence of a star upon other stars or upon men.
(v. t.) To repent; to displease; to disgust.
(a.) Alt. of Atomical
(imp. & p. p.) of Atone
(n.) One who makes atonement.
(a.) Characterized by atony, or want of vital energy; as, an
atonic disease.
(a.) Unaccented; as, an atonic syllable.
(a.) Destitute of tone vocality; surd.
(n.) A word that has no accent.
(n.) An element of speech entirely destitute of vocality, or
produced by the breath alone; a nonvocal or surd consonant; a
breathing.
(n.) A remedy capable of allaying organic excitement or
irritation.
(v. t.) To surpass in council.
(a.) Of or pertaining to an atrium.
(n.) A square hall lighted from above, into which rooms open at
one or more levels.
(n.) An open court with a porch or gallery around three or more
sides; especially at the entrance of a basilica or other church. The
name was extended in the Middle Ages to the open churchyard or
cemetery.
(n.) The main part of either auricle of the heart as distinct
from the auricular appendix. Also, the whole articular portion of the
heart.
(n.) A cavity in ascidians into which the intestine and
generative ducts open, and which also receives the water from the
gills. See Ascidioidea.
(a.) Coal-black; very black.
(v. t.) To bind, fasten, tie, or connect; to make fast or join;
as, to attach one thing to another by a string, by glue, or the like.
(v. t.) To connect; to place so as to belong; to assign by
authority; to appoint; as, an officer is attached to a certain
regiment, company, or ship.
(v. t.) To win the heart of; to connect by ties of love or
self-interest; to attract; to fasten or bind by moral influence; --
with to; as, attached to a friend; attaching others to us by wealth or
flattery.
(v. t.) To connect, in a figurative sense; to ascribe or
attribute; to affix; -- with to; as, to attach great importance to a
particular circumstance.
(v. t.) To take, seize, or lay hold of.
(v. t.) To take by legal authority: (a) To arrest by writ, and
bring before a court, as to answer for a debt, or a contempt; --
applied to a taking of the person by a civil process; being now rarely
used for the arrest of a criminal. (b) To seize or take (goods or real
estate) by virtue of a writ or precept to hold the same to satisfy a
judgment which may be rendered in the suit. See Attachment, 4.
(v. i.) To adhere; to be attached.
(v. i.) To come into legal operation in connection with
anything; to vest; as, dower will attach.
(n.) An attachment.
(v. t.) To achieve or accomplish, that is, to reach by efforts;
to gain; to compass; as, to attain rest.
(v. t.) To gain or obtain possession of; to acquire.
(v. t.) To get at the knowledge of; to ascertain.
(v. t.) To reach or come to, by progression or motion; to arrive
at.
(v. t.) To overtake.
(v. t.) To reach in excellence or degree; to equal.
(v. i.) To come or arrive, by motion, growth, bodily exertion,
or efforts toward a place, object, state, etc.; to reach.
(v. i.) To come or arrive, by an effort of mind.
(n.) Attainment.
(v. t.) To pierce; to attack.
(v. t.) To broach; to begin.
(v. t.) To take to task; to blame.
(v. t.) To direct the attention to; to fix the mind upon; to
give heed to; to regard.
(v. t.) To care for; to look after; to take charge of; to watch
over.
(v. t.) To go or stay with, as a companion, nurse, or servant;
to visit professionally, as a physician; to accompany or follow in
order to do service; to escort; to wait on; to serve.
(v. t.) To be present with; to accompany; to be united or
consequent to; as, a measure attended with ill effects.
(v. t.) To be present at; as, to attend church, school, a
concert, a business meeting.
(v. t.) To wait for; to await; to remain, abide, or be in store
for.
(v. i.) To apply the mind, or pay attention, with a view to
perceive, understand, or comply; to pay regard; to heed; to listen; --
usually followed by to.
(v. i.) To accompany or be present or near at hand, in pursuance
of duty; to be ready for service; to wait or be in waiting; -- often
followed by on or upon.
(v. i.) (with to) To take charge of; to look after; as, to
attend to a matter of business.
(v. i.) To wait; to stay; to delay.
(v. t.) Attentive; heedful.
(n.) Attention; heed.
(v. t.) To bear witness to; to certify; to affirm to be true or
genuine; as, to attest the truth of a writing, a copy of record.
(v. t.) To give proof of; to manifest; as, the ruins of Palmyra
attest its ancient magnificence.
(v. t.) To call to witness; to invoke.
(n.) Witness; testimony; attestation.
(v. t.) To dress; to array; to adorn; esp., to clothe with
elegant or splendid garments.
(n.) Dress; clothes; headdress; anything which dresses or
adorns; esp., ornamental clothing.
(n.) The antlers, or antlers and scalp, of a stag or buck.
(n.) The internal parts of a flower, included within the calyx
and the corolla.
(v. t.) To turn, or transfer homage and service, from one lord
to another. This is the act of feudatories, vassals, or tenants, upon
the alienation of the estate.
(v. t.) To agree to become tenant to one to whom reversion has
been granted.
(v. t.) To entrap; to insnare.
(v. t.) To adorn with trapping; to array.
(v. t.) To tune or put in tune; to make melodious; to adjust, as
one sound or musical instrument to another; as, to attune the voice to
a harp.
(v. t.) To arrange fitly; to make accordant.
(adv. or prep.) Between.
(a. & adv.) Twisted; distorted; awry.
(v. t.) To speak reproachfully of; to twit; to upbraid.
(adv.) Betwixt.
(a.) Alt. of Atypical
(n.) An open air concert in the morning, as distinguished from
an evening serenade; also, a pianoforte composition suggestive of
morning.
(n.) A variety of pyroxene, usually of a black or dark green
color, occurring in igneous rocks, such as basalt; -- also used instead
of the general term pyroxene.
(n.) See Algorism.
(n.) The art or practice of foretelling events by observing the
actions of birds, etc.; divination.
(n.) An omen; prediction; prognostication; indication of the
future; presage.
(n.) A rite, ceremony, or observation of an augur.
(v. t.) To figure or variegate.
(n.) Same as Ambry.
(n.) A form of Ambry, a closet; but confused with Almonry, as if
a place for alms.
(n.) A rude balance for weighing, and a kind of weight, formerly
used in England.
(v. t.) Alt. of Auntre
(v. t.) To venture; to dare.
(n.) Alt. of Aunty
(n.) A combination of auric acid with a base; as, aurate or
potassium.
(n.) One skilled in treating and curing disorders of the ear.
(a.) Containing gold.
(a.) Pertaining to, or derived from, gold; -- said of those
compounds of gold in which this element has its lower valence; as,
aurous oxide.
(v. t.) To divide into plots or parts; to apportion.
(adv.) Alt. of Algates
(a.) Of the nature of, or resembling, an alga.
(v. t.) To place opposite or before; to put or apply (one thing
to another).
(v. t.) To place in juxtaposition or proximity.
(v. t.) To put questions to; to examine; to try. [Obs.] See
Pose.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the algae, or seaweeds; abounding with,
or like, seaweed.
(a.) Nutritive; nourishing.
(v. t.) To alien or alienate; to transfer, as title or property;
as, to aliene an estate.
(v. i.) To spring down, get down, or descend, as from on
horseback or from a carriage; to dismount.
(v. i.) To descend and settle, lodge, rest, or stop; as, a
flying bird alights on a tree; snow alights on a roof.
(v. i.) To come or chance (upon).
(a.) Lighted; lighted up; in a flame.
(n.) One who adjusts things to a line or lines or brings them
into line.
(a.) Wing-footed, as the bat.
(n.) An animal whose toes are connected by a membrane, serving
for a wing, as the bat.
(n.) Soda ash; caustic soda, caustic potash, etc.
(n.) One of a class of caustic bases, such as soda, potash,
ammonia, and lithia, whose distinguishing peculiarities are solubility
in alcohol and water, uniting with oils and fats to form soap,
neutralizing and forming salts with acids, turning to brown several
vegetable yellows, and changing reddened litmus to blue.
(v. t.) To make fit.
(v. t.) To allure; to entice.
(n.) A noun which has no distinction of cases; an indeclinable
noun.
(v. t.) To bring forward with positiveness; to declare; to
affirm; to assert; as, to allege a fact.
(v. t.) To cite or quote; as, to allege the authority of a
judge.
(v. t.) To produce or urge as a reason, plea, or excuse; as, he
refused to lend, alleging a resolution against lending.
(v. t.) To alleviate; to lighten, as a burden or a trouble.
(a.) Watery; aqueous.
(n.) A carbohydrate, isomeric with cane sugar, contained in gum
arabic, from which it is extracted as a white, amorphous substance.
(n.) Mucilage, especially that made of gum arabic.
(a.) Fit for plowing or tillage; -- hence, often applied to land
which has been plowed or tilled.
(n.) Arable land; plow land.
(pl. ) of Alley
(pl. ) of Alley
(n.) Alt. of Allis
(v. t.) To raise.
(n.) A bead of rough carnelian. Arangoes were formerly imported
from Bombay for use in the African slave trade.
(n.) The strawberry tree, a genus of evergreen shrubs, of the
Heath family. It has a berry externally resembling the strawberry; the
arbute tree.
(n.) A series of arches with the columns or piers which support
them, the spandrels above, and other necessary appurtenances; sometimes
open, serving as an entrance or to give light; sometimes closed at the
back (as in the cut) and forming a decorative feature.
(n.) A long, arched building or gallery.
(n.) An arched or covered passageway or avenue.
(a.) Hidden; secret.
(pl. ) of Arcanum
(imp. & p. p.) of Arch
(v. i.) To refer to something indirectly or by suggestion; to
have reference to a subject not specifically and plainly mentioned; --
followed by to; as, the story alludes to a recent transaction.
(v. t.) To compare allusively; to refer (something) as
applicable.
(v. t.) To attempt to draw; to tempt by a lure or bait, that is,
by the offer of some good, real or apparent; to invite by something
flattering or acceptable; to entice; to attract.
(n.) Allurement.
(n.) Gait; bearing.
(a.) Made with an arch or curve; covered with an arch; as, an
arched door.
() A prefix signifying chief, arch; as, architect,
archiepiscopal. In Biol. and Anat. it usually means primitive,
original, ancestral; as, archipterygium, the primitive fin or wing.
(n.) A violet dye obtained from several species of lichen
(Roccella tinctoria, etc.), which grow on maritime rocks in the Canary
and Cape Verd Islands, etc.
(n.) The plant from which the dye is obtained.
(n.) See Ambry.
(n.) An almoner.
(n.) Alms.
(adv.) Nearly; well nigh; all but; for the greatest part.
(n.) Same as Amice, a hood or cape.
(n.) A measure for liquids in several countries. In Portugal the
Lisbon almude is about 4.4, and the Oporto almude about 6.6, gallons U.
S. measure. In Turkey the "almud" is about 1.4 gallons.
(n.) Measurement (of cloth) by the ell; also, a duty for such
measurement.
(adv.) In an arch manner; with attractive slyness or
roguishness; slyly; waggishly.
(n.) One of the chief magistrates in ancient Athens, especially,
by preeminence, the first of the nine chief magistrates.
(n.) An animal of Peru (Lama paco), having long, fine, wooly
hair, supposed by some to be a domesticated variety of the llama.
(a.) Of or pertaining to an arc.
(a.) Hot or burning; causing a sensation of burning; fiery; as,
ardent spirits, that is, distilled liquors; an ardent fever.
(a.) Having the appearance or quality of fire; fierce; glowing;
shining; as, ardent eyes.
(a.) Warm, applied to the passions and affections; passionate;
fervent; zealous; vehement; as, ardent love, feelings, zeal, hope,
temper.
(n.) Wool of the alpaca.
(n.) A thin kind of cloth made of the wooly hair of the alpaca,
often mixed with silk or with cotton.
(n.) Alt. of Alpia
(n.) A species of clover with pinkish or white flowers;
Trifolium hybridum.
(pl. ) of Arena
(n.) An interstice or small space, as between the cracks of the
surface in certain crustaceous lichens; or as between the fibers
composing organs or vessels that interlace; or as between the nervures
of an insect's wing.
(n.) The colored ring around the nipple, or around a vesicle or
pustule.
(n.) Same as Areola.
(a.) Acting by turns; alternate.
(n.) See Abnet.
(n.) A West Indian palm; also the fruit of this palm, the seeds
of which are used as a remedy for diseases of the chest.
(n.) He who, or that which, abases.
(n.) Alt. of Abassis
(imp. & p. p.) of Abate
(n.) One who, or that which, abates.
(n.) Alt. of Abattis
(n.) One who abates a nuisance.
(n.) A person who, without right, enters into a freehold on the
death of the last possessor, before the heir or devisee.
(n.) The dignity, estate, or jurisdiction of an abbot.
(n.) A female superior or governess of a nunnery, or convent of
nuns, having the same authority over the nuns which the abbots have
over the monks. See Abbey.
(n.) Purification by washing the hands before prayer; -- a
Mohammedan rite.
(v. t.) To draw or conduct away; to withdraw; to draw to a
different part.
(v. t.) To take away surreptitiously by force; to carry away (a
human being) wrongfully and usually by violence; to kidnap.
(v. t.) To draw away, as a limb or other part, from its ordinary
position.
(n.) A species of wild sheep (Ovis ammon, or O. argali),
remarkable for its large horns. It inhabits the mountains of Siberia
and central Asia.
(n.) The adjutant bird.
() Same as Aby.
(n.) One of the pear-shaped pots open at both ends, and so
formed as to be fitted together, the neck of one into the bottom of
another in succession; -- used in the process of sublimation.
(a.) Pertaining to the alula.
(n.) Alum.
(n. fem.) A female pupil; especially, a graduate of a school or
college.
(pl. ) of Alumnus
(n.) The channel of a river.
(a.) Of, from, in, or pertaining to, the belly or the
intestines; as, alvine discharges; alvine concretions.
(adv.) At all times; ever; perpetually; throughout all time;
continually; as, God is always the same.
(adv.) Constancy during a certain period, or regularly at stated
intervals; invariably; uniformly; -- opposed to sometimes or
occasionally.
(n.) A spongy, combustible substance, prepared from fungus
(Boletus and Polyporus) which grows on old trees; German tinder; punk.
It has been employed as a styptic by surgeons, but its common use is as
tinder, for which purpose it is prepared by soaking it in a strong
solution of niter.
(n.) A large ship, esp. a merchant vessel of the largest size.
(imp. & p. p.) of Argue
(n.) One who argues; a reasoner; a disputant.
(v. t. & i.) To argue pertinaciously.
(v. t. & i.) To signify.
(imp. & p. p.) of Amaze
(n.) An entertainment at which a medley of dishes is set on at
the same time.
(imp. & p. p.) of Amble
(v. t.) A disposition or arrangement of troops for attacking an
enemy unexpectedly from a concealed station. Hence: Unseen peril; a
device to entrap; a snare.
(v. t.) A concealed station, where troops or enemies lie in wait
to attack by surprise.
(v. t.) The troops posted in a concealed place, for attacking by
surprise; liers in wait.
(a.) Sharp; shrill.
(a.) Sagacious; acute; subtle; shrewd.
(v. t.) To station in ambush with a view to surprise an enemy.
(v. t.) To attack by ambush; to waylay.
(v. i.) To lie in wait, for the purpose of attacking by
surprise; to lurk.
(n.) A pecuniary punishment or fine; a reparation or
recantation.
(n. sing. & pl.) Compensation for a loss or injury; recompense;
reparation.
(pl. ) of Amentum
(v. t.) To punish by a pecuniary penalty, the amount of which is
not fixed by law, but left to the discretion of the court; as, the
amerced the criminal in the sum on the hundred dollars.
(v. t.) To punish, in general; to mulct.
(adv.) Rightly; correctly; in a right way or form; without
mistake or crime; as, to worship God aright.
(a.) Having an aril.
(a.) Characterized by melody, as distinguished from harmony.
(adv. & a.) In the smooth and melodious style of an air; ariose.
(p. p.) of Arise
(n.) Start modified by heat so as to become a transparent mass,
like horn. It is soluble in cold water.
(prep.) Alt. of Amid
(n.) A thin membrane surrounding the embryos of mammals, birds,
and reptiles.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Arm
(n.) Same as Amnion.
(n.) A rhizopod. common in fresh water, capable of undergoing
many changes of form at will. See Rhizopoda.
(n.) A genus of aromatic plants. It includes species which bear
cardamoms, and grains of paradise.
(n.) As much as the arm can hold.
(n.) The act of furnishing with, or taking, arms.
(n.) A piece of tallow placed in a cavity at the lower end of a
sounding lead, to bring up the sand, shells, etc., of the sea bottom.
(n.) Red dress cloths formerly hung fore and aft outside of a
ship's upper works on holidays.
(n.) A small arm; as, an armlet of the sea.
(n.) An arm ring; a bracelet for the upper arm.
(n.) Armor for the arm.
(a.) Elevated, -- as a toe, when raised so high that the tip
does not touch the ground.
(n.) To go up; to ascend.
(n.) To rise or reach by an accumulation of particular sums or
quantities; to come (to) in the aggregate or whole; -- with to or unto.
(n.) To rise, reach, or extend in effect, substance, or
influence; to be equivalent; to come practically (to); as, the
testimony amounts to very little.
(v. t.) To signify; to amount to.
(n.) The sum total of two or more sums or quantities; the
aggregate; the whole quantity; a totality; as, the amount of 7 and 9 is
16; the amount of a bill; the amount of this year's revenue.
(n.) The effect, substance, value, significance, or result; the
sum; as, the amount of the testimony is this.
() A prefix in words of Greek origin, signifying both, of both
kinds, on both sides, about, around.
(n.) A place where arms and instruments of war are deposited for
safe keeping.
(n.) Armor; defensive and offensive arms.
(n.) A manufactory of arms, as rifles, muskets, pistols,
bayonets, swords.
(n.) Ensigns armorial; armorial bearings.
(n.) That branch of heraldry which treats of coat armor.
(n.) The hollow beneath the junction of the arm and shoulder;
the axilla.
(n.) Armor.
(n.) A variety of twilled fabric ribbed on the surface.
(n.) A genus of plants; also, the most important species (Arnica
montana), native of the mountains of Europe, used in medicine as a
narcotic and stimulant.
(interj.) Stand off, or begone.
(v. t.) To drive or scare off by some exclamation.
(adv.) In a circle; circularly; on every side; round.
(adv.) In a circuit; here and there within the surrounding
space; all about; as, to travel around from town to town.
(adv.) Near; in the neighborhood; as, this man was standing
around when the fight took place.
(prep.) On all sides of; encircling; encompassing; so as to make
the circuit of; about.
(prep.) From one part to another of; at random through; about;
on another side of; as, to travel around the country; a house standing
around the corner.
(v. t.) To excite to action from a state of rest; to stir, or
put in motion or exertion; to rouse; to excite; as, to arouse one from
sleep; to arouse the dormant faculties.
(interj.) See Aroint.
(n.) Alt. of Arpen
(n.) A salt of the class formed by the combination of an acid
and a base, or by the union of two oxides, two sulphides, selenides, or
tellurides, as distinguished from a haloid compound.
(v. t.) To desire with eagerness; to seek to attain something
high or great; to pant; to long; -- followed by to or after, and rarely
by at; as, to aspire to a crown; to aspire after immorality.
(v. t.) To rise; to ascend; to tower; to soar.
(v. t.) To aspire to; to long for; to try to reach; to mount to.
(n.) Aspiration.
(a.) Pertaining to, or like, an asp.
(adv. & a.) Squatting.
(n.) The beginner, former, or first mover of anything; hence,
the efficient cause of a thing; a creator; an originator.
(n.) One who composes or writes a book; a composer, as
distinguished from an editor, translator, or compiler.
(n.) The editor of a periodical.
(n.) An informant.
(v. t.) To occasion; to originate.
(v. t.) To tell; to say; to declare.
(n.) The descent of a deity to earth, and his incarnation as a
man or an animal; -- chiefly associated with the incarnations of
Vishnu.
(n.) Incarnation; manifestation as an object of worship or
admiration.
(interj.) Begone; depart; -- a word of contempt or abhorrence,
equivalent to the phrase "Get thee gone."
(v. t. & i.) To advance; to move forward; to elevate.
(v. t. & i.) To depart; to move away.
(v. t. & i.) To vaunt; to boast.
(n.) A vaunt; to boast.
(n.) An officer of the king's stables whose duty it was to
provide oats for the horses.
(v. t.) To take vengeance for; to exact satisfaction for by
punishing the injuring party; to vindicate by inflicting pain or evil
on a wrongdoer.
(v. t.) To treat revengefully; to wreak vengeance on.
(v. i.) To take vengeance.
(n.) Vengeance; revenge.
(n.) A way or opening for entrance into a place; a passage by
which a place may by reached; a way of approach or of exit.
(n.) The principal walk or approach to a house which is
withdrawn from the road, especially, such approach bordered on each
side by trees; any broad passageway thus bordered.
(n.) A broad street; as, the Fifth Avenue in New York.
(a.) Turned away or backward.
(a.) Having a repugnance or opposition of mind; disliking;
disinclined; unwilling; reluctant.
(v. t. & i.) To turn away.
(n.) One who abides, or continues.
(n.) One who dwells; a resident.
(a.) Cast down; low-lying.
(a.) Sunk to a law condition; down in spirit or hope; degraded;
servile; groveling; despicable; as, abject posture, fortune, thoughts.
(a.) To cast off or down; hence, to abase; to degrade; to lower;
to debase.
(n.) A person in the lowest and most despicable condition; a
castaway.
(n.) A house, inclosure, large cage, or other place, for keeping
birds confined; a bird house.
(n.) An advocate.
(n.) Alt. of Avoset
(n.) A grallatorial bird, of the genus Recurvirostra; the
scooper. The bill is long and bend upward toward the tip. The American
species is R. Americana.
(n.) Same as Avocet.
(v. t.) To appeal to; to cite or claim as authority.
(v. t.) To maintain a just or true; to vouch for.
(v. t.) To declare or assert positively and as matter of fact;
to affirm openly.
(v. t.) To acknowledge deliberately; to admit; to confess; to
sanction.
(n.) Evidence; declaration.
(imp. & p. p.) of Avow
(n.) An open declaration; frank acknowledgment; as, an avowal of
such principles.
(a.) Openly acknowledged or declared; admitted.
(n.) One who avows or asserts.
(n.) An advocate; a patron; a patron saint.
(n.) The act of the distrainer of goods, who, in an action of
replevin, avows and justifies the taking in his own right.
(n.) A chief magistrate of a free imperial city or canton of
Switzerland.
(v. t.) To pluck or pull off.
() of Awake
(p. p.) of Awake
() of Awake
() of Awake
(v. t.) To rouse from sleep or torpor; to awake; to wake.
(a.) Weary.
(adv.) Just drawn out of the ground, and hanging
perpendicularly; atrip; -- said of the anchor.
(v. t.) To confound; to terrify; to amaze.
(adv.) For a while; for some time; for a short time.
(a.) Wanting reverence; void of respectful fear.
(a.) Inspiring no awe.
(n.) A rooflike cover, usually of canvas, extended over or
before any place as a shelter from the sun, rain, or wind.
(n.) That part of the poop deck which is continued forward
beyond the bulkhead of the cabin.
(adv.) Wrongly.
() See Ax, Axman.
(n.) The armpit, or the cavity beneath the junction of the arm
and shoulder.
(n.) An axil.
(n.) Axle or axletree.
(n.) Fat; grease; esp. the fat of pigs or geese; usually
(Pharm.), lard prepared for medical use.
(a.) Confined to no zone or region; not local.
(a.) Pertaining to azote, or nitrogen; formed or consisting of
azote; nitric; as, azotic gas; azotic acid.
(v. t.) To renounce upon oath; to forswear; to disavow; as, to
abjure allegiance to a prince. To abjure the realm, is to swear to
abandon it forever.
(v. t.) To renounce or reject with solemnity; to recant; to
abandon forever; to reject; repudiate; as, to abjure errors.
(v. i.) To renounce on oath.
(n.) The substitution of one root vowel for another, thus
indicating a corresponding modification of use or meaning; vowel
permutation; as, get, gat, got; sing, song; hang, hung.
(adv. & a.) On fire; in a blaze, gleaming.
(adv. & a.) In a state of glowing excitement or ardent desire.
(n.) To increase; to augment.
(n.) To come to by way of increase; to arise or spring as a
growth or result; to be added as increase, profit, or damage,
especially as the produce of money lent.
(n.) Something that accrues; advantage accruing.
(v. i.) To recline, as at table.
(a.) Smeared over.
(v. i.) To stand apart from; top leave off; to desist.
(v. t.) To swallow up; to engulf; to overwhelm; to cause to
disappear as if by swallowing up; to use up; to include.
(v. t.) To suck up; to drink in; to imbibe; as a sponge or as
the lacteals of the body.
(v. t.) To engross or engage wholly; to occupy fully; as,
absorbed in study or the pursuit of wealth.
(v. t.) To take up by cohesive, chemical, or any molecular
action, as when charcoal absorbs gases. So heat, light, and electricity
are absorbed or taken up in the substances into which they pass.
(n.) Accusation.
(v. t.) To charge with, or declare to have committed, a crime or
offense
(v. t.) to charge with an offense, judicially or by a public
process; -- with of; as, to accuse one of a high crime or misdemeanor.
(v. t.) To charge with a fault; to blame; to censure.
(v. t.) To betray; to show. [L.]
(v. t.) To move or conduct to or toward.
(a.) Grown to congenitally.
(a.) Growing together; -- said only of organic cohesion of
unlike parts.
(a.) Growing with one side adherent to a stem; -- a term applied
to the lateral zooids of corals and other compound animals.
(n.) An adjective, or attribute.
(n.) One who adores; a worshiper; one who admires or loves
greatly; an ardent admirer.
(v. t. & i.) To dread.
(adv. & a.) Floating at random; in a drifting condition; at the
mercy of wind and waves. Also fig.
(n.) A fine cotton cloth of India.
(v. t.) To daunt; to subdue; to mitigate.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Add
(v. t.) To award; to adjudge.
(n.) See Adze.
(p. p.) Addicted; devoted.
(v. t.) To apply habitually; to devote; to habituate; -- with
to.
(v. t.) To adapt; to make suitable; to fit.
(v. t.) To consume gradually; to waste away.
(a.) Contrary to reason or propriety; obviously and fiatly
opposed to manifest truth; inconsistent with the plain dictates of
common sense; logically contradictory; nonsensical; ridiculous; as, an
absurd person, an absurd opinion; an absurd dream.
(n.) An absurdity.
(adv.) In a bursting condition.
(imp. & p. p.) of Abuse
(n.) One who abuses [in the various senses of the verb].
(n.) Alt. of Acacine
(n.) The cashew tree; also, its fruit. See Cashew.
(n.) The mahogany tree; also, its timber.
(n.) See Caterer.
(n. pl.) See Cates.
(v. i.) To approach; to come forward; -- opposed to recede.
(v. i.) To enter upon an office or dignity; to attain.
(v. i.) To become a party by associating one's self with others;
to give one's adhesion. Hence, to agree or assent to a proposal or a
view; as, he acceded to my request.
(v. t.) To set on fire; to kindle.
(n.) A superior force of voice or of articulative effort upon
some particular syllable of a word or a phrase, distinguishing it from
the others.
(n.) A mark or character used in writing, and serving to
regulate the pronunciation; esp.: (a) a mark to indicate the nature and
place of the spoken accent; (b) a mark to indicate the quality of sound
of the vowel marked; as, the French accents.
(n.) Modulation of the voice in speaking; manner of speaking or
pronouncing; peculiar or characteristic modification of the voice;
tone; as, a foreign accent; a French or a German accent.
(n.) A word; a significant tone
(n.) expressions in general; speech.
(n.) Stress laid on certain syllables of a verse.
(n.) A regularly recurring stress upon the tone to mark the
beginning, and, more feebly, the third part of the measure.
(n.) A special emphasis of a tone, even in the weaker part of
the measure.
(n.) The rhythmical accent, which marks phrases and sections of
a period.
(n.) The expressive emphasis and shading of a passage.
(n.) A mark placed at the right hand of a letter, and a little
above it, to distinguish magnitudes of a similar kind expressed by the
same letter, but differing in value, as y', y''.
(n.) A mark at the right hand of a number, indicating minutes of
a degree, seconds, etc.; as, 12'27'', i. e., twelve minutes twenty
seven seconds.
(n.) A mark used to denote feet and inches; as, 6' 10'' is six
feet ten inches.
(v. t.) To express the accent of (either by the voice or by a
mark); to utter or to mark with accent.
(v. t.) To mark emphatically; to emphasize.
(v. t.) To receive with a consenting mind (something offered);
as, to accept a gift; -- often followed by of.
(v. t.) To receive with favor; to approve.
(v. t.) To receive or admit and agree to; to assent to; as, I
accept your proposal, amendment, or excuse.
(v. t.) To take by the mind; to understand; as, How are these
words to be accepted?
(v. t.) To receive as obligatory and promise to pay; as, to
accept a bill of exchange.
(v. t.) In a deliberate body, to receive in acquittance of a
duty imposed; as, to accept the report of a committee. [This makes it
the property of the body, and the question is then on its adoption.]
(a.) Accepted.
(adv.) Perhaps.
(adv.) In or into bloom; in a blooming state.
(v. t.) To be unlike; to differ.
(adv. & a.) Blushing; ruddy.
(adv.) On board; into or within a ship or boat; hence, into or
within a railway car.
(adv.) Alongside; as, close aboard.
(prep.) On board of; as, to go aboard a ship.
(prep.) Across; athwart.
(a.) Situated opposite to, or away from, the mouth.
(v. i.) To be in great plenty; to be very prevalent; to be
plentiful.
(v. i.) To be copiously supplied; -- followed by in or with.
(v. t.) To rub or wear off; to waste or wear away by friction;
as, to abrade rocks.
(v. t.) Same as Abraid.
(v. t. & i.) To awake; to arouse; to stir or start up; also, to
shout out.
(a.) Rubbed smooth.
(n.) Alt. of Abraum salts
(adv.) At large; widely; broadly; over a wide space; as, a tree
spreads its branches abroad.
(adv.) Without a certain confine; outside the house; away from
one's abode; as, to walk abroad.
(adv.) Beyond the bounds of a country; in foreign countries; as,
we have broils at home and enemies abroad.
(adv.) Before the public at large; throughout society or the
world; here and there; widely.
(adv.) In the act of brooding.
(v. t.) To brook; to endure.
(a.) Broken off; very steep, or craggy, as rocks, precipices,
banks; precipitous; steep; as, abrupt places.
(a.) Without notice to prepare the mind for the event; sudden;
hasty; unceremonious.
(a.) Having sudden transitions from one subject to another;
unconnected.
(a.) Suddenly terminating, as if cut off.
(n.) An abrupt place.
(v. t.) To tear off or asunder.
(a.) Being away from a place; withdrawn from a place; not
present.
(a.) Not existing; lacking; as, the part was rudimental or
absent.
(a.) Inattentive to what is passing; absent-minded; preoccupied;
as, an absent air.
(v. t.) To take or withdraw (one's self) to such a distance as
to prevent intercourse; -- used with the reflexive pronoun.
(v. t.) To withhold from being present.
(pl. ) of Arena
(v. t. & i.) Same as Astert.
(a. & adv.) Sticking out, or puffed out; swelling; in a swelling
manner.
(a. & adv.) In a strutting manner; with a strutting gait.
(adv.) In a state of swinging.
(adv.) In a swoon.
(v. t.) To fall upon with force; to assail, as with force and
arms; to assault.
(v. t.) To assail with unfriendly speech or writing; to begin a
controversy with; to attempt to overthrow or bring into disrepute, by
criticism or satire; to censure; as, to attack a man, or his opinions,
in a pamphlet.
(v. t.) To set to work upon, as upon a task or problem, or some
object of labor or investigation.
(v. t.) To begin to affect; to begin to act upon, injuriously or
destructively; to begin to decompose or waste.
(v. i.) To make an onset or attack.
(n.) The act of attacking, or falling on with force or violence;
an onset; an assault; -- opposed to defense.
(n.) An assault upon one's feelings or reputation with
unfriendly or bitter words.
(n.) A setting to work upon some task, etc.
(n.) An access of disease; a fit of sickness.
(n.) The beginning of corrosive, decomposing, or destructive
action, by a chemical agent.
(adv.) In twain; asunder.
(v. t. & i.) Alt. of Awreke
(a.) Of an azure color; sky-blue.
(n.) A coming to, or near approach; admittance; admission;
accessibility; as, to gain access to a prince.
(n.) The means, place, or way by which a thing may be
approached; passage way; as, the access is by a neck of land.
(n.) Admission to sexual intercourse.
(n.) Increase by something added; addition; as, an access of
territory. [In this sense accession is more generally used.]
(n.) An onset, attack, or fit of disease.
(n.) A paroxysm; a fit of passion; an outburst; as, an access of
fury.
(v. t.) To cite; to summon.
(v. t.) To fill to satiety; to stuff full; to clog; to overload;
to burden. See Cloy.
(v. t.) To gather together; to collect.
(v. t.) To coil together.
(imp. & p. p.) of Addle
(v. t.) To adjudge.
(v. t.) To bring forward or offer, as an argument, passage, or
consideration which bears on a statement or case; to cite; to allege.
(v. t.) To draw towards a common center or a middle line.
(p. p.) Takes away.
() Combining forms of the Greek word for gland; -- used in words
relating to the structure, diseases, etc., of the glands.
(a.) Dexterous in the use of the hands or in the exercise of the
mental faculties; exhibiting skill and readiness in avoiding danger or
escaping difficulty; ready in invention or execution; -- applied to
persons and to acts; as, an adroit mechanic, an adroit reply.
(v. i.) To accede, or come (to); to be added to something or
become a part of it, though not essential.
(n.) A word used to modify the sense of a verb, participle,
adjective, or other adverb, and usually placed near it; as, he writes
well; paper extremely white.
(v. i.) To turn the mind or attention; to refer; to take heed or
notice; -- with to; as, he adverted to what was said.
(n.) An opinion recommended or offered, as worthy to be
followed; counsel.
(n.) Deliberate consideration; knowledge.
(n.) Information or notice given; intelligence; as, late advices
from France; -- commonly in the plural.
(n.) Counseling to perform a specific illegal act.
(v. t.) To give advice to; to offer an opinion, as worthy or
expedient to be followed; to counsel; to warn.
(v. t.) To give information or notice to; to inform; -- with of
before the thing communicated; as, we were advised of the risk.
(v. t.) To consider; to deliberate.
(v. t.) To take counsel; to consult; -- followed by with; as, to
advise with friends.
(n.) Advice; counsel; suggestion; also, a dispatch or advice
boat.
(v. t.) To summon; to call.
(n.) Award.
(v. t.) To act upon; to produce an effect or change upon.
(v. t.) To influence or move, as the feelings or passions; to
touch.
(v. t.) To love; to regard with affection.
(v. t.) To show a fondness for; to like to use or practice; to
choose; hence, to frequent habitually.
(v. t.) To dispose or incline.
(v. t.) To aim at; to aspire; to covet.
(v. t.) To tend to by affinity or disposition.
(v. t.) To make a show of; to put on a pretense of; to feign; to
assume; as, to affect ignorance.
(v. t.) To assign; to appoint.
(n.) Affection; inclination; passion; feeling; disposition.
(v. t.) To confirm; to assure.
(v. t.) To assess or reduce, as an arbitrary penalty or
amercement, to a certain and reasonable sum.
(v. t.) To polish.
(n.) An isolated point not upon a curve, but whose coordinates
satisfy the equation of the curve so that it is considered as belonging
to the curve.
(a.) Relieving weariness; restorative.
(p. p.) Acquitted; set free; rid of.
(v. t.) To discharge, as a claim or debt; to clear off; to pay
off; to requite.
(v. t.) To pay for; to atone for.
(v. t.) To set free, release or discharge from an obligation,
duty, liability, burden, or from an accusation or charge; -- now
followed by of before the charge, formerly by from; as, the jury
acquitted the prisoner; we acquit a man of evil intentions.
(v. t.) To clear one's self.
(v. t.) To bear or conduct one's self; to perform one's part;
as, the soldier acquitted himself well in battle; the orator acquitted
himself very poorly.
(v. t.) To craze.
(v. t.) To impair; to destroy.
(n.) Excess; intemperance.
(n.) Inability to judge.
(n.) Undecided character of a disease.
(a.) Acritan.
(n.) Sharpness; keenness.
(adv.) Crookedly.
(n.) From side to side; athwart; crosswise, or in a direction
opposed to the length; quite over; as, a bridge laid across a river.
(adv.) From side to side; crosswise; as, with arms folded
across.
(v. t.) Agreement or concurrence of opinion, will, or action;
harmony of mind; consent; assent.
(v. t.) Harmony of sounds; agreement in pitch and tone; concord;
as, the accord of tones.
(v. t.) Agreement, harmony, or just correspondence of things;
as, the accord of light and shade in painting.
(v. t.) Voluntary or spontaneous motion or impulse to act; --
preceded by own; as, of one's own accord.
(v. t.) An agreement between parties in controversy, by which
satisfaction for an injury is stipulated, and which, when executed,
bars a suit.
(v. t.) To make to agree or correspond; to suit one thing to
another; to adjust; -- followed by to.
(v. t.) To bring to an agreement, as persons; to reconcile; to
settle, adjust, harmonize, or compose, as things; as, to accord suits
or controversies.
(v. t.) To grant as suitable or proper; to concede; to award;
as, to accord to one due praise.
(v. i.) To agree; to correspond; to be in harmony; -- followed
by with, formerly also by to; as, his disposition accords with his
looks.
(v. i.) To agree in pitch and tone.
(v. t.) To join side to side; to border; hence, to sail along
the coast or side of.
(v. t.) To approach; to make up to.
(v. t.) To speak to first; to address; to greet.
(v. i.) To adjoin; to lie alongside.
(n.) Address; greeting.
(n.) A combination of acetic acid with glycerin.
(n.) A complex, hypothetical radical, composed of two parts of
carbon to three of hydrogen and one of oxygen. Its hydroxide is acetic
acid.
(n.) An agate.
(n.) Purchase; bargaining.
(n.) Provisions. Same as Cates.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Ache
(n.) Alt. of Achenium
(a.) That aches; continuously painful. See Ache.
(a.) Containing a high percentage of silica; -- opposed to
basic.
(adv.) Sourly; tartly.
(n.) One of the small grains or drupelets which make up some
kinds of fruit, as the blackberry, raspberry, etc.
(n.) A grapestone.
(n.) One of the granular masses which constitute a racemose or
compound gland, as the pancreas; also, one of the saccular recesses in
the lobules of a racemose gland.
(v. t.) To recognize.
(v. t.) To acknowledge; to confess.
(v. t.) To refine.
(v. t.) to assert or confirm, as a judgment, decree, or order,
brought before an appellate court for review.
(v. t.) To assert positively; to tell with confidence; to aver;
to maintain as true; -- opposed to deny.
(v. t.) To declare, as a fact, solemnly, under judicial
sanction. See Affirmation, 4.
(v. i.) To declare or assert positively.
(v. i.) To make a solemn declaration, before an authorized
magistrate or tribunal, under the penalties of perjury; to testify by
affirmation.
(adv.) Obliquely; athwart; amiss; awry.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Act
(a.) Operating in any way.
(a.) Doing duty for another; officiating; as, an acting
superintendent.
(n.) A process or condition of acting or moving, as opposed to
rest; the doing of something; exertion of power or force, as when one
body acts on another; the effect of power exerted on one body by
another; agency; activity; operation; as, the action of heat; a man of
action.
(n.) An act; a thing done; a deed; an enterprise. (pl.):
Habitual deeds; hence, conduct; behavior; demeanor.
(n.) The event or connected series of events, either real or
imaginary, forming the subject of a play, poem, or other composition;
the unfolding of the drama of events.
(n.) Movement; as, the horse has a spirited action.
(n.) Effective motion; also, mechanism; as, the breech action of
a gun.
(n.) Any one of the active processes going on in an organism;
the performance of a function; as, the action of the heart, the
muscles, or the gastric juice.
(n.) Gesticulation; the external deportment of the speaker, or
the suiting of his attitude, voice, gestures, and countenance, to the
subject, or to the feelings.
(n.) The attitude or position of the several parts of the body
as expressive of the sentiment or passion depicted.
(n.) A suit or process, by which a demand is made of a right in
a court of justice; in a broad sense, a judicial proceeding for the
enforcement or protection of a right, the redress or prevention of a
wrong, or the punishment of a public offense.
(n.) A right of action; as, the law gives an action for every
claim.
(n.) A share in the capital stock of a joint-stock company, or
in the public funds; hence, in the plural, equivalent to stocks.
(n.) An engagement between troops in war, whether on land or
water; a battle; a fight; as, a general action, a partial action.
(n.) The mechanical contrivance by means of which the impulse of
the player's finger is transmitted to the strings of a pianoforte or to
the valve of an organ pipe.
(a.) Having the power or quality of acting; causing change;
communicating action or motion; acting; -- opposed to passive, that
receives; as, certain active principles; the powers of the mind.
(a.) Quick in physical movement; of an agile and vigorous body;
nimble; as, an active child or animal.
(a.) In action; actually proceeding; working; in force; --
opposed to quiescent, dormant, or extinct; as, active laws; active
hostilities; an active volcano.
(a.) Given to action; constantly engaged in action; energetic;
diligent; busy; -- opposed to dull, sluggish, indolent, or inert; as,
an active man of business; active mind; active zeal.
(a.) Requiring or implying action or exertion; -- opposed to
sedentary or to tranquil; as, active employment or service; active
scenes.
(a.) Given to action rather than contemplation; practical;
operative; -- opposed to speculative or theoretical; as, an active
rather than a speculative statesman.
(a.) Brisk; lively; as, an active demand for corn.
(a.) Implying or producing rapid action; as, an active disease;
an active remedy.
(a.) Applied to a form of the verb; -- opposed to passive. See
Active voice, under Voice.
(a.) Applied to verbs which assert that the subject acts upon or
affects something else; transitive.
(a.) Applied to all verbs that express action as distinct from
mere existence or state.
(a.) Involving or comprising action; active.
(a.) Existing in act or reality; really acted or acting; in
fact; real; -- opposed to potential, possible, virtual, speculative,
conceivable, theoretical, or nominal; as, the actual cost of goods; the
actual case under discussion.
(a.) In action at the time being; now exiting; present; as the
actual situation of the country.
(n.) Something actually received; real, as distinct from
estimated, receipts.
(n.) Action.
(v. t.) To sharpen; to make pungent; to quicken.
(a.) Sharpened; sharp-pointed.
(n.) Sharpness or acuteness, as of a needle, wit, etc.
(pl. ) of Aculeus
(n.) Quickness of perception or discernment; penetration of
mind; the faculty of nice discrimination.
(n.) The division or defective coherence of an organ that is
usually entire.
(v. i.) To stick fast or cleave, as a glutinous substance does;
to become joined or united; as, wax to the finger; the lungs sometimes
adhere to the pleura.
(v. i.) To hold, be attached, or devoted; to remain fixed,
either by personal union or conformity of faith, principle, or opinion;
as, men adhere to a party, a cause, a leader, a church.
(v. i.) To be consistent or coherent; to be in accordance; to
agree.
(v. t.) To exhort; to advise.
(pl. ) of Adieu
(p. p.) of Adight
(v. t.) To set in order; to array; to attire; to deck, to dress.
(a.) Pertaining to, or derived from, fatty or oily substances;
-- applied to certain acids obtained from fats by the action of nitric
acid.
(n.) Absence of thirst.
(v. t.) To add or annex; to join.
(v. t.) To join or unite to; to lie contiguous to; to be in
contact with; to attach; to append.
(v. i.) To lie or be next, or in contact; to be contiguous; as,
the houses adjoin.
(v. i.) To join one's self.
(v. t.) To charge, bind, or command, solemnly, as if under oath,
or under the penalty of a curse; to appeal to in the most solemn or
impressive manner; to entreat earnestly.
(a. & adv.) Slow; slowly, leisurely, and gracefully. When
repeated, adagio, adagio, it directs the movement to be very slow.
(n.) A piece of music in adagio time; a slow movement; as, an
adagio of Haydn.
(n.) The innermost sanctuary or shrine in ancient temples,
whence oracles were given. Hence: A private chamber; a sanctum.
(n.) A magistrate in ancient Rome, who had the superintendence
of public buildings, highways, shows, etc.; hence, a municipal officer.
(v. t.) To combine or charge with gas; usually with carbonic
acid gas, formerly called fixed air.
(v. t.) To supply or impregnate with common air; as, to aerate
soil; to aerate water.
(v. t.) To expose to the chemical action of air; to oxygenate
(the blood) by respiration; to arterialize.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the air, or atmosphere; inhabiting or
frequenting the air; produced by or found in the air; performed in the
air; as, aerial regions or currents.
(a.) Consisting of air; resembling, or partaking of the nature
of air. Hence: Unsubstantial; unreal.
(a.) Rising aloft in air; high; lofty; as, aerial spires.
(a.) Growing, forming, or existing in the air, as opposed to
growing or existing in earth or water, or underground; as, aerial
rootlets, aerial plants.
(a.) Light as air; ethereal.
(v. t.) To infuse air into; to combine air with.
(v. t.) To change into an aeriform state.
(a.) Of the nature of, or like, copper; brassy.
(n.) The rust of any metal, esp. of brass or copper; verdigris.
(n.) See Ether.
(p. a.) Afraid.
(n.) That which is done or is to be done; matter; concern; as, a
difficult affair to manage; business of any kind, commercial,
professional, or public; -- often in the plural. "At the head of
affairs." Junius.
(n.) Any proceeding or action which it is wished to refer to or
characterize vaguely; as, an affair of honor, i. e., a duel; an affair
of love, i. e., an intrigue.
(n.) An action or engagement not of sufficient magnitude to be
called a battle.
(n.) Action; endeavor.
(n.) A material object (vaguely designated).
(v. t.) To make exact; to fit; to make correspondent or
conformable; to bring into proper relations; as, to adjust a garment to
the body, or things to a standard.
(v. t.) To put in order; to regulate, or reduce to system.
(v. t.) To settle or bring to a satisfactory state, so that
parties are agreed in the result; as, to adjust accounts; the
differences are adjusted.
(v. t.) To bring to a true relative position, as the parts of an
instrument; to regulate for use; as, to adjust a telescope or
microscope.
(v. t.) To add.
(imp. & p. p.) of Abase
(a.) Lowered; humbled.
(a.) Borne lower than usual, as a fess; also, having the ends of
the wings turned downward towards the point of the shield.
(pl. ) of Abbey
(n.) Same as Acanthus.
(adv.) Dancing.
() At the door; of the door; as, out adoors.