- freely
- freeze
- frozen
- freeze
- frenum
- frenzy
- fresco
- fretty
- fretum
- friary
- fridge
- friese
- frieze
- fright
- frigid
- fringe
- fringy
- frisky
- frithy
- frizel
- frizzy
- froggy
- froise
- frolic
- floury
- flowed
- fluate
- flucan
- fluent
- fluffy
- flugel
- flunky
- flurry
- fluted
- fluter
- fluxed
- flying
- flymen
- flyman
- foaled
- foamed
- fobbed
- fodder
- foemen
- foeman
- foetal
- foetor
- foetus
- fogged
- fogies
- foible
- foiled
- foiler
- foison
- foisty
- folded
- folder
- foliar
- folily
- folios
- folium
- follow
- foment
- fondle
- fondly
- fondon
- fondus
- fontal
- fooled
- featly
- feazed
- fecche
- fecial
- fecula
- fecund
- fedity
- feeing
- feeble
- feebly
- feeder
- feeler
- feline
- felled
- fellah
- felloe
- fellon
- felony
- felted
- felter
- female
- femora
- fencer
- fended
- fender
- fennec
- fennel
- feodal
- feriae
- ferial
- ferine
- ferity
- fairly
- falcer
- fallen
- faller
- fallow
- falser
- falter
- famble
- faming
- famine
- famish
- famous
- fanned
- fanega
- fanged
- fangle
- fangot
- fanion
- fannel
- fanner
- fantom
- faquir
- farced
- farcin
- fardel
- faring
- farfet
- farina
- farmed
- fasces
- fascet
- fascia
- fashed
- fasted
- fasten
- faster
- fastly
- fatted
- fathom
- fatten
- faucal
- fauces
- faucet
- faulty
- faunal
- fausen
- fautor
- fauces
- favose
- fawned
- fawner
- faying
- feague
- fealty
- frosty
- frothy
- frouzy
- frower
- frowny
- frowzy
- frozen
- frugal
- frusta
- frutex
- frying
- fucate
- fucoid
- fudder
- fuddle
- fudged
- fueler
- fugacy
- fugato
- fulcra
- fulgid
- fulgor
- fulled
- fullam
- fulmar
- fulvid
- fumade
- fumado
- fumage
- fumble
- fuming
- fumify
- fuming
- famish
- fummel
- fumous
- funded
- fundus
- funest
- fungal
- fungic
- fungin
- fungus
- funnel
- furred
- furdle
- furfur
- furial
- furile
- furoin
- furore
- furrow
- fusain
- fuscin
- fusing
- fusile
- fusion
- fussed
- fustet
- fustic
- futile
- future
- fuzzle
- fabled
- fabler
- fabric
- facade
- facing
- facete
- facial
- facies
- facile
- facing
- factum
- facund
- faddle
- fading
- faecal
- faeces
- faffle
- fagged
- failed
- faille
- faints
- fainty
- fairly
- feared
- fearer
- forfex
- forged
- forger
- forgot
- forgat
- forgot
- forget
- forgot
- forked
- forlay
- forlet
- forlie
- formed
- formal
- formed
- former
- formic
- formyl
- fornix
- forold
- forsay
- forthy
- forwhy
- fossae
- fosset
- fossil
- fother
- fotive
- fotmal
- fought
- fouled
- foully
- fourth
- foussa
- fouter
- foutra
- foveae
- fowled
- foxing
- fracas
- fracid
- foxery
- foxish
- fraena
- frenum
- fragor
- fraise
- fraken
- framed
- framer
- frater
- fraxin
- frayed
- footed
- forage
- forbid
- forced
- forcer
- forcut
- forded
- foreby
- forego
- forums
- ferous
- ferret
- ferri-
- ferric
- ferro-
- ferula
- ferule
- fervid
- fervor
- fescue
- fesels
- festal
- fester
- feting
- fetich
- fetish
- fetter
- fettle
- feudal
- feuter
- fevery
- fiacre
- fiance
- fiants
- fiasco
- fiaunt
- fibbed
- fibber
- fibred
- fibril
- fibrin
- fibula
- fickle
- fickly
- ficoes
- fictor
- fiddle
- fidget
- fieldy
- fierce
- fifing
- figaro
- figary
- figent
- figgum
- fought
- figure
- filing
- filial
- filing
- filled
- fillet
- fillip
- filose
- filter
- filthy
- finned
- finale
- finary
- finder
- fining
- fineer
- finely
- finery
- finger
- finial
- finify
- fining
- finish
- finite
- finlet
- finned
- finner
- fiorin
- fipple
- firing
- firkin
- firlot
- firmly
- fiscal
- fished
- fisted
- fistic
- fitted
- fitche
- fitchy
- fitful
- fitter
- fixing
- fixity
- fixure
- fizgig
- fizzed
- fizzle
- flabby
- flabel
- flaggy
- flagon
- flaked
- flamed
- flamen
- flanch
- flange
- flared
- flashy
- flatly
- flatus
- flaunt
- flauto
- flavin
- flavor
- flawed
- flaxen
- flayed
- flayer
- fleamy
- fleche
- fledge
- fleecy
- flemer
- flench
- flense
- fleshy
- flewed
- flexed
- flexor
- flidge
- flimsy
- flinch
- flinty
- flitch
- flitty
- floaty
- flocci
- flocky
- floppy
- floran
- floret
- florid
(adv.) In a free manner; without restraint or compulsion;
abundantly; gratuitously.
(n.) A frieze.
(p. p.) of Freeze
(v. i.) To become congealed by cold; to be changed from a liquid
to a solid state by the abstraction of heat; to be hardened into ice or
a like solid body.
(v. i.) To become chilled with cold, or as with cold; to suffer
loss of animation or life by lack of heat; as, the blood freezes in the
veins.
(v. t.) To congeal; to harden into ice; to convert from a fluid
to a solid form by cold, or abstraction of heat.
(v. t.) To cause loss of animation or life in, from lack of
heat; to give the sensation of cold to; to chill.
(n.) The act of congealing, or the state of being congealed.
(n.) A cheek stripe of color.
(n.) Same as Fraenum.
(n.) Any violent agitation of the mind approaching to
distraction; violent and temporary derangement of the mental faculties;
madness; rage.
(a.) Mad; frantic.
(v. t.) To affect with frenzy; to drive to madness
(a.) A cool, refreshing state of the air; duskiness; coolness;
shade.
(a.) The art of painting on freshly spread plaster, before it
dries.
(a.) In modern parlance, incorrectly applied to painting on
plaster in any manner.
(a.) A painting on plaster in either of senses a and b.
(v. t.) To paint in fresco, as walls.
(a.) Adorned with fretwork.
(n.) A strait, or arm of the sea.
(n.) Like a friar; pertaining to friars or to a convent.
(n.) A monastery; a convent of friars.
(n.) The institution or praactices of friars.
(n.) To rub; to fray.
(n.) Same as Friesic, n.
(n.) That part of the entablature of an order which is between
the architrave and cornice. It is a flat member or face, either uniform
or broken by triglyphs, and often enriched with figures and other
ornaments of sculpture.
(n.) Any sculptured or richly ornamented band in a building or,
by extension, in rich pieces of furniture. See Illust. of Column.
(n.) A kind of coarse woolen cloth or stuff with a shaggy or
tufted (friezed) nap on one side.
(v. t.) To make a nap on (cloth); to friz. See Friz, v. t., 2.
(n.) A state of terror excited by the sudden appearance of
danger; sudden and violent fear, usually of short duration; a sudden
alarm.
(n.) Anything strange, ugly or shocking, producing a feeling of
alarm or aversion.
(n.) To alarm suddenly; to shock by causing sudden fear; to
terrify; to scare.
(a.) Cold; wanting heat or warmth; of low temperature; as, a
frigid climate.
(a.) Wanting warmth, fervor, ardor, fire, vivacity, etc.;
unfeeling; forbidding in manner; dull and unanimated; stiff and formal;
as, a frigid constitution; a frigid style; a frigid look or manner;
frigid obedience or service.
(a.) Wanting natural heat or vigor sufficient to excite the
generative power; impotent.
(n.) An ornamental appendage to the border of a piece of stuff,
originally consisting of the ends of the warp, projecting beyond the
woven fabric; but more commonly made separate and sewed on, consisting
sometimes of projecting ends, twisted or plaited together, and
sometimes of loose threads of wool, silk, or linen, or narrow strips of
leather, or the like.
(n.) Something resembling in any respect a fringe; a line of
objects along a border or edge; a border; an edging; a margin; a
confine.
(n.) One of a number of light or dark bands, produced by the
interference of light; a diffraction band; -- called also interference
fringe.
(n.) The peristome or fringelike appendage of the capsules of
most mosses. See Peristome.
(v. t.) To adorn the edge of with a fringe or as with a fringe.
(a.) Aborned with fringes.
(a.) Inclined to frisk; frolicsome; gay.
(a.) Woody.
(a.) A movable furrowed piece of steel struck by the flint, to
throw sparks into the pan, in an early form of flintlock.
(a.) Curled or crisped; as, frizzly, hair.
(a.) Abounding in frogs.
(n.) A kind of pancake. See 1st Fraise.
(a.) Full of levity; dancing, playing, or frisking about; full
of pranks; frolicsome; gay; merry.
(n.) A wild prank; a flight of levity, or of gayety and mirth.
(n.) A scene of gayety and mirth, as in lively play, or in
dancing; a merrymaking.
(v. i.) To play wild pranks; to play tricks of levity, mirth,
and gayety; to indulge in frolicsome play; to sport.
(a.) Of or resembling flour; mealy; covered with flour.
(imp. & p. p.) of Flow
(n.) A fluoride.
(n.) Soft clayey matter in the vein, or surrounding it.
(a.) Flowing or capable of flowing; liquid; glodding; easily
moving.
(a.) Ready in the use of words; voluble; copious; having words
at command; and uttering them with facility and smoothness; as, a
fluent speaker; hence, flowing; voluble; smooth; -- said of language;
as, fluent speech.
(n.) A current of water; a stream.
(n.) A variable quantity, considered as increasing or
diminishing; -- called, in the modern calculus, the function or
integral.
(superl.) Pertaining to, or resembling, fluff or nap; soft and
downy.
(n.) A grand piano or a harpsichord, both being wing-shaped.
(n.) A contemptuous name for a liveried servant or a footman.
(n.) One who is obsequious or cringing; a snob.
(n.) One easily deceived in buying stocks; an inexperienced and
unwary jobber.
(n.) A sudden and brief blast or gust; a light, temporary
breeze; as, a flurry of wind.
(n.) A light shower or snowfall accompanied with wind.
(n.) Violent agitation; commotion; bustle; hurry.
(n.) The violent spasms of a dying whale.
(v. t.) To put in a state of agitation; to excite or alarm.
(imp. & p. p.) of Flute
(a.) Thin; fine; clear and mellow; flutelike; as, fluted notes.
(a.) Decorated with flutes; channeled; grooved; as, a fluted
column; a fluted ruffle; a fluted spectrum.
(n.) One who plays on the flute; a flutist or flautist.
(n.) One who makes grooves or flutings.
(imp. & p. p.) of Flux
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Fly
(v. i.) Moving in the air with, or as with, wings; moving
lightly or rapidly; intended for rapid movement.
(pl. ) of Flyman
(n.) The driver of a fly, or light public carriage.
(imp. & p. p.) of Foal
(imp. & p. p.) of Foam
(imp. & p. p.) of Fob
(n.) A weight by which lead and some other metals were formerly
sold, in England, varying from 19/ to 24 cwt.; a fother.
(n.) That which is fed out to cattle horses, and sheep, as hay,
cornstalks, vegetables, etc.
(v.t.) To feed, as cattle, with dry food or cut grass, etc.;to
furnish with hay, straw, oats, etc.
(pl. ) of Foeman
(n.) An enemy in war.
(a.) Same as Fetal.
(n.) Same as Fetor.
(n.) Same as Fetus.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fog
(pl. ) of Fogy
(a.) Weak; feeble.
(n.) A moral weakness; a failing; a weak point; a frailty.
(n.) The half of a sword blade or foil blade nearest the point;
-- opposed to forte.
(imp. & p. p.) of Foil
(n.) One who foils or frustrates.
(n.) Rich harvest; plenty; abundance.
(a.) Fusty; musty.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fold
(n.) One who, or that which, folds; esp., a flat, knifelike
instrument used for folding paper.
(a.) Consisting of, or pertaining to, leaves; as, foliar
appendages.
(a.) Foolishly.
(pl. ) of Folio
(n.) A leaf, esp. a thin leaf or plate.
(n.) A curve of the third order, consisting of two infinite
branches, which have a common asymptote. The curve has a double point,
and a leaf-shaped loop; whence the name. Its equation is x3 + y3 = axy.
(v. t.) To go or come after; to move behind in the same path or
direction; hence, to go with (a leader, guide, etc.); to accompany; to
attend.
(v. t.) To endeavor to overtake; to go in pursuit of; to chase;
to pursue; to prosecute.
(v. t.) To accept as authority; to adopt the opinions of; to
obey; to yield to; to take as a rule of action; as, to follow good
advice.
(v. t.) To copy after; to take as an example.
(v. t.) To succeed in order of time, rank, or office.
(v. t.) To result from, as an effect from a cause, or an
inference from a premise.
(v. t.) To watch, as a receding object; to keep the eyes fixed
upon while in motion; to keep the mind upon while in progress, as a
speech, musical performance, etc.; also, to keep up with; to understand
the meaning, connection, or force of, as of a course of thought or
argument.
(v. t.) To walk in, as a road or course; to attend upon closely,
as a profession or calling.
(v. i.) To go or come after; -- used in the various senses of
the transitive verb: To pursue; to attend; to accompany; to be a
result; to imitate.
(v. t.) To apply a warm lotion to; to bathe with a cloth or
sponge wet with warm water or medicated liquid.
(v. t.) To cherish with heat; to foster.
(v. t.) To nurse to life or activity; to cherish and promote by
excitements; to encourage; to abet; to instigate; -- used often in a
bad sense; as, to foment ill humors.
(v.) To treat or handle with tenderness or in a loving manner;
to caress; as, a nurse fondles a child.
(adv.) Foolishly.
(adv.) In a fond manner; affectionately; tenderly.
(n.) A large copper vessel used for hot amalgamation.
(n.) A style of printing calico, paper hangings, etc., in which
the colors are in bands and graduated into each other.
(a.) Pertaining to a font, fountain, source, or origin;
original; primitive.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fool
(a.) Neatly; dexterously; nimbly.
(imp. & p. p.) of Feaze
(v. t.) To fetch.
(a.) Pertaining to heralds, declarations of war, and treaties of
peace; as, fecial law.
(n.) Any pulverulent matter obtained from plants by simply
breaking down the texture, washing with water, and subsidence.
(n.) The nutritious part of wheat; starch or farina; -- called
also amylaceous fecula.
(n.) The green matter of plants; chlorophyll.
(a.) Fruitful in children; prolific.
(n.) Turpitude; vileness.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Fee
(superl.) Deficient in physical strength; weak; infirm;
debilitated.
(superl.) Wanting force, vigor, or efficiency in action or
expression; not full, loud, bright, strong, rapid, etc.; faint; as, a
feeble color; feeble motion.
(v. t.) To make feble; to enfeeble.
(adv.) In a feeble manner.
(n.) One who, or that which, gives food or supplies nourishment;
steward.
(n.) One who furnishes incentives; an encourager.
(n.) One who eats or feeds; specifically, an animal to be fed or
fattened.
(n.) One who fattens cattle for slaughter.
(n.) A stream that flows into another body of water; a
tributary; specifically (Hydraulic Engin.), a water course which
supplies a canal or reservoir by gravitation or natural flow.
(n.) A branch railroad, stage line, or the like; a side line
which increases the business of the main line.
(n.) A small lateral lode falling into the main lode or mineral
vein.
(n.) A strong discharge of gas from a fissure; a blower.
(n.) An auxiliary part of a machine which supplies or leads
along the material operated upon.
(n.) A device for supplying steam boilers with water as needed.
(n.) One who, or that which, feels.
(n.) One of the sense organs or certain animals (as insects),
which are used in testing objects by touch and in searching for food;
an antenna; a palp.
(n.) Anything, as a proposal, observation, etc., put forth or
thrown out in order to ascertain the views of others; something
tentative.
(a.) Catlike; of or pertaining to the genus Felis, or family
Felidae; as, the feline race; feline voracity.
(a.) Characteristic of cats; sly; stealthy; treacherous; as, a
feline nature; feline manners.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fell
(n.) A peasant or cultivator of the soil among the Egyptians,
Syrians, etc.
(n.) See Felly.
(n.) Variant of Felon.
(n.) An act on the part of the vassal which cost him his fee by
forfeiture.
(n.) An offense which occasions a total forfeiture either lands
or goods, or both, at the common law, and to which capital or other
punishment may be added, according to the degree of guilt.
(n.) A heinous crime; especially, a crime punishable by death or
imprisonment.
(imp. & p. p.) of Felt
(v. t.) To clot or mat together like felt.
(n.) An individual of the sex which conceives and brings forth
young, or (in a wider sense) which has an ovary and produces ova.
(n.) A plant which produces only that kind of reproductive
organs which are capable of developing into fruit after impregnation or
fertilization; a pistillate plant.
(a.) Belonging to the sex which conceives and gives birth to
young, or (in a wider sense) which produces ova; not male.
(a.) Belonging to an individual of the female sex;
characteristic of woman; feminine; as, female tenderness.
(a.) Having pistils and no stamens; pistillate; or, in
cryptogamous plants, capable of receiving fertilization.
(pl. ) of Femur
(n.) One who fences; one who teaches or practices the art of
fencing with sword or foil.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fend
(v. t. & i.) One who or that which defends or protects by
warding off harm
(v. t. & i.) A screen to prevent coals or sparks of an open fire
from escaping to the floor.
(v. t. & i.) Anything serving as a cushion to lessen the shock
when a vessel comes in contact with another vessel or a wharf.
(v. t. & i.) A screen to protect a carriage from mud thrown off
the wheels: also, a splashboard.
(v. t. & i.) Anything set up to protect an exposed angle, as of
a house, from damage by carriage wheels.
(n.) A small, African, foxlike animal (Vulpes zerda) of a pale
fawn color, remarkable for the large size of its ears.
(n.) A perennial plant of the genus Faeniculum (F. vulgare),
having very finely divided leaves. It is cultivated in gardens for the
agreeable aromatic flavor of its seeds.
(a.) Feudal. See Feudal.
(pl. ) of Feria
(n.) Same as Feria.
(a.) Of or pertaining to holidays.
(a.) Belonging to any week day, esp. to a day that is neither a
festival nor a fast.
(a.) Wild; untamed; savage; as, lions, tigers, wolves, and bears
are ferine beasts.
(n.) A wild beast; a beast of prey.
(n.) Wildness; savageness; fierceness.
(adv.) Softly; quietly; gently.
(n.) One of the mandibles of a spider.
(p. p.) of Fall
(a.) Dropped; prostrate; degraded; ruined; decreased; dead.
(n.) One who, or that which, falls.
(n.) A part which acts by falling, as a stamp in a fulling mill,
or the device in a spinning machine to arrest motion when a thread
breaks.
(a.) Pale red or pale yellow; as, a fallow deer or greyhound.
(n.) Left untilled or unsowed after plowing; uncultivated; as,
fallow ground.
(n.) Plowed land.
(n.) Land that has lain a year or more untilled or unseeded;
land plowed without being sowed for the season.
(n.) The plowing or tilling of land, without sowing it for a
season; as, summer fallow, properly conducted, has ever been found a
sure method of destroying weeds.
(n.) To plow, harrow, and break up, as land, without seeding,
for the purpose of destroying weeds and insects, and rendering it
mellow; as, it is profitable to fallow cold, strong, clayey land.
(n.) A deceiver.
(v. t.) To thrash in the chaff; also, to cleanse or sift, as
barley.
(v. & n.) To hesitate; to speak brokenly or weakly; to stammer;
as, his tongue falters.
(v. & n.) To tremble; to totter; to be unsteady.
(v. & n.) To hesitate in purpose or action.
(v. & n.) To fail in distinctness or regularity of exercise; --
said of the mind or of thought.
(v. t.) To utter with hesitation, or in a broken, trembling, or
weak manner.
(v. i.) Hesitation; trembling; feebleness; an uncertain or
broken sound; as, a slight falter in her voice.
(v. i.) To stammer.
(v.) A hand.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Fame
(n.) General scarcity of food; dearth; a want of provisions;
destitution.
(v. t.) To starve, kill, or destroy with hunger.
(v. t.) To exhaust the strength or endurance of, by hunger; to
distress with hanger.
(v. t.) To kill, or to cause to suffer extremity, by deprivation
or denial of anything necessary.
(v. t.) To force or constrain by famine.
(v. i.) To die of hunger; to starve.
(v. i.) To suffer extreme hunger or thirst, so as to be
exhausted in strength, or to come near to perish.
(v. i.) To suffer extremity from deprivation of anything
essential or necessary.
(a.) Celebrated in fame or public report; renowned; mach talked
of; distinguished in story; -- used in either a good or a bad sense,
chiefly the former; often followed by for; as, famous for erudition,
for eloquence, for military skill; a famous pirate.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fan
(n.) A dry measure in Spain and Spanish America, varying from 1/
to 2/ bushels; also, a measure of land.
(a.) Having fangs or tusks; as, a fanged adder. Also used
figuratively.
(v. t.) Something new-fashioned; a foolish innovation; a gewgaw;
a trifling ornament.
(v. t.) To fashion.
(n.) A quantity of wares, as raw silk, etc., from one hundred
weight.
(n.) A small flag sometimes carried at the head of the baggage
of a brigade.
(n.) A small flag for marking the stations in surveying.
(n.) Same as Fanon.
(n.) One who fans.
(n.) A fan wheel; a fan blower. See under Fan.
(n.) See Phantom.
(n.) See Fakir.
(imp. & p. p.) of Farce
(n.) Same as Farcy.
(n.) A bundle or little pack; hence, a burden.
(v. t.) To make up in fardels.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Fare
(p. p.) Farfetched.
(n.) A fine flour or meal made from cereal grains or from the
starch or fecula of vegetables, extracted by various processes, and
used in cookery.
(n.) Pollen.
(imp. & p. p.) of Farm
(pl.) A bundle of rods, having among them an ax with the blade
projecting, borne before the Roman magistrates as a badge of their
authority.
(n.) A wire basket on the end of a rod to carry glass bottles,
etc., to the annealing furnace; also, an iron rod to be thrust into the
mouths of bottles, and used for the same purpose; -- called also pontee
and punty.
(n.) A band, sash, or fillet; especially, in surgery, a bandage
or roller.
(n.) A flat member of an order or building, like a flat band or
broad fillet; especially, one of the three bands which make up the
architrave, in the Ionic order. See Illust. of Column.
(n.) The layer of loose tissue, often containing fat,
immediately beneath the skin; the stronger layer of connective tissue
covering and investing all muscles; an aponeurosis.
(n.) A broad well-defined band of color.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fash
(imp. & p. p.) of Fast
(a.) To fix firmly; to make fast; to secure, as by a knot, lock,
bolt, etc.; as, to fasten a chain to the feet; to fasten a door or
window.
(a.) To cause to hold together or to something else; to attach
or unite firmly; to cause to cleave to something , or to cleave
together, by any means; as, to fasten boards together with nails or
cords; to fasten anything in our thoughts.
(a.) To cause to take close effect; to make to tell; to lay on;
as, to fasten a blow.
(v. i.) To fix one's self; to take firm hold; to clinch; to
cling.
(n.) One who abstains from food.
(adv.) Firmly; surely.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fat
(n.) A measure of length, containing six feet; the space to
which a man can extend his arms; -- used chiefly in measuring cables,
cordage, and the depth of navigable water by soundings.
(n.) The measure or extant of one's capacity; depth, as of
intellect; profundity; reach; penetration.
(v. t.) To encompass with the arms extended or encircling; to
measure by throwing the arms about; to span.
(v. t.) The measure by a sounding line; especially, to sound the
depth of; to penetrate, measure, and comprehend; to get to the bottom
of.
(v. t.) To make fat; to feed for slaughter; to make fleshy or
plump with fat; to fill full; to fat.
(v. t.) To make fertile and fruitful; to enrich; as, to fatten
land; to fatten fields with blood.
(v. i.) To grow fat or corpulent; to grow plump, thick, or
fleshy; to be pampered.
(a.) Pertaining to the fauces, or opening of the throat;
faucial; esp., (Phon.) produced in the fauces, as certain deep guttural
sounds found in the Semitic and some other languages.
(n.pl.) The narrow passage from the mouth to the pharynx,
situated between the soft palate and the base of the tongue; -- called
also the isthmus of the fauces. On either side of the passage two
membranous folds, called the pillars of the fauces, inclose the
tonsils.
(n.pl.) The throat of a calyx, corolla, etc.
(n.pl.) That portion of the interior of a spiral shell which can
be seen by looking into the aperture.
(n.) A fixture for drawing a liquid, as water, molasses, oil,
etc., from a pipe, cask, or other vessel, in such quantities as may be
desired; -- called also tap, and cock. It consists of a tubular spout,
stopped with a movable plug, spigot, valve, or slide.
(n.) The enlarged end of a section of pipe which receives the
spigot end of the next section.
(a.) Containing faults, blemishes, or defects; imperfect; not
fit for the use intended.
(a.) Guilty of a fault, or of faults; hence, blamable; worthy of
censure.
(a.) Relating to fauna.
(n.) A young eel.
(n.) A favorer; a patron; one who gives countenance or support;
an abettor.
(pl. ) of Faux
(a.) Honeycombed. See Faveolate.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the disease called favus.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fawn
(n.) One who fawns; a sycophant.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Fay
(v. t.) To beat or whip; to drive.
(n.) Fidelity to one's lord; the feudal obligation by which the
tenant or vassal was bound to be faithful to his lord; the special oath
by which this obligation was assumed; fidelity to a superior power, or
to a government; loyality. It is no longer the practice to exact the
performance of fealty, as a feudal obligation.
(n.) Fidelity; constancy; faithfulness, as of a friend to a
friend, or of a wife to her husband.
(a.) Attended with, or producing, frost; having power to congeal
water; cold; freezing; as, a frosty night.
(a.) Covered with frost; as, the grass is frosty.
(a.) Chill in affection; without warmth of affection or courage.
(a.) Appearing as if covered with hoarfrost; white; gray-haired;
as, a frosty head.
(superl.) Full of foam or froth, or consisting of froth or light
bubbles; spumous; foamy.
(superl.) Not firm or solid; soft; unstable.
(superl.) Of the nature of froth; light; empty; unsubstantial;
as, a frothy speaker or harangue.
(a.) Fetid, musty; rank; disordered and offensive to the smell
or sight; slovenly; dingy. See Frowzy.
(n.) A tool. See 2d Frow.
(a.) Frowning; scowling.
(a.) Slovenly; unkempt; untidy; frouzy.
(a.) Congealed with cold; affected by freezing; as, a frozen
brook.
(a.) Subject to frost, or to long and severe cold; chilly; as,
the frozen north; the frozen zones.
(a.) Cold-hearted; unsympathetic; unyielding.
(n.) Economical in the use or appropriation of resources; not
wasteful or lavish; wise in the expenditure or application of force,
materials, time, etc.; characterized by frugality; sparing; economical;
saving; as, a frugal housekeeper; frugal of time.
(n.) Obtained by, or appropriate to, economy; as, a frugal
fortune.
(pl. ) of Frustum
(n.) A plant having a woody, durable stem, but less than a tree;
a shrub.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Fry
(n.) The process denoted by the verb fry.
(a.) Alt. of Fucated
(a.) Properly, belonging to an order of alga: (Fucoideae) which
are blackish in color, and produce oospores which are not fertilized
until they have escaped from the conceptacle. The common rockweeds and
the gulfweed (Sargassum) are fucoid in character.
(a.) In a vague sense, resembling seaweeds, or of the nature of
seaweeds.
(n.) A plant, whether recent or fossil, which resembles a
seaweed. See Fucoid, a.
(n.) See Fodder, a weight.
(v. t.) To make foolish by drink; to cause to become
intoxicated.
(v. i.) To drink to excess.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fudge
(n.) One who, or that which, supplies fuel.
(n.) Banishment.
(a.) in the gugue style, but not strictly like a fugue.
(n.) A composition resembling a fugue.
(n. pl.) See Fulcrum.
(pl. ) of Fulcrum
(a.) Shining; glittering; dazzling.
(n.) Dazzling brightness; splendor.
(imp. & p. p.) of Full
(n.) A false die. See Fulham.
(n.) One of several species of sea birds, of the family
procellariidae, allied to the albatrosses and petrels. Among the
well-known species are the arctic fulmar (Fulmarus glacialis) (called
also fulmar petrel, malduck, and mollemock), and the giant fulmar
(Ossifraga gigantea).
(a.) Fulvous.
(v. i.) Alt. of Fumado
(v. i.) A salted and smoked fish, as the pilchard.
(n.) Hearth money.
(v. i.) To feel or grope about; to make awkward attempts to do
or find something.
(v. i.) To grope about in perplexity; to seek awkwardly; as, to
fumble for an excuse.
(v. i.) To handle much; to play childishly; to turn over and
over.
(v. t.) To handle or manage awkwardly; to crowd or tumble
together.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Fume
(v. t.) To subject to the action of smoke.
(a.) Producing fumes, or vapors.
(a.) Smoky; hot; choleric.
(n.) A hinny.
(a.) Producing smoke; smoky.
(a.) Producing fumes; full of fumes.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fund
(a.) Existing in the form of bonds bearing regular interest; as,
funded debt.
(a.) Invested in public funds; as, funded money.
(n.) The bottom or base of any hollow organ; as, the fundus of
the bladder; the fundus of the eye.
(a.) Lamentable; doleful.
(a.) Of or pertaining to fungi.
(a.) Pertaining to, or obtained from, mushrooms; as, fungic
acid.
(n.) A name formerly given to cellulose found in certain fungi
and mushrooms.
(n.) Any one of the Fungi, a large and very complex group of
thallophytes of low organization, -- the molds, mildews, rusts, smuts,
mushrooms, toadstools, puff balls, and the allies of each.
(n.) A spongy, morbid growth or granulation in animal bodies, as
the proud flesh of wounds.
(v. t.) A vessel of the shape of an inverted hollow cone,
terminating below in a pipe, and used for conveying liquids into a
close vessel; a tunnel.
(v. t.) A passage or avenue for a fluid or flowing substance;
specifically, a smoke flue or pipe; the iron chimney of a steamship or
the like.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fur
(v. t.) To draw up into a bundle; to roll up.
(n.) Scurf; dandruff.
(a.) Furious; raging; tormenting.
(n.) A yellow, crystalline substance, (C4H3O)2.C2O2, obtained by
the oxidation of furoin.
(n.) A colorless, crystalline substance, C10H8O4, from furfurol.
(n.) Excitement; commotion; enthusiasm.
(n.) A trench in the earth made by, or as by, a plow.
(n.) Any trench, channel, or groove, as in wood or metal; a
wrinkle on the face; as, the furrows of age.
(n.) To cut a furrow in; to make furrows in; to plow; as, to
furrow the ground or sea.
(n.) To mark with channels or with wrinkles.
(n.) Fine charcoal of willow wood, used as a drawing implement.
(n.) A drawing made with it. See Charcoal, n. 2, and Charcoal
drawing, under Charcoal.
(n.) A brown, nitrogenous pigment contained in the retinal
epithelium; a variety of melanin.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Fuse
(a.) Same as Fusil, a.
(v. t.) The act or operation of melting or rendering fluid by
heat; the act of melting together; as, the fusion of metals.
(v. t.) The state of being melted or dissolved by heat; a state
of fluidity or flowing in consequence of heat; as, metals in fusion.
(v. t.) The union or blending together of things, as, melted
together.
(v. t.) The union, or binding together, of adjacent parts or
tissues.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fuss
(n.) The wood of the Rhus Cptinus or Venice sumach, a shrub of
Southern Europe, which yields a fine orange color, which, however, is
not durable without a mordant.
(n.) The wood of the Maclura tinctoria, a tree growing in the
West Indies, used in dyeing yellow; -- called also old fustic.
(v. t.) Talkative; loquacious; tattling.
(v. t.) Of no importance; answering no useful end; useless;
vain; worthless.
(v. i.) That is to be or come hereafter; that will exist at any
time after the present; as, the next moment is future, to the present.
(a.) Time to come; time subsequent to the present (as, the
future shall be as the present); collectively, events that are to
happen in time to come.
(a.) The possibilities of the future; -- used especially of
prospective success or advancement; as, he had great future before him.
(a.) A future tense.
(v. t.) To make drunk; to intoxicate; to fuddle.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fable
(n.) A writer of fables; a fabulist; a dealer in untruths or
falsehoods.
(n.) The structure of anything; the manner in which the parts of
a thing are united; workmanship; texture; make; as cloth of a beautiful
fabric.
(n.) That which is fabricated
(n.) Framework; structure; edifice; building.
(n.) Cloth of any kind that is woven or knit from fibers, either
vegetable or animal; manufactured cloth; as, silks or other fabrics.
(n.) The act of constructing; construction.
(n.) Any system or structure consisting of connected parts; as,
the fabric of the universe.
(v. t.) To frame; to build; to construct.
(n.) The front of a building; esp., the principal front, having
some architectural pretensions. Thus a church is said to have its
facade unfinished, though the interior may be in use.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Face
(a.) Facetious; witty; humorous.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the face; as, the facial artery, vein,
or nerve.
(n.) The anterior part of the head; the face.
(n.) The general aspect or habit of a species, or group of
species, esp. with reference to its adaptation to its environment.
(n.) The face of a bird, or the front of the head, excluding the
bill.
(a.) Easy to be done or performed: not difficult; performable or
attainable with little labor.
(a.) Easy to be surmounted or removed; easily conquerable;
readily mastered.
(a.) Easy of access or converse; mild; courteous; not haughty,
austere, or distant; affable; complaisant.
(a.) Easily persuaded to good or bad; yielding; ductile to a
fault; pliant; flexible.
(a.) Ready; quick; expert; as, he is facile in expedients; he
wields a facile pen.
(n.) A covering in front, for ornament or other purpose; an
exterior covering or sheathing; as, the facing of an earthen slope, sea
wall, etc. , to strengthen it or to protect or adorn the exposed
surface.
(n.) A lining placed near the edge of a garment for ornament or
protection.
(n.) The finishing of any face of a wall with material different
from that of which it is chiefly composed, or the coating or material
so used.
(n.) A powdered substance, as charcoal, bituminous coal, ect.,
applied to the face of a mold, or mixed with the sand that forms it, to
give a fine smooth surface to the casting.
(n.) The collar and cuffs of a military coat; -- commonly of a
color different from that of the coat.
(n.) The movement of soldiers by turning on their heels to the
right, left, or about; -- chiefly in the pl.
(n.) A man's own act and deed
(n.) Anything stated and made certain.
(n.) The due execution of a will, including everything necessary
to its validity.
(n.) The product. See Facient, 2.
(a.) Eloquent.
(v. i.) To trifle; to toy.
(v. t. ) To fondle; to dandle.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Fade
(a.) Losing freshness, color, brightness, or vigor.
(n.) Loss of color, freshness, or vigor.
(n.) An Irish dance; also, the burden of a song.
(a.) See Fecal.
(n.pl.) Excrement; ordure; also, settlings; sediment after
infusion or distillation.
(v. i.) To stammer.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fag
(imp. & p. p.) of Fail
(n.) A soft silk, heavier than a foulard and not glossy.
(n.pl.) The impure spirit which comes over first and last in the
distillation of whisky; -- the former being called the strong faints,
and the latter, which is much more abundant, the weak faints. This
crude spirit is much impregnated with fusel oil.
(a.) Feeble; languid.
(adv.) In a fair manner; clearly; openly; plainly; fully;
distinctly; frankly.
(adv.) Favorably; auspiciously; commodiously; as, a town fairly
situated for foreign traade.
(adv.) Honestly; properly.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fear
(n.) One who fars.
(n.) A pair of shears.
(imp. & p. p.) of Forge
(n. & v. t.) One who forges, makes, of forms; a fabricator; a
falsifier.
(n. & v. t.) Especially: One guilty of forgery; one who makes or
issues a counterfeit document.
(imp.) of Forget
() of Forget
() of Forget
(v. t.) To lose the remembrance of; to let go from the memory;
to cease to have in mind; not to think of; also, to lose the power of;
to cease from doing.
(v. t.) To treat with inattention or disregard; to slight; to
neglect.
() imp. & p. p. of Forget.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fork
(a.) Formed into a forklike shape; having a fork; dividing into
two or more prongs or branches; furcated; bifurcated; zigzag; as, the
forked lighting.
(a.) Having a double meaning; ambiguous; equivocal.
(v. t.) To lie in wait for; to ambush.
(v. t.) To give up; to leave; to abandon.
(v. i.) See Forelie.
(imp. & p. p.) of Form
(n.) See Methylal.
(a.) Belonging to the form, shape, frame, external appearance,
or organization of a thing.
(a.) Belonging to the constitution of a thing, as distinguished
from the matter composing it; having the power of making a thing what
it is; constituent; essential; pertaining to or depending on the forms,
so called, of the human intellect.
(a.) Done in due form, or with solemnity; according to regular
method; not incidental, sudden or irregular; express; as, he gave his
formal consent.
(a.) Devoted to, or done in accordance with, forms or rules;
punctilious; regular; orderly; methodical; of a prescribed form; exact;
prim; stiff; ceremonious; as, a man formal in his dress, his gait, his
conversation.
(a.) Having the form or appearance without the substance or
essence; external; as, formal duty; formal worship; formal courtesy,
etc.
(a.) Dependent in form; conventional.
(a.) Sound; normal.
(a.) Arranged, as stars in a constellation; as, formed stars.
(a.) Having structure; capable of growth and development;
organized; as, the formed or organized ferments. See Ferment, n.
(n.) One who forms; a maker; a creator.
(n.) A shape around which an article is to be shaped, molded,
woven wrapped, pasted, or otherwise constructed.
(n.) A templet, pattern, or gauge by which an article is shaped.
(n.) A cutting die.
(a.) Preceding in order of time; antecedent; previous; prior;
earlier; hence, ancient; long past.
(a.) Near the beginning; preceeding; as, the former part of a
discourse or argument.
(a.) Earlier, as between two things mentioned together; first
mentioned.
(a.) Pertaining to, or derived from, ants; as, formic acid; in
an extended sense, pertaining to, or derived from, formic acid; as,
formic ether.
(n.) A univalent radical, H.C:O, regarded as the essential
residue of formic acid and aldehyde.
(n.) Formerly, the radical methyl, CH3.
(n.) An arch or fold; as, the fornix, or vault, of the cranium;
the fornix, or reflection, of the conjuctiva.
(n.) Esp., two longitudinal bands of white nervous tissue
beneath the lateral ventricles of the brain.
(a.) Very old.
(v. t.) To forbid; to renounce; to forsake; to deny.
(adv.) Therefore.
(conj.) Wherefore; because.
(pl. ) of Fossa
(n.) A faucet.
(a.) Dug out of the earth; as, fossil coal; fossil salt.
(a.) Like or pertaining to fossils; contained in rocks, whether
petrified or not; as, fossil plants, shells.
(n.) A substance dug from the earth.
(n.) The remains of an animal or plant found in stratified
rocks. Most fossils belong to extinct species, but many of the later
ones belong to species still living.
(n.) A person whose views and opinions are extremely antiquated;
one whose sympathies are with a former time rather than with the
present.
(n.) A wagonload; a load of any sort.
(n.) See Fodder, a unit of weight.
(v. t.) To stop (a leak in a ship at sea) by drawing under its
bottom a thrummed sail, so that the pressure of the water may force it
into the crack.
(a.) Nourishing.
(n.) Seventy pounds of lead.
() imp. & p. p. of Fight.
(imp. & p. p.) of Foul
(v.) In a foul manner; filthily; nastily; shamefully; unfairly;
dishonorably.
(a.) Next in order after the third; the ordinal of four.
(a.) Forming one of four equal parts into which anything may be
divided.
(n.) One of four equal parts into which one whole may be
divided; the quotient of a unit divided by four; one coming next in
order after the third.
(n.) The interval of two tones and a semitone, embracing four
diatonic degrees of the scale; the subdominant of any key.
(n.) A viverrine animal of Madagascar (Cryptoprocta ferox). It
resembles a cat in size and form, and has retractile claws.
(n.) A despicable fellow.
(n.) A fig; -- a word of contempt.
(pl. ) of Fovea
(imp. & p. p.) of Fowl
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Fox
(v. t.) An uproar; a noisy quarrel; a disturbance; a brawl.
(a.) Rotten from being too ripe; overripe.
(n.) Behavior like that of a fox; cunning.
(a.) Foxlike.
(pl. ) of Frenum
(n.) A connecting fold of membrane serving to support or
restrain any part; as, the fraenum of the tongue.
(n.) A loud and sudden sound; the report of anything bursting; a
crash.
(n.) A strong or sweet scent.
(n.) A large and thick pancake, with slices of bacon in it.
(n.) A defense consisting of pointed stakes driven into the
ramparts in a horizontal or inclined position.
(n.) A fluted reamer for enlarging holes in stone; a small
milling cutter.
(v. t.) To protect, as a line of troops, against an onset of
cavalry, by opposing bayonets raised obliquely forward.
(n.) A freckle.
(imp. & p. p.) of Frame
(n.) One who frames; as, the framer of a building; the framers
of the Constitution.
(n.) A monk; also, a frater house.
(n.) A colorless crystalline substance, regarded as a glucoside,
and found in the bark of the ash (Fraxinus) and along with esculin in
the bark of the horse-chestnut. It shows a delicate fluorescence in
alkaline solutions; -- called also paviin.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fray
(imp. & p. p.) of Foot
(a.) Having a foot or feet; shaped in the foot.
(a.) Having a foothold; established.
(n.) The act of foraging; search for provisions, etc.
(n.) Food of any kind for animals, especially for horses and
cattle, as grass, pasture, hay, corn, oats.
(v. i.) To wander or rove in search of food; to collect food,
esp. forage, for horses and cattle by feeding on or stripping the
country; to ravage; to feed on spoil.
(v. t.) To strip of provisions; to supply with forage; as, to
forage steeds.
() of Forbid
(v. t.) To command against, or contrary to; to prohibit; to
interdict.
(v. t.) To deny, exclude from, or warn off, by express command;
to command not to enter.
(v. t.) To oppose, hinder, or prevent, as if by an effectual
command; as, an impassable river forbids the approach of the army.
(v. t.) To accurse; to blast.
(v. t.) To defy; to challenge.
(v. i.) To utter a prohibition; to prevent; to hinder.
(imp. & p. p.) of Force
(a.) Done or produced with force or great labor, or by
extraordinary exertion; hurried; strained; produced by unnatural effort
or pressure; as, a forced style; a forced laugh.
(n.) One who, or that which, forces or drives.
(n.) The solid piston of a force pump; the instrument by which
water is forced in a pump.
(n.) A small hand pump for sinking pits, draining cellars, etc.
(v. t.) To cut completely; to cut off.
(imp. & p. p.) of Ford
(prep.) Near; hard by; along; past. See Forby.
(v. t.) To quit; to relinquish; to leave.
(v. t.) To relinquish the enjoyment or advantage of; to give up;
to resign; to renounce; -- said of a thing already enjoyed, or of one
within reach, or anticipated.
(v. i.) To go before; to precede; -- used especially in the
present and past participles.
(pl. ) of Forum
(a.) Wild; savage.
(n.) An animal of the Weasel family (Mustela / Putorius furo),
about fourteen inches in length, of a pale yellow or white color, with
red eyes. It is a native of Africa, but has been domesticated in
Europe. Ferrets are used to drive rabbits and rats out of their holes.
(n.) To drive or hunt out of a lurking place, as a ferret does
the cony; to search out by patient and sagacious efforts; -- often used
with out; as, to ferret out a secret.
(n.) A kind of narrow tape, usually made of woolen; sometimes of
cotton or silk; -- called also ferreting.
(n.) The iron used for trying the melted glass to see if is fit
to work, and for shaping the rings at the mouths of bottles.
() A combining form indicating ferric iron as an ingredient; as,
ferricyanide.
(a.) Pertaining to, derived from, or containing iron.
Specifically (Chem.), denoting those compounds in which iron has a
higher valence than in the ferrous compounds; as, ferric oxide; ferric
acid.
() A prefix, or combining form, indicating ferrous iron as an
ingredient; as, ferrocyanide.
(n.) A ferule.
(n.) The imperial scepter in the Byzantine or Eastern Empire.
(n.) A flat piece of wood, used for striking, children, esp. on
the hand, in punishment.
(v. t.) To punish with a ferule.
(a.) Very hot; burning; boiling.
(a.) Ardent; vehement; zealous.
(n.) Heat; excessive warmth.
(n.) Intensity of feeling or expression; glowing ardor; passion;
holy zeal; earnestness.
(n.) A straw, wire, stick, etc., used chiefly to point out
letters to children when learning to read.
(n.) An instrument for playing on the harp; a plectrum.
(n.) The style of a dial.
(n.) A grass of the genus Festuca.
(v. i. & t.) To use a fescue, or teach with a fescue.
(n. pl.) See Phasel.
(a.) Of or pertaining to a holiday or a feast; joyous; festive.
(n.) To generate pus; to become imflamed and suppurate; as, a
sore or a wound festers.
(n.) To be inflamed; to grow virulent, or malignant; to grow in
intensity; to rankle.
(v. t.) To cause to fester or rankle.
(n.) A small sore which becomes inflamed and discharges corrupt
matter; a pustule.
(n.) A festering or rankling.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Fete
(n.) Alt. of Fetish
(n.) A material object supposed among certain African tribes to
represent in such a way, or to be so connected with, a supernatural
being, that the possession of it gives to the possessor power to
control that being.
(n.) Any object to which one is excessively devoted.
(a.) Alt. of Fetishistic
(n.) A chain or shackle for the feet; a chain by which an animal
is confined by the foot, either made fast or disabled from free and
rapid motion; a bond; a shackle.
(n.) Anything that confines or restrains; a restraint.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) To put fetters upon; to shackle or confine the
feet of with a chain; to bind.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) To restrain from motion; to impose restraints
on; to confine; to enchain; as, fettered by obligations.
(a.) To repair; to prepare; to put in order.
(a.) To cover or line with a mixture of ore, cinders, etc., as
the hearth of a puddling furnace.
(v. i.) To make preparations; to put things in order; to do
trifling business.
(n.) The act of fettling.
(a.) Of or pertaining to feuds, fiefs, or feels; as, feudal
rights or services; feudal tenures.
(a.) Consisting of, or founded upon, feuds or fiefs; embracing
tenures by military services; as, the feudal system.
(v. t.) To set close; to fix in rest, as a spear.
(a.) Feverish.
(n.) A kind of French hackney coach.
(v. t.) To betroth; to affiance.
(n.) A betrothed man.
(n.) The dung of the fox, wolf, boar, or badger.
(n.) A complete or ridiculous failure, esp. of a musical
performance, or of any pretentious undertaking.
(n.) Commission; fiat; order; decree.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fib
(n.) One who tells fibs.
(a.) Having fibers; made up of fibers.
(n.) A small fiber; the branch of a fiber; a very slender
thread; a fibrilla.
(n.) A white, albuminous, fibrous substance, formed in the
coagulation of the blood either by decomposition of fibrinogen, or from
the union of fibrinogen and paraglobulin which exist separately in the
blood. It is insoluble in water, but is readily digestible in gastric
and pancreatic juice.
(n.) The white, albuminous mass remaining after washing lean
beef or other meat with water until all coloring matter is removed; the
fibrous portion of the muscle tissue; flesh fibrin.
(n.) An albuminous body, resembling animal fibrin in
composition, found in cereal grains and similar seeds; vegetable
fibrin.
(n.) A brooch, clasp, or buckle.
(n.) The outer and usually the smaller of the two bones of the
leg, or hind limb, below the knee.
(n.) A needle for sewing up wounds.
(a.) Not fixed or firm; liable to change; unstable; of a
changeable mind; not firm in opinion or purpose; inconstant;
capricious; as, Fortune's fickle wheel.
(adv.) In a fickle manner.
(pl. ) of Fico
(n.) An artist who models or forms statues and reliefs in any
plastic material.
(n.) A stringed instrument of music played with a bow; a violin;
a kit.
(n.) A kind of dock (Rumex pulcher) with fiddle-shaped leaves;
-- called also fiddle dock.
(n.) A rack or frame of bars connected by strings, to keep table
furniture in place on the cabin table in bad weather.
(v. i.) To play on a fiddle.
(v. i.) To keep the hands and fingers actively moving as a
fiddler does; to move the hands and fingers restlessy or in busy
idleness; to trifle.
(v. t.) To play (a tune) on a fiddle.
(v. i.) To move uneasily one way and the other; to move
irregularly, or by fits and starts.
(n.) Uneasiness; restlessness.
(n.) A general nervous restlessness, manifested by incessant
changes of position; dysphoria.
(a.) Open, like a field.
(superl.) Furious; violent; unrestrained; impetuous; as, a
fierce wind.
(superl.) Vehement in anger or cruelty; ready or eager to kill
or injure; of a nature to inspire terror; ferocious.
(superl.) Excessively earnest, eager, or ardent.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Fife
(n.) An adroit and unscrupulous intriguer.
(n.) A frolic; a vagary; a whim.
(a.) Fidgety; restless.
(n.) A juggler's trick; conjuring.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fight
(n.) The form of anything; shape; outline; appearance.
(n.) The representation of any form, as by drawing, painting,
modeling, carving, embroidering, etc.; especially, a representation of
the human body; as, a figure in bronze; a figure cut in marble.
(n.) A pattern in cloth, paper, or other manufactured article; a
design wrought out in a fabric; as, the muslin was of a pretty figure.
(n.) A diagram or drawing; made to represent a magnitude or the
relation of two or more magnitudes; a surface or space inclosed on all
sides; -- called superficial when inclosed by lines, and solid when
inclosed by surface; any arrangement made up of points, lines, angles,
surfaces, etc.
(n.) The appearance or impression made by the conduct or carrer
of a person; as, a sorry figure.
(n.) Distinguished appearance; magnificence; conspicuous
representation; splendor; show.
(n.) A character or symbol representing a number; a numeral; a
digit; as, 1, 2,3, etc.
(n.) Value, as expressed in numbers; price; as, the goods are
estimated or sold at a low figure.
(n.) A person, thing, or action, conceived of as analogous to
another person, thing, or action, of which it thus becomes a type or
representative.
(n.) A mode of expressing abstract or immaterial ideas by words
which suggest pictures or images from the physical world; pictorial
language; a trope; hence, any deviation from the plainest form of
statement.
(n.) The form of a syllogism with respect to the relative
position of the middle term.
(n.) Any one of the several regular steps or movements made by a
dancer.
(n.) A horoscope; the diagram of the aspects of the astrological
houses.
(n.) Any short succession of notes, either as melody or as a
group of chords, which produce a single complete and distinct
impression.
(n.) A form of melody or accompaniment kept up through a strain
or passage; a musical or motive; a florid embellishment.
(n.) To represent by a figure, as to form or mold; to make an
image of, either palpable or ideal; also, to fashion into a determinate
form; to shape.
(n.) To embellish with design; to adorn with figures.
(n.) To indicate by numerals; also, to compute.
(n.) To represent by a metaphor; to signify or symbolize.
(n.) To prefigure; to foreshow.
(n.) To write over or under the bass, as figures or other
characters, in order to indicate the accompanying chords.
(n.) To embellish.
(v. t.) To make a figure; to be distinguished or conspicious;
as, the envoy figured at court.
(v. t.) To calculate; to contrive; to scheme; as, he is figuring
to secure the nomination.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of File
(a.) Of or pertaining to a son or daughter; becoming to a child
in relation to his parents; as, filial obedience.
(a.) Bearing the relation of a child.
(n.) A fragment or particle rubbed off by the act of filing; as,
iron filings.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fill
(n.) A little band, especially one intended to encircle the hair
of the head.
(n.) A piece of lean meat without bone; sometimes, a long strip
rolled together and tied.
(n.) A thin strip or ribbon; esp.: (a) A strip of metal from
which coins are punched. (b) A strip of card clothing. (c) A thin
projecting band or strip.
(n.) A concave filling in of a reentrant angle where two
surfaces meet, forming a rounded corner.
(n.) A narrow flat member; especially, a flat molding separating
other moldings; a reglet; also, the space between two flutings in a
shaft. See Illust. of Base, and Column.
(n.) An ordinary equaling in breadth one fourth of the chief, to
the lowest portion of which it corresponds in position.
(n.) The thread of a screw.
(n.) A border of broad or narrow lines of color or gilt.
(n.) The raised molding about the muzzle of a gun.
(n.) Any scantling smaller than a batten.
(n.) A fascia; a band of fibers; applied esp. to certain bands
of white matter in the brain.
(n.) The loins of a horse, beginning at the place where the
hinder part of the saddle rests.
(v. t.) To bind, furnish, or adorn with a fillet.
(v. t.) To strike with the nail of the finger, first placed
against the ball of the thumb, and forced from that position with a
sudden spring; to snap with the finger.
(v. t.) To snap; to project quickly.
(n.) A jerk of the finger forced suddenly from the thumb; a
smart blow.
(n.) Something serving to rouse or excite.
(a.) Terminating in a threadlike process.
(n.) Any porous substance, as cloth, paper, sand, or charcoal,
through which water or other liquid may passed to cleanse it from the
solid or impure matter held in suspension; a chamber or device
containing such substance; a strainer; also, a similar device for
purifying air.
(n.) To purify or defecate, as water or other liquid, by causing
it to pass through a filter.
(v. i.) To pass through a filter; to percolate.
(n.) Same as Philter.
(superl.) Defiled with filth, whether material or moral; nasty;
dirty; polluted; foul; impure; obscene.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fin
(n.) Close; termination
(n.) The last movement of a symphony, sonata, concerto, or any
instrumental composition.
(n.) The last composition performed in any act of an opera.
(n.) The closing part, piece, or scene in any public performance
or exhibition.
(n.) See Finery.
(n.) One who, or that which, finds; specifically (Astron.), a
small telescope of low power and large field of view, attached to a
larger telescope, for the purpose of finding an object more readily.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Fine
(v. i.) To run in dept by getting goods made up in a way
unsuitable for the use of others, and then threatening not to take them
except on credit.
(v. t.) To veneer.
(adv.) In a fine or finished manner.
(n.) Fineness; beauty.
(n.) Ornament; decoration; especially, excecially decoration;
showy clothes; jewels.
(n.) A charcoal hearth or furnace for the conversion of cast
iron into wrought iron, or into iron suitable for puddling.
(n.) One of the five terminating members of the hand; a digit;
esp., one of the four extermities of the hand, other than the thumb.
(n.) Anything that does work of a finger; as, the pointer of a
clock, watch, or other registering machine; especially (Mech.) a small
projecting rod, wire, or piece, which is brought into contact with an
object to effect, direct, or restrain a motion.
(n.) The breadth of a finger, or the fourth part of the hand; a
measure of nearly an inch; also, the length of finger, a measure in
domestic use in the United States, of about four and a half inches or
one eighth of a yard.
(n.) Skill in the use of the fingers, as in playing upon a
musical instrument.
(v. t.) To touch with the fingers; to handle; to meddle with.
(v. t.) To touch lightly; to toy with.
(v. t.) To perform on an instrument of music.
(v. t.) To mark the notes of (a piece of music) so as to guide
the fingers in playing.
(v. t.) To take thievishly; to pilfer; to purloin.
(v. t.) To execute, as any delicate work.
(v. i.) To use the fingers in playing on an instrument.
(n.) The knot or bunch of foliage, or foliated ornament, that
forms the upper extremity of a pinnacle in Gothic architecture;
sometimes, the pinnacle itself.
(a.) To make fine; to dress finically.
(n.) The act of imposing a fin/.
(n.) The process of fining or refining; clarification; also
(Metal.), the conversion of cast iron into suitable for puddling, in a
hearth or charcoal fire.
(n.) That which is used to refine; especially, a preparation of
isinglass, gelatin, etc., for clarifying beer.
(v. t.) To arrive at the end of; to bring to an end; to put an
end to; to make an end of; to terminate.
(v. t.) To bestow the last required labor upon; to complete; to
bestow the utmost possible labor upon; to perfect; to accomplish; to
polish.
(v. i.) To come to an end; to terminate.
(v. i.) To end; to die.
(n.) That which finishes, puts an end to/ or perfects.
(n.) The joiner work and other finer work required for the
completion of a building, especially of the interior. See Inside
finish, and Outside finish.
(n.) The labor required to give final completion to any work;
hence, minute detail, careful elaboration, or the like.
(n.) See Finishing coat, under Finishing.
(n.) The result of completed labor, as on the surface of an
object; manner or style of finishing; as, a rough, dead, or glossy
finish given to cloth, stone, metal, etc.
(n.) Completion; -- opposed to start, or beginning.
(a.) Having a limit; limited in quantity, degree, or capacity;
bounded; -- opposed to infinite; as, finite number; finite existence; a
finite being; a finite mind; finite duration.
(n.) A little fin; one of the parts of a divided fin.
(a.) Having a fin, or fins, or anything resembling a fin.
(n.) A finback whale.
(n.) A species of creeping bent grass (Agrostis alba); -- called
also fiorin grass.
(n.) A stopper, as in a wind instrument of music.
(n.) The act of disharging firearms.
(n.) The mode of introducing fuel into the furnace and working
it.
(n.) The application of fire, or of a cautery.
(n.) The process of partly vitrifying pottery by exposing it to
intense heat in a kiln.
(n.) Fuel; firewood or coal.
(n.) A varying measure of capacity, usually being the fourth
part of a barrel; specifically, a measure equal to nine imperial
gallons.
(n.) A small wooden vessel or cask of indeterminate size, --
used for butter, lard, etc.
(n.) A dry measure formerly used in Scotland; the fourth part of
a boll of grain or meal. The Linlithgow wheat firlot was to the
imperial bushel as 998 to 1000; the barley firlot as 1456 to 1000.
(adv.) In a firm manner.
(a.) Pertaining to the public treasury or revenue.
(n.) The income of a prince or a state; revenue; exhequer.
(n.) A treasurer.
(n.) A public officer in Scotland who prosecutes in petty
criminal cases; -- called also procurator fiscal.
(n.) The solicitor in Spain and Portugal; the attorney-general.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fish
(imp. & p. p.) of Fist
(a.) Pertaining to boxing, or to encounters with the fists;
puglistic; as, fistic exploits; fistic heroes.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fit
(a.) Sharpened to a point; pointed.
(a.) Having fitches or vetches.
(a.) Fitche.
(a.) Full of fits; irregularly variable; impulsive and unstable.
(n.) One who fits or makes to fit;
(n.) One who tries on, and adjusts, articles of dress.
(n.) One who fits or adjusts the different parts of machinery to
each other.
(n.) A coal broker who conducts the sales between the owner of a
coal pit and the shipper.
(n.) A little piece; a flitter; a flinder.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Fix
(n.) The act or process of making fixed.
(n.) That which is fixed; a fixture.
(n.) Arrangements; embellishments; trimmings; accompaniments.
(n.) Fixedness; as, fixity of tenure; also, that which is fixed.
(n.) Coherence of parts.
(n.) Fixed position; stable condition; firmness.
(n.) A fishgig.
(n.) A firework, made of damp powder, which makes a fizzing or
hissing noise when it explodes.
(n.) A gadding, flirting girl.
(imp. & p. p.) of Fizz
(v. i.) To make a hissing sound.
(v. i.) To make a ridiculous failure in an undertaking.
(n.) A failure or abortive effort.
(a.) Yielding to the touch, and easily moved or shaken; hanging
loose by its own weight; wanting firmness; flaccid; as, flabby flesh.
(n.) A fan.
(a.) Weak; flexible; limber.
(a.) Tasteless; insipid; as, a flaggy apple.
(a.) Abounding with the plant called flag; as, a flaggy marsh.
(n.) A vessel with a narrow mouth, used for holding and
conveying liquors. It is generally larger than a bottle, and of leather
or stoneware rather than of glass.
(imp. & p. p.) of Flake
(imp. & p. p.) of Flame
(n.) A priest devoted to the service of a particular god, from
whom he received a distinguishing epithet. The most honored were those
of Jupiter, Mars, and Quirinus, called respectively Flamen Dialis,
Flamen Martialis, and Flamen Quirinalis.
(n.) A flange.
(n.) A bearing consisting of a segment of a circle encroaching
on the field from the side.
(n.) An external or internal rib, or rim, for strength, as the
flange of an iron beam; or for a guide, as the flange of a car wheel
(see Car wheel.); or for attachment to another object, as the flange on
the end of a pipe, steam cylinder, etc.
(n.) A plate or ring to form a rim at the end of a pipe when
fastened to the pipe.
(v. t.) To make a flange on; to furnish with a flange.
(v. i.) To be bent into a flange.
(imp. & p. p.) of Flare
(a.) Dazzling for a moment; making a momentary show of
brilliancy; transitorily bright.
(a.) Fiery; vehement; impetuous.
(a.) Showy; gay; gaudy; as, a flashy dress.
(a.) Without taste or spirit.
(adv.) In a flat manner; evenly; horizontally; without spirit;
dully; frigidly; peremptorily; positively, plainly.
(pl. ) of Flatus
(n.) A breath; a puff of wind.
(n.) Wind or gas generated in the stomach or other cavities of
the body.
(v. i.) To throw or spread out; to flutter; to move
ostentatiously; as, a flaunting show.
(v. t.) To display ostentatiously; to make an impudent show of.
(n.) Anything displayed for show.
(n.) A flute.
(n.) A yellow, vegetable dyestuff, resembling quercitron.
(n.) That quality of anything which affects the smell; odor;
fragrances; as, the flavor of a rose.
(n.) That quality of anything which affects the taste; that
quality which gratifies the palate; relish; zest; savor; as, the flavor
of food or drink.
(n.) That which imparts to anything a peculiar odor or taste,
gratifying to the sense of smell, or the nicer perceptions of the
palate; a substance which flavors.
(n.) That quality which gives character to any of the
productions of literature or the fine arts.
(v. t.) To give flavor to; to add something (as salt or a spice)
to, to give character or zest.
(imp. & p. p.) of Flaw
(a.) Made of flax; resembling flax or its fibers; of the color
of flax; of a light soft straw color; fair and flowing, like flax or
tow; as, flaxen thread; flaxen hair.
(imp. & p. p.) of Flay
(n.) One who strips off the skin.
(a.) Bloody; clotted.
(n.) A simple fieldwork, consisting of two faces forming a
salient angle pointing outward and open at the gorge.
(v. i.) Feathered; furnished with feathers or wings; able to
fly.
(v. t. & i.) To furnish with feathers; to supply with the
feathers necessary for flight.
(v. t. & i.) To furnish or adorn with any soft covering.
(a.) Covered with, made of, or resembling, a fleece.
(n.) One who, or that which, banishes or expels.
(v. t.) Same as Flence.
(v. t.) To strip the blubber or skin from, as from a whale,
seal, etc.
(superl.) Full of, or composed of, flesh; plump; corpulent; fat;
gross.
(superl.) Human.
(superl.) Composed of firm pulp; succulent; as, the houseleek,
cactus, and agave are fleshy plants.
(a.) Having large flews.
(imp. & p. p.) of Flex
(n.) A muscle which bends or flexes any part; as, the flexors of
the arm or the hand; -- opposed to extensor.
(a.) Fledged; fledge.
(v. i.) To become fledged; to fledge.
(superl.) Weak; feeble; limp; slight; vain; without strength or
solidity; of loose and unsubstantial structure; without reason or
plausibility; as, a flimsy argument, excuse, objection.
(n.) Thin or transfer paper.
(n.) A bank note.
(v. i.) To withdraw from any suffering or undertaking, from pain
or danger; to fail in doing or perserving; to show signs of yielding or
of suffering; to shrink; to wince; as, one of the parties flinched from
the combat.
(v. i.) To let the foot slip from a ball, when attempting to
give a tight croquet.
(n.) The act of flinching.
(superl.) Consisting of, composed of, abounding in, or
resembling, flint; as, a flinty rock; flinty ground; a flinty heart.
(n.) The side of a hog salted and cured; a side of bacon.
(n.) One of several planks, smaller timbers, or iron plates,
which are secured together, side by side, to make a large girder or
built beam.
(n.) The outside piece of a sawed log; a slab.
(a.) Unstable; fluttering.
(a.) Swimming on the surface; buoyant; light.
(pl. ) of Floccus
(a.) Abounding with flocks; floccose.
(n.) Having a tendency to flop or flap; as, a floppy hat brim.
(n.) Tin ore scarcely perceptible in the stone; tin ore stamped
very fine.
(n.) A little flower; one of the numerous little flowers which
compose the head or anthodium in such flowers as the daisy, thistle,
and dandelion.
(n.) A foil; a blunt sword used in fencing.
(a.) Covered with flowers; abounding in flowers; flowery.
(a.) Bright in color; flushed with red; of a lively reddish
color; as, a florid countenance.
(a.) Embellished with flowers of rhetoric; enriched to excess
with figures; excessively ornate; as, a florid style; florid eloquence.
(a.) Flowery; ornamental; running in rapid melodic figures,
divisions, or passages, as in variations; full of fioriture or little
ornamentations.