- dander
- dandle
- dogmas
- douche
- dimity
- dimple
- dimply
- dinned
- doughy
- doused
- douter
- dovish
- dining
- dinged
- dingey
- dinghy
- dining
- dinner
- dowcet
- dowery
- dowlas
- dinted
- downed
- dowser
- doxies
- dozing
- dipped
- dozens
- drachm
- dracin
- dradge
- draffy
- draine
- draped
- drapet
- drawee
- drawer
- diploe
- dipody
- dipper
- drawer
- drazel
- dipper
- dipsas
- dreamt
- dreamy
- dipyre
- direct
- dreary
- dredge
- dreggy
- dreint
- drench
- direly
- dressy
- dretch
- dreynt
- dirige
- dirked
- driest
- drifty
- disard
- disarm
- driven
- drivel
- driven
- driver
- disbar
- disbud
- discal
- drogue
- dromon
- droned
- drongo
- dronte
- discus
- disple
- depart
- depend
- depict
- disray
- deploy
- depone
- deport
- depose
- distad
- distal
- depure
- depute
- deputy
- derail
- deride
- dister
- distil
- derive
- dermal
- dermic
- dermis
- dernly
- descry
- desert
- disuse
- dition
- design
- desire
- desist
- desman
- desmid
- ditone
- dittos
- despot
- desume
- detach
- detail
- detain
- detect
- detent
- detest
- detort
- detour
- dayfly
- deltas
- dewret
- diddle
- dropsy
- drosky
- drossy
- droumy
- drouth
- drover
- drowse
- drowsy
- drudge
- druery
- drumly
- drupal
- drupel
- drused
- druxey
- drying
- dualin
- dubbed
- dubber
- ducked
- ducker
- ductor
- dudder
- dudeen
- dudish
- dueful
- dueler
- duenna
- duetto
- duffel
- duffer
- duffle
- dugong
- dugout
- dulcet
- duller
- dumbly
- dumose
- dumous
- dumped
- dumple
- dunned
- dunder
- dunged
- dunlin
- dunner
- dunted
- dunter
- duping
- dupery
- dupion
- duplex
- dupper
- dandle
- danger
- dangle
- dapper
- dapple
- daring
- dargue
- daring
- darkle
- darkly
- darned
- darnel
- darner
- darnex
- darted
- darter
- dartle
- dartos
- dasewe
- dashed
- dasher
- datary
- dating
- dative
- daubed
- dauber
- daubry
- davyne
- davyum
- dawdle
- dawish
- dawned
- dazing
- dazzle
- deaden
- deadly
- deafen
- deafly
- dealer
- dearie
- dearly
- dearth
- debark
- debase
- debate
- debile
- deblai
- debosh
- debris
- debted
- debtee
- debtor
- decade
- decane
- decani
- decant
- decard
- decede
- deceit
- decene
- decent
- decern
- decerp
- decide
- decile
- decime
- decine
- decked
- deckel
- decker
- deckle
- decoct
- decore
- decree
- decrew
- decurt
- decury
- dedans
- deduce
- deduct
- deduit
- deemed
- deepen
- deeply
- durbar
- duress
- durian
- durion
- during
- durity
- durous
- dusken
- dusted
- dutied
- duties
- dwarfs
- dwarfy
- dyadic
- dyeing
- dynast
- dysury
- dzeren
- dzeron
- deturb
- deturn
- deuced
- deuto-
- devast
- devata
- devest
- device
- devise
- devoid
- devoir
- devote
- devoto
- devour
- devout
- devove
- dewing
- dewlap
- dewrot
- damnum
- dhurra
- diacid
- divast
- diving
- diverb
- divers
- diadem
- divert
- dialed
- divest
- divide
- diving
- diaper
- djinns
- doable
- do-all
- dobber
- dobule
- docent
- diatom
- diazo-
- docity
- docked
- docket
- dodded
- dodder
- dodged
- dodger
- dodkin
- dodman
- dodoes
- doffed
- doffer
- dogged
- dogate
- dibber
- dibble
- dicast
- dicing
- dicker
- dogged
- dogget
- dogtie
- doings
- doling
- dolent
- dictum
- didine
- dieses
- diesis
- dieted
- dietic
- differ
- dolium
- dolman
- dolmen
- dolven
- domage
- domify
- digged
- digamy
- domine
- domite
- donned
- donary
- donate
- donjon
- donkey
- donzel
- doodle
- doomed
- digram
- dormer
- dorsad
- dorsal
- dorsel
- dorser
- dorsum
- dories
- dosing
- dossel
- dosser
- dossil
- dotted
- dotage
- dotant
- dotard
- doting
- diiamb
- diking
- doting
- dotish
- dotted
- douane
- double
- dilate
- double
- dilogy
- dilute
- dimmed
- dimble
- doubly
- doucet
- dowset
- douche
- disert
- dished
- deesis
- deface
- defail
- defalk
- defame
- defeat
- defect
- defend
- defier
- defile
- define
- deflow
- deflux
- deform
- defoul
- defray
- deftly
- defuse
- defied
- degree
- degust
- dehorn
- dehors
- dehort
- dehusk
- deific
- deject
- delate
- delays
- delete
- dabbed
- dabber
- dabble
- daboia
- dacoit
- delict
- dadoes
- daemon
- dagger
- daggle
- deline
- dagoba
- dahlin
- daimio
- dainty
- dakoit
- dallop
- deloul
- deltic
- dammed
- damage
- damask
- delude
- delved
- delver
- demain
- demand
- demean
- dement
- damask
- dammar
- damned
- damped
- dampen
- damper
- dampne
- damsel
- damson
- danced
- dancer
- demise
- demiss
- dempne
- demure
- demies
- denary
- dengue
- denial
- denier
- denize
- denote
- dented
- dental
- dented
- dentel
- dentex
- dentil
- dismal
- disman
- dismaw
- dismay
- denude
- denied
- disorb
- disown
- deodar
- disown
- dispel
- dynamo
(n.) Dandruff or scurf on the head.
(n.) Anger or vexation; rage.
(v. i.) To wander about; to saunter; to talk incoherently.
(v. t.) To move up and down on one's knee or in one's arms, in
affectionate play, as an infant.
(v. t.) To treat with fondness, as if a child; to fondle; to toy
with; to pet.
(pl. ) of Dogma
(n.) A syringe.
(n.) A cotton fabric employed for hangings and furniture
coverings, and formerly used for women's under-garments. It is of many
patterns, both plain and twilled, and occasionally is printed in
colors.
(n.) A slight natural depression or indentation on the surface
of some part of the body, esp. on the cheek or chin.
(n.) A slight indentation on any surface.
(v. i.) To form dimples; to sink into depressions or little
inequalities.
(v. t.) To mark with dimples or dimplelike depressions.
(a.) Full of dimples, or small depressions; dimpled; as, the
dimply pool.
(imp. & p. p.) of Din
(a.) Like dough; soft and heavy; pasty; crude; flabby and pale;
as, a doughy complexion.
(imp. & p. p.) of Douse
(n.) An extinguisher for candles.
(a.) Like a dove; harmless; innocent.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Dine
(imp. & p. p.) of Ding
(n.) Alt. of Dinghy
(n.) A kind of boat used in the East Indies.
(n.) A ship's smallest boat.
(n. & a.) from Dine, a.
(n.) The principal meal of the day, eaten by most people about
midday, but by many (especially in cities) at a later hour.
(n.) An entertainment; a feast.
(n.) One of the testicles of a hart or stag.
(n.) See Dower.
(n.) A coarse linen cloth made in the north of England and in
Scotland, now nearly replaced by calico.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dint
(imp. & p. p.) of Down
(n.) A divining rod used in searching for water, ore, etc., a
dowsing rod.
(n.) One who uses the dowser or divining rod.
(pl. ) of Doxy
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Doze
(imp. & p. p.) of Dip
(pl. ) of Dozen
(n.) A drachma.
(n.) Same as Dram.
(n.) See Draconin.
(n.) Inferior ore, separated from the better by cobbing.
(a.) Dreggy; waste; worthless.
(n.) The missel thrush.
(imp. & p. p.) of Drape
(n.) Cloth.
(n.) The person on whom an order or bill of exchange is drawn;
-- the correlative of drawer.
(n.) One who, or that which, draws
(n.) One who draws liquor for guests; a waiter in a taproom.
(n.) One who delineates or depicts; a draughtsman; as, a good
drawer.
(n.) One who draws a bill of exchange or order for payment; --
the correlative of drawee.
(n.) That which is drawn
(n.) A sliding box or receptacle in a case, which is opened by
pulling or drawing out, and closed by pushing in.
(n.) The soft, spongy, or cancellated substance between the
plates of the skull.
(n.) Two metrical feet taken together, or included in one
measure.
(n.) One who, or that which, dips; especially, a vessel used to
dip water or other liquid; a ladle.
(n.) A small grebe; the dabchick.
(n.) The buffel duck.
(n.) An under-garment worn on the lower limbs.
(n.) A slut; a vagabond wench. Same as Drossel.
(n.) The water ouzel (Cinolus aquaticus) of Europe.
(n.) The American dipper or ouzel (Cinclus Mexicanus).
(n.) A serpent whose bite was fabled to produce intense thirst.
(n.) A genus of harmless colubrine snakes.
() of Dream
(superl.) Abounding in dreams or given to dreaming; appropriate
to, or like, dreams; visionary.
(n.) A mineral of the scapolite group; -- so called from the
double effect of fire upon it, in fusing it, and rendering it
phosphorescent.
(a.) Straight; not crooked, oblique, or circuitous; leading by
the short or shortest way to a point or end; as, a direct line; direct
means.
(a.) Straightforward; not of crooked ways, or swerving from
truth and openness; sincere; outspoken.
(a.) Immediate; express; plain; unambiguous.
(a.) In the line of descent; not collateral; as, a descendant in
the direct line.
(a.) In the direction of the general planetary motion, or from
west to east; in the order of the signs; not retrograde; -- said of the
motion of a celestial body.
(v. t.) To arrange in a direct or straight line, as against a
mark, or towards a goal; to point; to aim; as, to direct an arrow or a
piece of ordnance.
(v. t.) To point out or show to (any one), as the direct or
right course or way; to guide, as by pointing out the way; as, he
directed me to the left-hand road.
(v. t.) To determine the direction or course of; to cause to go
on in a particular manner; to order in the way to a certain end; to
regulate; to govern; as, to direct the affairs of a nation or the
movements of an army.
(v. t.) To point out to with authority; to instruct as a
superior; to order; as, he directed them to go.
(v. t.) To put a direction or address upon; to mark with the
name and residence of the person to whom anything is sent; to
superscribe; as, to direct a letter.
(v. i.) To give direction; to point out a course; to act as
guide.
(n.) A character, thus [/], placed at the end of a staff on the
line or space of the first note of the next staff, to apprise the
performer of its situation.
(superl.) Sorrowful; distressful.
(superl.) Exciting cheerless sensations, feelings, or
associations; comfortless; dismal; gloomy.
(n.) Any instrument used to gather or take by dragging; as: (a)
A dragnet for taking up oysters, etc., from their beds. (b) A dredging
machine. (c) An iron frame, with a fine net attached, used in
collecting animals living at the bottom of the sea.
(n.) Very fine mineral matter held in suspension in water.
(v. t.) To catch or gather with a dredge; to deepen with a
dredging machine.
(n.) A mixture of oats and barley.
(v. t.) To sift or sprinkle flour, etc., on, as on roasting
meat.
(a.) Containing dregs or lees; muddy; foul; feculent.
() p. p. of Drench to drown.
(v. t.) To cause to drink; especially, to dose by force; to put
a potion down the throat of, as of a horse; hence. to purge violently
by physic.
(v. t.) To steep in moisture; to wet thoroughly; to soak; to
saturate with water or other liquid; to immerse.
(v. t.) A drink; a draught; specifically, a potion of medicine
poured or forced down the throat; also, a potion that causes purging.
(n.) A military vassal mentioned in Domesday Book.
(adv.) In a dire manner.
(a.) Showy in dress; attentive to dress.
(v. t. & i.) See Drecche.
() p. p., of Drench to drown.
(n.) A service for the dead, in the Roman Catholic Church, being
the first antiphon of Matins for the dead, of which Dirige is the first
word; a dirge.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dirk
(superl.) of Dry, a.
(a.) Full of drifts; tending to form drifts, as snow, and the
like.
(n.) See Dizzard.
(v. t.) To deprive of arms; to take away the weapons of; to
deprive of the means of attack or defense; to render defenseless.
(v. t.) To deprive of the means or the disposition to harm; to
render harmless or innocuous; as, to disarm a man's wrath.
(p. p.) of Drive
(v. i.) To slaver; to let spittle drop or flow from the mouth,
like a child, idiot, or dotard.
(v. i.) To be weak or foolish; to dote; as, a driveling hero;
driveling love.
(n.) Slaver; saliva flowing from the mouth.
(n.) Inarticulate or unmeaning utterance; foolish talk; babble.
(n.) A driveler; a fool; an idiot.
(n.) A servant; a drudge.
(p. p.) of Drive. Also adj.
(n.) One who, or that which, drives; the person or thing that
urges or compels anything else to move onward.
(n.) The person who drives beasts or a carriage; a coachman; a
charioteer, etc.; hence, also, one who controls the movements of a
locomotive.
(n.) An overseer of a gang of slaves or gang of convicts at
their work.
(n.) A part that transmits motion to another part by contact
with it, or through an intermediate relatively movable part, as a gear
which drives another, or a lever which moves another through a link,
etc. Specifically:
(n.) The driving wheel of a locomotive.
(n.) An attachment to a lathe, spindle, or face plate to turn a
carrier.
(n.) A crossbar on a grinding mill spindle to drive the upper
stone.
(n.) The after sail in a ship or bark, being a fore-and-aft sail
attached to a gaff; a spanker.
(v. t.) To expel from the bar, or the legal profession; to
deprive (an attorney, barrister, or counselor) of his status and
privileges as such.
(v.) To deprive of buds or shoots, as for training, or
economizing the vital strength of a tree.
(a.) Pertaining to, or resembling, a disk; as, discal cells.
(n.) See Drag, n., 6, and Drag sail, under Drag, n.
() In the Middle Ages, a large, fast-sailing galley, or cutter;
a large, swift war vessel.
(imp. & p. p.) of Drone
(n.) A passerine bird of the family Dicruridae. They are usually
black with a deeply forked tail. They are natives of Asia, Africa, and
Australia; -- called also drongo shrikes.
(n.) The dodo.
(n.) A quoit; a circular plate of some heavy material intended
to be pitched or hurled as a trial of strength and skill.
(n.) The exercise with the discus.
(n.) A disk. See Disk.
(v. t.) To discipline; to correct.
(v. i.) To part; to divide; to separate.
(v. i.) To go forth or away; to quit, leave, or separate, as
from a place or a person; to withdraw; -- opposed to arrive; -- often
with from before the place, person, or thing left, and for or to before
the destination.
(v. i.) To forsake; to abandon; to desist or deviate (from); not
to adhere to; -- with from; as, we can not depart from our rules; to
depart from a title or defense in legal pleading.
(v. i.) To pass away; to perish.
(v. i.) To quit this world; to die.
(v. t.) To part thoroughly; to dispart; to divide; to separate.
(v. t.) To divide in order to share; to apportion.
(v. t.) To leave; to depart from.
(n.) Division; separation, as of compound substances into their
ingredients.
(n.) A going away; departure; hence, death.
(v. i.) To hang down; to be sustained by being fastened or
attached to something above.
(v. i.) To hang in suspense; to be pending; to be undetermined
or undecided; as, a cause depending in court.
(v. i.) To rely for support; to be conditioned or contingent; to
be connected with anything, as a cause of existence, or as a necessary
condition; -- followed by on or upon, formerly by of.
(v. i.) To trust; to rest with confidence; to rely; to confide;
to be certain; -- with on or upon; as, we depend on the word or
assurance of our friends; we depend on the mail at the usual hour.
(v. i.) To serve; to attend; to act as a dependent or retainer.
(v. i.) To impend.
(p. p.) Depicted.
(p. p.) Depicted.
(v. t.) To form a colored likeness of; to represent by a
picture; to paint; to portray.
(v. t.) To represent in words; to describe vividly.
(variant) of Disarray.
(v. t. & i.) To open out; to unfold; to spread out (a body of
troops) in such a way that they shall display a wider front and less
depth; -- the reverse of ploy; as, to deploy a column of troops into
line of battle.
(n.) Alt. of Deployment
(v. t.) To lay, as a stake; to wager.
(v. t.) To lay down.
(v. t.) To assert under oath; to depose.
(v. i.) To testify under oath; to depose; to bear witness.
(v. t.) To transport; to carry away; to exile; to send into
banishment.
(v. t.) To carry or demean; to conduct; to behave; -- followed
by the reflexive pronoun.
(n.) Behavior; carriage; demeanor; deportment.
(v. t.) To lay down; to divest one's self of; to lay aside.
(v. t.) To let fall; to deposit.
(v. t.) To remove from a throne or other high station; to
dethrone; to divest or deprive of office.
(v. t.) To testify under oath; to bear testimony to; -- now
usually said of bearing testimony which is officially written down for
future use.
(v. t.) To put under oath.
(v. i.) To bear witness; to testify under oath; to make
deposition.
(adv.) Toward a distal part; on the distal side of; distally.
(a.) Remote from the point of attachment or origin; as, the
distal end of a bone or muscle
(a.) Pertaining to that which is distal; as, the distal
tuberosities of a bone.
(v. t.) To depurate; to purify.
(v. t.) To appoint as deputy or agent; to commission to act in
one's place; to delegate.
(v. t.) To appoint; to assign; to choose.
(n.) A person deputed; a deputy.
(n.) One appointed as the substitute of another, and empowered
to act for him, in his name or his behalf; a substitute in office; a
lieutenant; a representative; a delegate; a vicegerent; as, the deputy
of a prince, of a sheriff, of a township, etc.
(n.) A member of the Chamber of Deputies.
(v. t.) To cause to run off from the rails of a railroad, as a
locomotive.
(v. t.) To laugh at with contempt; to laugh to scorn; to turn to
ridicule or make sport of; to mock; to scoff at.
(v. t.) To banish or drive from a country.
(v. t. & i.) See Distill.
(v. t.) To turn the course of, as water; to divert and
distribute into subordinate channels; to diffuse; to communicate; to
transmit; -- followed by to, into, on, upon.
(v. t.) To receive, as from a source or origin; to obtain by
descent or by transmission; to draw; to deduce; -- followed by from.
(v. t.) To trace the origin, descent, or derivation of; to
recognize transmission of; as, he derives this word from the
Anglo-Saxon.
(v. t.) To obtain one substance from another by actual or
theoretical substitution; as, to derive an organic acid from its
corresponding hydrocarbon.
(v. i.) To flow; to have origin; to descend; to proceed; to be
deduced.
(a.) Pertaining to the integument or skin of animals; dermic;
as, the dermal secretions.
(a.) Pertaining to the dermis or true skin.
(a.) Relating to the derm or skin.
(a.) Pertaining to the dermis; dermal.
(n.) The deep sensitive layer of the skin beneath the scarfskin
or epidermis; -- called also true skin, derm, derma, corium, cutis, and
enderon. See Skin, and Illust. in Appendix.
(adv.) Secretly; grievously; mournfully.
(v. t.) To spy out or discover by the eye, as objects distant or
obscure; to espy; to recognize; to discern; to discover.
(v. t.) To discover; to disclose; to reveal.
(n.) Discovery or view, as of an army seen at a distance.
(n.) That which is deserved; the reward or the punishment justly
due; claim to recompense, usually in a good sense; right to reward;
merit.
(n.) A deserted or forsaken region; a barren tract incapable of
supporting population, as the vast sand plains of Asia and Africa are
destitute and vegetation.
(n.) A tract, which may be capable of sustaining a population,
but has been left unoccupied and uncultivated; a wilderness; a solitary
place.
(a.) Of or pertaining to a desert; forsaken; without life or
cultivation; unproductive; waste; barren; wild; desolate; solitary; as,
they landed on a desert island.
(v. t.) To leave (especially something which one should stay by
and support); to leave in the lurch; to abandon; to forsake; --
implying blame, except sometimes when used of localities; as, to desert
a friend, a principle, a cause, one's country.
(v. t.) To abandon (the service) without leave; to forsake in
violation of duty; to abscond from; as, to desert the army; to desert
one's colors.
(v. i.) To abandon a service without leave; to quit military
service without permission, before the expiration of one's term; to
abscond.
(v. t.) To cease to use; to discontinue the practice of.
(v. t.) To disaccustom; -- with to or from; as, disused to toil.
(n.) Cessation of use, practice, or exercise; inusitation;
desuetude; as, the limbs lose their strength by disuse.
(n.) Dominion; rule.
(n.) To draw preliminary outline or main features of; to sketch
for a pattern or model; to delineate; to trace out; to draw.
(n.) To mark out and exhibit; to designate; to indicate; to
show; to point out; to appoint.
(n.) To create or produce, as a work of art; to form a plan or
scheme of; to form in idea; to invent; to project; to lay out in the
mind; as, a man designs an essay, a poem, a statue, or a cathedral.
(n.) To intend or purpose; -- usually with for before the remote
object, but sometimes with to.
(v. i.) To form a design or designs; to plan.
(n.) A preliminary sketch; an outline or pattern of the main
features of something to be executed, as of a picture, a building, or a
decoration; a delineation; a plan.
(n.) A plan or scheme formed in the mind of something to be
done; preliminary conception; idea intended to be expressed in a
visible form or carried into action; intention; purpose; -- often used
in a bad sense for evil intention or purpose; scheme; plot.
(n.) Specifically, intention or purpose as revealed or inferred
from the adaptation of means to an end; as, the argument from design.
(n.) The realization of an inventive or decorative plan; esp., a
work of decorative art considered as a new creation; conception or plan
shown in completed work; as, this carved panel is a fine design, or of
a fine design.
(n.) The invention and conduct of the subject; the disposition
of every part, and the general order of the whole.
(v. t.) To long for; to wish for earnestly; to covet.
(v. t.) To express a wish for; to entreat; to request.
(v. t.) To require; to demand; to claim.
(v. t.) To miss; to regret.
(v. t.) The natural longing that is excited by the enjoyment or
the thought of any good, and impels to action or effort its continuance
or possession; an eager wish to obtain or enjoy.
(v. t.) An expressed wish; a request; petition.
(v. t.) Anything which is desired; an object of longing.
(v. t.) Excessive or morbid longing; lust; appetite.
(v. t.) Grief; regret.
(v. i.) To cease to proceed or act; to stop; to forbear; --
often with from.
(n.) An amphibious, insectivorous mammal found in Russia
(Myogale moschata). It is allied to the moles, but is called muskrat by
some English writers.
(n.) Alt. of Desmidian
(n.) The Greek major third, which comprehend two major tones
(the modern major third contains one major and one minor whole tone).
(pl. ) of Ditto
(n.) A master; a lord; especially, an absolute or irresponsible
ruler or sovereign.
(n.) One who rules regardless of a constitution or laws; a
tyrant.
(v. t.) To select; to borrow.
(v. t.) To part; to separate or disunite; to disengage; -- the
opposite of attach; as, to detach the coats of a bulbous root from each
other; to detach a man from a leader or from a party.
(v. t.) To separate for a special object or use; -- used
especially in military language; as, to detach a ship from a fleet, or
a company from a regiment.
(v. i.) To push asunder; to come off or separate from anything;
to disengage.
(n.) A minute portion; one of the small parts; a particular; an
item; -- used chiefly in the plural; as, the details of a scheme or
transaction.
(n.) A narrative which relates minute points; an account which
dwells on particulars.
(n.) The selection for a particular service of a person or a
body of men; hence, the person or the body of men so selected.
(n.) To relate in particulars; to particularize; to report
minutely and distinctly; to enumerate; to specify; as, he detailed all
the facts in due order.
(n.) To tell off or appoint for a particular service, as an
officer, a troop, or a squadron.
(v. t.) To keep back or from; to withhold.
(v. t.) To restrain from proceeding; to stay or stop; to delay;
as, we were detained by an accident.
(v. t.) To hold or keep in custody.
(n.) Detention.
(a.) Detected.
(v. t.) To uncover; to discover; to find out; to bring to light;
as, to detect a crime or a criminal; to detect a mistake in an account.
(v. t.) To inform against; to accuse.
(n.) That which locks or unlocks a movement; a catch, pawl, or
dog; especially, in clockwork, the catch which locks and unlocks the
wheelwork in striking.
(v. t.) To witness against; to denounce; to condemn.
(v. t.) To hate intensely; to abhor; to abominate; to loathe;
as, we detest what is contemptible or evil.
(v. t.) To turn form the original or plain meaning; to pervert;
to wrest.
(n.) A turning; a circuitous route; a deviation from a direct
course; as, the detours of the Mississippi.
(n.) A neuropterous insect of the genus Ephemera and related
genera, of many species, and inhabiting fresh water in the larval
state; the ephemeral fly; -- so called because it commonly lives but
one day in the winged or adult state. See Ephemeral fly, under
Ephemeral.
(pl. ) of Delta
(v. t.) To ret or rot by the process called dewretting.
(v. i.) To totter, as a child in walking.
(v. t.) To cheat or overreach.
(n.) An unnatural collection of serous fluid in any serous
cavity of the body, or in the subcutaneous cellular tissue.
(n.) A low, four-wheeled, open carriage, used in Russia,
consisting of a kind of long, narrow bench, on which the passengers
ride as on a saddle, with their feet reaching nearly to the ground.
Other kinds of vehicles are now so called, esp. a kind of victoria
drawn by one or two horses, and used as a public carriage in German
cities.
(superl.) Of, pertaining to, resembling, dross; full of dross;
impure; worthless.
(a.) Troubled; muddy.
(n.) Same as Drought.
(n.) One who drives cattle or sheep to market; one who makes it
his business to purchase cattle, and drive them to market.
(n.) A boat driven by the tide.
(v. i.) To sleep imperfectly or unsoundly; to slumber; to be
heavy with sleepiness; to doze.
(v. t.) To make heavy with sleepiness or imperfect sleep; to
make dull or stupid.
(n.) A slight or imperfect sleep; a doze.
(superl.) Inclined to drowse; heavy with sleepiness; lethargic;
dozy.
(superl.) Disposing to sleep; lulling; soporific.
(superl.) Dull; stupid.
(v. i.) To perform menial work; to labor in mean or unpleasant
offices with toil and fatigue.
(v. t.) To consume laboriously; -- with away.
(n.) One who drudges; one who works hard in servile employment;
a mental servant.
(n.) Courtship; gallantry; love; an object of love.
(a.) Turbid; muddy.
(a.) Drupaceous.
(n.) Alt. of Drupelet
(a.) Covered with a large number of minute crystals.
(a.) Alt. of Druxy
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Dry
(a.) Adapted or tending to exhaust moisture; as, a drying wind
or day; a drying room.
(a.) Having the quality of rapidly becoming dry.
(n.) An explosive substance consisting essentially of sawdust or
wood pulp, saturated with nitroglycerin and other similar nitro
compounds. It is inferior to dynamite, and is more liable to explosion.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dub
(n.) One who, or that which, dubs.
(n.) A globular vessel or bottle of leather, used in India to
hold ghee, oil, etc.
(imp. & p. p.) of Duck
(n.) One who, or that which, ducks; a plunger; a diver.
(n.) A cringing, servile person; a fawner.
(n.) One who leads.
(n.) A contrivance for removing superfluous ink or coloring
matter from a roller. See Doctor, 4.
(v. t.) To confuse or confound with noise.
(v. i.) To shiver or tremble; to dodder.
(n.) A peddler or hawker, especially of cheap and flashy goods
pretended to be smuggled; a duffer.
(n.) A short tobacco pipe.
(a.) Like, or characterized of, a dude.
(a.) Fit; becoming.
(n.) One who engages in a duel.
(n.) The chief lady in waiting on the queen of Spain.
(n.) An elderly lady holding a station between a governess and
companion, and appointed to have charge over the younger ladies in a
Spanish or a Portuguese family.
(n.) Any old woman who is employed to guard a younger one; a
governess.
(n.) See Duet.
(n.) A kind of coarse woolen cloth, having a thick nap or
frieze.
(n.) A peddler or hawker, especially of cheap, flashy articles,
as sham jewelry; hence, a sham or cheat.
(n.) A stupid, awkward, inefficient person.
(n.) See Duffel.
(n.) An aquatic herbivorous mammal (Halicore dugong), of the
order Sirenia, allied to the manatee, but with a bilobed tail. It
inhabits the Red Sea, Indian Ocean, East Indies, and Australia.
(n.) A canoe or boat dug out from a large log.
(n.) A place dug out.
(n.) A house made partly in a hillside or slighter elevation.
(a.) Sweet to the taste; luscious.
(a.) Sweet to the ear; melodious; harmonious.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dull
(n.) One who, or that which, dulls.
(adv.) In silence; mutely.
(a.) Alt. of Dumous
(a.) Abounding with bushes and briers.
(a.) Having a compact, bushy form.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dump
(v. t.) To make dumpy; to fold, or bend, as one part over
another.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dun
(n.) The lees or dregs of cane juice, used in the distillation
of rum.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dung
(n.) A species of sandpiper (Tringa alpina); -- called also
churr, dorbie, grass bird, and red-backed sandpiper. It is found both
in Europe and America.
(n.) One employed in soliciting the payment of debts.
(a.) Beaten; hence, blunted.
(n.) A porpoise.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Dupe
(n.) The act or practice of duping.
(n.) A double cocoon, made by two silkworms.
(a.) Double; twofold.
(n.) See 2d Dubber.
(v. t.) To play with; to put off or delay by trifles; to
wheedle.
(n.) Authority; jurisdiction; control.
(n.) Power to harm; subjection or liability to penalty.
(n.) Exposure to injury, loss, pain, or other evil; peril; risk;
insecurity.
(n.) Difficulty; sparingness.
(n.) Coyness; disdainful behavior.
(v. t.) To endanger.
(v. i.) To hang loosely, or with a swinging or jerking motion.
(v. t.) To cause to dangle; to swing, as something suspended
loosely; as, to dangle the feet.
(a.) Little and active; spruce; trim; smart; neat in dress or
appearance; lively.
(n.) One of the spots on a dappled animal.
(a.) Alt. of Dappled
(v. t.) To variegate with spots; to spot.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Dare
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Dare
(n.) A day's work; also, a fixed amount of work, whether more or
less than that of a day.
(n.) Boldness; fearlessness; adventurousness; also, a daring
act.
(a.) Bold; fearless; adventurous; as, daring spirits.
(v. i.) To grow dark; to show indistinctly.
(adv.) With imperfect light, clearness, or knowledge; obscurely;
dimly; blindly; uncertainly.
(adv.) With a dark, gloomy, cruel, or menacing look.
(imp. & p. p.) of Darn
(n.) Any grass of the genus Lolium, esp. the Lolium temulentum
(bearded darnel), the grains of which have been reputed poisonous.
Other species, as Lolium perenne (rye grass or ray grass), and its
variety L. Italicum (Italian rye grass), are highly esteemed for
pasture and for making hay.
(n.) One who mends by darning.
(n.) Alt. of Darnic
(imp. & p. p.) of Dart
(n.) One who darts, or who throw darts; that which darts.
(n.) The snakebird, a water bird of the genus Plotus; -- so
called because it darts out its long, snakelike neck at its prey. See
Snakebird.
(n.) A small fresh-water etheostomoid fish. The group includes
numerous genera and species, all of them American. See Etheostomoid.
(v. t. & i.) To pierce or shoot through; to dart repeatedly: --
frequentative of dart.
(n.) A thin layer of peculiar contractile tissue directly
beneath the skin of the scrotum.
(v. i.) To become dim-sighted; to become dazed or dazzled.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dash
(n.) That which dashes or agitates; as, the dasher of a churn.
(n.) A dashboard or splashboard.
(n.) One who makes an ostentatious parade.
(n.) An officer in the pope's court, having charge of the
Dataria.
(n.) The office or employment of a datary.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Date
(a.) Noting the case of a noun which expresses the remoter
object, and is generally indicated in English by to or for with the
objective.
(a.) In one's gift; capable of being disposed of at will and
pleasure, as an office.
(a.) Removable, as distinguished from perpetual; -- said of an
officer.
(a.) Given by a magistrate, as distinguished from being cast
upon a party by the law.
(n.) The dative case. See Dative, a., 1.
(imp. & p. p.) of Daub
(n.) One who, or that which, daubs; especially, a coarse,
unskillful painter.
(n.) A pad or ball of rags, covered over with canvas, for inking
plates; a dabber.
(n.) A low and gross flatterer.
(n.) The mud wasp; the mud dauber.
(n.) A daubing; specious coloring; false pretenses.
(n.) A variety of nephelite from Vesuvius.
(n.) A rare metallic element found in platinum ore. It is a
white malleable substance. Symbol Da. Atomic weight 154.
(v. i.) To waste time in trifling employment; to trifle; to
saunter.
(v. t.) To waste by trifling; as, to dawdle away a whole
morning.
(n.) A dawdler.
(a.) Like a daw.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dawn
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Daze
(v. t.) To overpower with light; to confuse the sight of by
brilliance of light.
(v. t.) To bewilder or surprise with brilliancy or display of
any kind.
(v. i.) To be overpoweringly or intensely bright; to excite
admiration by brilliancy.
(v. i.) To be overpowered by light; to be confused by excess of
brightness.
(n.) A light of dazzling brilliancy.
(a.) To make as dead; to impair in vigor, force, activity, or
sensation; to lessen the force or acuteness of; to blunt; as, to deaden
the natural powers or feelings; to deaden a sound.
(a.) To lessen the velocity or momentum of; to retard; as, to
deaden a ship's headway.
(a.) To make vapid or spiritless; as, to deaden wine.
(a.) To deprive of gloss or brilliancy; to obscure; as, to
deaden gilding by a coat of size.
(a.) Capable of causing death; mortal; fatal; destructive;
certain or likely to cause death; as, a deadly blow or wound.
(a.) Aiming or willing to destroy; implacable; desperately
hostile; flagitious; as, deadly enemies.
(a.) Subject to death; mortal.
(adv.) In a manner resembling, or as if produced by, death.
(adv.) In a manner to occasion death; mortally.
(adv.) In an implacable manner; destructively.
(adv.) Extremely.
(v. t.) To make deaf; to deprive of the power of hearing; to
render incapable of perceiving sounds distinctly.
(v. t.) To render impervious to sound, as a partition or floor,
by filling the space within with mortar, by lining with paper, etc.
(adv.) Without sense of sounds; obscurely.
(a.) Lonely; solitary.
(n.) One who deals; one who has to do, or has concern, with
others; esp., a trader, a trafficker, a shopkeeper, a broker, or a
merchant; as, a dealer in dry goods; a dealer in stocks; a retail
dealer.
(n.) One who distributes cards to the players.
(n.) Same as Deary.
(adv.) In a dear manner; with affection; heartily; earnestly;
as, to love one dearly.
(adv.) At a high rate or price; grievously.
(adv.) Exquisitely.
(n.) Scarcity which renders dear; want; lack; specifically, lack
of food on account of failure of crops; famine.
(v. t. & i.) To go ashore from a ship or boat; to disembark; to
put ashore.
(a.) To reduce from a higher to a lower state or grade of worth,
dignity, purity, station, etc.; to degrade; to lower; to deteriorate;
to abase; as, to debase the character by crime; to debase the mind by
frivolity; to debase style by vulgar words.
(v. t.) To engage in combat for; to strive for.
(v. t.) To contend for in words or arguments; to strive to
maintain by reasoning; to dispute; to contest; to discuss; to argue for
and against.
(v. i.) To engage in strife or combat; to fight.
(v. i.) To contend in words; to dispute; hence, to deliberate;
to consider; to discuss or examine different arguments in the mind; --
often followed by on or upon.
(v. t.) A fight or fighting; contest; strife.
(v. t.) Contention in words or arguments; discussion for the
purpose of elucidating truth or influencing action; strife in argument;
controversy; as, the debates in Parliament or in Congress.
(v. t.) Subject of discussion.
(a.) Weak.
(n.) The cavity from which the earth for parapets, etc.
(remblai), is taken.
(v. t.) To debauch.
(n.) Broken and detached fragments, taken collectively;
especially, fragments detached from a rock or mountain, and piled up at
the base.
(n.) Rubbish, especially such as results from the destruction of
anything; remains; ruins.
(p. a.) Indebted; obliged to.
(n.) One to whom a debt is due; creditor; -- correlative to
debtor.
(n.) One who owes a debt; one who is indebted; -- correlative to
creditor.
(n.) A group or division of ten; esp., a period of ten years; a
decennium; as, a decade of years or days; a decade of soldiers; the
second decade of Livy.
(n.) A liquid hydrocarbon, C10H22, of the paraffin series,
including several isomeric modifications.
(a.) Used of the side of the choir on which the dean's stall is
placed; decanal; -- correlative to cantoris; as, the decanal, or
decani, side.
(v. t.) To pour off gently, as liquor, so as not to disturb the
sediment; or to pour from one vessel into another; as, to decant wine.
(v. t.) To discard.
(n.) To withdraw.
(n.) An attempt or disposition to deceive or lead into error;
any declaration, artifice, or practice, which misleads another, or
causes him to believe what is false; a contrivance to entrap;
deception; a wily device; fraud.
(n.) Any trick, collusion, contrivance, false representation, or
underhand practice, used to defraud another. When injury is thereby
effected, an action of deceit, as it called, lies for compensation.
(n.) One of the higher hydrocarbons, C10H20, of the ethylene
series.
(a.) Suitable in words, behavior, dress, or ceremony; becoming;
fit; decorous; proper; seemly; as, decent conduct; decent language.
(a.) Free from immodesty or obscenity; modest.
(a.) Comely; shapely; well-formed.
(a.) Moderate, but competent; sufficient; hence, respectable;
fairly good; reasonably comfortable or satisfying; as, a decent
fortune; a decent person.
(v. t.) To perceive, discern, or decide.
(v. t.) To decree; to adjudge.
(v. t.) To pluck off; to crop; to gather.
(v. t.) To cut off; to separate.
(v. t.) To bring to a termination, as a question, controversy,
struggle, by giving the victory to one side or party; to render
judgment concerning; to determine; to settle.
(v. i.) To determine; to form a definite opinion; to come to a
conclusion; to give decision; as, the court decided in favor of the
defendant.
(n.) An aspect or position of two planets, when they are distant
from each other a tenth part of the zodiac, or 36¡.
(n.) A French coin, the tenth part of a franc, equal to about
two cents.
(n.) One of the higher hydrocarbons, C10H15, of the acetylene
series; -- called also decenylene.
(imp. & p. p.) of Deck
(n.) Same as Deckle.
(n.) One who, or that which, decks or adorns; a coverer; as, a
table decker.
(n.) A vessel which has a deck or decks; -- used esp. in
composition; as, a single-decker; a three-decker.
(n.) A separate thin wooden frame used to form the border of a
hand mold, or a curb of India rubber or other material which rests on,
and forms the edge of, the mold in a paper machine and determines the
width of the paper.
(v. t.) To prepare by boiling; to digest in hot or boiling
water; to extract the strength or flavor of by boiling; to make an
infusion of.
(v. t.) To prepare by the heat of the stomach for assimilation;
to digest; to concoct.
(v. t.) To warm, strengthen, or invigorate, as if by boiling.
(v. t.) To decorate; to beautify.
(n.) An order from one having authority, deciding what is to be
done by a subordinate; also, a determination by one having power,
deciding what is to be done or to take place; edict, law; authoritative
ru// decision.
(n.) A decision, order, or sentence, given in a cause by a court
of equity or admiralty.
(n.) A determination or judgment of an umpire on a case
submitted to him.
(n.) An edict or law made by a council for regulating any
business within their jurisdiction; as, the decrees of ecclesiastical
councils.
(v. t.) To determine judicially by authority, or by decree; to
constitute by edict; to appoint by decree or law; to determine; to
order; to ordain; as, a court decrees a restoration of property.
(v. t.) To ordain by fate.
(v. i.) To make decrees; -- used absolutely.
(v. i.) To decrease.
(v. t.) To cut short; to curtail.
(n.) A set or squad of ten men under a decurion.
(n.) A division, at one end of a tennis court, for spectators.
(v. t.) To lead forth.
(v. t.) To take away; to deduct; to subtract; as, to deduce a
part from the whole.
(v. t.) To derive or draw; to derive by logical process; to
obtain or arrive at as the result of reasoning; to gather, as a truth
or opinion, from what precedes or from premises; to infer; -- with from
or out of.
(v. t.) To lead forth or out.
(v. t.) To take away, separate, or remove, in numbering,
estimating, or calculating; to subtract; -- often with from or out of.
(v. t.) To reduce; to diminish.
(n.) Delight; pleasure.
(imp. & p. p.) of Deem
(v. t.) To make deep or deeper; to increase the depth of; to
sink lower; as, to deepen a well or a channel.
(v. t.) To make darker or more intense; to darken; as, the event
deepened the prevailing gloom.
(v. t.) To make more poignant or affecting; to increase in
degree; as, to deepen grief or sorrow.
(v. t.) To make more grave or low in tone; as, to deepen the
tones of an organ.
(v. i.) To become deeper; as, the water deepens at every cast of
the lead; the plot deepens.
(adv.) At or to a great depth; far below the surface; as, to
sink deeply.
(adv.) Profoundly; thoroughly; not superficially; in a high
degree; intensely; as, deeply skilled in ethics.
(adv.) Very; with a tendency to darkness of color.
(adv.) Gravely; with low or deep tone; as, a deeply toned
instrument.
(adv.) With profound skill; with art or intricacy; as, a deeply
laid plot or intrigue.
(n.) An audience hall; the court of a native prince; a state
levee; a formal reception of native princes, given by the governor
general of India.
(n.) Hardship; constraint; pressure; imprisonment; restraint of
liberty.
(n.) The state of compulsion or necessity in which a person is
influenced, whether by the unlawful restrain of his liberty or by
actual or threatened physical violence, to incur a civil liability or
to commit an offense.
(v. t.) To subject to duress.
(n.) Alt. of Durion
(n.) The fruit of the durio. It is oval or globular, and eight
or ten inches long. It has a hard prickly rind, containing a soft,
cream-colored pulp, of a most delicious flavor and a very offensive
odor. The seeds are roasted and eaten like chestnuts.
(prep.) In the time of; as long as the action or existence of;
as, during life; during the space of a year.
(n.) Hardness; firmness.
(n.) Harshness; cruelty.
(a.) Hard.
(v. t.) To make dusk or obscure.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dust
(a.) Subjected to a duty.
(pl. ) of Duty
(pl. ) of Dwarf
(a.) Much undersized.
(a.) Pertaining to the number two; of two parts or elements.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Dye
(n.) The process or art of fixing coloring matters permanently
and uniformly in the fibers of wool, cotton, etc.
(n.) A ruler; a governor; a prince.
(n.) A dynasty; a government.
(n.) Difficult or painful discharge of urine.
(n.) Alt. of Dzeron
(n.) The Chinese yellow antelope (Procapra gutturosa), a
remarkably swift-footed animal, inhabiting the deserts of Central Asia,
Thibet, and China.
(v. t.) To throw down.
(v. t.) To turn away.
(a.) Devilish; excessive; extreme.
() Alt. of Deut-
(v. t.) To devastate.
(n.) A deity; a divine being; a good spirit; an idol.
(v. t.) To divest; to undress.
(v. t.) To take away, as an authority, title, etc., to deprive;
to alienate, as an estate.
(v. i.) To be taken away, lost, or alienated, as a title or an
estate.
(n.) That which is devised, or formed by design; a contrivance;
an invention; a project; a scheme; often, a scheme to deceive; a
stratagem; an artifice.
(n.) Power of devising; invention; contrivance.
(n.) An emblematic design, generally consisting of one or more
figures with a motto, used apart from heraldic bearings to denote the
historical situation, the ambition, or the desire of the person
adopting it. See Cognizance.
(n.) Improperly, an heraldic bearing.
(n.) Anything fancifully conceived.
(n.) A spectacle or show.
(n.) Opinion; decision.
(v. t.) To form in the mind by new combinations of ideas, new
applications of principles, or new arrangement of parts; to formulate
by thought; to contrive; to excogitate; to invent; to plan; to scheme;
as, to devise an engine, a new mode of writing, a plan of defense, or
an argument.
(v. t.) To plan or scheme for; to purpose to obtain.
(v. t.) To say; to relate; to describe.
(v. t.) To imagine; to guess.
(v. t.) To give by will; -- used of real estate; formerly, also,
of chattels.
(v. i.) To form a scheme; to lay a plan; to contrive; to
consider.
(n.) The act of giving or disposing of real estate by will; --
sometimes improperly applied to a bequest of personal estate.
(n.) A will or testament, conveying real estate; the clause of a
will making a gift of real property.
(n.) Property devised, or given by will.
(n.) Device. See Device.
(v. t.) To empty out; to remove.
(v. t.) Void; empty; vacant.
(v. t.) Destitute; not in possession; -- with of; as, devoid of
sense; devoid of pity or of pride.
(n.) Duty; service owed; hence, due act of civility or respect;
-- now usually in the plural; as, they paid their devoirs to the
ladies.
(v. t.) To appropriate by vow; to set apart or dedicate by a
solemn act; to consecrate; also, to consign over; to doom; to evil; to
devote one to destruction; the city was devoted to the flames.
(v. t.) To execrate; to curse.
(v. t.) To give up wholly; to addict; to direct the attention of
wholly or compound; to attach; -- often with a reflexive pronoun; as,
to devote one's self to science, to one's friends, to piety, etc.
(a.) Devoted; addicted; devout.
(n.) A devotee.
(n.) A devotee.
(v. t.) To eat up with greediness; to consume ravenously; to
feast upon like a wild beast or a glutton; to prey upon.
(v. t.) To seize upon and destroy or appropriate greedily,
selfishly, or wantonly; to consume; to swallow up; to use up; to waste;
to annihilate.
(v. t.) To enjoy with avidity; to appropriate or take in eagerly
by the senses.
(v. t.) Devoted to religion or to religious feelings and duties;
absorbed in religious exercises; given to devotion; pious; reverent;
religious.
(v. t.) Expressing devotion or piety; as, eyes devout; sighs
devout; a devout posture.
(v. t.) Warmly devoted; hearty; sincere; earnest; as, devout
wishes for one's welfare.
(n.) A devotee.
(n.) A devotional composition, or part of a composition;
devotion.
(v. t.) To devote.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Dew
(n.) The pendulous skin under the neck of an ox, which laps or
licks the dew in grazing.
(n.) The flesh upon the human throat, especially when with age.
(v. t.) To rot, as flax or hemp, by exposure to rain, dew, and
sun. See Dewretting.
(n.) Harm; detriment, either to character or property.
(n.) Indian millet. See Durra.
(a.) Divalent; -- said of a base or radical as capable of
saturating two acid monad radicals or a dibasic acid. Cf. Dibasic, a.,
and Biacid.
(a.) Devastated; laid waste.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Dive
(n.) A saying in which two members of the sentence are
contrasted; an antithetical proverb.
(a.) Different in kind or species; diverse.
(a.) Several; sundry; various; more than one, but not a great
number; as, divers philosophers. Also used substantively or
pronominally.
(n.) Originally, an ornamental head band or fillet, worn by
Eastern monarchs as a badge of royalty; hence (later), also, a crown,
in general.
(n.) Regal power; sovereignty; empire; -- considered as
symbolized by the crown.
(n.) An arch rising from the rim of a crown (rarely also of a
coronet), and uniting with others over its center.
(v. t.) To adorn with a diadem; to crown.
(v. t.) To turn aside; to turn off from any course or intended
application; to deflect; as, to divert a river from its channel; to
divert commerce from its usual course.
(v. t.) To turn away from any occupation, business, or study; to
cause to have lively and agreeable sensations; to amuse; to entertain;
as, children are diverted with sports; men are diverted with works of
wit and humor.
(v. i.) To turn aside; to digress.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dial
(v. t.) To unclothe; to strip, as of clothes, arms, or equipage;
-- opposed to invest.
(v. t.) Fig.: To strip; to deprive; to dispossess; as, to divest
one of his rights or privileges; to divest one's self of prejudices,
passions, etc.
(v. t.) See Devest.
(v. t.) To part asunder (a whole); to sever into two or more
parts or pieces; to sunder; to separate into parts.
(v. t.) To cause to be separate; to keep apart by a partition,
or by an imaginary line or limit; as, a wall divides two houses; a
stream divides the towns.
(v. t.) To make partition of among a number; to apportion, as
profits of stock among proprietors; to give in shares; to distribute;
to mete out; to share.
(v. t.) To disunite in opinion or interest; to make discordant
or hostile; to set at variance.
(v. t.) To separate into two parts, in order to ascertain the
votes for and against a measure; as, to divide a legislative house upon
a question.
(v. t.) To subject to arithmetical division.
(v. t.) To separate into species; -- said of a genus or generic
term.
(v. t.) To mark divisions on; to graduate; as, to divide a
sextant.
(v. t.) To play or sing in a florid style, or with variations.
(v. i.) To be separated; to part; to open; to go asunder.
(v. i.) To cause separation; to disunite.
(v. i.) To break friendship; to fall out.
(v. i.) To have a share; to partake.
(v. i.) To vote, as in the British Parliament, by the members
separating themselves into two parties (as on opposite sides of the
hall or in opposite lobbies), that is, the ayes dividing from the noes.
(n.) A dividing ridge of land between the tributaries of two
streams; a watershed.
(a.) That dives or is used or diving.
(n.) Any textile fabric (esp. linen or cotton toweling) woven in
diaper pattern. See 2.
(n.) Surface decoration of any sort which consists of the
constant repetition of one or more simple figures or units of design
evenly spaced.
(n.) A towel or napkin for wiping the hands, etc.
(n.) An infant's breechcloth.
(v. t.) To ornament with figures, etc., arranged in the pattern
called diaper, as cloth in weaving.
(v. t.) To put a diaper on (a child).
(v. i.) To draw flowers or figures, as upon cloth.
(pl. ) of Djinnee
(a.) Capable of being done.
(n.) General manager; factotum.
(n.) See Dabchick.
(n.) A float to a fishing line.
(n.) The European dace.
(a.) Serving to instruct; teaching.
(n.) One of the Diatomaceae, a family of minute unicellular
Algae having a siliceous covering of great delicacy, each individual
multiplying by spontaneous division. By some authors diatoms are called
Bacillariae, but this word is not in general use.
(n.) A particle or atom endowed with the vital principle.
() A combining form (also used adjectively), meaning pertaining
to, or derived from, a series of compounds containing a radical of two
nitrogen atoms, united usually to an aromatic radical; as,
diazo-benzene, C6H5.N2.OH.
(n.) Teachableness.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dock
(n.) A small piece of paper or parchment, containing the heads
of a writing; a summary or digest.
(n.) A bill tied to goods, containing some direction, as the
name of the owner, or the place to which they are to be sent; a label.
(n.) An abridged entry of a judgment or proceeding in an action,
or register or such entries; a book of original, kept by clerks of
courts, containing a formal list of the names of parties, and minutes
of the proceedings, in each case in court.
(n.) A list or calendar of causes ready for hearing or trial,
prepared for the use of courts by the clerks.
(n.) A list or calendar of business matters to be acted on in
any assembly.
(v. t.) To make a brief abstract of (a writing) and indorse it
on the back of the paper, or to indorse the title or contents on the
back of; to summarize; as, to docket letters and papers.
(v. t.) To make a brief abstract of and inscribe in a book; as,
judgments regularly docketed.
(v. t.) To enter or inscribe in a docket, or list of causes for
trial.
(v. t.) To mark with a ticket; as, to docket goods.
(a.) Without horns; as, dodded cattle; without beards; as,
dodded corn.
(n.) A plant of the genus Cuscuta. It is a leafless parasitical
vine with yellowish threadlike stems. It attaches itself to some other
plant, as to flax, goldenrod, etc., and decaying at the root, is
nourished by the plant that supports it.
(v. t. & i.) To shake, tremble, or totter.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dodge
(n.) One who dodges or evades; one who plays fast and loose, or
uses tricky devices.
(n.) A small handbill.
(n.) See Corndodger.
(n.) A doit; a small coin.
(n.) A snail; also, a snail shell; a hodmandod.
(n.) Any shellfish which casts its shell, as a lobster.
(pl. ) of Dodo
(imp. & p. p.) of Doff
(n.) A revolving cylinder, or a vibrating bar with teeth, in a
carding machine, which doffs, or strips off, the cotton from the cards.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dog
(n.) The office or dignity of a doge.
(n.) A dibble.
(v. i.) A pointed implement used to make holes in the ground in
which no set out plants or to plant seeds.
(v. i.) To dib or dip frequently, as in angling.
(v. t.) To plant with a dibble; to make holes in (soil) with a
dibble, for planting.
(v. t.) To make holes or indentations in, as if with a dibble.
(n.) A functionary in ancient Athens answering nearly to the
modern juryman.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Dice
(n.) An ornamenting in squares or cubes.
(n.) Gambling with dice.
(n.) The number or quantity of ten, particularly ten hides or
skins; a dakir; as, a dicker of gloves.
(n.) A chaffering, barter, or exchange, of small wares; as, to
make a dicker.
(v. i. & t.) To negotiate a dicker; to barter.
(a.) Sullen; morose.
(a.) Sullenly obstinate; obstinately determined or persistent;
as, dogged resolution; dogged work.
(n.) Docket. See Docket.
(n.) A cramp.
(pl. ) of Doing
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Dole
(a.) Sorrowful.
(n.) An authoritative statement; a dogmatic saying; an apothegm.
(n.) A judicial opinion expressed by judges on points that do
not necessarily arise in the case, and are not involved in it.
(n.) The report of a judgment made by one of the judges who has
given it.
(n.) An arbitrament or award.
(a.) Like or pertaining to the genus Didus, or the dodo.
(pl. ) of Diesis
(n.) A small interval, less than any in actual practice, but
used in the mathematical calculation of intervals.
(n.) The mark /; -- called also double dagger.
(imp. & p. p.) of Diet
(a.) Dietetic.
(v. i.) To be or stand apart; to disagree; to be unlike; to be
distinguished; -- with from.
(v. i.) To be of unlike or opposite opinion; to disagree in
sentiment; -- often with from or with.
(v. i.) To have a difference, cause of variance, or quarrel; to
dispute; to contend.
(v. t.) To cause to be different or unlike; to set at variance.
(n.) A genus of large univalve mollusks, including the partridge
shell and tun shells.
(n.) A long robe or outer garment, with long sleeves, worn by
the Turks.
(n.) A cloak of a peculiar fashion worn by women.
(n.) A cromlech. See Cromlech.
(p. p.) of Delve.
(n.) Damage; hurt.
(n.) Subjugation.
(v. t.) To divide, as the heavens, into twelve houses. See
House, in astrological sense.
(v. t.) To tame; to domesticate.
() of Dig
(n.) Act, or state, of being twice married; deuterogamy.
(n.) A name given to a pastor of the Reformed Church. The word
is also applied locally in the United States, in colloquial speech, to
any clergyman.
(n.) A West Indian fish (Epinula magistralis), of the family
Trichiuridae. It is a long-bodied, voracious fish.
(n.) A grayish variety of trachyte; -- so called from the
Puy-de-Dome in Auvergne, France, where it is found.
(imp. & p. p.) of Don
(n.) A thing given to a sacred use.
(v. t.) To give; to bestow; to present; as, to donate fifty
thousand dollars to a college.
(n.) The chief tower, also called the keep; a massive tower in
ancient castles, forming the strongest part of the fortifications. See
Illust. of Castle.
(n.) An ass; or (less frequently) a mule.
(n.) A stupid or obstinate fellow; an ass.
(n.) A young squire, or knight's attendant; a page.
(n.) A trifler; a simple fellow.
(imp. & p. p.) of Doom
(n.) A digraph.
(n.) Alt. of Dormer window
(adv.) Toward the dorsum or back; on the dorsal side; dorsally.
(a.) Pertaining to, or situated near, the back, or dorsum, of an
animal or of one of its parts; notal; tergal; neural; as, the dorsal
fin of a fish; the dorsal artery of the tongue; -- opposed to ventral.
(a.) Pertaining to the surface naturally inferior, as of a leaf.
(a.) Pertaining to the surface naturally superior, as of a
creeping hepatic moss.
(a.) A hanging, usually of rich stuff, at the back of a throne,
or of an altar, or in any similar position.
(n.) A pannier.
(n.) Same as Dorsal, n.
(n.) See Dosser.
(n.) The ridge of a hill.
(n.) The back or dorsal region of an animal; the upper side of
an appendage or part; as, the dorsum of the tongue.
(pl. ) of Dory
(pl. ) of Dory
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Dose
(n.) Same as Dorsal, n.
(n.) A pannier, or basket.
(n.) A hanging tapestry; a dorsal.
(n.) A small ovoid or cylindrical roil or pledget of lint, for
keeping a sore, wound, etc., open; a tent.
(n.) A roll of cloth for wiping off the face of a copperplate,
leaving the ink in the engraved lines.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dot
(v. i.) Feebleness or imbecility of understanding or mind,
particularly in old age; the childishness of old age; senility; as, a
venerable man, now in his dotage.
(v. i.) Foolish utterance; drivel.
(v. i.) Excessive fondness; weak and foolish affection.
(n.) A dotard.
(v. i.) One whose mind is impaired by age; one in second
childhood.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Dote
(n.) A diiambus.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Dike
(a.) That dotes; silly; excessively fond.
(a.) Foolish; weak; imbecile.
(a.) Marked with, or made of, dots or small spots; diversified
with small, detached objects.
(n.) A customhouse.
(a.) Twofold; multiplied by two; increased by its equivalent;
made twice as large or as much, etc.
(a.) Being in pairs; presenting two of a kind, or two in a set
together; coupled.
(a.) Divided into two; acting two parts, one openly and the
other secretly; equivocal; deceitful; insincere.
(a.) Having the petals in a flower considerably increased beyond
the natural number, usually as the result of cultivation and the
expense of the stamens, or stamens and pistils. The white water lily
and some other plants have their blossoms naturally double.
(adv.) Twice; doubly.
(a.) To increase by adding an equal number, quantity, length,
value, or the like; multiply by two; to double a sum of money; to
double a number, or length.
(a.) To make of two thicknesses or folds by turning or bending
together in the middle; to fold one part upon another part of; as, to
double the leaf of a book, and the like; to clinch, as the fist; --
often followed by up; as, to double up a sheet of paper or cloth.
(a.) To be the double of; to exceed by twofold; to contain or be
worth twice as much as.
(a.) To pass around or by; to march or sail round, so as to
reverse the direction of motion.
(a.) To unite, as ranks or files, so as to form one from each
two.
(v. i.) To be increased to twice the sum, number, quantity,
length, or value; to increase or grow to twice as much.
(v. i.) To return upon one's track; to turn and go back over the
same ground, or in an opposite direction.
(v. i.) To play tricks; to use sleights; to play false.
(v. t.) To expand; to distend; to enlarge or extend in all
directions; to swell; -- opposed to contract; as, the air dilates the
lungs; air is dilated by increase of heat.
(v. t.) To enlarge upon; to relate at large; to tell copiously
or diffusely.
(v. i.) To grow wide; to expand; to swell or extend in all
directions.
(v. i.) To speak largely and copiously; to dwell in narration;
to enlarge; -- with on or upon.
(a.) Extensive; expanded.
(v. i.) To set up a word or words a second time by mistake; to
make a doublet.
(n.) Twice as much; twice the number, sum, quantity, length,
value, and the like.
(n.) Among compositors, a doublet (see Doublet, 2.); among
pressmen, a sheet that is twice pulled, and blurred.
(n.) That which is doubled over or together; a doubling; a
plait; a fold.
(n.) A turn or circuit in running to escape pursues; hence, a
trick; a shift; an artifice.
(n.) Something precisely equal or counterpart to another; a
counterpart. Hence, a wraith.
(n.) A player or singer who prepares to take the part of another
player in his absence; a substitute.
(n.) Double beer; strong beer.
(n.) A feast in which the antiphon is doubled, hat is, said
twice, before and after the Psalms, instead of only half being said, as
in simple feasts.
(n.) A game between two pairs of players; as, a first prize for
doubles.
(n.) An old term for a variation, as in Bach's Suites.
(n.) An ambiguous speech; a figure in which a word is used an
equivocal sense.
(v. t.) To make thinner or more liquid by admixture with
something; to thin and dissolve by mixing.
(v. t.) To diminish the strength, flavor, color, etc., of, by
mixing; to reduce, especially by the addition of water; to temper; to
attenuate; to weaken.
(v. i.) To become attenuated, thin, or weak; as, it dilutes
easily.
(a.) Diluted; thin; weak.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dim
(n.) A bower; a dingle.
(adv.) In twice the quantity; to twice the degree; as, doubly
wise or good; to be doubly sensible of an obligation.
(adv.) Deceitfully.
(n.) Alt. of Dowset
(n.) A custard.
(n.) A dowcet, or deep's testicle.
(n.) A jet or current of water or vapor directed upon some part
of the body to benefit it medicinally; a douche bath.
(a.) Eloquent.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dish
(n.) An invocation of, or address to, the Supreme Being.
(v. t.) To destroy or mar the face or external appearance of; to
disfigure; to injure, spoil, or mar, by effacing or obliterating
important features or portions of; as, to deface a monument; to deface
an edifice; to deface writing; to deface a note, deed, or bond; to
deface a record.
(v. t.) To destroy; to make null.
(v. t.) To cause to fail.
(v. t.) To lop off; to abate.
(v. t.) To harm or destroy the good fame or reputation of; to
disgrace; especially, to speak evil of maliciously; to dishonor by
slanderous reports; to calumniate; to asperse.
(v. t.) To render infamous; to bring into disrepute.
(v. t.) To charge; to accuse.
(n.) Dishonor.
(v. t.) To undo; to disfigure; to destroy.
(v. t.) To render null and void, as a title; to frustrate, as
hope; to deprive, as of an estate.
(v. t.) To overcome or vanquish, as an army; to check, disperse,
or ruin by victory; to overthrow.
(v. t.) To resist with success; as, to defeat an assault.
(v.) An undoing or annulling; destruction.
(v.) Frustration by rendering null and void, or by prevention of
success; as, the defeat of a plan or design.
(v.) An overthrow, as of an army in battle; loss of a battle;
repulse suffered; discomfiture; -- opposed to victory.
(n.) Want or absence of something necessary for completeness or
perfection; deficiency; -- opposed to superfluity.
(n.) Failing; fault; imperfection, whether physical or moral;
blemish; as, a defect in the ear or eye; a defect in timber or iron; a
defect of memory or judgment.
(v. i.) To fail; to become deficient.
(v. t.) To injure; to damage.
(v. t.) To ward or fend off; to drive back or away; to repel.
(v. t.) To prohibit; to forbid.
(v. t.) To repel danger or harm from; to protect; to secure
against; attack; to maintain against force or argument; to uphold; to
guard; as, to defend a town; to defend a cause; to defend character; to
defend the absent; -- sometimes followed by from or against; as, to
defend one's self from, or against, one's enemies.
(v. t.) To deny the right of the plaintiff in regard to (the
suit, or the wrong charged); to oppose or resist, as a claim at law; to
contest, as a suit.
(n.) One who dares and defies; a contemner; as, a defier of the
laws.
(v. i.) To march off in a line, file by file; to file off.
(v. t.) Same as Defilade.
(n.) Any narrow passage or gorge in which troops can march only
in a file, or with a narrow front; a long, narrow pass between hills,
rocks, etc.
(n.) The act of defilading a fortress, or of raising the
exterior works in order to protect the interior. See Defilade.
(v. t.) To make foul or impure; to make filthy; to dirty; to
befoul; to pollute.
(v. t.) To soil or sully; to tarnish, as reputation; to taint.
(v. t.) To injure in purity of character; to corrupt.
(v. t.) To corrupt the chastity of; to debauch; to violate.
(v. t.) To make ceremonially unclean; to pollute.
(v. t.) To fix the bounds of; to bring to a termination; to end.
(v. t.) To determine or clearly exhibit the boundaries of; to
mark the limits of; as, to define the extent of a kingdom or country.
(v. t.) To determine with precision; to mark out with
distinctness; to ascertain or exhibit clearly; as, the defining power
of an optical instrument.
(v. t.) To determine the precise signification of; to fix the
meaning of; to describe accurately; to explain; to expound or
interpret; as, to define a word, a phrase, or a scientific term.
(v. i.) To determine; to decide.
(v. i.) To flow down.
(n.) Downward flow.
(v. t.) To spoil the form of; to mar in form; to misshape; to
disfigure.
(v. t.) To render displeasing; to deprive of comeliness, grace,
or perfection; to dishonor.
(a.) Deformed; misshapen; shapeless; horrid.
(v. t.) To tread down.
(v. t.) To make foul; to defile.
(v. t.) To pay or discharge; to serve in payment of; to provide
for, as a charge, debt, expenses, costs, etc.
(v. t.) To avert or appease, as by paying off; to satisfy; as,
to defray wrath.
(adv.) Aptly; fitly; dexterously; neatly.
(v. t.) To disorder; to make shapeless.
(imp. & p. p.) of Defy
(n.) A step, stair, or staircase.
(n.) One of a series of progressive steps upward or downward, in
quality, rank, acquirement, and the like; a stage in progression;
grade; gradation; as, degrees of vice and virtue; to advance by slow
degrees; degree of comparison.
(n.) The point or step of progression to which a person has
arrived; rank or station in life; position.
(n.) Measure of advancement; quality; extent; as, tastes differ
in kind as well as in degree.
(n.) Grade or rank to which scholars are admitted by a college
or university, in recognition of their attainments; as, the degree of
bachelor of arts, master, doctor, etc.
(n.) A certain distance or remove in the line of descent,
determining the proximity of blood; one remove in the chain of
relationship; as, a relation in the third or fourth degree.
(n.) Three figures taken together in numeration; thus, 140 is
one degree, 222,140 two degrees.
(n.) State as indicated by sum of exponents; more particularly,
the degree of a term is indicated by the sum of the exponents of its
literal factors; thus, a2b3c is a term of the sixth degree. The degree
of a power, or radical, is denoted by its index, that of an equation by
the greatest sum of the exponents of the unknown quantities in any
term; thus, ax4 + bx2 = c, and mx2y2 + nyx = p, are both equations of
the fourth degree.
(n.) A 360th part of the circumference of a circle, which part
is taken as the principal unit of measure for arcs and angles. The
degree is divided into 60 minutes and the minute into 60 seconds.
(n.) A division, space, or interval, marked on a mathematical or
other instrument, as on a thermometer.
(n.) A line or space of the staff.
(v. t.) To taste.
(v. t.) To deprive of horns; to prevent the growth of the horns
of (cattle) by burning their ends soon after they start. See Dishorn.
(prep.) Out of; without; foreign to; out of the agreement,
record, will, or other instrument.
(n.) All sorts of outworks in general, at a distance from the
main works; any advanced works for protection or cover.
(v. t.) To urge to abstain or refrain; to dissuade.
(v. t.) To remove the husk from.
(a.) Alt. of Deifical
(v. t.) To cast down.
(v. t.) To cast down the spirits of; to dispirit; to discourage;
to dishearten.
(a.) Dejected.
(v.) To carry; to convey.
(v.) To carry abroad; to spread; to make public.
(v.) To carry or bring against, as a charge; to inform against;
to accuse; to denounce.
(v.) To carry on; to conduct.
(v. i.) To dilate.
(pl. ) of Delay
(v. t.) To blot out; to erase; to expunge; to dele; to omit.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dab
(n.) That with which one dabs; hence, a pad or other device used
by printers, engravers, etc., as for dabbing type or engraved plates
with ink.
(v. t.) To wet by little dips or strokes; to spatter; to
sprinkle; to moisten; to wet.
(v. i.) To play in water, as with the hands; to paddle or splash
in mud or water.
(v. i.) To work in slight or superficial manner; to do in a
small way; to tamper; to meddle.
(n.) A large and highly venomous Asiatic viper (Daboia
xanthica).
(n.) One of a class of robbers, in India, who act in gangs.
(n.) An offense or transgression against law; (Scots Law) an
offense of a lesser degree; a misdemeanor.
(pl. ) of Dado
(a.) Alt. of Daemonic
(n.) A short weapon used for stabbing. This is the general term:
cf. Poniard, Stiletto, Bowie knife, Dirk, Misericorde, Anlace.
(n.) A mark of reference in the form of a dagger [/]. It is the
second in order when more than one reference occurs on a page; --
called also obelisk.
(v. t.) To pierce with a dagger; to stab.
(n.) A timber placed diagonally in a ship's frame.
(v. t.) To trail, so as to wet or befoul; to make wet and limp;
to moisten.
(v. i.) To run, go, or trail one's self through water, mud, or
slush; to draggle.
(v. t.) To delineate.
(v. t.) To mark out.
(n.) A dome-shaped structure built over relics of Buddha or some
Buddhist saint.
(n.) A variety of starch extracted from the dahlia; -- called
also inulin. See Inulin.
(n.) The title of the feudal nobles of Japan.
(n.) Value; estimation; the gratification or pleasure taken in
anything.
(n.) That which is delicious or delicate; a delicacy.
(n.) A term of fondness.
(superl.) Rare; valuable; costly.
(superl.) Delicious to the palate; toothsome.
(superl.) Nice; delicate; elegant, in form, manner, or breeding;
well-formed; neat; tender.
(superl.) Requiring dainties. Hence: Overnice; hard to please;
fastidious; squeamish; scrupulous; ceremonious.
(n.) Alt. of Dakoity
(n.) A tuft or clump.
(n.) A special breed of the dromedary used for rapid traveling;
the swift camel; -- called also herire, and maharik.
(a.) Deltaic.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dam
(n.) Injury or harm to person, property, or reputation; an
inflicted loss of value; detriment; hurt; mischief.
(n.) The estimated reparation in money for detriment or injury
sustained; a compensation, recompense, or satisfaction to one party,
for a wrong or injury actually done to him by another.
(n.) To ocassion damage to the soudness, goodness, or value of;
to hurt; to injure; to impair.
(v. i.) To receive damage or harm; to be injured or impaired in
soudness or value; as. some colors in /oth damage in sunlight.
(n.) Damask silk; silk woven with an elaborate pattern of
flowers and the like.
(n.) Linen so woven that a pattern in produced by the different
directions of the thread, without contrast of color.
(v. t.) To lead from truth or into error; to mislead the mind or
judgment of; to beguile; to impose on; to dupe; to make a fool of.
(v. t.) To frustrate or disappoint.
(imp. & p. p.) of Delve
(n.) One who digs, as with a spade.
(n.) Rule; management.
(n.) See Demesne.
(v. t.) To ask or call for with authority; to claim or seek
from, as by authority or right; to claim, as something due; to call for
urgently or peremptorily; as, to demand a debt; to demand obedience.
(v. t.) To inquire authoritatively or earnestly; to ask, esp. in
a peremptory manner; to question.
(v. t.) To require as necessary or useful; to be in urgent need
of; hence, to call for; as, the case demands care.
(v. t.) To call into court; to summon.
(v. i.) To make a demand; to inquire.
(v. t.) The act of demanding; an asking with authority; a
peremptory urging of a claim; a claiming or challenging as due;
requisition; as, the demand of a creditor; a note payable on demand.
(v. t.) Earnest inquiry; question; query.
(v. t.) A diligent seeking or search; manifested want; desire to
possess; request; as, a demand for certain goods; a person's company is
in great demand.
(v. t.) That which one demands or has a right to demand; thing
claimed as due; claim; as, demands on an estate.
(v. t.) The asking or seeking for what is due or claimed as due.
(v. t.) The right or title in virtue of which anything may be
claimed; as, to hold a demand against a person.
(v. t.) A thing or amount claimed to be due.
(v. t.) To manage; to conduct; to treat.
(v. t.) To conduct; to behave; to comport; -- followed by the
reflexive pronoun.
(v. t.) To debase; to lower; to degrade; -- followed by the
reflexive pronoun.
(v. t.) Management; treatment.
(v. t.) Behavior; conduct; bearing; demeanor.
(n.) Demesne.
(n.) Resources; means.
(v. t.) To deprive of reason; to make mad.
(a.) Demented; dementate.
(n.) A heavy woolen or worsted stuff with a pattern woven in the
same way as the linen damask; -- made for furniture covering and
hangings.
(n.) Damask or Damascus steel; also, the peculiar markings or
"water" of such steel.
(n.) A deep pink or rose color.
(a.) Pertaining to, or originating at, the city of Damascus;
resembling the products or manufactures of Damascus.
(a.) Having the color of the damask rose.
(v. t.) To decorate in a way peculiar to Damascus or attributed
to Damascus; particularly: (a) with flowers and rich designs, as silk;
(b) with inlaid lines of gold, etc., or with a peculiar marking or
"water," as metal. See Damaskeen.
(n.) Alt. of Dammara
(imp. & p. p.) of Damn
(a.) Sentenced to punishment in a future state; condemned;
consigned to perdition.
(a.) Hateful; detestable; abominable.
(imp. & p. p.) of Damp
(v. t.) To make damp or moist; to make slightly wet.
(v. t.) To depress; to check; to make dull; to lessen.
(v. i.) To become damp; to deaden.
(n.) That which damps or checks; as: (a) A valve or movable
plate in the flue or other part of a stove, furnace, etc., used to
check or regulate the draught of air. (b) A contrivance, as in a
pianoforte, to deaden vibrations; or, as in other pieces of mechanism,
to check some action at a particular time.
(v. t.) To damn.
(n.) A young person, either male or female, of noble or gentle
extraction; as, Damsel Pepin; Damsel Richard, Prince of Wales.
(n.) A young unmarried woman; a girl; a maiden.
(n.) An attachment to a millstone spindle for shaking the
hopper.
(n.) A small oval plum of a blue color, the fruit of a variety
of the Prunus domestica; -- called also damask plum.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dance
(n.) One who dances or who practices dancing.
(n.) Transmission by formal act or conveyance to an heir or
successor; transference; especially, the transfer or transmission of
the crown or royal authority to a successor.
(n.) The decease of a royal or princely person; hence, also, the
death of any illustrious person.
(n.) The conveyance or transfer of an estate, either in fee for
life or for years, most commonly the latter.
(v. t.) To transfer or transmit by succession or inheritance; to
grant or bestow by will; to bequeath.
(v. t.) To convey; to give.
(v. t.) To convey, as an estate, by lease; to lease.
(a.) Cast down; humble; submissive.
(v. t.) To damn; to condemn.
(a.) Of sober or serious mien; composed and decorous in bearing;
of modest look; staid; grave.
(a.) Affectedly modest, decorous, or serious; making a show of
gravity.
(v. i.) To look demurely.
(pl. ) of Demy
(a.) Containing ten; tenfold; proceeding by tens; as, the
denary, or decimal, scale.
(n.) The number ten; a division into ten.
(n.) A coin; the Anglicized form of denarius.
(n.) A specific epidemic disease attended with high fever,
cutaneous eruption, and severe pains in the head and limbs, resembling
those of rheumatism; -- called also breakbone fever. It occurs in
India, Egypt, the West Indies, etc., is of short duration, and rarely
fatal.
(n.) The act of gainsaying, refusing, or disowning; negation; --
the contrary of affirmation.
(n.) A refusal to admit the truth of a statement, charge,
imputation, etc.; assertion of the untruth of a thing stated or
maintained; a contradiction.
(n.) A refusal to grant; rejection of a request.
(n.) A refusal to acknowledge; disclaimer of connection with;
disavowal; -- the contrary of confession; as, the denial of a fault
charged on one; a denial of God.
(n.) One who denies; as, a denier of a fact, or of the faith, or
of Christ.
(n.) A small copper coin of insignificant value.
(v. t.) To make a denizen; to confer the rights of citizenship
upon; to naturalize.
(v. t.) To mark out plainly; to signify by a visible sign; to
serve as the sign or name of; to indicate; to point out; as, the hands
of the clock denote the hour.
(v. t.) To be the sign of; to betoken; to signify; to mean.
(imp. & p. p.) of Dent
(a.) Of or pertaining to the teeth or to dentistry; as, dental
surgery.
(a.) Formed by the aid of the teeth; -- said of certain
articulations and the letters representing them; as, d t are dental
letters.
(a.) An articulation or letter formed by the aid of the teeth.
(a.) A marine mollusk of the genus Dentalium, with a curved
conical shell resembling a tooth. See Dentalium.
(v. t.) Indented; impressed with little hollows.
(n.) Same as Dentil.
(n.) An edible European marine fish (Sparus dentex, or Dentex
vulgaris) of the family Percidae.
(n.) A small square block or projection in cornices, a number of
which are ranged in an ornamental band; -- used particularly in the
Ionic, Corinthian, and Composite orders.
(a.) Fatal; ill-omened; unlucky.
(a.) Gloomy to the eye or ear; sorrowful and depressing to the
feelings; foreboding; cheerless; dull; dreary; as, a dismal outlook;
dismal stories; a dismal place.
(v. t.) To unman.
(v. t.) To eject from the maw; to disgorge.
(v. i.) To disable with alarm or apprehensions; to depress the
spirits or courage of; to deprive or firmness and energy through fear;
to daunt; to appall; to terrify.
(v. i.) To render lifeless; to subdue; to disquiet.
(v. i.) To take dismay or fright; to be filled with dismay.
(v. t.) Loss of courage and firmness through fear; overwhelming
and disabling terror; a sinking of the spirits; consternation.
(v. t.) Condition fitted to dismay; ruin.
(v. t.) To divest of all covering; to make bare or naked; to
strip; to divest; as, to denude one of clothing, or lands.
(imp. & p. p.) of Deny
(v. t.) To throw out of the proper orbit; to unsphere.
(v. t.) To refuse to own or acknowledge as belonging to one's
self; to disavow or deny, as connected with one's self personally; as,
a parent can hardly disown his child; an author will sometimes disown
his writings.
(n.) A kind of cedar (Cedrus Deodara), growing in India, highly
valued for its size and beauty as well as for its timber, and also
grown in England as an ornamental tree.
(v. t.) To refuse to acknowledge or allow; to deny.
(v. t.) To drive away by scattering, or so to cause to vanish;
to clear away; to banish; to dissipate; as, to dispel a cloud, vapors,
cares, doubts, illusions.
(n.) A dynamo-electric machine.