- sector
- secund
- secure
- sedate
- sedent
- sedged
- seduce
- seeing
- seeded
- seeing
- sought
- seeker
- seeled
- seemed
- seemer
- seemly
- sipage
- seesaw
- sodden
- seethe
- seggar
- seiner
- seisin
- septum
- sequel
- soften
- softly
- soiled
- scroll
- scruff
- scruze
- scummy
- scurfy
- scurry
- scurvy
- scutal
- scutch
- scypha
- scythe
- sdeign
- sealed
- sealer
- seamed
- seamen
- seamed
- seance
- seared
- searce
- slushy
- slutch
- smalls
- smally
- smatch
- smeary
- smeath
- smeeth
- smegma
- smiddy
- smiled
- smiler
- smilet
- smirch
- smirky
- smiter
- smithy
- smoked
- smoker
- smooch
- smooth
- smouch
- smudge
- smugly
- smutch
- smutty
- snaggy
- snaked
- snappy
- snared
- snarer
- snathe
- sneaky
- sneath
- sneeze
- snithe
- snithy
- snivel
- snobby
- snooze
- snored
- snorer
- snotty
- snouty
- snowed
- staled
- stalky
- stamen
- soiree
- solace
- soland
- solary
- solder
- soling
- solely
- solemn
- stamin
- stance
- stanch
- solert
- sol-fa
- stanza
- stapes
- staple
- starch
- sollar
- solute
- solved
- solver
- somber
- sombre
- somber
- sombre
- somber
- sombre
- stared
- starer
- starry
- somite
- somner
- starry
- sompne
- sonant
- sonata
- sonnet
- starve
- stasis
- statal
- stated
- stater
- sonnet
- soojee
- soonly
- soorma
- soosoo
- sooted
- soothe
- static
- sopped
- sophic
- statua
- statue
- sophta
- sopite
- sopper
- sorbet
- sorbic
- sorbin
- sordes
- sordid
- sabred
- sabicu
- saccus
- sachem
- sachet
- sacked
- sacker
- sacque
- sacral
- sacred
- sacro-
- sacrum
- sadden
- sadder
- saddle
- sordid
- sorely
- sorema
- statue
- status
- staved
- staves
- stayed
- sorner
- sorrel
- sorrow
- sortes
- shoddy
- shoder
- shogun
- shonde
- shoppy
- shored
- shorer
- shough
- should
- shoved
- shovel
- showed
- shower
- shrank
- shrape
- shrewd
- shriek
- shrift
- shrike
- shrill
- shrimp
- shrank
- shrunk
- shrink
- shrive
- shroff
- shroud
- shruff
- shumac
- shying
- sicken
- sicker
- sickle
- sickly
- siddow
- siding
- sidled
- sienna
- siesta
- sifted
- sifter
- sigger
- sighed
- sigher
- sigmas
- signed
- signal
- signer
- signet
- silage
- silent
- silica
- sapped
- silken
- siller
- sillon
- silted
- silure
- silvas
- silvae
- silvas
- selvas
- simial
- simian
- sauter
- savant
- saving
- savine
- saving
- sawing
- sawder
- sawneb
- saying
- scabby
- scalae
- scalar
- scaled
- scaler
- scanty
- scaped
- scapus
- scarab
- scarce
- scarfs
- scarry
- scatch
- scathe
- scazon
- scenic
- schema
- scheme
- schene
- schism
- schist
- schorl
- scient
- scious
- scobby
- scolex
- scoley
- sconce
- scorce
- scorch
- scored
- scorer
- scoria
- scorny
- scorse
- scotal
- scovel
- scrape
- scrawl
- screak
- scream
- screed
- screen
- scrimp
- scrine
- simile
- simmer
- simnel
- simony
- simoom
- simoon
- simous
- simpai
- simper
- simple
- simply
- sinned
- sindon
- sinewy
- sinful
- singed
- single
- singly
- sunken
- sinker
- sinner
- sinnet
- sinter
- sintoc
- stayed
- stayer
- stolen
- sawfly
- scared
- scyphi
- soaked
- sublet
- sundry
- sutile
- sutler
- sutras
- suttee
- suttle
- suture
- swaged
- swaggy
- swampy
- swanky
- swanny
- swardy
- swarth
- swarty
- swarve
- swatch
- swathe
- swayed
- sweaty
- sweepy
- strake
- strany
- strass
- strata
- strath
- strata
- strawy
- streak
- stream
- streek
- streel
- streen
- streit
- spital
- spited
- spleen
- stress
- splent
- splice
- spline
- splint
- strewn
- striae
- strich
- strick
- strict
- strode
- stride
- splint
- spoilt
- strife
- struck
- strike
- spoked
- spoken
- sponge
- strike
- string
- sponge
- spongy
- string
- strung
- string
- spoony
- sporid
- spotty
- spouse
- sprack
- sprain
- sprang
- sprawl
- spread
- sprent
- sprang
- sprint
- sprite
- sprong
- sprout
- spruce
- sprunt
- spumed
- spunge
- spunky
- spurge
- spurry
- seized
- seizer
- seizin
- seizor
- sejant
- seldom
- select
- selves
- selion
- seller
- selves
- semble
- semina
- semita
- sempre
- senary
- sendal
- senega
- senile
- sennet
- sennit
- sensed
- snudge
- snuffy
- snugly
- snying
- soaker
- soaped
- soared
- sobbed
- sensor
- socage
- social
- sentry
- sepawn
- sephen
- sepias
- sepiae
- sepose
- sepsin
- sepsis
- septal
- socket
- socmen
- socman
- sodden
- sodaic
- sodden
- sodio-
- sodium
- septet
- septic
- sodomy
- soever
- soffit
- soften
- safely
- safety
- sagged
- sagely
- sagene
- sagger
- sagoin
- sailed
- sailer
- sailor
- saithe
- salade
- salary
- salify
- saline
- salite
- sallet
- sallow
- salmis
- saloon
- saloop
- salpae
- salpas
- salpid
- salted
- saltly
- salute
- salved
- salver
- salvos
- salvor
- sambur
- samiel
- samite
- samlet
- sampan
- sample
- samshu
- sanded
- sandal
- sanded
- sandix
- sandyx
- sanies
- sanity
- sanjak
- sankha
- sannop
- sannup
- santon
- sapful
- sapper
- sarcel
- sarcle
- sarco-
- sardel
- sarlac
- sarlyk
- sarong
- sarsen
- sashed
- sastra
- sating
- sateen
- satiny
- sation
- satire
- sative
- satrap
- sauced
- saucer
- sauger
- saulie
- saurel
- sputum
- spying
- spyism
- squail
- squall
- squama
- squame
- square
- squawk
- squawl
- squeak
- squeal
- sequin
- serape
- seraph
- serein
- serial
- series
- serine
- sermon
- seroon
- serose
- serous
- serval
- served
- sesame
- sestet
- setose
- setous
- setout
- settee
- setter
- septi-
- sheath
- shekel
- set-to
- setula
- setule
- squint
- squirm
- squirr
- squirt
- stable
- stably
- stacte
- stadia
- staves
- stager
- staith
- staked
- sipped
- sipage
- siphon
- sipper
- sippet
- sircar
- sirdar
- siring
- sirene
- sirrah
- sirupy
- syrupy
- siskin
- sissoo
- sitten
- sithen
- sitten
- sizing
- sizzle
- skated
- skater
- skatol
- skelet
- skerry
- sketch
- skewed
- skewer
- skilts
- skilty
- skinch
- skinny
- skitty
- skiver
- skrike
- skurry
- skying
- skyish
- slabby
- slaggy
- slaked
- slakin
- slangy
- slashy
- slatch
- slated
- slaved
- slaver
- slayer
- sleave
- sleazy
- sledge
- sleeky
- sleepy
- sleety
- sleeve
- sleigh
- slepez
- sleuth
- slewed
- sliced
- slicer
- slider
- slimed
- slimly
- slimsy
- slinky
- slipes
- slippy
- sliver
- slogan
- sloomy
- sloped
- sloppy
- sloshy
- slouch
- sloven
- slowed
- slowly
- sludge
- sluing
- sluggy
- sluice
- sluicy
- slumpy
- steamy
- steely
- steepy
- steeve
- stelae
- sorted
- sortal
- sorter
- sortes
- sortie
- stemma
- stemmy
- sotted
- sought
- souled
- stench
- souple
- soured
- source
- sourly
- soused
- souter
- sovran
- sowing
- sowans
- sowens
- sowins
- sozzle
- spaced
- spaded
- spader
- spadix
- sterve
- stewed
- spahee
- stibic
- spared
- sticky
- stiddy
- sparer
- sparge
- sparry
- sparse
- sparth
- stifle
- stigma
- spatha
- spathe
- spauld
- spavin
- stigma
- spayed
- spayad
- spoken
- stilet
- speary
- specie
- stilly
- stilty
- stingo
- stingy
- stipel
- stipes
- stirps
- stitch
- stithy
- stiver
- stocah
- speece
- speech
- speedy
- speiss
- stocky
- stodgy
- stoker
- stolae
- stoled
- stolen
- sperse
- spewed
- spewer
- sphene
- sphere
- sphery
- spicae
- spiced
- stolid
- stolon
- stoned
- stoner
- spider
- spigot
- spiked
- stoped
- stopen
- spilth
- spinal
- storax
- severe
- sewing
- sewage
- sewing
- sexfid
- sextet
- sextic
- sextos
- sextry
- sexual
- shabby
- shaded
- shader
- shaggy
- shahin
- shaken
- should
- shaman
- shamed
- shamer
- shammy
- shamoy
- shanny
- shan't
- shanty
- shaped
- shapen
- shapoo
- shardy
- shared
- sharer
- shaved
- shaven
- sheafy
- sheard
- shears
- sheave
- shilfa
- sheely
- sheeny
- sheepy
- shelfy
- shelty
- shelvy
- sherif
- search
- seared
- shewel
- shewer
- shield
- seated
- seawan
- sebate
- secant
- secede
- secern
- secess
- second
- secret
- shifty
- shimmy
- shindy
- shinty
- shirky
- shiver
- shoaly
- stored
- spined
- spinel
- spinet
- storge
- spinny
- stound
- stoved
- spiral
- spired
- stowed
- stowce
- straik
- stripe
- strove
- strive
- stroam
- strode
- stroke
- stroll
- stroma
- stromb
- strond
- strook
- stroot
- strout
- strove
- strown
- struck
- strude
- strung
- strunt
- struse
- stubby
- stucco
- studio
- stuffy
- stulty
- stumpy
- stuped
- stupid
- stupor
- sturdy
- stying
- stylar
- styled
- stylet
- stylo-
- stylus
- styrol
- styryl
- stythe
- suable
- subact
- subaid
- subaud
- subdue
- subito
- submit
- subnex
- suborn
- subtle
- subtly
- suburb
- subway
- succor
- succus
- sucked
- sucken
- sucker
- sucket
- suckle
- sudary
- sudden
- suffer
- suffix
- sugary
- suggil
- suited
- suitor
- sulcus
- sulker
- sullen
- sultan
- sultry
- summed
- sumach
- sumbul
- summon
- splash
- squash
- sunned
- sunbow
- sunder
- sundew
- sundog
- sunken
- sunlit
- sunnud
- sunset
- supped
- supawn
- super-
- superb
- supine
- supper
- supply
- swerve
- sweven
- swinge
- surbed
- surcle
- surely
- surety
- surfle
- surfer
- surged
- swinge
- swiped
- swiple
- switch
- swithe
- swivel
- swough
- swound
- swythe
- sycite
- sycock
- surtax
- survey
- sylvae
- suslik
- sylvic
- symbol
- syndic
- syntax
- syphon
- syrtic
- syrupy
- system
- syzygy
- swashy
- shelve
- shined
- slewth
- slight
- snatch
(n.) A part of a circle comprehended between two radii and the
included arc.
(n.) A mathematical instrument, consisting of two rulers
connected at one end by a joint, each arm marked with several scales,
as of equal parts, chords, sines, tangents, etc., one scale of each
kind on each arm, and all on lines radiating from the common center of
motion. The sector is used for plotting, etc., to any scale.
(n.) An astronomical instrument, the limb of which embraces a
small portion only of a circle, used for measuring differences of
declination too great for the compass of a micrometer. When it is used
for measuring zenith distances of stars, it is called a zenith sector.
(a.) Arranged on one side only, as flowers or leaves on a stalk.
(a.) Free from fear, care, or anxiety; easy in mind; not feeling
suspicion or distrust; confident.
(a.) Overconfident; incautious; careless; -- in a bad sense.
(a.) Confident in opinion; not entertaining, or not having
reason to entertain, doubt; certain; sure; -- commonly with of; as,
secure of a welcome.
(a.) Net exposed to danger; safe; -- applied to persons and
things, and followed by against or from.
(v. t.) To make safe; to relieve from apprehensions of, or
exposure to, danger; to guard; to protect.
(v. t.) To put beyond hazard of losing or of not receiving; to
make certain; to assure; to insure; -- frequently with against or from,
rarely with of; as, to secure a creditor against loss; to secure a debt
by a mortgage.
(v. t.) To make fast; to close or confine effectually; to render
incapable of getting loose or escaping; as, to secure a prisoner; to
secure a door, or the hatches of a ship.
(v. t.) To get possession of; to make one's self secure of; to
acquire certainly; as, to secure an estate.
(a.) Undisturbed by passion or caprice; calm; tranquil; serene;
not passionate or giddy; composed; staid; as, a sedate soul, mind, or
temper.
(a.) Sitting; inactive; quiet.
(a.) Made or composed of sedge.
(v. t.) To draw aside from the path of rectitude and duty in any
manner; to entice to evil; to lead astray; to tempt and lead to
iniquity; to corrupt.
(v. t.) Specifically, to induce to surrender chastity; to
debauch by means of solicitation.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of See
(imp. & p. p.) of Seed
(conj. ) but originally a present participle)) In view of the
fact (that); considering; taking into account (that); insmuch as;
since; because; -- followed by a dependent clause; as, he did well,
seeing that he was so young.
(imp. & p. p.) of Seek
(n.) One who seeks; that which is used in seeking or searching.
(n.) One of a small heterogeneous sect of the 17th century, in
Great Britain, who professed to be seeking the true church, ministry,
and sacraments.
(imp. & p. p.) of Seel
(imp. & p. p.) of Seem
(n.) One who seems; one who carries or assumes an appearance or
semblance.
(v. i.) Suited to the object, occasion, purpose, or character;
suitable; fit; becoming; comely; decorous.
(superl.) In a decent or suitable manner; becomingly.
(n.) Water that seeped or oozed through a porous soil.
(n.) A play among children in which they are seated upon the
opposite ends of a plank which is balanced in the middle, and move
alternately up and down.
(n.) A plank or board adjusted for this play.
(n.) A vibratory or reciprocating motion.
(n.) Same as Crossruff.
(v. i.) To move with a reciprocating motion; to move backward
and forward, or upward and downward.
(v. t.) To cause to move backward and forward in seesaw fashion.
(a.) Moving up and down, or to and fro; having a reciprocating
motion.
() of Seethe
(n.) To decoct or prepare for food in hot liquid; to boil; as,
to seethe flesh.
(v. i.) To be a state of ebullition or violent commotion; to be
hot; to boil.
(n.) A case or holder made of fire clay, in which fine pottery
is inclosed while baking in the kin.
(n.) One who fishes with a seine.
(n.) See Seizin.
(n.) A wall separating two cavities; a partition; as, the nasal
septum.
(n.) A partition that separates the cells of a fruit.
(n.) One of the radial calcareous plates of a coral.
(n.) One of the transverse partitions dividing the shell of a
mollusk, or of a rhizopod, into several chambers. See Illust. under
Nautilus.
(n.) One of the transverse partitions dividing the body cavity
of an annelid.
(n.) That which follows; a succeeding part; continuation; as,
the sequel of a man's advantures or history.
(n.) Consequence; event; effect; result; as, let the sun cease,
fail, or swerve, and the sequel would be ruin.
(n.) Conclusion; inference.
(v. t.) To mollify; to make less fierce or intractable.
(v. t.) To palliate; to represent as less enormous; as, to
soften a fault.
(v. t.) To compose; to mitigate; to assuage.
(v. t.) To make less harsh, less rude, less offensive, or less
violent, or to render of an opposite quality.
(v. t.) To make less glaring; to tone down; as, to soften the
coloring of a picture.
(v. t.) To make tender; to make effeminate; to enervate; as,
troops softened by luxury.
(v. t.) To make less harsh or grating, or of a quality the
opposite; as, to soften the voice.
(v. i.) To become soft or softened, or less rude, harsh, severe,
or obdurate.
(adv.) In a soft manner.
(imp. & p. p.) of Soil
(n.) A roll of paper or parchment; a writing formed into a roll;
a schedule; a list.
(n.) An ornament formed of undulations giving off spirals or
sprays, usually suggestive of plant form. Roman architectural ornament
is largely of some scroll pattern.
(n.) A mark or flourish added to a person's signature, intended
to represent a seal, and in some States allowed as a substitute for a
seal.
(n.) Same as Skew surface. See under Skew.
(n.) Scurf.
(n.) The nape of the neck; the loose outside skin, as of the
back of the neck.
(v. t.) To squeeze, compress, crush, or bruise.
(a.) Covered with scum; of the nature of scum.
(superl.) Having or producing scurf; covered with scurf;
resembling scurf.
(v. i.) To hasten away or along; to move rapidly; to hurry; as,
the rabbit scurried away.
(n.) Act of scurring; hurried movement.
(n.) Covered or affected with scurf or scabs; scabby; scurfy;
specifically, diseased with the scurvy.
(n.) Vile; mean; low; vulgar; contemptible.
(n.) A disease characterized by livid spots, especially about
the thighs and legs, due to extravasation of blood, and by spongy gums,
and bleeding from almost all the mucous membranes. It is accompanied by
paleness, languor, depression, and general debility. It is occasioned
by confinement, innutritious food, and hard labor, but especially by
lack of fresh vegetable food, or confinement for a long time to a
limited range of food, which is incapable of repairing the waste of the
system. It was formerly prevalent among sailors and soldiers.
(a.) Of or pertaining to a shield.
(v. t.) To beat or whip; to drub.
(v. t.) To separate the woody fiber from (flax, hemp, etc.) by
beating; to swingle.
(v. t.) To loosen and dress the fiber of (cotton or silk) by
beating; to free (fibrous substances) from dust by beating and blowing.
(n.) A wooden instrument used in scutching flax and hemp.
(n.) The woody fiber of flax; the refuse of scutched flax.
(n.) See Scyphus, 2 (b).
(n.) An instrument for mowing grass, grain, or the like, by
hand, composed of a long, curving blade, with a sharp edge, made fast
to a long handle, called a snath, which is bent into a form convenient
for use.
(n.) A scythe-shaped blade attached to ancient war chariots.
(v. t.) To cut with a scythe; to cut off as with a scythe; to
mow.
(v. t.) To disdain.
(imp. & p. p.) of Seal
(n.) One who seals; especially, an officer whose duty it is to
seal writs or instruments, to stamp weights and measures, or the like.
(n.) A mariner or a vessel engaged in the business of capturing
seals.
(imp. & p. p.) of Seam
(pl. ) of Seaman
(pl. ) of Seaman
(a.) Out of condition; not in good condition; -- said of a hawk.
(n.) A session, as of some public body; especially, a meeting of
spiritualists to receive spirit communication, so called.
(imp. & p. p.) of Sear
(n.) A fine sieve.
(v. t.) To sift; to bolt.
(a.) Abounding in slush; characterized by soft mud or
half-melted snow; as, the streets are slushy; the snow is slushy.
(n.) Slush.
(n. pl.) See Small, n., 2, 3.
(adv.) In a small quantity or degree; with minuteness.
(n.) Taste; tincture; smack.
(v. i.) To smack.
(a.) Tending to smear or soil; adhesive; viscous.
(n.) The smew.
(v. t.) To smoke; to blacken with smoke; to rub with soot.
(v. t.) To smooth.
(n.) The matter secreted by any of the sebaceous glands.
(n.) The soapy substance covering the skin of newborn infants.
(n.) The cheesy, sebaceous matter which collects between the
glans penis and the foreskin.
(n.) A smithy.
(imp. & p. p.) of Smile
(n.) One who smiles.
(n.) A little smile.
(v. t.) To smear with something which stains, or makes dirty; to
smutch; to begrime; to soil; to sully.
(n.) A smutch; a dirty stain.
(a.) Smirk; smirking.
(n.) One who smites.
(n.) The workshop of a smith, esp. a blacksmith; a smithery; a
stithy.
(imp. & p. p.) of Smoke
(n.) One who dries or preserves by smoke.
(n.) One who smokes tobacco or the like.
(n.) A smoking car or compartment.
(v. t.) See Smutch.
(superl.) Having an even surface, or a surface so even that no
roughness or points can be perceived by the touch; not rough; as,
smooth glass; smooth porcelain.
(superl.) Evenly spread or arranged; sleek; as, smooth hair.
(superl.) Gently flowing; moving equably; not ruffled or
obstructed; as, a smooth stream.
(superl.) Flowing or uttered without check, obstruction, or
hesitation; not harsh; voluble; even; fluent.
(superl.) Bland; mild; smoothing; fattering.
(superl.) Causing no resistance to a body sliding along its
surface; frictionless.
(adv.) Smoothly.
(n.) The act of making smooth; a stroke which smooths.
(n.) That which is smooth; the smooth part of anything.
(a.) To make smooth; to make even on the surface by any means;
as, to smooth a board with a plane; to smooth cloth with an iron.
(a.) To free from obstruction; to make easy.
(a.) To free from harshness; to make flowing.
(a.) To palliate; to gloze; as, to smooth over a fault.
(a.) To give a smooth or calm appearance to.
(a.) To ease; to regulate.
(v. i.) To flatter; to use blandishment.
(v. t.) To kiss closely.
(v. t.) To smutch; to soil; as, to smouch the face.
(n.) A dark soil or stain; a smutch.
(n.) A suffocating smoke.
(n.) A heap of damp combustibles partially ignited and burning
slowly, placed on the windward side of a house, tent, or the like, in
order, by the thick smoke, to keep off mosquitoes or other insects.
(n.) That which is smeared upon anything; a stain; a blot; a
smutch; a smear.
(v. t.) To stifle or smother with smoke; to smoke by means of a
smudge.
(v. t.) To smear; to smutch; to soil; to blacken with smoke.
(adv.) In a smug manner.
(n.) A stain; a dirty spot.
(v. t.) To blacken with smoke, soot, or coal.
(superl.) Soiled with smut; smutted.
(superl.) Tainted with mildew; as, smutty corn.
(superl.) Obscene; not modest or pure; as, a smutty saying.
(a.) Full of snags; full of short, rough branches or sharp
points; abounding with knots.
(a.) Snappish; cross; ill-tempered.
(imp. & p. p.) of Snake
(a.) Snappish.
(imp. & p. p.) of Snare
(n.) One who lays snares, or entraps.
(v. t.) To lop; to prune.
(n.) Like a sneak; sneaking.
(n.) Alt. of Sneathe
(v. i.) To emit air, chiefly through the nose, audibly and
violently, by a kind of involuntary convulsive force, occasioned by
irritation of the inner membrane of the nose.
(n.) A sudden and violent ejection of air with an audible sound,
chiefly through the nose.
(a.) Alt. of Snithy
(a.) Sharp; piercing; cutting; -- applied to the wind.
(v. i.) To run at the nose; to make a snuffling noise.
(v. i.) To cry or whine with snuffling, as children; to cry
weakly or whiningly.
(v. i.) Mucus from the nose; snot.
(a.) Snobbish.
(n.) A short sleep; a nap.
(v. i.) To doze; to drowse; to take a short nap; to slumber.
(imp. & p. p.) of Snore
(n.) One who snores.
(a.) Foul with snot; hence, mean; dirty.
(a.) Resembling a beast's snout.
(imp. & p. p.) of Snow
(imp. & p. p.) of Stale
(a.) Hard as a stalk; resembling a stalk.
(n.) A thread; especially, a warp thread.
(n.) The male organ of flowers for secreting and furnishing the
pollen or fecundating dust. It consists of the anther and filament.
(n.) An evening party; -- distinguished from levee, and matinee.
(v. t.) Comfort in grief; alleviation of grief or anxiety; also,
that which relieves in distress; that which cheers or consoles; relief.
(v. t.) Rest; relaxation; ease.
(n.) To cheer in grief or under calamity; to comfort; to relieve
in affliction, solitude, or discomfort; to console; -- applied to
persons; as, to solace one with the hope of future reward.
(n.) To allay; to assuage; to soothe; as, to solace grief.
(v. i.) To take comfort; to be cheered.
(n.) A solan goose.
(a.) Solar.
(n.) A metal or metallic alloy used when melted for uniting
adjacent metallic edges or surfaces; a metallic cement.
(n.) anything which unites or cements.
(n.) To unite (metallic surfaces or edges) by the intervention
of a more fusible metal or metallic alloy applied when melted; to join
by means of metallic cement.
(n.) To mend; to patch up.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Sole
(adv.) Singly; alone; only; without another; as, to rest a cause
solely one argument; to rely solelyn one's own strength.
(a.) Marked with religious rites and pomps; enjoined by, or
connected with, religion; sacred.
(a.) Pertaining to a festival; festive; festal.
(a.) Stately; ceremonious; grand.
(a.) Fitted to awaken or express serious reflections; marked by
seriousness; serious; grave; devout; as, a solemn promise; solemn
earnestness.
(a.) Real; earnest; downright.
(a.) Affectedly grave or serious; as, to put on a solemn face.
(a.) Made in form; ceremonious; as, solemn war; conforming with
all legal requirements; as, probate in solemn form.
(n.) A kind of woolen cloth.
(n.) A stanza.
(n.) A station; a position; a site.
(v. t.) To stop the flowing of, as blood; to check; also, to
stop the flowing of blood from; as, to stanch a wound.
(v. t.) To extinguish; to quench, as fire or thirst.
(v. i.) To cease, as the flowing of blood.
(n.) That which stanches or checks.
(n.) A flood gate by which water is accumulated, for floating a
boat over a shallow part of a stream by its release.
(v. t.) Strong and tight; sound; firm; as, a stanch ship.
(v. t.) Firm in principle; constant and zealous; loyal; hearty;
steady; steadfast; as, a stanch churchman; a stanch friend or adherent.
(v. t.) Close; secret; private.
(v. t.) To prop; to make stanch, or strong.
(a.) Skillful; clever; crafty.
(v. i.) To sing the notes of the gamut, ascending or descending;
as, do or ut, re, mi, fa, sol, la, si, do, or the same in reverse
order.
(n.) The gamut, or musical scale. See Tonic sol-fa, under Tonic,
n.
(n.) A number of lines or verses forming a division of a song or
poem, and agreeing in meter, rhyme, number of lines, etc., with other
divisions; a part of a poem, ordinarily containing every variation of
measure in that poem; a combination or arrangement of lines usually
recurring; whether like or unlike, in measure.
(n.) An apartment or division in a building; a room or chamber.
(n.) The innermost of the ossicles of the ear; the stirrup, or
stirrup bone; -- so called from its form. See Illust. of Ear.
(n.) A settled mart; an emporium; a city or town to which
merchants brought commodities for sale or exportation in bulk; a place
for wholesale traffic.
(n.) Hence: Place of supply; source; fountain head.
(n.) The principal commodity of traffic in a market; a principal
commodity or production of a country or district; as, wheat, maize, and
cotton are great staples of the United States.
(n.) The principal constituent in anything; chief item.
(n.) Unmanufactured material; raw material.
(n.) The fiber of wool, cotton, flax, or the like; as, a coarse
staple; a fine staple; a long or short staple.
(n.) A loop of iron, or a bar or wire, bent and formed with two
points to be driven into wood, to hold a hook, pin, or the like.
(n.) A shaft, smaller and shorter than the principal one,
joining different levels.
(n.) A small pit.
(n.) A district granted to an abbey.
(a.) Pertaining to, or being market of staple for, commodities;
as, a staple town.
(a.) Established in commerce; occupying the markets; settled;
as, a staple trade.
(a.) Fit to be sold; marketable.
(a.) Regularly produced or manufactured in large quantities;
belonging to wholesale traffic; principal; chief.
(v. t.) To sort according to its staple; as, to staple cotton.
(a.) Stiff; precise; rigid.
(n.) A widely diffused vegetable substance found especially in
seeds, bulbs, and tubers, and extracted (as from potatoes, corn, rice,
etc.) as a white, glistening, granular or powdery substance, without
taste or smell, and giving a very peculiar creaking sound when rubbed
between the fingers. It is used as a food, in the production of
commercial grape sugar, for stiffening linen in laundries, in making
paste, etc.
(n.) Fig.: A stiff, formal manner; formality.
(v. t.) To stiffen with starch.
(n.) See Solar, n.
(n.) A platform in a shaft, especially one of those between the
series of ladders in a shaft.
(v. t.) To cover, or provide with, a sollar.
(a.) Loose; free; liberal; as, a solute interpretation.
(a.) Relaxed; hence; merry; cheerful.
(a.) Soluble; as, a solute salt.
(a.) Not adhering; loose; -- opposed to adnate; as, a solute
stipule.
(v. t.) To dissolve; to resolve.
(v. t.) To absolve; as, to solute sin.
(imp. & p. p.) of Solve
(n.) One who, or that which, solves.
(a.) Alt. of Sombre
(a.) Dull; dusky; somewhat dark; gloomy; as, a somber forest; a
somber house.
(a.) Melancholy; sad; grave; depressing; as, a somber person;
somber reflections.
(v. t.) Alt. of Sombre
(v. t.) To make somber, or dark; to make shady.
(n.) Alt. of Sombre
(n.) Gloom; obscurity; duskiness; somberness.
(imp. & p. p.) of Stare
(n.) One who stares, or gazes.
(a.) Abounding with stars; adorned with stars.
(n.) One of the actual or ideal serial segments of which an
animal, esp. an articulate or vertebrate, is is composed; somatome;
metamere.
(n.) A summoner; esp., one who summons to an ecclesiastical
court.
(a.) Consisting of, or proceeding from, the stars; stellar;
stellary; as, starry light; starry flame.
(a.) Shining like stars; sparkling; as, starry eyes.
(a.) Arranged in rays like those of a star; stellate.
(v. t.) To summon; to cite.
(a.) Of or pertaining to sound; sounding.
(a.) Uttered, as an element of speech, with tone or proper vocal
sound, as distinguished from mere breath sound; intonated; voiced;
tonic; the opposite of nonvocal, or surd; -- sid of the vowels,
semivowels, liquids, and nasals, and particularly of the consonants b,
d, g hard, v, etc., as compared with their cognates p, t, k, f, etc.,
which are called nonvocal, surd, or aspirate.
(n.) A sonant letter.
(n.) An extended composition for one or two instruments,
consisting usually of three or four movements; as, Beethoven's sonatas
for the piano, for the violin and piano, etc.
(n.) A short poem, -- usually amatory.
(n.) A poem of fourteen lines, -- two stanzas, called the
octave, being of four verses each, and two stanzas, called the sestet,
of three verses each, the rhymes being adjusted by a particular rule.
(v. i.) To die; to perish.
(v. i.) To perish with hunger; to suffer extreme hunger or want;
to be very indigent.
(v. i.) To perish or die with cold.
(v. t.) To destroy with cold.
(v. t.) To kill with hunger; as, maliciously to starve a man is,
in law, murder.
(v. t.) To distress or subdue by famine; as, to starvea garrison
into a surrender.
(v. t.) To destroy by want of any kind; as, to starve plans by
depriving them of proper light and air.
(v. t.) To deprive of force or vigor; to disable.
(n.) A slackening or arrest of the blood current in the vessels,
due not to a lessening of the heart's beat, but presumably to some
abnormal resistance of the capillary walls. It is one of the phenomena
observed in the capillaries in inflammation.
(a.) Of, pertaining to, or existing with reference to, a State
of the American Union, as distinguished from the general government.
(imp. & p. p.) of State
(a.) Settled; established; fixed.
(a.) Recurring at regular time; not occasional; as, stated
preaching; stated business hours.
(n.) One who states.
(n.) The principal gold coin of ancient Grece. It varied much in
value, the stater best known at Athens being worth about £1 2s., or
about $5.35. The Attic silver tetradrachm was in later times called
stater.
(v. i.) To compose sonnets.
(n.) Same as Suji.
(adv.) Soon.
(n.) A preparation of antimony with which Mohammedan men anoint
their eyelids.
(n.) A kind of dolphin (Platanista Gangeticus) native of the
river Ganges; the Gangetic dolphin. It has a long, slender, somewhat
spatulate beak.
(imp. & p. p.) of Soot
(a.) To assent to as true.
(a.) To assent to; to comply with; to gratify; to humor by
compliance; to please with blandishments or soft words; to flatter.
(a.) To assuage; to mollify; to calm; to comfort; as, to soothe
a crying child; to soothe one's sorrows.
(a.) Alt. of Statical
(imp. & p. p.) of Sop
(a.) Alt. of Sophical
(n.) A statue.
(n.) The likeness of a living being sculptured or modeled in
some solid substance, as marble, bronze, or wax; an image; as, a statue
of Hercules, or of a lion.
(n.) A portrait.
(n.) See Softa.
(v. t.) To lay asleep; to put to sleep; to quiet.
(n.) One who sops.
(n.) A kind of beverage; sherbet.
(a.) Pertaining to, or obtained from, the rowan tree, or sorb;
specifically, designating an acid, C/H/CO/H, of the acetylene series,
found in the unripe berries of this tree, and extracted as a white
crystalline substance.
(n.) An unfermentable sugar, isomeric with glucose, found in the
ripe berries of the rowan tree, or sorb, and extracted as a sweet white
crystalline substance; -- called also mountain-ash sugar.
(n.) Foul matter; excretion; dregs; filthy, useless, or rejected
matter of any kind; specifically (Med.), the foul matter that collects
on the teeth and tongue in low fevers and other conditions attended
with great vital depression.
(a.) Filthy; foul; dirty.
(a.) Vile; base; gross; mean; as, vulgar, sordid mortals.
() of Sabre
(n.) The very hard wood of a leguminous West Indian tree
(Lysiloma Sabicu), valued for shipbuilding.
(n.) A sac.
(n.) A chief of a tribe of the American Indians; a sagamore.
(n.) A scent bag, or perfume cushion, to be laid among
handkerchiefs, garments, etc., to perfume them.
(imp. & p. p.) of Sack
(n.) One who sacks; one who takes part in the storm and pillage
of a town.
(n.) Same as 2d Sack, 3.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the sacrum; in the region of the
sacrum.
(a.) Set apart by solemn religious ceremony; especially, in a
good sense, made holy; set apart to religious use; consecrated; not
profane or common; as, a sacred place; a sacred day; sacred service.
(a.) Relating to religion, or to the services of religion; not
secular; religious; as, sacred history.
(a.) Designated or exalted by a divine sanction; possessing the
highest title to obedience, honor, reverence, or veneration; entitled
to extreme reverence; venerable.
(a.) Hence, not to be profaned or violated; inviolable.
(a.) Consecrated; dedicated; devoted; -- with to.
(a.) Solemnly devoted, in a bad sense, as to evil, vengeance,
curse, or the like; accursed; baleful.
() A combining form denoting connection with, or relation to,
the sacrum, as in sacro-coccygeal, sacro-iliac, sacrosciatic.
(n.) That part of the vertebral column which is directly
connected with, or forms a part of, the pelvis.
(v. t.) To make sad.
(v. t.) To render heavy or cohesive.
(v. t.) To make dull- or sad-colored, as cloth.
(v. t.) To make grave or serious; to make melancholy or
sorrowful.
(v. i.) To become, or be made, sad.
(n.) Same as Sadda.
(n.) A seat for a rider, -- usually made of leather, padded to
span comfortably a horse's back, furnished with stirrups for the
rider's feet to rest in, and fastened in place with a girth; also, a
seat for the rider on a bicycle or tricycle.
(n.) A padded part of a harness which is worn on a horse's back,
being fastened in place with a girth. It serves various purposes, as to
keep the breeching in place, carry guides for the reins, etc.
(n.) A piece of meat containing a part of the backbone of an
animal with the ribs on each side; as, a saddle of mutton, of venison,
etc.
(n.) A block of wood, usually fastened to some spar, and shaped
to receive the end of another spar.
(n.) A part, as a flange, which is hollowed out to fit upon a
convex surface and serve as a means of attachment or support.
(n.) The clitellus of an earthworm.
(n.) The threshold of a door, when a separate piece from the
floor or landing; -- so called because it spans and covers the joint
between two floors.
(v. t.) To put a saddle upon; to equip (a beast) for riding.
(v. t.) Hence: To fix as a charge or burden upon; to load; to
encumber; as, to saddle a town with the expense of bridges and
highways.
(a.) Meanly avaricious; covetous; niggardly.
(adv.) In a sore manner; grievously; painfully; as, to be sorely
afflicted.
(n.) A heap of carpels belonging to one flower.
(v. t.) To place, as a statue; to form a statue of; to make into
a statue.
(n.) State; condition; position of affairs.
(imp. & p. p.) of Stave
(n.) pl. of Staff.
(pl.) pl. of Stave.
(imp. & p. p.) of Stay
(n.) One who obtrudes himself on another for bed and board.
(a.) Of a yellowish or redish brown color; as, a sorrel horse.
(n.) A yellowish or redish brown color.
(n.) One of various plants having a sour juice; especially, a
plant of the genus Rumex, as Rumex Acetosa, Rumex Acetosella, etc.
(n.) The uneasiness or pain of mind which is produced by the
loss of any good, real or supposed, or by diseappointment in the
expectation of good; grief at having suffered or occasioned evil;
regret; unhappiness; sadness.
(n.) To feel pain of mind in consequence of evil experienced,
feared, or done; to grieve; to be sad; to be sorry.
(pl. ) of Sors
(v. t.) A fibrous material obtained by "deviling," or tearing
into fibers, refuse woolen goods, old stockings, rags, druggets, etc.
See Mungo.
(v. t.) A fabric of inferior quality made of, or containing a
large amount of, shoddy.
(a.) Made wholly or in part of shoddy; containing shoddy; as,
shoddy cloth; shoddy blankets; hence, colloquially, not genuine; sham;
pretentious; as, shoddy aristocracy.
(n.) A package of gold beater's skins in which gold is subjected
to the second process of beating.
(n.) A title originally conferred by the Mikado on the military
governor of the eastern provinces of Japan. By gradual usurpation of
power the Shoguns (known to foreigners as Tycoons) became finally the
virtual rulers of Japan. The title was abolished in 1867.
(n.) Harm; disgrace; shame.
(a.) Abounding with shops.
(a.) Of or pertaining to shops, or one's own shop or business;
as, shoppy talk.
(imp. & p. p.) of Shore
(n.) One who, or that which, shores or props; a prop; a shore.
(n.) A shockdog.
(interj.) See Shoo.
(imp.) Used as an auxiliary verb, to express a conditional or
contingent act or state, or as a supposition of an actual fact; also,
to express moral obligation (see Shall); e. g.: they should have come
last week; if I should go; I should think you could go.
(imp. & p. p.) of Shove
(v. t.) An implement consisting of a broad scoop, or more or
less hollow blade, with a handle, used for lifting and throwing earth,
coal, grain, or other loose substances.
(v. t.) To take up and throw with a shovel; as, to shovel earth
into a heap, or into a cart, or out of a pit.
(v. t.) To gather up as with a shovel.
(imp.) of Show
() of Show
(n.) One who shows or exhibits.
(n.) That which shows; a mirror.
(n.) A fall or rain or hail of short duration; sometimes, but
rarely, a like fall of snow.
(n.) That which resembles a shower in falling or passing through
the air copiously and rapidly.
(n.) A copious supply bestowed.
(v. t.) To water with a shower; to //t copiously with rain.
(v. t.) To bestow liberally; to destribute or scatter in
/undance; to rain.
(v. i.) To rain in showers; to fall, as in a hower or showers.
() imp. of Shrink.
(n.) A place baited with chaff to entice birds.
(superl.) Inclining to shrew; disposing to curse or scold;
hence, vicious; malicious; evil; wicked; mischievous; vexatious; rough;
unfair; shrewish.
(superl.) Artful; wily; cunning; arch.
(superl.) Able or clever in practical affairs; sharp in
business; astute; sharp-witted; sagacious; keen; as, a shrewd observer;
a shrewd design; a shrewd reply.
(v. i.) To utter a loud, sharp, shrill sound or cry, as do some
birds and beasts; to scream, as in a sudden fright, in horror or
anguish.
(v. t.) To utter sharply and shrilly; to utter in or with a
shriek or shrieks.
(n.) A sharp, shrill outcry or scream; a shrill wild cry such as
is caused by sudden or extreme terror, pain, or the like.
(n.) The act of shriving.
(n.) Confession made to a priest, and the absolution consequent
upon it.
(v. i.) Any one of numerous species of oscinine birds of the
family Laniidae, having a strong hooked bill, toothed at the tip. Most
shrikes are insectivorous, but the common European gray shrike (Lanius
excubitor), the great northern shrike (L. borealis), and several
others, kill mice, small birds, etc., and often impale them on thorns,
and are, on that account called also butcher birds. See under Butcher.
(v. i.) Acute; sharp; piercing; having or emitting a sharp,
piercing tone or sound; -- said of a sound, or of that which produces a
sound.
(n.) A shrill sound.
(v. i.) To utter an acute, piercing sound; to sound with a
sharp, shrill tone; to become shrill.
(v. t.) To utter or express in a shrill tone; to cause to make a
shrill sound.
(v. t.) To contract; to shrink.
(v.) Any one of numerous species of macruran Crustacea belonging
to Crangon and various allied genera, having a slender body and long
legs. Many of them are used as food. The larger kinds are called also
prawns. See Illust. of Decapoda.
(v.) In a more general sense, any species of the macruran tribe
Caridea, or any species of the order Schizopoda, having a similar form.
(v.) In a loose sense, any small crustacean, including some
amphipods and even certain entomostracans; as, the fairy shrimp, and
brine shrimp. See under Fairy, and Brine.
(v.) Figuratively, a little wrinkled man; a dwarf; -- in
contempt.
(imp.) of Shrink
() of Shrink
(p. p.) of Shrink
(v. i.) To wrinkle, bend, or curl; to shrivel; hence, to
contract into a less extent or compass; to gather together; to become
compacted.
(v. i.) To withdraw or retire, as from danger; to decline action
from fear; to recoil, as in fear, horror, or distress.
(v. i.) To express fear, horror, or pain by contracting the
body, or part of it; to shudder; to quake.
(v. t.) To cause to contract or shrink; as, to shrink finnel by
imersing it in boiling water.
(v. t.) To draw back; to withdraw.
(n.) The act shrinking; shrinkage; contraction; also, recoil;
withdrawal.
(v. t.) To hear or receive the confession of; to administer
confession and absolution to; -- said of a priest as the agent.
(v. t.) To confess, and receive absolution; -- used reflexively.
(v. i.) To receive confessions, as a priest; to administer
confession and absolution.
(n.) A banker, or changer of money.
(n.) That which clothes, covers, conceals, or protects; a
garment.
(n.) Especially, the dress for the dead; a winding sheet.
(n.) That which covers or shelters like a shroud.
(n.) A covered place used as a retreat or shelter, as a cave or
den; also, a vault or crypt.
(n.) The branching top of a tree; foliage.
(n.) A set of ropes serving as stays to support the masts. The
lower shrouds are secured to the sides of vessels by heavy iron bolts
and are passed around the head of the lower masts.
(n.) One of the two annular plates at the periphery of a water
wheel, which form the sides of the buckets; a shroud plate.
(n.) To cover with a shroud; especially, to inclose in a winding
sheet; to dress for the grave.
(n.) To cover, as with a shroud; to protect completely; to cover
so as to conceal; to hide; to veil.
(v. i.) To take shelter or harbor.
(v. t.) To lop. See Shrood.
(n.) Rubbish. Specifically: (a) Dross or refuse of metals.
[Obs.] (b) Light, dry wood, or stuff used for fuel.
(n.) Sumac.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Shy
(v. t.) To make sick; to disease.
(v. t.) To make qualmish; to nauseate; to disgust; as, to sicken
the stomach.
(v. t.) To impair; to weaken.
(v. i.) To become sick; to fall into disease.
(v. i.) To be filled to disgust; to be disgusted or nauseated;
to be filled with abhorrence or aversion; to be surfeited or satiated.
(v. i.) To become disgusting or tedious.
(v. i.) To become weak; to decay; to languish.
(v. i.) To percolate, trickle, or ooze, as water through a
crack.
(a.) Alt. of Siker
(adv.) Alt. of Siker
(n.) A reaping instrument consisting of a steel blade curved
into the form of a hook, and having a handle fitted on a tang. The
sickle has one side of the blade notched, so as always to sharpen with
a serrated edge. Cf. Reaping hook, under Reap.
(n.) A group of stars in the constellation Leo. See Illust. of
Leo.
(superl.) Somewhat sick; disposed to illness; attended with
disease; as, a sickly body.
(superl.) Producing, or tending to, disease; as, a sickly
autumn; a sickly climate.
(superl.) Appearing as if sick; weak; languid; pale.
(superl.) Tending to produce nausea; sickening; as, a sickly
smell; sickly sentimentality.
(adv.) In a sick manner or condition; ill.
(v. t.) To make sick or sickly; -- with over, and probably only
in the past participle.
(a.) Soft; pulpy.
(p. pr.& vb. n.) of Side
(n.) Attaching one's self to a party.
(n.) A side track, as a railroad; a turnout.
(n.) The covering of the outside wall of a frame house, whether
made of weatherboards, vertical boarding with cleats, shingles, or the
like.
(n.) The thickness of a rib or timber, measured, at right angles
with its side, across the curved edge; as, a timber having a siding of
ten inches.
(imp. & p. p.) of Sidle
(n.) Clay that is colored red or brown by the oxides of iron or
manganese, and used as a pigment. It is used either in the raw state or
burnt.
(n.) A short sleep taken about the middle of the day, or after
dinner; a midday nap.
(imp. & p. p.) of Sift
(n.) One who, or that which, sifts.
(n.) Any lamellirostral bird, as a duck or goose; -- so called
because it sifts or strains its food from the water and mud by means of
the lamell/ of the beak.
(v. i.) Same as
(imp. & p. p.) of Sigh
(n.) One who sighs.
(pl. ) of Sigma
(imp. & p. p.) of Sign
(n.) A sign made for the purpose of giving notice to a person of
some occurence, command, or danger; also, a sign, event, or watchword,
which has been agreed upon as the occasion of concerted action.
(n.) A token; an indication; a foreshadowing; a sign.
(a.) Noticeable; distinguished from what is ordinary; eminent;
remarkable; memorable; as, a signal exploit; a signal service; a signal
act of benevolence.
(a.) Of or pertaining to signals, or the use of signals in
conveying information; as, a signal flag or officer.
(v. t.) To communicate by signals; as, to signal orders.
(v. t.) To notify by a signals; to make a signal or signals to;
as, to signal a fleet to anchor.
(n.) One who signs or subscribes his name; as, a memorial with a
hundred signers.
(n.) A seal; especially, in England, the seal used by the
sovereign in sealing private letters and grants that pass by bill under
the sign manual; -- called also privy signet.
(n. & v.) Short for Ensilage.
(a.) Free from sound or noise; absolutely still; perfectly
quiet.
(a.) Not speaking; indisposed to talk; speechless; mute;
taciturn; not loquacious; not talkative.
(a.) Keeping at rest; inactive; calm; undisturbed; as, the wind
is silent.
(a.) Not pronounced; having no sound; quiescent; as, e is silent
in "fable."
(a.) Having no effect; not operating; inefficient.
(n.) That which is silent; a time of silence.
(n.) Silicon dioxide, SiO/. It constitutes ordinary quartz (also
opal and tridymite), and is artifically prepared as a very fine, white,
tasteless, inodorous powder.
(imp. & p. p.) of Sap
(a.) Of or pertaining to silk; made of, or resembling, silk; as,
silken cloth; a silken veil.
(a.) Fig.: Soft; delicate; tender; smooth; as, silken language.
(a.) Dressed in silk.
(v. t.) To render silken or silklike.
(n.) Silver.
(n.) A work raised in the middle of a wide ditch, to defend it.
(imp. & p. p.) of Silt
(n.) A fish of the genus Silurus, as the sheatfish; a siluroid.
(pl. ) of Silva
(pl. ) of Silva
(n. pl.) Alt. of Selvas
(n. pl.) Vast woodland plains of South America.
(a.) Simian; apelike.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the family Simiadae, which, in its
widest sense, includes all the Old World apes and monkeys; also,
apelike.
(n.) Any Old World monkey or ape.
(v. t.) To fry lightly and quickly, as meat, by turning or
tossing it over frequently in a hot pan greased with a little fat.
(n.) Psalter.
(a.) A man of learning; one versed in literature or science; a
person eminent for acquirements.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Save
(n.) A coniferous shrub (Juniperus Sabina) of Western Asia,
occasionally found also in the northern parts of the United States and
in British America. It is a compact bush, with dark-colored foliage,
and produces small berries having a glaucous bloom. Its bitter, acrid
tops are sometimes used in medicine for gout, amenorrhoea, etc.
(n.) The North American red cedar (Juniperus Virginiana.)
(a.) Preserving; rescuing.
(a.) Avoiding unnecessary expense or waste; frugal; not lavish
or wasteful; economical; as, a saving cook.
(a.) Bringing back in returns or in receipts the sum expended;
incurring no loss, though not gainful; as, a saving bargain; the ship
has made a saving voyage.
(a.) Making reservation or exception; as, a saving clause.
(participle) With the exception of; except; excepting; also,
without disrespect to.
(n.) Something kept from being expended or lost; that which is
saved or laid up; as, the savings of years of economy.
(n.) Exception; reservation.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Saw
(n.) A corrupt spelling and pronunciation of solder.
(n.) A merganser.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Say
(n.) That which is said; a declaration; a statement, especially
a proverbial one; an aphorism; a proverb.
(superl.) Affected with scabs; full of scabs.
(superl.) Diseased with the scab, or mange; mangy.
(pl. ) of Scala
(n.) In the quaternion analysis, a quantity that has magnitude,
but not direction; -- distinguished from a vector, which has both
magnitude and direction.
(imp. & p. p.) of Scale
(a.) Covered with scales, or scalelike structures; -- said of a
fish, a reptile, a moth, etc.
(a.) Without scales, or with the scales removed; as, scaled
herring.
(a.) Having feathers which in form, color, or arrangement
somewhat resemble scales; as, the scaled dove.
(n.) One who, or that which, scales; specifically, a dentist's
instrument for removing tartar from the teeth.
(a.) Wanting amplitude or extent; narrow; small; not abundant.
(a.) Somewhat less than is needed; insufficient; scant; as, a
scanty supply of words; a scanty supply of bread.
(a.) Sparing; niggardly; parsimonious.
(imp. & p. p.) of Scape
(n.) See 1st Scape.
(n.) Alt. of Scarabee
(superl.) Not plentiful or abundant; in small quantity in
proportion to the demand; not easily to be procured; rare; uncommon.
(superl.) Scantily supplied (with); deficient (in); -- with of.
(superl.) Sparing; frugal; parsimonious; stingy.
(adv.) Alt. of Scarcely
(pl. ) of Scarf
(a.) Bearing scars or marks of wounds.
(a.) Like a scar, or rocky eminence; containing scars.
(n.) A kind of bit for the bridle of a horse; -- called also
scatchmouth.
(v. t.) Alt. of Scath
(n.) A choliamb.
(a.) Alt. of Scenical
(n.) An outline or image universally applicable to a general
conception, under which it is likely to be presented to the mind; as,
five dots in a line are a schema of the number five; a preceding and
succeeding event are a schema of cause and effect.
(n.) A combination of things connected and adjusted by design; a
system.
(n.) A plan or theory something to be done; a design; a project;
as, to form a scheme.
(n.) Any lineal or mathematical diagram; an outline.
(n.) A representation of the aspects of the celestial bodies for
any moment or at a given event.
(v. t.) To make a scheme of; to plan; to design; to project; to
plot.
(v. i.) To form a scheme or schemes.
(n.) An Egyptian or Persian measure of length, varying from
thirty-two to sixty stadia.
(n.) Division or separation; specifically (Eccl.), permanent
division or separation in the Christian church; breach of unity among
people of the same religious faith; the offense of seeking to produce
division in a church without justifiable cause.
(n.) Any crystalline rock having a foliated structure (see
Foliation) and hence admitting of ready division into slabs or slates.
The common kinds are mica schist, and hornblendic schist, consisting
chiefly of quartz with mica or hornblende and often feldspar.
(n.) Black tourmaline.
(a.) Knowing; skillful.
(a.) Knowing; having knowledge.
(n.) The chaffinch.
(n.) The embryo produced directly from the egg in a metagenetic
series, especially the larva of a tapeworm or other parasitic worm. See
Illust. of Echinococcus.
(n.) One of the Scolecida.
(v. i.) To go to school; to study.
(p. p.) A fortification, or work for defense; a fort.
(p. p.) A hut for protection and shelter; a stall.
(p. p.) A piece of armor for the head; headpiece; helmet.
(p. p.) Fig.: The head; the skull; also, brains; sense;
discretion.
(p. p.) A poll tax; a mulct or fine.
(p. p.) A protection for a light; a lantern or cased support for
a candle; hence, a fixed hanging or projecting candlestick.
(p. p.) Hence, the circular tube, with a brim, in a candlestick,
into which the candle is inserted.
(p. p.) A squinch.
(p. p.) A fragment of a floe of ice.
(p. p.) A fixed seat or shelf.
(v. t.) To shut up in a sconce; to imprison; to insconce.
(v. t.) To mulct; to fine.
(n.) Barter.
(v. t.) To burn superficially; to parch, or shrivel, the surface
of, by heat; to subject to so much heat as changes color and texture
without consuming; as, to scorch linen.
(v. t.) To affect painfully with heat, or as with heat; to dry
up with heat; to affect as by heat.
(v. t.) To burn; to destroy by, or as by, fire.
(v. i.) To be burnt on the surface; to be parched; to be dried
up.
(v. i.) To burn or be burnt.
(imp. & p. p.) of Score
(n.) One who, or that which, scores.
(n.) The recrement of metals in fusion, or the slag rejected
after the reduction of metallic ores; dross.
(n.) Cellular slaggy lava; volcanic cinders.
(a.) Deserving scorn; paltry.
(n.) Barter; exchange; trade.
(v. t.) To barter or exchange.
(v. t.) To chase.
(v. i.) To deal for the purchase of anything; to practice
barter.
(n.) Alt. of Scotale
(n.) A mop for sweeping ovens; a malkin.
(v. t.) To rub over the surface of (something) with a sharp or
rough instrument; to rub over with something that roughens by removing
portions of the surface; to grate harshly over; to abrade; to make
even, or bring to a required condition or form, by moving the sharp
edge of an instrument breadthwise over the surface with pressure,
cutting away excesses and superfluous parts; to make smooth or clean;
as, to scrape a bone with a knife; to scrape a metal plate to an even
surface.
(v. t.) To remove by rubbing or scraping (in the sense above).
(v. t.) To collect by, or as by, a process of scraping; to
gather in small portions by laborious effort; hence, to acquire
avariciously and save penuriously; -- often followed by together or up;
as, to scrape money together.
(v. t.) To express disapprobation of, as a play, or to silence,
as a speaker, by drawing the feet back and forth upon the floor; --
usually with down.
(v. i.) To rub over the surface of anything with something which
roughens or removes it, or which smooths or cleans it; to rub harshly
and noisily along.
(v. i.) To occupy one's self with getting laboriously; as, he
scraped and saved until he became rich.
(v. i.) To play awkwardly and inharmoniously on a violin or like
instrument.
(v. i.) To draw back the right foot along the ground or floor
when making a bow.
(n.) The act of scraping; also, the effect of scraping, as a
scratch, or a harsh sound; as, a noisy scrape on the floor; a scrape of
a pen.
(n.) A drawing back of the right foot when bowing; also, a bow
made with that accompaniment.
(n.) A disagreeable and embarrassing predicament out of which
one can not get without undergoing, as it were, a painful rubbing or
scraping; a perplexity; a difficulty.
(v. i.) See Crawl.
(v. t.) To draw or mark awkwardly and irregularly; to write
hastily and carelessly; to scratch; to scribble; as, to scrawl a
letter.
(v. i.) To write unskillfully and inelegantly.
(n.) Unskillful or inelegant writing; that which is unskillfully
or inelegantly written.
(v.) To utter suddenly a sharp, shrill sound; to screech; to
creak, as a door or wheel.
(n.) A creaking; a screech; a shriek.
(v. i.) To cry out with a shrill voice; to utter a sudden, sharp
outcry, or shrill, loud cry, as in fright or extreme pain; to shriek;
to screech.
(n.) A sharp, shrill cry, uttered suddenly, as in terror or in
pain; a shriek; a screech.
(n.) A strip of plaster of the thickness proposed for the coat,
applied to the wall at intervals of four or five feet, as a guide.
(n.) A wooden straightedge used to lay across the plaster
screed, as a limit for the thickness of the coat.
(n.) A fragment; a portion; a shred.
(n.) A breach or rent; a breaking forth into a loud, shrill
sound; as, martial screeds.
(n.) An harangue; a long tirade on any subject.
(n.) Anything that separates or cuts off inconvenience, injury,
or danger; that which shelters or conceals from view; a shield or
protection; as, a fire screen.
(n.) A dwarf wall or partition carried up to a certain height
for separation and protection, as in a church, to separate the aisle
from the choir, or the like.
(n.) A surface, as that afforded by a curtain, sheet, wall,
etc., upon which an image, as a picture, is thrown by a magic lantern,
solar microscope, etc.
(n.) A long, coarse riddle or sieve, sometimes a revolving
perforated cylinder, used to separate the coarser from the finer parts,
as of coal, sand, gravel, and the like.
(v. t.) To provide with a shelter or means of concealment; to
separate or cut off from inconvenience, injury, or danger; to shelter;
to protect; to protect by hiding; to conceal; as, fruits screened from
cold winds by a forest or hill.
(v. t.) To pass, as coal, gravel, ashes, etc., through a screen
in order to separate the coarse from the fine, or the worthless from
the valuable; to sift.
(v. t.) To make too small or short; to limit or straiten; to put
on short allowance; to scant; to contract; to shorten; as, to scrimp
the pattern of a coat.
(a.) Short; scanty; curtailed.
(n.) A pinching miser; a niggard.
(n.) A chest, bookcase, or other place, where writings or
curiosities are deposited; a shrine.
(v. i.) To cringe.
(n.) A word or phrase by which anything is likened, in one or
more of its aspects, to something else; a similitude; a poetical or
imaginative comparison.
(v. i.) To boil gently, or with a gentle hissing; to begin to
boil.
(v. t.) To cause to boil gently; to cook in liquid heated almost
or just to the boiling point.
(n.) A kind of cake made of fine flour; a cracknel.
(n.) A kind of rich plum cake, eaten especially on Mid-Lent
Sunday.
(n.) The crime of buying or selling ecclesiastical preferment;
the corrupt presentation of any one to an ecclesiastical benefice for
money or reward.
(n.) Alt. of Simoon
(n.) A hot, dry, suffocating, dust-laden wind, that blows
occasionally in Arabia, Syria, and neighboring countries, generated by
the extreme heat of the parched deserts or sandy plains.
(a.) Having a very flat or snub nose, with the end turned up.
(n.) A long-tailed monkey (Semnopitchecus melalophus) native of
Sumatra. It has a crest of black hair. The forehead and cheeks are fawn
color, the upper parts tawny and red, the under parts white. Called
also black-crested monkey, and sinpae.
(v. i.) To smile in a silly, affected, or conceited manner.
(v. i.) To glimmer; to twinkle.
(n.) A constrained, self-conscious smile; an affected, silly
smile; a smirk.
(a.) Single; not complex; not infolded or entangled; uncombined;
not compounded; not blended with something else; not complicated; as, a
simple substance; a simple idea; a simple sound; a simple machine; a
simple problem; simple tasks.
(a.) Plain; unadorned; as, simple dress.
(a.) Mere; not other than; being only.
(a.) Not given to artifice, stratagem, or duplicity;
undesigning; sincere; true.
(a.) Artless in manner; unaffected; unconstrained; natural;
inartificial;; straightforward.
(a.) Direct; clear; intelligible; not abstruse or enigmatical;
as, a simple statement; simple language.
(a.) Weak in intellect; not wise or sagacious; of but moderate
understanding or attainments; hence, foolish; silly.
(a.) Not luxurious; without much variety; plain; as, a simple
diet; a simple way of living.
(a.) Humble; lowly; undistinguished.
(a.) Without subdivisions; entire; as, a simple stem; a simple
leaf.
(a.) Not capable of being decomposed into anything more simple
or ultimate by any means at present known; elementary; thus, atoms are
regarded as simple bodies. Cf. Ultimate, a.
(a.) Homogenous.
(a.) Consisting of a single individual or zooid; as, a simple
ascidian; -- opposed to compound.
(a.) Something not mixed or compounded.
(a.) A medicinal plant; -- so called because each vegetable was
supposed to possess its particular virtue, and therefore to constitute
a simple remedy.
(a.) A drawloom.
(a.) A part of the apparatus for raising the heddles of a
drawloom.
(a.) A feast which is not a double or a semidouble.
(v. i.) To gather simples, or medicinal plants.
(adv.) In a simple manner or state; considered in or by itself;
without addition; along; merely; solely; barely.
(adv.) Plainly; without art or subtlety.
(adv.) Weakly; foolishly.
(imp. & p. p.) of Sin
(n.) A wrapper.
(n.) A small rag or pledget introduced into the hole in the
cranium made by a trephine.
(a.) Pertaining to, consisting of, or resembling, a sinew or
sinews.
(a.) Well braced with, or as if with, sinews; nervous; vigorous;
strong; firm; tough; as, the sinewy Ajax.
(a.) Tainted with, or full of, sin; wicked; iniquitous;
criminal; unholy; as, sinful men; sinful thoughts.
(imp. & p. p.) of Singe
(a.) One only, as distinguished from more than one; consisting
of one alone; individual; separate; as, a single star.
(a.) Alone; having no companion.
(a.) Hence, unmarried; as, a single man or woman.
(a.) Not doubled, twisted together, or combined with others; as,
a single thread; a single strand of a rope.
(a.) Performed by one person, or one on each side; as, a single
combat.
(a.) Uncompounded; pure; unmixed.
(a.) Not deceitful or artful; honest; sincere.
(a.) Simple; not wise; weak; silly.
(v. t.) To select, as an individual person or thing, from among
a number; to choose out from others; to separate.
(v. t.) To sequester; to withdraw; to retire.
(v. t.) To take alone, or one by one.
(v. i.) To take the irrregular gait called single-foot;- said of
a horse. See Single-foot.
(n.) A unit; one; as, to score a single.
(n.) The reeled filaments of silk, twisted without doubling to
give them firmness.
(n.) A handful of gleaned grain.
(n.) A game with but one player on each side; -- usually in the
plural.
(n.) A hit by a batter which enables him to reach first base
only.
(adv.) Individually; particularly; severally; as, to make men
singly and personally good.
(adv.) Only; by one's self; alone.
(adv.) Without partners, companions, or associates;
single-handed; as, to attack another singly.
(adv.) Honestly; sincerely; simply.
(adv.) Singularly; peculiarly.
() of Sink
(n.) One who, or that which, sinks.
(n.) A weight on something, as on a fish line, to sink it.
(n.) In knitting machines, one of the thin plates, blades, or
other devices, that depress the loops upon or between the needles.
(n.) One who has sinned; especially, one who has sinned without
repenting; hence, a persistent and incorrigible transgressor; one
condemned by the law of God.
(v. i.) To act as a sinner.
(n.) See Sennit .
(n.) Dross, as of iron; the scale which files from iron when
hammered; -- applied as a name to various minerals.
(n.) A kind of spice used in the East Indies, consisting of the
bark of a species of Cinnamomum.
(a.) Staid; fixed; settled; sober; -- now written staid. See
Staid.
(n.) One who upholds or supports that which props; one who, or
that which, stays, stops, or restrains; also, colloquially, a horse,
man, etc., that has endurance, an a race.
(p. p.) of Steal
(n.) Any one of numerous species of hymenopterous insects
belonging to the family Tenthredinidae. The female usually has an
ovipositor containing a pair of sawlike organs with which she makes
incisions in the leaves or stems of plants in which to lay the eggs.
The larvae resemble those of Lepidoptera.
(imp. & p. p.) of Scare
(pl. ) of Scyphus
(imp. & p. p.) of Soak
(imp. & p. p.) of Sublet
(v. t.) To underlet; to lease, as when a lessee leases to
another person.
(v. t.) Several; divers; more than one or two; various.
(v. t.) Separate; diverse.
(a.) Done by stitching.
(n.) A person who follows an army, and sells to the troops
provisions, liquors, and the like.
(pl. ) of Sutra
(n.) A Hindoo widow who immolates herself, or is immolated, on
the funeral pile of her husband; -- so called because this act of
self-immolation is regarded as envincing excellence of wifely
character.
(n.) The act of burning a widow on the funeral pile of her
husband.
(n.) The weight when the tare has been deducted, and tret is yet
to be allowed.
(v. i.) To act as sutler; to supply provisions and other
articles to troops.
(n.) The act of sewing; also, the line along which two things or
parts are sewed together, or are united so as to form a seam, or that
which resembles a seam.
(n.) The uniting of the parts of a wound by stitching.
(n.) The stitch by which the parts are united.
(n.) The line of union, or seam, in an immovable articulation,
like those between the bones of the skull; also, such an articulation
itself; synarthrosis. See Harmonic suture, under Harmonic.
(n.) The line, or seam, formed by the union of two margins in
any part of a plant; as, the ventral suture of a legume.
(n.) A line resembling a seam; as, the dorsal suture of a
legume, which really corresponds to a midrib.
(n.) The line at which the elytra of a beetle meet and are
sometimes confluent.
(n.) A seam, or impressed line, as between the segments of a
crustacean, or between the whorls of a univalve shell.
(imp. & p. p.) of Swage
(a.) Inclined to swag; sinking, hanging, or leaning by its
weight.
(a.) Consisting of swamp; like a swamp; low, wet, and spongy;
as, swampy land.
(n.) An active and clever young fellow.
(a.) Swanlike; as, a swanny glossiness of the neck.
(a.) Covered with sward or grass.
(a.) Swart; swarthy.
(n.) An apparition of a person about to die; a wraith.
(n.) Sward; short grass.
(n.) See Swath.
(a.) Swarthy; tawny.
(v. i.) To swerve.
(v. i.) To climb.
(n.) A swath.
(n.) A piece, pattern, or sample, generally of cloth.
(n.) To bind with a swathe, band, bandage, or rollers.
(n.) A bandage; a band; a swath.
(imp. & p. p.) of Sway
(a.) Bent down, and hollow in the back; sway-backed; -- said of
a horse.
(superl.) Moist with sweat; as, a sweaty skin; a sweaty garment.
(superl.) Consisting of sweat; of the nature of sweat.
(superl.) Causing sweat; hence, laborious; toilsome; difficult.
(a.) Moving with a sweeping motion.
() imp. of Strike.
(n.) A streak.
(n.) An iron band by which the fellies of a wheel are secured to
each other, being not continuous, as the tire is, but made up of
separate pieces.
(n.) One breadth of planks or plates forming a continuous range
on the bottom or sides of a vessel, reaching from the stem to the
stern; a streak.
(n.) A trough for washing broken ore, gravel, or sand; a
launder.
(n.) The guillemot.
(n.) A brilliant glass, used in the manufacture of artificial
paste gems, which consists essentially of a complex borosilicate of
lead and potassium. Cf. Glass.
(n.) pl. of Stratum.
(n.) A valley of considerable size, through which a river runs;
a valley bottom; -- often used in composition with the name of the
river; as, Strath Spey, Strathdon, Strathmore.
(pl. ) of Stratum
(a.) Of or pertaining to straw; made of, or resembling, straw.
(v. t.) To stretch; to extend; hence, to lay out, as a dead
body.
(n.) A line or long mark of a different color from the ground; a
stripe; a vein.
(n.) A strake.
(n.) The fine powder or mark yielded by a mineral when scratched
or rubbed against a harder surface, the color of which is sometimes a
distinguishing character.
(n.) The rung or round of a ladder.
(v. t.) To form streaks or stripes in or on; to stripe; to
variegate with lines of a different color, or of different colors.
(v. t.) With it as an object: To run swiftly.
(n.) A current of water or other fluid; a liquid flowing
continuously in a line or course, either on the earth, as a river,
brook, etc., or from a vessel, reservoir, or fountain; specifically,
any course of running water; as, many streams are blended in the
Mississippi; gas and steam came from the earth in streams; a stream of
molten lead from a furnace; a stream of lava from a volcano.
(n.) A beam or ray of light.
(n.) Anything issuing or moving with continued succession of
parts; as, a stream of words; a stream of sand.
(n.) A continued current or course; as, a stream of weather.
(n.) Current; drift; tendency; series of tending or moving
causes; as, the stream of opinions or manners.
(v. i.) To issue or flow in a stream; to flow freely or in a
current, as a fluid or whatever is likened to fluids; as, tears
streamed from her eyes.
(v. i.) To pour out, or emit, a stream or streams.
(v. i.) To issue in a stream of light; to radiate.
(v. i.) To extend; to stretch out with a wavy motion; to float
in the wind; as, a flag streams in the wind.
(v. t.) To send forth in a current or stream; to cause to flow;
to pour; as, his eyes streamed tears.
(v. t.) To mark with colors or embroidery in long tracts.
(v. t.) To unfurl.
(v. t.) To stretch; also, to lay out, as a dead body. See
Streak.
(v. i.) To trail along; to saunter or be drawn along,
carelessly, swaying in a kind of zigzag motion.
(n.) See Strene.
(a.) Drawn.
(a.) Close; narrow; strict.
(n.) A hospital.
(imp. & p. p.) of Spite
(n.) A peculiar glandlike but ductless organ found near the
stomach or intestine of most vertebrates and connected with the
vascular system; the milt. Its exact function in not known.
(n.) Anger; latent spite; ill humor; malice; as, to vent one's
spleen.
(n.) A fit of anger; choler.
(n.) A sudden motion or action; a fit; a freak; a whim.
(n.) Melancholy; hypochondriacal affections.
(n.) A fit of immoderate laughter or merriment.
(v. t.) To dislke.
(n.) Distress.
(n.) Pressure, strain; -- used chiefly of immaterial things;
except in mechanics; hence, urgency; importance; weight; significance.
(n.) The force, or combination of forces, which produces a
strain; force exerted in any direction or manner between contiguous
bodies, or parts of bodies, and taking specific names according to its
direction, or mode of action, as thrust or pressure, pull or tension,
shear or tangential stress.
(n.) Force of utterance expended upon words or syllables. Stress
is in English the chief element in accent and is one of the most
important in emphasis. See Guide to pronunciation, // 31-35.
(n.) Distress; the act of distraining; also, the thing
distrained.
(v. t.) To press; to urge; to distress; to put to difficulties.
(v. t.) To subject to stress, pressure, or strain.
(n.) See Splent.
(n.) See Splent coal, below.
(v. t.) To unite, as two ropes, or parts of a rope, by a
particular manner of interweaving the strands, -- the union being
between two ends, or between an end and the body of a rope.
(v. t.) To unite, as spars, timbers, rails, etc., by lapping the
two ends together, or by applying a piece which laps upon the two ends,
and then binding, or in any way making fast.
(v. t.) To unite in marrige.
(n.) A junction or joining made by splicing.
(n.) A rectangular piece fitting grooves like key seats in a hub
and a shaft, so that while the one may slide endwise on the other, both
must revolve together; a feather; also, sometimes, a groove to receive
such a rectangular piece.
(n.) A long, flexble piece of wood sometimes used as a ruler.
(v. t.) A piece split off; a splinter.
(v. t.) A thin piece of wood, or other substance, used to keep
in place, or protect, an injured part, especially a broken bone when
set.
(v. t.) A splint bone.
(v. t.) A disease affecting the splint bones, as a callosity or
hard excrescence.
(p. p.) of Strew
() p. p. of Strew.
(pl. ) of Stria
(n.) An owl.
(n.) A bunch of hackled flax prepared for drawing into slivers.
(a.) Strained; drawn close; tight; as, a strict embrace; a
strict ligature.
(a.) Tense; not relaxed; as, a strict fiber.
(a.) Exact; accurate; precise; rigorously nice; as, to keep
strict watch; to pay strict attention.
(a.) Governed or governing by exact rules; observing exact
rules; severe; rigorous; as, very strict in observing the Sabbath.
(a.) Rigidly; interpreted; exactly limited; confined;
restricted; as, to understand words in a strict sense.
(a.) Upright, or straight and narrow; -- said of the shape of
the plants or their flower clusters.
(imp.) of Stride
(v. t.) To walk with long steps, especially in a measured or
pompous manner.
(v. t.) To stand with the legs wide apart; to straddle.
(v. t.) To pass over at a step; to step over.
(v. t.) To straddle; to bestride.
(n.) The act of stridding; a long step; the space measured by a
long step; as, a masculine stride.
(v. t.) One of the small plates of metal used in making splint
armor. See Splint armor, below.
(v. t.) Splint, or splent, coal. See Splent coal, under Splent.
(v. t.) To split into splints, or thin, slender pieces; to
splinter; to shiver.
(v. t.) To fasten or confine with splints, as a broken limb. See
Splint, n., 2.
() of Spoil
(n.) The act of striving; earnest endeavor.
(n.) Exertion or contention for superiority; contest of
emulation, either by intellectual or physical efforts.
(n.) Altercation; violent contention; fight; battle.
(n.) That which is contended against; occasion of contest.
(imp.) of Strike
(p. p.) of Strike
(v. t.) To touch or hit with some force, either with the hand or
with an instrument; to smite; to give a blow to, either with the hand
or with any instrument or missile.
(v. t.) To come in collision with; to strike against; as, a
bullet struck him; the wave struck the boat amidships; the ship struck
a reef.
(v. t.) To give, as a blow; to impel, as with a blow; to give a
force to; to dash; to cast.
(v. t.) To stamp or impress with a stroke; to coin; as, to
strike coin from metal: to strike dollars at the mint.
(v. t.) To thrust in; to cause to enter or penetrate; to set in
the earth; as, a tree strikes its roots deep.
(v. t.) To punish; to afflict; to smite.
(v. t.) To cause to sound by one or more beats; to indicate or
notify by audible strokes; as, the clock strikes twelve; the drums
strike up a march.
(v. t.) To lower; to let or take down; to remove; as, to strike
sail; to strike a flag or an ensign, as in token of surrender; to
strike a yard or a topmast in a gale; to strike a tent; to strike the
centering of an arch.
(v. t.) To make a sudden impression upon, as by a blow; to
affect sensibly with some strong emotion; as, to strike the mind, with
surprise; to strike one with wonder, alarm, dread, or horror.
(v. t.) To affect in some particular manner by a sudden
impression or impulse; as, the plan proposed strikes me favorably; to
strike one dead or blind.
(v. t.) To cause or produce by a stroke, or suddenly, as by a
stroke; as, to strike a light.
(v. t.) To cause to ignite; as, to strike a match.
(v. t.) To make and ratify; as, to strike a bargain.
(v. t.) To take forcibly or fraudulently; as, to strike money.
(v. t.) To level, as a measure of grain, salt, or the like, by
scraping off with a straight instrument what is above the level of the
top.
(v. t.) To cut off, as a mortar joint, even with the face of the
wall, or inward at a slight angle.
(v. t.) To hit upon, or light upon, suddenly; as, my eye struck
a strange word; they soon struck the trail.
(imp. & p. p.) of Spoke
(a.) Uttered in speech; delivered by word of mouth; oral; as, a
spoken narrative; the spoken word.
(a.) Characterized by a certain manner or style in speaking; --
often in composition; as, a pleasant-spoken man.
(n.) Any one of numerous species of Spongiae, or Porifera. See
Illust. and Note under Spongiae.
(n.) The elastic fibrous skeleton of many species of horny
Spongiae (keratosa), used for many purposes, especially the varieties
of the genus Spongia. The most valuable sponges are found in the
Mediterranean and the Red Sea, and on the coasts of Florida and the
West Indies.
(n.) One who lives upon others; a pertinaceous and indolent
dependent; a parasite; a sponger.
(n.) Any spongelike substance.
(n.) Dough before it is kneaded and formed into loaves, and
after it is converted into a light, spongy mass by the agency of the
yeast or leaven.
(v. t.) To borrow money of; to make a demand upon; as, he struck
a friend for five dollars.
(v. t.) To lade into a cooler, as a liquor.
(v. t.) To stroke or pass lightly; to wave.
(v. t.) To advance; to cause to go forward; -- used only in past
participle.
(v. i.) To move; to advance; to proceed; to take a course; as,
to strike into the fields.
(v. i.) To deliver a quick blow or thrust; to give blows.
(v. i.) To hit; to collide; to dush; to clash; as, a hammer
strikes against the bell of a clock.
(v. i.) To sound by percussion, with blows, or as with blows; to
be struck; as, the clock strikes.
(v. i.) To make an attack; to aim a blow.
(v. i.) To touch; to act by appulse.
(v. i.) To run upon a rock or bank; to be stranded; as, the ship
struck in the night.
(v. i.) To pass with a quick or strong effect; to dart; to
penetrate.
(v. i.) To break forth; to commence suddenly; -- with into; as,
to strike into reputation; to strike into a run.
(v. i.) To lower a flag, or colors, in token of respect, or to
signify a surrender of a ship to an enemy.
(v. i.) To quit work in order to compel an increase, or prevent
a reduction, of wages.
(v. i.) To become attached to something; -- said of the spat of
oysters.
(v. i.) To steal money.
(n.) The act of striking.
(n.) An instrument with a straight edge for leveling a measure
of grain, salt, and the like, scraping off what is above the level of
the top; a strickle.
(n.) A bushel; four pecks.
(n.) An old measure of four bushels.
(n.) Fullness of measure; hence, excellence of quality.
(n.) An iron pale or standard in a gate or fence.
(n.) The act of quitting work; specifically, such an act by a
body of workmen, done as a means of enforcing compliance with demands
made on their employer.
(n.) A puddler's stirrer.
(n.) The horizontal direction of the outcropping edges of tilted
rocks; or, the direction of a horizontal line supposed to be drawn on
the surface of a tilted stratum. It is at right angles to the dip.
(n.) The extortion of money, or the attempt to extort money, by
threat of injury; blackmailing.
(n.) A small cord, a line, a twine, or a slender strip of
leather, or other substance, used for binding together, fastening, or
tying things; a cord, larger than a thread and smaller than a rope; as,
a shoe string; a bonnet string; a silken string.
(n.) Iron from the puddling furnace, in a pasty condition.
(n.) Iron ore, in masses, reduced but not melted or worked.
(n.) A mop for cleaning the bore of a cannon after a discharge.
It consists of a cylinder of wood, covered with sheepskin with the wool
on, or cloth with a heavy looped nap, and having a handle, or staff.
(n.) The extremity, or point, of a horseshoe, answering to the
heel.
(v. t.) To cleanse or wipe with a sponge; as, to sponge a slate
or a cannon; to wet with a sponge; as, to sponge cloth.
(v. t.) To wipe out with a sponge, as letters or writing; to
efface; to destroy all trace of.
(v. t.) Fig.: To deprive of something by imposition.
(v. t.) Fig.: To get by imposition or mean arts without cost;
as, to sponge a breakfast.
(v. i.) To suck in, or imbile, as a sponge.
(v. i.) Fig.: To gain by mean arts, by intrusion, or hanging on;
as, an idler sponges on his neighbor.
(v. i.) To be converted, as dough, into a light, spongy mass by
the agency of yeast, or leaven.
(a.) Soft, and full of cavities; of an open, loose, pliable
texture; as, a spongy excrescence; spongy earth; spongy cake; spongy
bones.
(a.) Wet; drenched; soaked and soft, like sponge; rainy.
(a.) Having the quality of imbibing fluids, like a sponge.
(n.) A thread or cord on which a number of objects or parts are
strung or arranged in close and orderly succession; hence, a line or
series of things arranged on a thread, or as if so arranged; a
succession; a concatenation; a chain; as, a string of shells or beads;
a string of dried apples; a string of houses; a string of arguments.
(n.) A strip, as of leather, by which the covers of a book are
held together.
(n.) The cord of a musical instrument, as of a piano, harp, or
violin; specifically (pl.), the stringed instruments of an orchestra,
in distinction from the wind instruments; as, the strings took up the
theme.
(n.) The line or cord of a bow.
(n.) A fiber, as of a plant; a little, fibrous root.
(n.) A nerve or tendon of an animal body.
(n.) An inside range of ceiling planks, corresponding to the
sheer strake on the outside and bolted to it.
(n.) The tough fibrous substance that unites the valves of the
pericap of leguminous plants, and which is readily pulled off; as, the
strings of beans.
(n.) A small, filamentous ramification of a metallic vein.
(n.) Same as Stringcourse.
(n.) The points made in a game.
(imp.) of String
(p. p.) of String
(v. t.) To furnish with strings; as, to string a violin.
(v. t.) To put in tune the strings of, as a stringed instrument,
in order to play upon it.
(v. t.) To put on a string; to file; as, to string beads.
(v. t.) To make tense; to strengthen.
(v. t.) To deprive of strings; to strip the strings from; as, to
string beans. See String, n., 9.
(a. & n.) Same as Spooney.
(n.) A sporidium.
(a.) Full of spots; marked with spots.
(n.) A man or woman engaged or joined in wedlock; a married
person, husband or wife.
(n.) A married man, in distinct from a spousess or married
woman; a bridegroom or husband.
(n.) To wed; to espouse.
(a.) Quick; lively; alert.
(v. t.) To weaken, as a joint, ligament, or muscle, by sudden
and excessive exertion, as by wrenching; to overstrain, or stretch
injuriously, but without luxation; as, to sprain one's ankle.
(n.) The act or result of spraining; lameness caused by
spraining; as, a bad sprain of the wrist.
() imp. of Spring.
(v. i.) To spread and stretch the body or limbs carelessly in a
horizontal position; to lie with the limbs stretched out ungracefully.
(v. i.) To spread irregularly, as vines, plants, or tress; to
spread ungracefully, as chirography.
(v. i.) To move, when lying down, with awkward extension and
motions of the limbs; to scramble in creeping.
(imp. & p. p.) of Spread
(v. t.) To extend in length and breadth, or in breadth only; to
stretch or expand to a broad or broader surface or extent; to open; to
unfurl; as, to spread a carpet; to spread a tent or a sail.
(v. t.) To extend so as to cover something; to extend to a great
or grater extent in every direction; to cause to fill or cover a wide
or wider space.
(v. t.) To divulge; to publish, as news or fame; to cause to be
more extensively known; to disseminate; to make known fully; as, to
spread a report; -- often acompanied by abroad.
(v. t.) To propagate; to cause to affect great numbers; as, to
spread a disease.
(v. t.) To diffuse, as emanations or effluvia; to emit; as,
odoriferous plants spread their fragrance.
(v. t.) To strew; to scatter over a surface; as, to spread
manure; to spread lime on the ground.
(v. t.) To prepare; to set and furnish with provisions; as, to
spread a table.
(v. i.) To extend in length and breadth in all directions, or in
breadth only; to be extended or stretched; to expand.
(v. i.) To be extended by drawing or beating; as, some metals
spread with difficulty.
(v. i.) To be made known more extensively, as news.
(v. i.) To be propagated from one to another; as, the disease
spread into all parts of the city.
(n.) Extent; compass.
(n.) Expansion of parts.
(n.) A cloth used as a cover for a table or a bed.
(n.) A table, as spread or furnished with a meal; hence, an
entertainment of food; a feast.
(n.) A privilege which one person buys of another, of demanding
certain shares of stock at a certain price, or of delivering the same
shares of stock at another price, within a time agreed upon.
(n.) An unlimited expanse of discontinuous points.
() imp. & p. p. of Spread, v.
() p. p. of Sprenge. Sprinkled.
(imp.) of Spring
(v. i.) To run very rapidly; to run at full speed.
(n.) The act of sprinting; a run of a short distance at full
speed.
(n.) A spirit; a soul; a shade; also, an apparition. See
Spright.
(n.) An elf; a fairy; a goblin.
(n.) The green woodpecker, or yaffle.
() imp. of Spring. Sprung.
(v. t.) To shoot, as the seed of a plant; to germinate; to push
out new shoots; hence, to grow like shoots of plants.
(v. t.) To shoot into ramifications.
(v. t.) To cause to sprout; as, the rain will sprout the seed.
(v. t.) To deprive of sprouts; as, to sprout potatoes.
(v. i.) The shoot of a plant; a shoot from the seed, from the
stump, or from the root or tuber, of a plant or tree; more rarely, a
shoot from the stem of a plant, or the end of a branch.
(v. i.) Young coleworts; Brussels sprouts.
(a.) Any coniferous tree of the genus Picea, as the Norway
spruce (P. excelsa), and the white and black spruces of America (P.
alba and P. nigra), besides several others in the far Northwest. See
Picea.
(a.) The wood or timber of the spruce tree.
(a.) Prussia leather; pruce.
(n.) Neat, without elegance or dignity; -- formerly applied to
things with a serious meaning; now chiefly applied to persons.
(n.) Sprightly; dashing.
(v. t.) To dress with affected neatness; to trim; to make
spruce.
(v. i.) To dress one's self with affected neatness; as, to
spruce up.
(v. i.) To spring up; to germinate; to spring forward or
outward.
(n.) Anything short and stiff.
(n.) A leap; a spring.
(n.) A steep ascent in a road.
(a.) Active; lively; vigorous.
(imp. & p. p.) of Spume
(n.) A sponge.
(superl.) Full of spunk; quick; spirited.
(v. t.) To emit foam; to froth; -- said of the emission of yeast
from beer in course of fermentation.
(n.) Any plant of the genus Euphorbia. See Euphorbia.
(n.) An annual herb (Spergula arvensis) with whorled filiform
leaves, sometimes grown in Europe for fodder.
(imp. & p. p.) of Seize
(n.) One who, or that which, seizes.
(n.) Possession; possession of an estate of froehold. It may be
either in deed or in law; the former when there is actual possession,
the latter when there is a right to such possession by construction of
law. In some of the United States seizin means merely ownership.
(n.) The act of taking possession.
(n.) The thing possessed; property.
(n.) One who seizes, or takes possession.
(a.) Alt. of Sejeant
(a.) Rare; infrequent.
(a.) Taken from a number by preferance; picked out as more
valuable or exellent than others; of special value or exellence; nicely
chosen; selected; choice.
(v. t.) To choose and take from a number; to take by preference
from among others; to pick out; to cull; as, to select the best authors
for perusal.
(pl. ) of Self
(n.) A short piece of land in arable ridges and furrows, of
uncertain quantity; also, a ridge of land lying between two furrows.
(n.) One who sells.
(n.) pl. of Self.
(a.) To imitate; to make a representation or likeness.
(a.) It seems; -- chiefly used impersonally in reports and
judgments to express an opinion in reference to the law on some point
not necessary to be decided, and not intended to be definitely settled
in the cause.
(a.) Like; resembling.
(pl. ) of Semen
(n.) A fasciole of a spatangoid sea urchin.
(adv.) Always; throughout; as, sempre piano, always soft.
(a.) Of six; belonging to six; containing six.
(n.) A light thin stuff of silk.
(n.) Seneca root.
(a.) Of or pertaining to old age; proceeding from, or
characteristic of, old age; affected with the infirmities of old age;
as, senile weakness.
(n.) A signal call on a trumpet or cornet for entrance or exit
on the stage.
(n.) The barracuda.
(n.) A braided cord or fabric formed by plaiting together rope
yarns or other small stuff.
(n.) Plaited straw or palm leaves for making hats.
(imp. & p. p.) of Sense
(v. i.) To lie snug or quiet.
(n.) A miser; a sneaking fellow.
(a.) Soiled with snuff.
(a.) Sulky; angry; vexed.
(adv.) In a snug manner; closely; safely.
(n.) A curved plank, placed edgewise, to work in the bows of a
vessel.
(n.) One who, or that which, soaks.
(n.) A hard drinker.
(imp. & p. p.) of Soap
(imp. & p. p.) of Soar
(imp. & p. p.) of Sob
(a.) Sensory; as, the sensor nerves.
(n.) A tenure of lands and tenements by a certain or determinate
service; a tenure distinct from chivalry or knight's service, in which
the obligations were uncertain. The service must be certain, in order
to be denominated socage, as to hold by fealty and twenty shillings
rent.
(a.) Of or pertaining to society; relating to men living in
society, or to the public as an aggregate body; as, social interest or
concerns; social pleasure; social benefits; social happiness; social
duties.
(a.) Ready or disposed to mix in friendly converse;
companionable; sociable; as, a social person.
(a.) Consisting in union or mutual intercourse.
(a.) Naturally growing in groups or masses; -- said of many
individual plants of the same species.
(a.) Living in communities consisting of males, females, and
neuters, as do ants and most bees.
(a.) Forming compound groups or colonies by budding from basal
processes or stolons; as, the social ascidians.
(n.) A soldier placed on guard; a sentinel.
(n.) Guard; watch, as by a sentinel.
(n.) See Supawn.
(n.) A large sting ray of the genus Trygon, especially T. sephen
of the Indian Ocean and the Red Sea. The skin is an article of
commerce.
(pl. ) of Sepia
(pl. ) of Sepia
(v. t.) To set apart.
(n.) A soluble poison (ptomaine) present in putrid blood. It is
also formed in the putrefaction of proteid matter in general.
(n.) The poisoning of the system by the introduction of
putrescent material into the blood.
(a.) Of or pertaining to a septum or septa, as of a coral or a
shell.
(n.) An opening into which anything is fitted; any hollow thing
or place which receives and holds something else; as, the sockets of
the teeth.
(n.) Especially, the hollow tube or place in which a candle is
fixed in the candlestick.
(pl. ) of Socman
(n.) One who holds lands or tenements by socage; a socager.
(imp. & p. p.) of Sod
(a.) Pertaining to, or containing, soda.
(p. p.) Boiled; seethed; also, soaked; heavy with moisture;
saturated; as, sodden beef; sodden bread; sodden fields.
(v. i.) To be seethed; to become sodden.
(v. t.) To soak; to make heavy with water.
() A combining form (also used adjectively) denoting the
presence of sodium or one of its compounds.
(n.) A common metallic element of the alkali group, in nature
always occuring combined, as in common salt, in albite, etc. It is
isolated as a soft, waxy, white, unstable metal, so readily oxidized
that it combines violently with water, and to be preserved must be kept
under petroleum or some similar liquid. Sodium is used combined in many
salts, in the free state as a reducer, and as a means of obtaining
other metals (as magnesium and aluminium) is an important commercial
product. Symbol Na (Natrium). Atomic weight 23. Specific gravity 0.97.
(n.) Alt. of Septette
(a.) Of the seventh degree or order.
(n.) A quantic of the seventh degree.
(a.) Alt. of Septical
(n.) A substance that promotes putrefaction.
(n.) Carnal copulation in a manner against nature; buggery.
() A word compounded of so and ever, used in composition with
who, what, where, when, how, etc., and indicating any out of all
possible or supposable persons, things, places, times, ways, etc. It is
sometimes used separate from the pronoun or adverb.
(n.) The under side of the subordinate parts and members of
buildings, such as staircases, entablatures, archways, cornices, or the
like. See Illust. of Lintel.
(v. t.) To make soft or more soft.
(v. t.) To render less hard; -- said of matter.
(adv.) In a safe manner; danger, injury, loss, or evil
consequences.
(n.) The condition or state of being safe; freedom from danger
or hazard; exemption from hurt, injury, or loss.
(n.) Freedom from whatever exposes one to danger or from
liability to cause danger or harm; safeness; hence, the quality of
making safe or secure, or of giving confidence, justifying trust,
insuring against harm or loss, etc.
(n.) Preservation from escape; close custody.
(n.) Same as Safety touchdown, below.
(imp. & p. p.) of Sag
(adv.) In a sage manner; wisely.
(n.) A Russian measure of length equal to about seven English
feet.
(n.) A pot or case of fire clay, in which fine stoneware is
inclosed while baking in the kiln; a seggar.
(n.) The clay of which such pots or cases are made.
(n.) A marmoset; -- called also sagouin.
(imp. & p. p.) of Sail
(n.) A sailor.
(n.) A ship or other vessel; -- with qualifying words
descriptive of speed or manner of sailing; as, a heavy sailer; a fast
sailer.
(n.) One who follows the business of navigating ships or other
vessels; one who understands the practical management of ships; one of
the crew of a vessel; a mariner; a common seaman.
(n.) The pollock, or coalfish; -- called also sillock.
(n.) A helmet. See Sallet.
(a.) Saline
(n.) The recompense or consideration paid, or stipulated to be
paid, to a person at regular intervals for services; fixed wages, as by
the year, quarter, or month; stipend; hire.
(v. t.) To pay, or agree to pay, a salary to; to attach salary
to; as, to salary a clerk; to salary a position.
(v. t.) To combine or impregnate with a salt.
(v. t.) To form a salt with; to convert into a salt; as, to
salify a base or an acid.
(a.) Consisting of salt, or containing salt; as, saline
particles; saline substances; a saline cathartic.
(a.) Of the quality of salt; salty; as, a saline taste.
(a.) A salt spring; a place where salt water is collected in the
earth.
(n.) A crude potash obtained from beet-root residues and other
similar sources.
(n.) A metallic salt; esp., a salt of potassium, sodium,
lithium, or magnesium, used in medicine.
(v. t.) To season with salt; to salt.
(n.) A massive lamellar variety of pyroxene, of a dingy green
color.
(n.) A light kind of helmet, with or without a visor, introduced
during the 15th century.
(n.) Alt. of Salleting
(n.) The willow; willow twigs.
(n.) A name given to certain species of willow, especially those
which do not have flexible shoots, as Salix caprea, S. cinerea, etc.
(superl.) Having a yellowish color; of a pale, sickly color,
tinged with yellow; as, a sallow skin.
(v. t.) To tinge with sallowness.
(n.) A ragout of partly roasted game stewed with sauce, wine,
bread, and condiments suited to provoke appetite.
(n.) A spacious and elegant apartment for the reception of
company or for works of art; a hall of reception, esp. a hall for
public entertainments or amusements; a large room or parlor; as, the
saloon of a steamboat.
(n.) Popularly, a public room for specific uses; esp., a barroom
or grogshop; as, a drinking saloon; an eating saloon; a dancing saloon.
(n.) An aromatic drink prepared from sassafras bark and other
ingredients, at one time much used in London.
(pl. ) of Salpa
(pl. ) of Salpa
(n.) A salpa.
(imp. & p. p.) of Salt
(adv.) With taste of salt; in a salt manner.
(v. t.) To address, as with expressions of kind wishes and
courtesy; to greet; to hail.
(v. t.) Hence, to give a sign of good will; to compliment by an
act or ceremony, as a kiss, a bow, etc.
(v. t.) To honor, as some day, person, or nation, by a discharge
of cannon or small arms, by dipping colors, by cheers, etc.
(v. t.) To promote the welfare and safety of; to benefit; to
gratify.
(v.) The act of saluting, or expressing kind wishes or respect;
salutation; greeting.
(v.) A sign, token, or ceremony, expressing good will,
compliment, or respect, as a kiss, a bow, etc.
(v.) A token of respect or honor for some distinguished or
official personage, for a foreign vessel or flag, or for some festival
or event, as by presenting arms, by a discharge of cannon, volleys of
small arms, dipping the colors or the topsails, etc.
(imp. & p. p.) of Salve
(n.) One who salves, or uses salve as a remedy; hence, a
quacksalver, or quack.
(n.) A salvor.
(n.) A tray or waiter on which anything is presented.
(pl. ) of Salvo
(n.) One who assists in saving a ship or goods at sea, without
being under special obligation to do so.
(n.) An East Indian deer (Rusa Aristotelis) having a mane on its
neck. Its antlers have but three prongs. Called also gerow. The name is
applied to other species of the genus Rusa, as the Bornean sambur (R.
equina).
(n.) A hot and destructive wind that sometimes blows, in Turkey,
from the desert. It is identical with the simoom of Arabia and the
kamsin of Syria.
(a.) A species of silk stuff, or taffeta, generally interwoven
with gold.
(n.) The parr.
(n.) A Chinese boat from twelve to fifteen feet long, covered
with a house, and sometimes used as a permanent habitation on the
inland waters.
(n.) Example; pattern.
(n.) A part of anything presented for inspection, or shown as
evidence of the quality of the whole; a specimen; as, goods are often
purchased by samples.
(v. t.) To make or show something similar to; to match.
(v. t.) To take or to test a sample or samples of; as, to sample
sugar, teas, wools, cloths.
(n.) A spirituous liquor distilled by the Chinese from the
yeasty liquor in which boiled rice has fermented under pressure.
(imp. & p. p.) of Sand
(n.) Same as Sendal.
(n.) Sandalwood.
(n.) A kind of shoe consisting of a sole strapped to the foot; a
protection for the foot, covering its lower surface, but not its upper.
(n.) A kind of slipper.
(n.) An overshoe with parallel openings across the instep.
(a.) Covered or sprinkled with sand; sandy; barren.
(a.) Marked with small spots; variegated with spots; speckled;
of a sandy color, as a hound.
(a.) Short-sighted.
(n.) A kind of minium, or red lead, made by calcining carbonate
of lead, but inferior to true minium.
(n.) See Sandix.
(n.) A thin, serous fluid commonly discharged from ulcers or
foul wounds.
(n.) The condition or quality of being sane; soundness of health
of body or mind, especially of the mind; saneness.
(n.) A district or a subvision of a vilayet.
(n.) A chank shell (Turbinella pyrum); also, a shell bracelet or
necklace made in India from the chank shell.
(n.) Same as Sannup.
(n.) A male Indian; a brave; -- correlative of squaw.
(n.) A Turkish saint; a kind of dervish, regarded by the people
as a saint: also, a hermit.
(a.) Abounding in sap; sappy.
(n.) One who saps; specifically (Mil.), one who is employed in
working at saps, building and repairing fortifications, and the like.
(n.) One of the outer pinions or feathers of the wing of a bird,
esp. of a hawk.
(v. t.) To weed, or clear of weeds, with a hoe.
() A combining form from Gr. sa`rx, sa`rkos, flesh; as,
sarcophagous, flesh-eating; sarcology.
(n.) A sardine.
(n.) A precious stone. See Sardius.
(n.) Alt. of Sarlyk
(n.) The yak.
(n.) A sort of petticoat worn by both sexes in Java and the
Malay Archipelago.
(n.) One of the large sandstone blocks scattered over the
English chalk downs; -- called also sarsen stone, and Druid stone.
(imp. & p. p.) of Sash
(n.) Same as Shaster.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Sate
(n.) A kind of dress goods made of cotton or woolen, with a
glossy surface resembling satin.
(a.) Like or composed of satin; glossy; as, to have a satiny
appearance; a satiny texture.
(n.) A sowing or planting.
(a.) A composition, generally poetical, holding up vice or folly
to reprobation; a keen or severe exposure of what in public or private
morals deserves rebuke; an invective poem; as, the Satires of Juvenal.
(a.) Keeness and severity of remark; caustic exposure to
reprobation; trenchant wit; sarcasm.
(a.) Sown; propagated by seed.
(n.) The governor of a province in ancient Persia; hence, a
petty autocrat despot.
(imp. & p. p.) of Sauce
(n.) A small pan or vessel in which sauce was set on a table.
(n.) A small dish, commonly deeper than a plate, in which a cup
is set at table.
(n.) Something resembling a saucer in shape.
(n.) A flat, shallow caisson for raising sunken ships.
(n.) A shallow socket for the pivot of a capstan.
(n.) An American fresh-water food fish (Stizostedion Canadense);
-- called also gray pike, blue pike, hornfish, land pike, sand pike,
pickering, and pickerel.
(n.) A hired mourner at a funeral.
(n.) Any carangoid fish of the genus Trachurus, especially T.
trachurus, or T. saurus, of Europe and America, and T. picturatus of
California. Called also skipjack, and horse mackerel.
(n.) That which is expectorated; a salival discharge; spittle;
saliva.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Spy
(n.) Act or business of spying.
(v. i.) To throw sticls at cocks; to throw anything about
awkwardly or irregularly.
(n.) A sudden violent gust of wind often attended with rain or
snow.
(v. i.) To cry out; to scream or cry violently, as a woman
frightened, or a child in anger or distress; as, the infant squalled.
(n.) A loud scream; a harsh cry.
(n.) A scale cast off from the skin; a thin dry shred consisting
of epithelium.
(n.) A scale.
(n.) The scale, or exopodite, of an antenna of a crustacean.
(n.) The corner, or angle, of a figure.
(n.) A parallelogram having four equal sides and four right
angles.
(n.) Hence, anything which is square, or nearly so
(n.) A square piece or fragment.
(n.) A pane of glass.
(n.) A certain number of lines, forming a portion of a column,
nearly square; -- used chiefly in reckoning the prices of
advertisements in newspapers.
(n.) One hundred superficial feet.
(n.) An area of four sides, generally with houses on each side;
sometimes, a solid block of houses; also, an open place or area for
public use, as at the meeting or intersection of two or more streets.
(n.) An instrument having at least one right angle and two or
more straight edges, used to lay out or test square work. It is of
several forms, as the T square, the carpenter's square, the
try-square., etc.
(n.) Hence, a pattern or rule.
(n.) The product of a number or quantity multiplied by itself;
thus, 64 is the square of 8, for 8 / 8 = 64; the square of a + b is a2
+ 2ab + b2.
(n.) Exact proportion; justness of workmanship and conduct;
regularity; rule.
(n.) A body of troops formed in a square, esp. one formed to
resist a charge of cavalry; a squadron.
(n.) Fig.: The relation of harmony, or exact agreement;
equality; level.
(n.) The position of planets distant ninety degrees from each
other; a quadrate.
(n.) The act of squaring, or quarreling; a quarrel.
(n.) The front of a woman's dress over the bosom, usually worked
or embroidered.
(a.) Having four equal sides and four right angles; as, a square
figure.
(a.) Forming a right angle; as, a square corner.
(a.) Having a shape broad for the height, with rectilineal and
angular rather than curving outlines; as, a man of a square frame.
(a.) Exactly suitable or correspondent; true; just.
(a.) Rendering equal justice; exact; fair; honest, as square
dealing.
(a.) Even; leaving no balance; as, to make or leave the accounts
square.
(a.) Leaving nothing; hearty; vigorous.
(a.) At right angles with the mast or the keel, and parallel to
the horizon; -- said of the yards of a square-rigged vessel when they
are so braced.
(n.) To form with four sides and four right angles.
(n.) To form with right angles and straight lines, or flat
surfaces; as, to square mason's work.
(n.) To compare with, or reduce to, any given measure or
standard.
(n.) To adjust; to regulate; to mold; to shape; to fit; as, to
square our actions by the opinions of others.
(n.) To make even, so as leave no remainder of difference; to
balance; as, to square accounts.
(n.) To multiply by itself; as, to square a number or a
quantity.
(n.) To hold a quartile position respecting.
(n.) To place at right angles with the keel; as, to square the
yards.
(v. i.) To accord or agree exactly; to be consistent with; to
conform or agree; to suit; to fit.
(v. i.) To go to opposite sides; to take an attitude of offense
or defense, or of defiance; to quarrel.
(v. i.) To take a boxing attitude; -- often with up, sometimes
with off.
(v. i.) To utter a shrill, abrupt scream; to squeak harshly.
(n.) Act of squawking; a harsh squeak.
(n.) The American night heron. See under Night.
(v. i.) See Squall.
(v. i.) To utter a sharp, shrill cry, usually of short duration;
to cry with an acute tone, as an animal; or, to make a sharp,
disagreeable noise, as a pipe or quill, a wagon wheel, a door; to
creak.
(v. i.) To break silence or secrecy for fear of pain or
punishment; to speak; to confess.
(n.) A sharp, shrill, disagreeable sound suddenly utered, either
of the human voice or of any animal or instrument, such as is made by
carriage wheels when dry, by the soles of leather shoes, or by a pipe
or reed.
(v. i.) To cry with a sharp, shrill, prolonged sound, as certain
animals do, indicating want, displeasure, or pain.
(v. i.) To turn informer; to betray a secret.
(n.) A shrill, somewhat prolonged cry.
(n.) An old gold coin of Italy and Turkey. It was first struck
at Venice about the end of the 13th century, and afterward in the other
Italian cities, and by the Levant trade was introduced into Turkey. It
is worth about 9s. 3d. sterling, or about $2.25. The different kinds
vary somewhat in value.
(n.) A blanket or shawl worn as an outer garment by the Spanish
Americans, as in Mexico.
(n.) One of an order of celestial beings, each having three
pairs of wings. In ecclesiastical art and in poetry, a seraph is
represented as one of a class of angels.
(n.) A mist, or very fine rain, which sometimes falls from a
clear sky a few moments after sunset.
(a.) Of or pertaining to a series; consisting of a series;
appearing in successive parts or numbers; as, a serial work or
publication.
(a.) Of or pertaining to rows.
(n.) A publication appearing in a series or succession of part;
a tale, or other writing, published in successive numbers of a
periodical.
(n.) A number of things or events standing or succeeding in
order, and connected by a like relation; sequence; order; course; a
succession of things; as, a continuous series of calamitous events.
(n.) Any comprehensive group of animals or plants including
several subordinate related groups.
(n.) An indefinite number of terms succeeding one another, each
of which is derived from one or more of the preceding by a fixed law,
called the law of the series; as, an arithmetical series; a geometrical
series.
(n.) A white crystalline nitrogenous substance obtained by the
action of dilute sulphuric acid on silk gelatin.
(n.) A discourse or address; a talk; a writing; as, the sermons
of Chaucer.
(n.) Specifically, a discourse delivered in public, usually by a
clergyman, for the purpose of religious instruction and grounded on
some text or passage of Scripture.
(n.) Hence, a serious address; a lecture on one's conduct or
duty; an exhortation or reproof; a homily; -- often in a depreciatory
sense.
(v. i.) To speak; to discourse; to compose or deliver a sermon.
(v. t.) To discourse to or of, as in a sermon.
(v. t.) To tutor; to lecture.
(n.) Same as Ceroon.
(a.) Serous.
(a.) Thin; watery; like serum; as the serous fluids.
(a.) Of or pertaining to serum; as, the serous glands,
membranes, layers. See Serum.
(n.) An African wild cat (Felis serval) of moderate size. It has
rather long legs and a tail of moderate length. Its color is tawny,
with black spots on the body and rings of black on the tail.
(imp. & p. p.) of Serve
(n.) Either of two annual herbaceous plants of the genus Sesamum
(S. Indicum, and S. orientale), from the seeds of which an oil is
expressed; also, the small obovate, flattish seeds of these plants,
sometimes used as food. See Benne.
(n.) A piece of music composed for six voices or six
instruments; a sextet; -- called also sestuor.
(n.) The last six lines of a sonnet.
(a.) Alt. of Setous
(a.) Thickly set with bristles or bristly hairs.
(n.) A display, as of plate, equipage, etc.; that which is
displayed.
(n.) A long seat with a back, -- made to accommodate several
persons at once.
(n.) A vessel with a very long, sharp prow, carrying two or
three masts with lateen sails, -- used in the Mediterranean.
(n.) One who, or that which, sets; -- used mostly in composition
with a noun, as typesetter; or in combination with an adverb, as a
setter on (or inciter), a setter up, a setter forth.
(n.) A hunting dog of a special breed originally derived from a
cross between the spaniel and the pointer. Modern setters are usually
trained to indicate the position of game birds by standing in a fixed
position, but originally they indicated it by sitting or crouching.
(n.) One who hunts victims for sharpers.
(n.) One who adapts words to music in composition.
(n.) An adornment; a decoration; -- with off.
(n.) A shallow seggar for porcelain.
(v. t.) To cut the dewlap (of a cow or an ox), and to insert a
seton, so as to cause an issue.
() A combining form meaning seven; as, septifolious,
seven-leaved; septi-lateral, seven-sided.
(n.) A case for the reception of a sword, hunting knife, or
other long and slender instrument; a scabbard.
(n.) Any sheathlike covering, organ, or part.
(n.) The base of a leaf when sheathing or investing a stem or
branch, as in grasses.
(n.) One of the elytra of an insect.
(n.) An ancient weight and coin used by the Jews and by other
nations of the same stock.
(n.) A jocose term for money.
(n.) A contest in boxing, in an argument, or the like.
(n.) A small, short hair or bristle; a small seta.
(n.) A setula.
(a.) Looking obliquely. Specifically (Med.), not having the
optic axes coincident; -- said of the eyes. See Squint, n., 2.
(n.) Fig.: Looking askance.
(v. i.) To see or look obliquely, asquint, or awry, or with a
furtive glance.
(v. i.) To have the axes of the eyes not coincident; -- to be
cross-eyed.
(v. i.) To deviate from a true line; to run obliquely.
(v. t.) To turn to an oblique position; to direct obliquely; as,
to squint an eye.
(v. t.) To cause to look with noncoincident optic axes.
(n.) The act or habit of squinting.
(n.) A want of coincidence of the axes of the eyes; strabismus.
(n.) Same as Hagioscope.
(v. i.) To twist about briskly with contor/ions like an eel or a
worm; to wriggle; to writhe.
(v. t.) See Squir.
(v. t.) To drive or eject in a stream out of a narrow pipe or
orifice; as, to squirt water.
(v. i.) To be thrown out, or ejected, in a rapid stream, from a
narrow orifice; -- said of liquids.
(v. i.) Hence, to throw out or utter words rapidly; to prate.
(n.) An instrument out of which a liquid is ejected in a small
stream with force.
(n.) A small, quick stream; a jet.
(v. i.) Firmly established; not easily moved, shaken, or
overthrown; fixed; as, a stable government.
(v. i.) Steady in purpose; constant; firm in resolution; not
easily diverted from a purpose; not fickle or wavering; as, a man of
stable character.
(v. i.) Durable; not subject to overthrow or change; firm; as, a
stable foundation; a stable position.
(v. t.) To fix; to establish.
(v. i.) A house, shed, or building, for beasts to lodge and feed
in; esp., a building or apartment with stalls, for horses; as, a horse
stable; a cow stable.
(v. t.) To put or keep in a stable.
(v. i.) To dwell or lodge in a stable; to dwell in an inclosed
place; to kennel.
(adv.) In a stable manner; firmly; fixedly; steadily; as, a
government stably settled.
(n.) One of the sweet spices used by the ancient Jews in the
preparation of incense. It was perhaps an oil or other form of myrrh or
cinnamon, or a kind of storax.
(pl. ) of Stadium
(pl. ) of Staff
(n.) A player.
(n.) One who has long acted on the stage of life; a
practitioner; a person of experience, or of skill derived from long
experience.
(n.) A horse used in drawing a stage.
(n.) A landing place; an elevated staging upon a wharf for
discharging coal, etc., as from railway cars, into vessels.
(imp. & p. p.) of Stake
(imp. & p. p.) of Sip
(n.) See Seepage.
(n.) A device, consisting of a pipe or tube bent so as to form
two branches or legs of unequal length, by which a liquid can be
transferred to a lower level, as from one vessel to another, over an
intermediate elevation, by the action of the pressure of the atmosphere
in forcing the liquid up the shorter branch of the pipe immersed in it,
while the continued excess of weight of the liquid in the longer branch
(when once filled) causes a continuous flow. The flow takes place only
when the discharging extremity of the pipe ia lower than the higher
liquid surface, and when no part of the pipe is higher above the
surface than the same liquid will rise by atmospheric pressure; that
is, about 33 feet for water, and 30 inches for mercury, near the sea
level.
(n.) One of the tubes or folds of the mantle border of a bivalve
or gastropod mollusk by which water is conducted into the gill cavity.
See Illust. under Mya, and Lamellibranchiata.
(n.) The anterior prolongation of the margin of any gastropod
shell for the protection of the soft siphon.
(n.) The tubular organ through which water is ejected from the
gill cavity of a cephaloid. It serves as a locomotive organ, by guiding
and confining the jet of water. Called also siphuncle. See Illust.
under Loligo, and Dibranchiata.
(n.) The siphuncle of a cephalopod shell.
(n.) The sucking proboscis of certain parasitic insects and
crustaceans.
(n.) A sproutlike prolongation in front of the mouth of many
gephyreans.
(n.) A tubular organ connected both with the esophagus and the
intestine of certain sea urchins and annelids.
(n.) A siphon bottle.
(v. t.) To convey, or draw off, by means of a siphon, as a
liquid from one vessel to another at a lower level.
(n.) One whi sips.
(n.) A small sop; a small, thin piece of toasted bread soaked in
milk, broth, or the like; a small piece of toasted or fried bread cut
into some special shape and used for garnishing.
(n.) A Hindoo clerk or accountant.
(n.) A district or province; a circar.
(n.) The government; the supreme authority of the state.
(n.) A native chief in Hindostan; a headman.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Sire
(n.) See Siren, 6.
(n.) A term of address implying inferiority and used in anger,
contempt, reproach, or disrespectful familiarity, addressed to a man or
boy, but sometimes to a woman. In sililoquies often preceded by ah. Not
used in the plural.
(a.) Alt. of Syrupy
(a.) Like sirup, or partaking of its qualities.
(n.) A small green and yellow European finch (Spinus spinus, or
Carduelis spinus); -- called also aberdevine.
(n.) The American pinefinch (S. pinus); -- called also pine
siskin. See Pinefinch.
(n.) A leguminous tree (Dalbergia Sissoo) of the northern parts
of India; also, the dark brown compact and durable timber obtained from
it. It is used in shipbuilding and for gun carriages, railway ties,
etc.
() of Sit
(adv. & conj.) Since; afterwards. See 1st Sith.
() p. p. of Sit, for sat.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Size
(n.) Act of covering or treating with size.
(n.) A weak glue used in various trades; size.
(n.) The act of sorting with respect to size.
(n.) The act of bringing anything to a certain size.
(n.) Food and drink ordered from the buttery by a student.
(v. i.) To make a hissing sound; to fry, or to dry and shrivel
up, with a hissing sound.
(n.) A hissing sound, as of something frying over a fire.
(imp. & p. p.) of Skate
(n.) One who skates.
(n.) Any one of numerous species of hemipterous insects
belonging to Gerris, Pyrrhocoris, Prostemma, and allied genera. They
have long legs, and run rapidly over the surface of the water, as if
skating.
(n.) A constituent of human faeces formed in the small
intestines as a product of the putrefaction of albuminous matter. It is
also found in reduced indigo. Chemically it is methyl indol, C9H9N.
(n.) A skeleton. See Scelet.
(n.) A rocky isle; an insulated rock.
(n.) An outline or general delineation of anything; a first
rough or incomplete draught or plan of any design; especially, in the
fine arts, such a representation of an object or scene as serves the
artist's purpose by recording its chief features; also, a preliminary
study for an original work.
(n.) To draw the outline or chief features of; to make a rought
of.
(n.) To plan or describe by giving the principal points or ideas
of.
(v. i.) To make sketches, as of landscapes.
(imp. & p. p.) of Skew
(n.) A pin of wood or metal for fastening meat to a spit, or for
keeping it in form while roasting.
(v. t.) To fasten with skewers.
(n. pl.) A kind of large, coarse, short trousers formerly worn.
(n.) The water rail.
(v. t. & i.) To give scant measure; to squeeze or pinch in order
to effect a saving.
(a.) Consisting, or chiefly consisting, of skin; wanting flesh.
(n.) A rail; as, the water rail (called also skitty cock, and
skitty coot); the spotted crake (Porzana maruetta), and the moor hen.
(n.) An inferior quality of leather, made of split sheepskin,
tanned by immersion in sumac, and dyed. It is used for hat linings,
pocketbooks, bookbinding, etc.
(n.) The cutting tool or machine used in splitting leather or
skins, as sheepskins.
(v. i. & t.) To shriek.
(n.) The missel thrush.
(n. & v.) See Scurry.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Sky
(a.) Like the sky, or approaching the sky; lofty; ethereal.
(a.) Thick; viscous.
(a.) Sloppy; slimy; miry. See Sloppy.
(a.) Of or pertaining to slag; resembling slag; as, slaggy
cobalt.
(imp. & p. p.) of Slake
(n.) Slacken.
(a.) Of or pertaining to slang; of the nature of slang; disposed
to use slang.
(a.) Wet and dirty; slushy.
(n.) The period of a transitory breeze.
(n.) An interval of fair weather.
(n.) The loose or slack part of a rope; slack.
(imp. & p. p.) of Slate
(imp. & p. p.) of Slave
(n.) A vessel engaged in the slave trade; a slave ship.
(n.) A person engaged in the purchase and sale of slaves; a
slave merchant, or slave trader.
(v. i.) To suffer spittle, etc., to run from the mouth.
(v. i.) To be besmeared with saliva.
(v. t.) To smear with saliva issuing from the mouth; to defile
with drivel; to slabber.
(n.) Saliva driveling from the mouth.
(n.) One who slays; a killer; a murderer; a destrroyer of life.
(n.) The knotted or entangled part of silk or thread.
(n.) Silk not yet twisted; floss; -- called also sleave silk.
(v. t.) To separate, as threads; to divide, as a collection of
threads; to sley; -- a weaver's term.
(a.) Wanting firmness of texture or substance; thin; flimsy; as,
sleazy silk or muslin.
(n.) A strong vehicle with low runners or low wheels; or one
without wheels or runners, made of plank slightly turned up at one end,
used for transporting loads upon the snow, ice, or bare ground; a sled.
(n.) A hurdle on which, formerly, traitors were drawn to the
place of execution.
(n.) A sleigh.
(n.) A game at cards; -- called also old sledge, and all fours.
(v. i. & t.) To travel or convey in a sledge or sledges.
(v. t.) A large, heavy hammer, usually wielded with both hands;
-- called also sledge hammer.
(a.) Of a sleek, or smooth, and glossy appearance.
(a.) Fawning and deceitful; sly.
(n.) Drowsy; inclined to, or overcome by, sleep.
(n.) Tending to induce sleep; soporiferous; somniferous; as, a
sleepy drink or potion.
(n.) Dull; lazy; heavy; sluggish.
(n.) Characterized by an absence of watchfulness; as, sleepy
security.
(a.) Of or pertaining to sleet; characterized by sleet; as, a
sleety storm; sleety weather.
(n.) See Sleave, untwisted thread.
(n.) The part of a garment which covers the arm; as, the sleeve
of a coat or a gown.
(n.) A narrow channel of water.
(n.) A tubular part made to cover, sustain, or steady another
part, or to form a connection between two parts.
(n.) A long bushing or thimble, as in the nave of a wheel.
(n.) A short piece of pipe used for covering a joint, or forming
a joint between the ends of two other pipes.
(v. t.) To furnish with sleeves; to put sleeves into; as, to
sleeve a coat.
(a.) Sly.
(n.) A vehicle moved on runners, and used for transporting
persons or goods on snow or ice; -- in England commonly called a
sledge.
(n.) A burrowing rodent (Spalax typhlus), native of Russia and
Asia Minor. It has the general appearance of a mole, and is destitute
of eyes. Called also mole rat.
(n.) The track of man or beast as followed by the scent.
(a.) Somewhat drunk.
(imp. & p. p.) of Slice
(n.) One who, or that which, slices; specifically, the circular
saw of the lapidary.
(a.) See Slidder.
(n.) One who, or that which, slides; especially, a sliding part
of an instrument or machine.
(n.) The red-bellied terrapin (Pseudemys rugosa).
(imp. & p. p.) of Slime
(adv.) In a state of slimness; in a slim manner; slenderly.
(a.) Flimsy; frail.
(a.) Thin; lank.
(v.) Sledge runners on which a skip is dragged in a mine.
(a.) Slippery.
(v. t.) To cut or divide into long, thin pieces, or into very
small pieces; to cut or rend lengthwise; to slit; as, to sliver wood.
(n.) A long piece cut ot rent off; a sharp, slender fragment; a
splinter.
(n.) A strand, or slender roll, of cotton or other fiber in a
loose, untwisted state, produced by a carding machine and ready for the
roving or slubbing which preceeds spinning.
(n.) Bait made of pieces of small fish. Cf. Kibblings.
(n.) The war cry, or gathering word, of a Highland clan in
Scotland; hence, any rallying cry.
(a.) Sluggish; slow.
(imp. & p. p.) of Slope
(superl.) Wet, so as to spatter easily; wet, as with something
slopped over; muddy; plashy; as, a sloppy place, walk, road.
() See Slush, Slushy.
(n.) A hanging down of the head; a drooping attitude; a limp
appearance; an ungainly, clownish gait; a sidewise depression or
hanging down, as of a hat brim.
(n.) An awkward, heavy, clownish fellow.
(v. i.) To droop, as the head.
(v. i.) To walk in a clumsy, lazy manner.
(v. t.) To cause to hang down; to depress at the side; as, to
slouth the hat.
(n.) A man or boy habitually negligent of neathess and order; --
the correlative term to slattern, or slut.
(imp. & p. p.) of Slow
(adv.) In a slow manner; moderately; not rapidly; not early; not
rashly; not readly; tardly.
(n.) Mud; mire; soft mud; slush.
(n.) Small floating pieces of ice, or masses of saturated snow.
(n.) See Slime, 4.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Slue
(a.) Sluggish.
(n.) An artifical passage for water, fitted with a valve or
gate, as in a mill stream, for stopping or regulating the flow; also, a
water gate or flood gate.
(n.) Hence, an opening or channel through which anything flows;
a source of supply.
(n.) The stream flowing through a flood gate.
(n.) A long box or trough through which water flows, -- used for
washing auriferous earth.
(v. t.) To emit by, or as by, flood gates.
(v. t.) To wet copiously, as by opening a sluice; as, to sluice
meadows.
(v. t.) To wash with, or in, a stream of water running through a
sluice; as, to sluice eart or gold dust in mining.
(a.) Falling copiously or in streams, as from a sluice.
(a.) Easily broken through; boggy; marshy; swampy.
(a.) Consisting of, or resembling, steam; full of steam;
vaporous; misty.
(a.) Made of steel; consisting of steel.
(a.) Resembling steel; hard; firm; having the color of steel.
(a.) Steep; precipitous.
(v. i.) To project upward, or make an angle with the horizon or
with the line of a vessel's keel; -- said of the bowsprit, etc.
(v. t.) To elevate or fix at an angle with the horizon; -- said
of the bowsprit, etc.
(v. t.) To stow, as bales in a vessel's hold, by means of a
steeve. See Steeve, n. (b).
(n.) The angle which a bowsprit makes with the horizon, or with
the line of the vessel's keel; -- called also steeving.
(n.) A spar, with a block at one end, used in stowing cotton
bales, and similar kinds of cargo which need to be packed tightly.
(pl. ) of Stela
(imp. & p. p.) of Sort
(a.) Pertaining to a sort.
(n.) One who, or that which, sorts.
(n.) pl. of Sors.
(n.) The sudden issuing of a body of troops, usually small, from
a besieged place to attack or harass the besiegers; a sally.
(n.) One of the ocelli of an insect. See Ocellus.
(n.) One of the facets of a compound eye of any arthropod.
(a.) Abounding in stems, or mixed with stems; -- said of tea,
dried currants, etc.
() a. & p. p. of Sot. Befooled; deluded; besotted.
() imp. & p. p. of Seek.
(a.) Furnished with a soul; possessing soul and feeling; -- used
chiefly in composition; as, great-souled Hector.
(v. t.) To stanch.
(v. i.) A smell; an odor.
(v. i.) An ill smell; an offensive odor; a stink.
(n.) To cause to emit a disagreeable odor; to cause to stink.
(n.) That part of a flail which strikes the grain.
(imp. & p. p.) of Sour
(n.) The act of rising; a rise; an ascent.
(n.) The rising from the ground, or beginning, of a stream of
water or the like; a spring; a fountain.
(n.) That from which anything comes forth, regarded as its cause
or origin; the person from whom anything originates; first cause.
(adv.) In a sour manner; with sourness.
(imp. & p. p.) of Souse
(n.) A shoemaker; a cobbler.
(a.) A variant of Sovereign.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Sow
(n. pl.) See Sowens.
(n. pl.) A nutritious article of food, much used in Scotland,
made from the husk of the oat by a process not unlike that by which
common starch is made; -- called flummery in England.
(n. pl.) See Sowens.
(v. t.) To splash or wet carelessly; as, to sozzle the feet in
water.
(v. t.) To heap up in confusion.
(n.) One who spills water or other liquids carelessly;
specifically, a sluttish woman.
(n.) A mass, or heap, confusedly mingled.
(imp. & p. p.) of Space
(imp. & p. p.) of Spade
(n.) One who, or that which, spades; specifically, a digging
machine.
(n.) A fleshy spike of flowers, usually inclosed in a leaf
called a spathe.
(n.) A special organ of the nautilus, due to a modification of
the posterior tentacles.
(v. t. & i.) To die, or cause to die; to perish. See Starve.
(imp. & p. p.) of Stew
(n.) Formerly, one of the Turkish cavalry.
(n.) An Algerian cavalryman in the French army.
(a.) Antimonic; -- used with reference to certain compounds of
antimony.
(imp. & p. p.) of Spare
(superl.) Having the quality of sticking to a surface; adhesive;
gluey; viscous; viscid; glutinous; tenacious.
(n.) An anvil; also, a smith shop. See Stithy.
(n.) One who spares.
(v. t.) To sprinkle; to moisten by sprinkling; as, to sparge
paper.
(a.) Resembling spar, or consisting of spar; abounding with
spar; having a confused crystalline structure; spathose.
(superl.) Thinly scattered; set or planted here and there; not
being dense or close together; as, a sparse population.
(superl.) Placed irregularly and distantly; scattered; --
applied to branches, leaves, peduncles, and the like.
(v. t.) To scatter; to disperse.
(n.) An Anglo-Saxon battle-ax, or halberd.
(n.) The joint next above the hock, and near the flank, in the
hind leg of the horse and allied animals; the joint corresponding to
the knee in man; -- called also stifle joint. See Illust. under Horse.
(v. t.) To stop the breath of by crowding something into the
windpipe, or introducing an irrespirable substance into the lungs; to
choke; to suffocate; to cause the death of by such means; as, to stifle
one with smoke or dust.
(v. t.) To stop; to extinguish; to deaden; to quench; as, to
stifle the breath; to stifle a fire or flame.
(v. t.) To suppress the manifestation or report of; to smother;
to conceal from public knowledge; as, to stifle a story; to stifle
passion.
(v. i.) To die by reason of obstruction of the breath, or
because some noxious substance prevents respiration.
(v. t.) A mark made with a burning iron; a brand.
(v. t.) Any mark of infamy or disgrace; sign of moral blemish;
stain or reproach caused by dishonorable conduct; reproachful
characterization.
(v. t.) That part of a pistil which has no epidermis, and is
fitted to receive the pollen. It is usually the terminal portion, and
is commonly somewhat glutinous or viscid. See Illust. of Stamen and of
Flower.
(v. t.) A small spot, mark, scar, or a minute hole; -- applied
especially to a spot on the outer surface of a Graafian follicle, and
to spots of intercellular substance in scaly epithelium, or to minute
holes in such spots.
(n.) A spathe.
(n.) A special involucre formed of one leaf and inclosing a
spadix, as in aroid plants and palms. See the Note under Bract, and
Illust. of Spadix.
(n.) The shoulder.
(n.) A disease of horses characterized by a bony swelling
developed on the hock as the result of inflammation of the bones; also,
the swelling itself. The resulting lameness is due to the inflammation,
and not the bony tumor as popularly supposed.
(v. t.) A red speck upon the skin, produced either by the
extravasation of blood, as in the bloody sweat characteristic of
certain varieties of religious ecstasy, or by capillary congestion, as
in the case of drunkards.
(v. t.) One of the external openings of the tracheae of insects,
myriapods, and other arthropods; a spiracle.
(v. t.) One of the apertures of the pulmonary sacs of arachnids.
See Illust. of Scorpion.
(v. t.) One of the apertures of the gill of an ascidian, and of
Amphioxus.
(v. t.) A point so connected by any law whatever with another
point, called an index, that as the index moves in any manner in a
plane the first point or stigma moves in a determinate way in the same
plane.
(v. t.) Marks believed to have been supernaturally impressed
upon the bodies of certain persons in imitation of the wounds on the
crucified body of Christ. See def. 5, above.
(imp. & p. p.) of Spay
(n.) Alt. of Spayade
(p. p.) of Speak
(n.) A stiletto.
(n.) See Stylet, 2.
(a.) Having the form of a spear.
() abl. of L. species sort, kind. Used in the phrase in specie,
that is, in sort, in kind, in (its own) form.
(n.) Coin; hard money.
(a.) Still; quiet; calm.
(adv.) In a still manner; quietly; silently; softly.
(a.) Unreasonably elevated; pompous; stilted; as, a stilty
style.
(n.) Old beer; sharp or strong liquor.
(a.) Stinging; able to sting.
(superl.) Extremely close and covetous; meanly avaricious;
niggardly; miserly; penurious; as, a stingy churl.
(n.) The stipule of a leaflet.
(n.) The second joint of a maxilla of an insect or a crustacean.
(n.) An eyestalk.
(n.) Stock; race; family.
(n.) A race, or a fixed and permanent variety.
(v. i.) A single pass of a needle in sewing; the loop or turn of
the thread thus made.
(v. i.) A single turn of the thread round a needle in knitting;
a link, or loop, of yarn; as, to let down, or drop, a stitch; to take
up a stitch.
(v. i.) A space of work taken up, or gone over, in a single pass
of the needle; hence, by extension, any space passed over; distance.
(v. i.) A local sharp pain; an acute pain, like the piercing of
a needle; as, a stitch in the side.
(v. i.) A contortion, or twist.
(v. i.) Any least part of a fabric or dress; as, to wet every
stitch of clothes.
(v. i.) A furrow.
(v. t.) To form stitches in; especially, to sew in such a manner
as to show on the surface a continuous line of stitches; as, to stitch
a shirt bosom.
(v. t.) To sew, or unite together by stitches; as, to stitch
printed sheets in making a book or a pamphlet.
(v. t.) To form land into ridges.
(v. i.) To practice stitching, or needlework.
(n.) An anvil.
(n.) A smith's shop; a smithy; a smithery; a forge.
(v. t.) To forge on an anvil.
(n.) A Dutch coin, and money of account, of the value of two
cents, or about one penny sterling; hence, figuratively, anything of
little worth.
(n.) A menial attendant.
(n.) Species; sort.
(n.) The faculty of uttering articulate sounds or words; the
faculty of expressing thoughts by words or articulate sounds; the power
of speaking.
(n.) he act of speaking; that which is spoken; words, as
expressing ideas; language; conversation.
(n.) A particular language, as distinct from others; a tongue; a
dialect.
(n.) Talk; mention; common saying.
(n.) formal discourse in public; oration; harangue.
(n.) ny declaration of thoughts.
(v. i. & t.) To make a speech; to harangue.
(superl.) Not dilatory or slow; quick; swift; nimble; hasty;
rapid in motion or performance; as, a speedy flight; on speedy foot.
(n.) A regulus consisting essentially of nickel, obtained as a
residue in fusing cobalt and nickel ores with silica and sodium
carbonate to make smalt.
(a.) Short and thick; thick rather than tall or corpulent.
(a.) Headstrong.
(a.) Wet.
(v. t.) One who is employed to tend a furnace and supply it with
fuel, especially the furnace of a locomotive or of a marine steam
boiler; also, a machine for feeding fuel to a fire.
(v. t.) A fire poker.
(pl. ) of Stola
(a.) Having or wearing a stole.
() p. p. of Steal.
(v. t.) To disperse.
(imp. & p. p.) of Spew
(n.) One who spews.
(n.) A mineral found usually in thin, wedge-shaped crystals of a
yellow or green to black color. It is a silicate of titanium and
calcium; titanite.
(n.) A body or space contained under a single surface, which in
every part is equally distant from a point within called its center.
(n.) Hence, any globe or globular body, especially a celestial
one, as the sun, a planet, or the earth.
(n.) The apparent surface of the heavens, which is assumed to be
spherical and everywhere equally distant, in which the heavenly bodies
appear to have their places, and on which the various astronomical
circles, as of right ascension and declination, the equator, ecliptic,
etc., are conceived to be drawn; an ideal geometrical sphere, with the
astronomical and geographical circles in their proper positions on it.
(n.) In ancient astronomy, one of the concentric and eccentric
revolving spherical transparent shells in which the stars, sun,
planets, and moon were supposed to be set, and by which they were
carried, in such a manner as to produce their apparent motions.
(n.) The extension of a general conception, or the totality of
the individuals or species to which it may be applied.
(n.) Circuit or range of action, knowledge, or influence;
compass; province; employment; place of existence.
(n.) Rank; order of society; social positions.
(n.) An orbit, as of a star; a socket.
(v. t.) To place in a sphere, or among the spheres; to insphere.
(v. t.) To form into roundness; to make spherical, or spheral;
to perfect.
(a.) Round; spherical; starlike.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the spheres.
(pl. ) of Spica
(imp. & p. p.) of Spice
(a.) Hopelessly insensible or stupid; not easily aroused or
excited; dull; impassive; foolish.
(n.) A trailing branch which is disposed to take root at the end
or at the joints; a stole.
(n.) An extension of the integument of the body, or of the body
wall, from which buds are developed, giving rise to new zooids, and
thus forming a compound animal in which the zooids usually remain
united by the stolons. Such stolons are often present in Anthozoa,
Hydroidea, Bryozoa, and social ascidians. See Illust. under
Scyphistoma.
(imp. & p. p.) of Stone
(n.) One who stones; one who makes an assault with stones.
(n.) One who walls with stones.
(n.) Any one of numerous species of arachnids comprising the
order Araneina. Spiders have the mandibles converted into poison fangs,
or falcers. The abdomen is large and not segmented, with two or three
pairs of spinnerets near the end, by means of which they spin threads
of silk to form cocoons, or nests, to protect their eggs and young.
Many species spin also complex webs to entrap the insects upon which
they prey. The eyes are usually eight in number (rarely six), and are
situated on the back of the cephalothorax. See Illust. under Araneina.
(n.) Any one of various other arachnids resembling the true
spiders, especially certain mites, as the red spider (see under Red).
(n.) An iron pan with a long handle, used as a kitchen utensil
in frying food. Originally, it had long legs, and was used over coals
on the hearth.
(n.) A trevet to support pans or pots over a fire.
(n.) A skeleton, or frame, having radiating arms or members,
often connected by crosspieces; as, a casting forming the hub and
spokes to which the rim of a fly wheel or large gear is bolted; the
body of a piston head; a frame for strengthening a core or mold for a
casting, etc.
(n.) A pin or peg used to stop the vent in a cask; also, the
plug of a faucet or cock.
(imp. & p. p.) of Spike
(a.) Furnished or set with spikes, as corn; fastened with
spikes; stopped with spikes.
(imp. & p. p.) of Stope
(p. p.) Stepped; gone; advanced.
(n.) Anything spilt, or freely poured out; slop; effusion.
(a.) Of, pertaining to, or in the region of, the backbone, or
vertebral column; rachidian; vertebral.
(a.) Of or pertaining to a spine or spines.
(n.) Any one of a number of similar complex resins obtained from
the bark of several trees and shrubs of the Styrax family. The most
common of these is liquid storax, a brown or gray semifluid substance
of an agreeable aromatic odor and balsamic taste, sometimes used in
perfumery, and in medicine as an expectorant.
(superl.) Serious in feeeling or manner; sedate; grave; austere;
not light, lively, or cheerful.
(superl.) Very strict in judgment, discipline, or government;
harsh; not mild or indulgent; rigorous; as, severe criticism; severe
punishment.
(superl.) Rigidly methodical, or adherent to rule or principle;
exactly conformed to a standard; not allowing or employing unneccessary
ornament, amplification, etc.; strict; -- said of style, argument, etc.
(superl.) Sharp; afflictive; distressing; violent; extreme; as,
severe pain, anguish, fortune; severe cold.
(superl.) Difficult to be endured; exact; critical; rigorous;
as, a severe test.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Sew
(n.) The contents of a sewer or drain; refuse liquids or matter
carried off by sewers
(n.) Sewerage, 2.
(n.) The act or occupation of one who sews.
(n.) That which is sewed with the needle.
(a.) Alt. of Sexifid
(n.) Alt. of Sextetto
(a.) Of the sixth degree or order.
(n.) A quantic of the sixth degree.
(pl. ) of Sexto
(n.) See Sacristy.
(a.) Of or pertaining to sex, or the sexes; distinguishing sex;
peculiar to the distinction and office of male or female; relating to
the distinctive genital organs of the sexes; proceeding from, or based
upon, sex; as, sexual characteristics; sexual intercourse, connection,
or commerce; sexual desire; sexual diseases; sexual generation.
(n.) Torn or worn to rage; poor; mean; ragged.
(n.) Clothed with ragged, much worn, or soiled garments.
(n.) Mean; paltry; despicable; as, shabby treatment.
(imp. & p. p.) of Shade
(n.) One who, or that which, shades.
(n.) Rough with long hair or wool.
(n.) Rough; rugged; jaggy.
(n.) A large and swift Asiatic falcon (Falco pregrinator) highly
valued in falconry.
(p. p.) of Shake
(a.) Caused to shake; agitated; as, a shaken bough.
(a.) Cracked or checked; split. See Shake, n., 2.
(n.) Impaired, as by a shock.
(imp.) of Shall
(n.) A priest of Shamanism; a wizard among the Shamanists.
(imp. & p. p.) of Shame
(n.) One who, or that which, disgraces, or makes ashamed.
(n.) The chamois.
(n.) A soft, pliant leather, prepared originally from the skin
of the chamois, but now made also from the skin of the sheep, goat,
kid, deer, and calf. See Shamoying.
(n.) See Shammy.
(n.) The European smooth blenny (Blennius pholis). It is
olive-green with irregular black spots, and without appendages on the
head.
() A contraction of shall not.
(a.) Jaunty; showy.
(n.) A small, mean dwelling; a rough, slight building for
temporary use; a hut.
(v. i.) To inhabit a shanty.
(imp.) of Shape
(p. p.) of Shape
() of Shape
(n.) The oorial.
(a.) Having, or consisting of, shards.
(imp. & p. p.) of Share
(n.) One who shares; a participator; a partaker; also, a
divider; a distributer.
(imp.) of Shave
(p. p.) of Shave
() of Shave
(a.) Pertaining to, or consisting of, a sheaf or sheaves;
resembling a sheaf.
(n.) See Shard.
(n.) A cutting instrument.
(n.) An instrument consisting of two blades, commonly with bevel
edges, connected by a pivot, and working on both sides of the material
to be cut, -- used for cutting cloth and other substances.
(n.) A similar instrument the blades of which are extensions of
a curved spring, -- used for shearing sheep or skins.
(n.) A shearing machine; a blade, or a set of blades, working
against a resisting edge.
(n.) Anything in the form of shears.
(n.) A pair of wings.
(n.) An apparatus for raising heavy weights, and especially for
stepping and unstepping the lower masts of ships. It consists of two or
more spars or pieces of timber, fastened together near the top,
steadied by a guy or guys, and furnished with the necessary tackle.
(n.) The bedpiece of a machine tool, upon which a table or slide
rest is secured; as, the shears of a lathe or planer. See Illust. under
Lathe.
(v.) A wheel having a groove in the rim for a rope to work in,
and set in a block, mast, or the like; the wheel of a pulley.
(v. t.) To gather and bind into a sheaf or sheaves; hence, to
collect.
(n.) The chaffinch; -- so named from its call note.
(n.) Same as Sheelfa.
(a.) Bright; shining; radiant; sheen.
(a.) Resembling sheep; sheepish.
(a.) Abounding in shelves; full of dangerous shallows.
(a.) Full of strata of rock.
(n.) A Shetland pony.
(a.) Sloping gradually; shelving.
(n.) A member of an Arab princely family descended from Mohammed
through his son-in-law Ali and daughter Fatima. The Grand Shereef is
the governor of Mecca.
(v. t.) To look over or through, for the purpose of finding
something; to examine; to explore; as, to search the city.
(v. t.) To inquire after; to look for; to seek.
(v. t.) To examine or explore by feeling with an instrument; to
probe; as, to search a wound.
(v. t.) To examine; to try; to put to the test.
(v. i.) To seek; to look for something; to make inquiry,
exploration, or examination; to hunt.
(v. t.) The act of seeking or looking for something; quest;
inquiry; pursuit for finding something; examination.
(a.) Scorched; cauterized; hence, figuratively, insensible; not
susceptible to moral influences.
(n.) A scarecrow.
(n.) One who shews. See Shower.
(n.) A broad piece of defensive armor, carried on the arm, --
formerly in general use in war, for the protection of the body. See
Buckler.
(n.) Anything which protects or defends; defense; shelter;
protection.
(n.) Figuratively, one who protects or defends.
(n.) In lichens, a Hardened cup or disk surrounded by a rim and
containing the fructification, or asci.
(n.) The escutcheon or field on which are placed the bearings in
coats of arms. Cf. Lozenge. See Illust. of Escutcheon.
(n.) A framework used to protect workmen in making an adit under
ground, and capable of being pushed along as excavation progresses.
(n.) A spot resembling, or having the form of, a shield.
(n.) A coin, the old French crown, or ecu, having on one side
the figure of a shield.
(n.) To cover with, or as with, a shield; to cover from danger;
to defend; to protect from assault or injury.
(n.) To ward off; to keep off or out.
(n.) To avert, as a misfortune; hence, as a supplicatory
exclamation, forbid!
(imp. & p. p.) of Seat
(n.) Alt. of Seawant
(n.) A salt of sebacic acid.
(a.) Cutting; divivding into two parts; as, a secant line.
(a.) A line that cuts another; especially, a straight line
cutting a curve in two or more points.
(a.) A right line drawn from the center of a circle through one
end of a circular arc, and terminated by a tangent drawn from the other
end; the number expressing the ratio line of this line to the radius of
the circle. See Trigonometrical function, under Function.
(v. i.) To withdraw from fellowship, communion, or association;
to separate one's self by a solemn act; to draw off; to retire;
especially, to withdraw from a political or religious body.
(v. t.) To separate; to distinguish.
(v. t.) To secrete; as, mucus secerned in the nose.
(n.) Retirement; retreat; secession.
(a.) Immediately following the first; next to the first in order
of place or time; hence, occuring again; another; other.
(a.) Next to the first in value, power, excellence, dignity, or
rank; secondary; subordinate; inferior.
(a.) Being of the same kind as another that has preceded;
another, like a protype; as, a second Cato; a second Troy; a second
deluge.
(n.) One who, or that which, follows, or comes after; one next
and inferior in place, time, rank, importance, excellence, or power.
(n.) One who follows or attends another for his support and aid;
a backer; an assistant; specifically, one who acts as another's aid in
a duel.
(n.) Aid; assistance; help.
(n.) An article of merchandise of a grade inferior to the best;
esp., a coarse or inferior kind of flour.
(a.) The sixtieth part of a minute of time or of a minute of
space, that is, the second regular subdivision of the degree; as, sound
moves about 1,140 English feet in a second; five minutes and ten
seconds north of this place.
(a.) In the duodecimal system of mensuration, the twelfth part
of an inch or prime; a line. See Inch, and Prime, n., 8.
(n.) The interval between any tone and the tone which is
represented on the degree of the staff next above it.
(n.) The second part in a concerted piece; -- often popularly
applied to the alto.
(a.) To follow in the next place; to succeed; to alternate.
(a.) To follow or attend for the purpose of assisting; to
support; to back; to act as the second of; to assist; to forward; to
encourage.
(a.) Specifically, to support, as a motion or proposal, by
adding one's voice to that of the mover or proposer.
(a.) Hidden; concealed; as, secret treasure; secret plans; a
secret vow.
(a.) Withdraw from general intercourse or notice; in retirement
or secrecy; secluded.
(a.) Faithful to a secret; not inclined to divulge or betray
confidence; secretive.
(a.) Separate; distinct.
(a.) Something studiously concealed; a thing kept from general
knowledge; what is not revealed, or not to be revealed.
(a.) A thing not discovered; what is unknown or unexplained; a
mystery.
(a.) The parts which modesty and propriety require to be
concealed; the genital organs.
(v. t.) To keep secret.
(a.) Full of, or ready with, shifts; fertile in expedients or
contrivance.
(n.) A chemise.
(n.) An uproar or disturbance; a spree; a row; a riot.
(n.) Hockey; shinney.
(n.) A fancy or liking.
(n.) A Scotch game resembling hockey; also, the club used in the
game.
(a.) Disposed to shirk.
(n.) One of the small pieces, or splinters, into which a brittle
thing is broken by sudden violence; -- generally used in the plural.
(n.) A thin slice; a shive.
(n.) A variety of blue slate.
(n.) A sheave or small wheel in a pulley.
(n.) A small wedge, as for fastening the bolt of a window
shutter.
(n.) A spindle.
(v. t.) To break into many small pieces, or splinters; to
shatter; to dash to pieces by a blow; as, to shiver a glass goblet.
(v. i.) To separate suddenly into many small pieces or parts; to
be shattered.
(v. i.) To tremble; to vibrate; to quiver; to shake, as from
cold or fear.
(v. t.) To cause to shake or tremble, as a sail, by steering
close to the wind.
(n.) The act of shivering or trembling.
(a.) Full of shoals, or shallow places.
(imp. & p. p.) of Store
(a.) Collected or accumulated as a reserve supply; as, stored
electricity.
(a.) Furnished with spines; spiny.
(n.) Alt. of Spinelle
(n.) Bleached yarn in making the linen tape called inkle;
unwrought inkle.
(n.) A keyed instrument of music resembling a harpsichord, but
smaller, with one string of brass or steel wire to each note, sounded
by means of leather or quill plectrums or jacks. It was formerly much
used.
(n.) A spinny.
(n.) Parental affection; the instinctive affection which animals
have for their young.
(n.) A small thicket or grove with undergrowth; a clump of
trees.
(a.) Thin and long; slim; slender.
(v. i.) To be in pain or sorrow.
(v. i.) Stunned.
(n.) A sudden, severe pain or grief; peril; alarm.
(n.) Astonishment; amazement.
(n.) Hour; time; season.
(n.) A brief space of time; a moment.
(n.) A vessel for holding small beer.
(imp. & p. p.) of Stove
(a.) Winding or circling round a center or pole and gradually
receding from it; as, the spiral curve of a watch spring.
(a.) Winding round a cylinder or imaginary axis, and at the same
time rising or advancing forward; winding like the thread of a screw;
helical.
(a.) Of or pertaining to a spiral; like a spiral.
(a.) A plane curve, not reentrant, described by a point, called
the generatrix, moving along a straight line according to a
mathematical law, while the line is revolving about a fixed point
called the pole. Cf. Helix.
(a.) Anything which has a spiral form, as a spiral shell.
(imp. & p. p.) of Spire
(a.) Having a spire; being in the form of a spire; as, a spired
steeple.
(imp. & p. p.) of Stow
(n.) A windlass.
(n.) A wooden landmark, to indicate possession of mining land.
(n.) A strake.
(n.) A line, or long, narrow division of anything of a different
color or structure from the ground; hence, any linear variation of
color or structure; as, a stripe, or streak, of red on a green ground;
a raised stripe.
(n.) A pattern produced by arranging the warp threads in sets of
alternating colors, or in sets presenting some other contrast of
appearance.
(n.) A strip, or long, narrow piece attached to something of a
different color; as, a red or blue stripe sewed upon a garment.
(n.) A stroke or blow made with a whip, rod, scourge, or the
like, such as usually leaves a mark.
(n.) A long, narrow discoloration of the skin made by the blow
of a lash, rod, or the like.
(n.) Color indicating a party or faction; hence, distinguishing
characteristic; sign; likeness; sort; as, persons of the same political
stripe.
(n.) The chevron on the coat of a noncommissioned officer.
(v. t.) To make stripes upon; to form with lines of different
colors or textures; to variegate with stripes.
(v. t.) To strike; to lash.
(imp.) of Strive
() of Strive
(v. i.) To make efforts; to use exertions; to endeavor with
earnestness; to labor hard.
(v. i.) To struggle in opposition; to be in contention or
dispute; to contend; to contest; -- followed by against or with before
the person or thing opposed; as, strive against temptation; strive for
the truth.
(v. i.) To vie; to compete; to be a rival.
(n.) An effort; a striving.
(n.) Strife; contention.
(v. i.) To wander about idly and vacantly.
(v. i.) To take long strides in walking.
(n.) See Strude.
() imp. of Stride.
(imp.) Struck.
(v. t.) The act of striking; a blow; a hit; a knock; esp., a
violent or hostile attack made with the arm or hand, or with an
instrument or weapon.
(v. t.) The result of effect of a striking; injury or
affliction; soreness.
(v. t.) The striking of the clock to tell the hour.
(v. t.) A gentle, caressing touch or movement upon something; a
stroking.
(v. t.) A mark or dash in writing or printing; a line; the touch
of a pen or pencil; as, an up stroke; a firm stroke.
(v. t.) Hence, by extension, an addition or amandment to a
written composition; a touch; as, to give some finishing strokes to an
essay.
(v. t.) A sudden attack of disease; especially, a fatal attack;
a severe disaster; any affliction or calamity, especially a sudden one;
as, a stroke of apoplexy; the stroke of death.
(v. t.) A throb or beat, as of the heart.
(v. t.) One of a series of beats or movements against a
resisting medium, by means of which movement through or upon it is
accomplished; as, the stroke of a bird's wing in flying, or an oar in
rowing, of a skater, swimmer, etc.
(v. t.) The rate of succession of stroke; as, a quick stroke.
(v. t.) The oar nearest the stern of a boat, by which the other
oars are guided; -- called also stroke oar.
(v. t.) The rower who pulls the stroke oar; the strokesman.
(v. t.) A powerful or sudden effort by which something is done,
produced, or accomplished; also, something done or accomplished by such
an effort; as, a stroke of genius; a stroke of business; a master
stroke of policy.
(v. t.) The movement, in either direction, of the piston
plunger, piston rod, crosshead, etc., as of a steam engine or a pump,
in which these parts have a reciprocating motion; as, the forward
stroke of a piston; also, the entire distance passed through, as by a
piston, in such a movement; as, the piston is at half stroke.
(v. t.) Power; influence.
(v. t.) Appetite.
(v. t.) To strike.
(v. t.) To rib gently in one direction; especially, to pass the
hand gently over by way of expressing kindness or tenderness; to
caress; to soothe.
(v. t.) To make smooth by rubbing.
(v. t.) To give a finely fluted surface to.
(v. t.) To row the stroke oar of; as, to stroke a boat.
(v. i.) To wander on foot; to ramble idly or leisurely; to rove.
(n.) A wandering on foot; an idle and leisurely walk; a ramble.
(n.) The connective tissue or supporting framework of an organ;
as, the stroma of the kidney.
(n.) The spongy, colorless framework of a red blood corpuscle or
other cell.
(n.) A layer or mass of cellular tissue, especially that part of
the thallus of certain fungi which incloses the perithecia.
(n.) Any marine univalve mollusk of the genus Strombus and
allied genera. See Conch, and Strombus.
(n.) Strand; beach.
() imp. of Strike.
(n.) A stroke.
(v. i.) To swell out; to strut.
(v. i.) To swell; to puff out; to project.
(v. t.) To cause to project or swell out; to enlarge affectedly;
to strut.
() imp. of Strive.
(p. p.) of Strow
() p. p. of Strow.
() imp. & p. p. of Strike.
(n.) A stock of breeding mares.
() imp. & p. p. of String.
(n.) Spirituous liquor.
(n.) A Russian river craft used for transporting freight.
(a.) Abounding with stubs.
(a.) Short and thick; short and strong, as bristles.
(n.) Plaster of any kind used as a coating for walls,
especially, a fine plaster, composed of lime or gypsum with sand and
pounded marble, used for internal decorations and fine work.
(n.) Work made of stucco; stuccowork.
(v. t.) To overlay or decorate with stucco, or fine plaster.
(n.) The working room of an artist.
(a.) Stout; mettlesome; resolute.
(a.) Angry and obstinate; sulky.
(a.) Ill-ventilated; close.
(a.) Foolish; silly.
(a.) Full of stumps; hard; strong.
(a.) Short and thick; stubby.
(imp. & p. p.) of Stupe
(a.) Very dull; insensible; senseless; wanting in understanding;
heavy; sluggish; in a state of stupor; -- said of persons.
(a.) Resulting from, or evincing, stupidity; formed without
skill or genius; dull; heavy; -- said of things.
(n.) Great diminution or suspension of sensibility; suppression
of sense or feeling; lethargy.
(n.) Intellectual insensibility; moral stupidity; heedlessness
or inattention to one's interests.
(superl.) Foolishly obstinate or resolute; stubborn;
unrelenting; unfeeling; stern.
(superl.) Resolute, in a good sense; or firm, unyielding
quality; as, a man of sturdy piety or patriotism.
(superl.) Characterized by physical strength or force; strong;
lusty; violent; as, a sturdy lout.
(superl.) Stiff; stout; strong; as, a sturdy oak.
(n.) A disease in sheep and cattle, marked by great nervousness,
or by dullness and stupor.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Sty
(a.) See Stilar.
(imp. & p. p.) of Style
(n.) A small poniard; a stiletto.
(n.) An instrument for examining wounds and fistulas, and for
passing setons, and the like; a probe, -- called also specillum.
(n.) A stiff wire, inserted in catheters or other tubular
instruments to maintain their shape and prevent clogging.
(n.) Any small, more or less rigid, bristlelike organ; as, the
caudal stylets of certain insects; the ventral stylets of certain
Infusoria.
() A combining form used in anatomy to indicate connection with,
or relation to, the styloid process of the temporal bone; as,
stylohyal, stylomastoid, stylomaxillary.
(n.) An instrument for writing. See Style, n., 1.
(n.) That needle-shaped part at the tip of the playing arm of
phonograph which sits in the groove of a phonograph record while it is
turning, to detect the undulations in the phonograph groove and convert
them into vibrations which are transmitted to a system (since 1920
electronic) which converts the signal into sound; also called needle.
The stylus is frequently composed of metal or diamond.
(n.) The needle-like device used to cut the grooves which record
the sound on the original disc during recording of a phonograph record.
(n.) A pen-shaped pointing device used to specify the cursor
position on a graphics tablet.
(n.) See Styrolene.
(n.) A hypothetical radical found in certain derivatives of
styrolene and cinnamic acid; -- called also cinnyl, or cinnamyl.
(n.) Choke damp.
(a.) Capable of being sued; subject by law to be called to
answer in court.
(v. t.) To reduce; to subdue.
(v. t.) To aid secretly; to assist in a private manner, or
indirectly.
(v. t.) To understand or supply in an ellipsis.
(v. t.) To bring under; to conquer by force or the exertion of
superior power, and bring into permanent subjection; to reduce under
dominion; to vanquish.
(v. t.) To overpower so as to disable from further resistance;
to crush.
(v. t.) To destroy the force of; to overcome; as, medicines
subdue a fever.
(v. t.) To render submissive; to bring under command; to reduce
to mildness or obedience; to tame; as, to subdue a stubborn child; to
subdue the temper or passions.
(v. t.) To overcome, as by persuasion or other mild means; as,
to subdue opposition by argument or entreaties.
(v. t.) To reduce to tenderness; to melt; to soften; as, to
subdue ferocity by tears.
(v. t.) To make mellow; to break, as land; also, to destroy, as
weeds.
(v. t.) To reduce the intensity or degree of; to tone down; to
soften; as, to subdue the brilliancy of colors.
(adv.) In haste; quickly; rapidly.
(v. t.) To let down; to lower.
(v. t.) To put or place under.
(v. t.) To yield, resign, or surrender to power, will, or
authority; -- often with the reflexive pronoun.
(v. t.) To leave or commit to the discretion or judgment of
another or others; to refer; as, to submit a controversy to
arbitrators; to submit a question to the court; -- often followed by a
dependent proposition as the object.
(v. i.) To yield one's person to the power of another; to give
up resistance; to surrender.
(v. i.) To yield one's opinion to the opinion of authority of
another; to be subject; to acquiesce.
(v. i.) To be submissive or resigned; to yield without
murmuring.
(v. t.) To subjoin; to subnect.
(v. t.) To procure or cause to take a false oath amounting to
perjury, such oath being actually taken.
(v. t.) To procure privately, or by collusion; to procure by
indirect means; to incite secretly; to instigate.
(superl.) Sly in design; artful; cunning; insinuating; subtile;
-- applied to persons; as, a subtle foe.
(superl.) Cunningly devised; crafty; treacherous; as, a subtle
stratagem.
(superl.) Characterized by refinement and niceness in drawing
distinctions; nicely discriminating; -- said of persons; as, a subtle
logician; refined; tenuous; sinuous; insinuating; hence, penetrative or
pervasive; -- said of the mind; its faculties, or its operations; as, a
subtle intellect; a subtle imagination; a subtle process of thought;
also, difficult of apprehension; elusive.
(superl.) Smooth and deceptive.
(adv.) In a subtle manner; slyly; artfully; cunningly.
(adv.) Nicely; delicately.
(adv.) Deceitfully; delusively.
(n.) An outlying part of a city or town; a smaller place
immediately adjacent to a city; in the plural, the region which is on
the confines of any city or large town; as, a house stands in the
suburbs; a garden situated in the suburbs of Paris.
(n.) Hence, the confines; the outer part; the environment.
(n.) An underground way or gallery; especially, a passage under
a street, in which water mains, gas mains, telegraph wires, etc., are
conducted.
(v. t.) To run to, or run to support; hence, to help or relieve
when in difficulty, want, or distress; to assist and deliver from
suffering; to relieve; as, to succor a besieged city.
(v. t.) Aid; help; assistance; esp., assistance that relieves
and delivers from difficulty, want, or distress.
(v. t.) The person or thing that brings relief.
(n.) The expressed juice of a plant, for medicinal use.
(imp. & p. p.) of Suck
(n.) The jurisdiction of a mill, or that extent of ground
astricted to it, the tenants of which are bound to bring their grain
thither to be ground.
(n.) One who, or that which, sucks; esp., one of the organs by
which certain animals, as the octopus and remora, adhere to other
bodies.
(n.) A suckling; a sucking animal.
(n.) The embolus, or bucket, of a pump; also, the valve of a
pump basket.
(n.) A pipe through which anything is drawn.
(n.) A small piece of leather, usually round, having a string
attached to the center, which, when saturated with water and pressed
upon a stone or other body having a smooth surface, adheres, by reason
of the atmospheric pressure, with such force as to enable a
considerable weight to be thus lifted by the string; -- used by
children as a plaything.
(n.) A shoot from the roots or lower part of the stem of a
plant; -- so called, perhaps, from diverting nourishment from the body
of the plant.
(n.) Any one of numerous species of North American fresh-water
cyprinoid fishes of the family Catostomidae; so called because the lips
are protrusile. The flesh is coarse, and they are of little value as
food. The most common species of the Eastern United States are the
northern sucker (Catostomus Commersoni), the white sucker (C. teres),
the hog sucker (C. nigricans), and the chub, or sweet sucker (Erimyzon
sucetta). Some of the large Western species are called buffalo fish,
red horse, black horse, and suckerel.
(n.) The remora.
(n.) The lumpfish.
(n.) The hagfish, or myxine.
(n.) A California food fish (Menticirrus undulatus) closely
allied to the kingfish (a); -- called also bagre.
(n.) A parasite; a sponger. See def. 6, above.
(n.) A hard drinker; a soaker.
(n.) A greenhorn; one easily gulled.
(n.) A nickname applied to a native of Illinois.
(v. t.) To strip off the suckers or shoots from; to deprive of
suckers; as, to sucker maize.
(v. i.) To form suckers; as, corn suckers abundantly.
(v. t.) A sweetmeat; a dainty morsel.
(n.) A teat.
(v. t.) To give suck to; to nurse at the breast.
(v. i.) To nurse; to suck.
(n.) A napkin or handkerchief.
(a.) Happening without previous notice or with very brief
notice; coming unexpectedly, or without the common preparation;
immediate; instant; speedy.
(a.) Hastly prepared or employed; quick; rapid.
(a.) Hasty; violent; rash; precipitate.
(adv.) Suddenly; unexpectedly.
(n.) An unexpected occurrence; a surprise.
(v. t.) To feel, or endure, with pain, annoyance, etc.; to
submit to with distress or grief; to undergo; as, to suffer pain of
body, or grief of mind.
(v. t.) To endure or undergo without sinking; to support; to
sustain; to bear up under.
(v. t.) To undergo; to be affected by; to sustain; to
experience; as, most substances suffer a change when long exposed to
air and moisture; to suffer loss or damage.
(v. t.) To allow; to permit; not to forbid or hinder; to
tolerate.
(v. i.) To feel or undergo pain of body or mind; to bear what is
inconvenient; as, we suffer from pain, sickness, or sorrow; we suffer
with anxiety.
(v. i.) To undergo punishment; specifically, to undergo the
penalty of death.
(v. i.) To be injured; to sustain loss or damage.
(n.) A letter, letters, syllable, or syllables added or appended
to the end of a word or a root to modify the meaning; a postfix.
(n.) A subscript mark, number, or letter. See Subscript, a.
(v. t.) To add or annex to the end, as a letter or syllable to a
word; to append.
(a.) Resembling or containing sugar; tasting of sugar; sweet.
(a.) Fond of sugar or sweet things; as, a sugary palate.
(v. t.) To defame.
(imp. & p. p.) of Suit
(n.) One who sues, petitions, or entreats; a petitioner; an
applicant.
(n.) Especially, one who solicits a woman in marriage; a wooer;
a lover.
(n.) One who sues or prosecutes a demand in court; a party to a
suit, as a plaintiff, petitioner, etc.
(n.) One who attends a court as plaintiff, defendant,
petitioner, appellant, witness, juror, or the like.
(n.) A furrow; a groove; a fissure.
(n.) One who sulks.
(a.) Lonely; solitary; desolate.
(a.) Gloomy; dismal; foreboding.
(a.) Mischievous; malignant; unpropitious.
(a.) Gloomily angry and silent; cross; sour; affected with ill
humor; morose.
(a.) Obstinate; intractable.
(a.) Heavy; dull; sluggish.
(n.) One who is solitary, or lives alone; a hermit.
(n.) Sullen feelings or manners; sulks; moroseness; as, to have
the sullens.
(v. t.) To make sullen or sluggish.
(n.) A ruler, or sovereign, of a Mohammedan state; specifically,
the ruler of the Turks; the Padishah, or Grand Seignior; -- officially
so called.
(superl.) Very hot, burning, and oppressive; as, Libya's sultry
deserts.
(superl.) Very hot and moist, or hot, close, stagnant, and
oppressive, as air.
(imp. & p. p.) of Sum
(n.) Any plant of the genus Rhus, shrubs or small trees with
usually compound leaves and clusters of small flowers. Some of the
species are used in tanning, some in dyeing, and some in medicine. One,
the Japanese Rhus vernicifera, yields the celebrated Japan varnish, or
lacquer.
(n.) The powdered leaves, peduncles, and young branches of
certain species of the sumac plant, used in tanning and dyeing.
(n.) The musky root of an Asiatic umbelliferous plant, Ferula
Sumbul. It is used in medicine as a stimulant.
(v. t.) To call, bid, or cite; to notify to come to appear; --
often with up.
(v. t.) To give notice to, or command to appear, as in court; to
cite by authority; as, to summon witnesses.
(v. t.) To call upon to surrender, as a fort.
(v. t.) To strike and dash about, as water, mud, etc.; to plash.
(v. t.) To spatter water, mud, etc., upon; to wet.
(v. i.) To strike and dash about water, mud, etc.; to dash in
such a way as to spatter.
(n.) Water, or water and dirt, thrown upon anything, or thrown
from a puddle or the like; also, a spot or daub, as of matter which
wets or disfigures.
(n.) A noise made by striking upon or in a liquid.
(n.) An American animal allied to the weasel.
(n.) A plant and its fruit of the genus Cucurbita, or gourd
kind.
(v. i.) To beat or press into pulp or a flat mass; to crush.
(n.) Something soft and easily crushed; especially, an unripe
pod of pease.
(n.) Hence, something unripe or soft; -- used in contempt.
(n.) A sudden fall of a heavy, soft body; also, a shock of soft
bodies.
(imp. & p. p.) of Sun
(n.) A rainbow; an iris.
(v. t.) To disunite in almost any manner, either by rending,
cutting, or breaking; to part; to put or keep apart; to separate; to
divide; to sever; as, to sunder a rope; to sunder a limb; to sunder
friends.
(v. i.) To part; to separate.
(v. t.) A separation into parts; a division or severance.
(v. t.) To expose to the sun and wind.
(n.) Any plant of the genus Drosera, low bog plants whose leaves
are beset with pediceled glands which secrete a viscid fluid that
glitters like dewdrops and attracts and detains insects. After an
insect is caught, the glands curve inward like tentacles and the leaf
digests it. Called also lustwort.
(n.) A luminous spot occasionally seen a few degrees from the
sun, supposed to be formed by the intersection of two or more halos, or
in a manner similar to that of halos.
(a.) Lying on the bottom of a river or other water; sunk.
(a.) Lighted by the sun.
(n.) A charter or warrant; also, a deed of gift.
(n.) Alt. of Sunsetting
(imp. & p. p.) of Sup
(n.) Boiled Indian meal; hasty pudding; mush.
() A prefix signifying above, over, beyond, and hence often
denoting in a superior position, in excess, over and above, in
addition, exceedingly; as in superimpose, supersede, supernatural,
superabundance.
() A prefix formerly much used to denote that the ingredient to
the name of which it was prefixed was present in a large, or unusually
large, proportion as compared with the other ingredients; as in calcium
superphosphate. It has been superseded by per-, bi-, di-, acid, etc.
(as peroxide, bicarbonate, disulphide, and acid sulphate), which retain
the old meanings of super-, but with sharper definition. Cf. Acid, a.,
Bi-, Di-, and Per-.
(a.) Grand; magnificent; august; stately; as, a superb edifice;
a superb colonnade.
(a.) Rich; elegant; as, superb furniture or decorations.
(a.) Showy; excellent; grand; as, a superb exhibition.
(a.) Lying on the back, or with the face upward; -- opposed to
prone.
(a.) Leaning backward, or inclining with exposure to the sun;
sloping; inclined.
(a.) Negligent; heedless; indolent; listless.
(n.) A verbal noun; or (according to C.F.Becker), a case of the
infinitive mood ending in -um and -u, that in -um being sometimes
called the former supine, and that in -u the latter supine.
(n.) A meal taken at the close of the day; the evening meal.
(v. i.) To take supper; to sup.
(v. t.) To supply with supper.
(v. t.) To fill up, or keep full; to furnish with what is
wanted; to afford, or furnish with, a sufficiency; as, rivers are
supplied by smaller streams; an aqueduct supplies an artificial lake;
-- often followed by with before the thing furnished; as, to supply a
furnace with fuel; to supply soldiers with ammunition.
(v. t.) To serve instead of; to take the place of.
(v. t.) To fill temporarily; to serve as substitute for another
in, as a vacant place or office; to occupy; to have possession of; as,
to supply a pulpit.
(v. t.) To give; to bring or furnish; to provide; as, to supply
money for the war.
(n.) The act of supplying; supplial.
(n.) That which supplies a want; sufficiency of things for use
or want.
(n.) Auxiliary troops or reenforcements.
(n.) The food, and the like, which meets the daily necessities
of an army or other large body of men; store; -- used chiefly in the
plural; as, the army was discontented for lack of supplies.
(n.) An amount of money provided, as by Parliament or Congress,
to meet the annual national expenditures; generally in the plural; as,
to vote supplies.
(n.) A person who fills a place for a time; one who supplies the
place of another; a substitute; esp., a clergyman who supplies a vacant
pulpit.
(a.) Serving to contain, deliver, or regulate a supply of
anything; as, a supply tank or valve.
(v. i.) To stray; to wander; to rope.
(v. i.) To go out of a straight line; to deflect.
(v. i.) To wander from any line prescribed, or from a rule or
duty; to depart from what is established by law, duty, custom, or the
like; to deviate.
(v. i.) To bend; to incline.
(v. i.) To climb or move upward by winding or turning.
(v. t.) To turn aside.
(n.) A vision seen in sleep; a dream.
(v. & n.) See Singe.
(v. t.) To beat soundly; to whip; to chastise; to punish.
(v. t.) To set edgewise, as a stone; that is, to set it in a
position different from that which it had in the quarry.
(n.) A little shoot; a twig; a sucker.
(adv.) In a sure or certain manner; certainly; infallibly;
undoubtedly; assuredly.
(adv.) Without danger; firmly; steadly; securely.
(n.) The state of being sure; certainty; security.
(n.) That which makes sure; that which confirms; ground of
confidence or security.
(n.) Security against loss or damage; security for payment, or
for the performance of some act.
(n.) One who is bound with and for another who is primarily
liable, and who is called the principal; one who engages to answer for
another's appearance in court, or for his payment of a debt, or for
performance of some act; a bondsman; a bail.
(n.) Hence, a substitute; a hostage.
(n.) Evidence; confirmation; warrant.
(v. t.) To act as surety for.
(v. t.) To wash, as the face, with a cosmetic water, said by
some to be prepared from the sulphur.
(n.) The surf duck.
(imp. & p. p.) of Surge
(v. t.) To move as a lash; to lash.
(n.) The sweep of anything in motion; a swinging blow; a swing.
(n.) Power; sway; influence.
(imp. & p. p.) of Swipe
(n.) That part of a flail which strikes the grain in thrashing;
a swingel.
(n.) A small, flexible twig or rod.
(n.) A movable part of a rail; or of opposite rails, for
transferring cars from one track to another.
(n.) A separate mass or trees of hair, or of some substance (at
jute) made to resemble hair, worn on the head by women.
(n.) A mechanical device for shifting an electric current to
another circuit.
(v. t.) To strike with a switch or small flexible rod; to whip.
(v. t.) To swing or whisk; as, to switch a cane.
(v. t.) To trim, as, a hedge.
(v. t.) To turn from one railway track to another; to transfer
by a switch; -- generally with off, from, etc.; as, to switch off a
train; to switch a car from one track to another.
(v. t.) To shift to another circuit.
(v. i.) To walk with a jerk.
(adv.) Instantly; quickly; speedily; rapidly.
(a.) A piece, as a ring or hook, attached to another piece by a
pin, in such a manner as to permit rotation about the pin as an axis.
(a.) A small piece of ordnance, turning on a point or swivel; --
called also swivel gun.
(v. i.) To swing or turn, as on a pin or pivot.
(n.) A sound; a groan; a moan; a sough.
(n.) A swoon.
(v. & n.) See Swoon, v. & n.
(adv.) Quickly. See Swithe.
(n.) A nodule of flint, or a pebble, which resembles a fig.
(n.) The missel thrush.
(n.) An additional or extra tax.
(v. t.) To impose an additional tax on.
(v. t.) To inspect, or take a view of; to view with attention,
as from a high place; to overlook; as, to stand on a hill, and survey
the surrounding country.
(v. t.) To view with a scrutinizing eye; to examine.
(v. t.) To examine with reference to condition, situation,
value, etc.; to examine and ascertain the state of; as, to survey a
building in order to determine its value and exposure to loss by fire.
(v. t.) To determine the form, extent, position, etc., of, as a
tract of land, a coast, harbor, or the like, by means of linear and
angular measurments, and the application of the principles of geometry
and trigonometry; as, to survey land or a coast.
(v. t.) To examine and ascertain, as the boundaries and
royalties of a manor, the tenure of the tenants, and the rent and value
of the same.
(n.) The act of surveying; a general view, as from above.
(n.) A particular view; an examination, especially an official
examination, of all the parts or particulars of a thing, with a design
to ascertain the condition, quantity, or quality; as, a survey of the
stores of a ship; a survey of roads and bridges; a survey of buildings.
(n.) The operation of finding the contour, dimensions, position,
or other particulars of, as any part of the earth's surface, whether
land or water; also, a measured plan and description of any portion of
country, or of a road or line through it.
(pl. ) of Sylva
(n.) A ground squirrel (Spermophilus citillus) of Europe and
Asia. It has large cheek pouches.
(a.) Of, pertaining to, or resembling, pine or its products;
specifically, designating an acid called also abeitic acid, which is
the chief ingredient of common resin (obtained from Pinus sylvestris,
and other species).
(n.) A visible sign or representation of an idea; anything which
suggests an idea or quality, or another thing, as by resemblance or by
convention; an emblem; a representation; a type; a figure; as, the lion
is the symbol of courage; the lamb is the symbol of meekness or
patience.
(n.) Any character used to represent a quantity, an operation, a
relation, or an abbreviation.
(n.) An abstract or compendium of faith or doctrine; a creed, or
a summary of the articles of religion.
(n.) That which is thrown into a common fund; hence, an
appointed or accustomed duty.
(n.) Share; allotment.
(n.) An abbreviation standing for the name of an element and
consisting of the initial letter of the Latin or New Latin name, or
sometimes of the initial letter with a following one; as, C for carbon,
Na for sodium (Natrium), Fe for iron (Ferrum), Sn for tin (Stannum), Sb
for antimony (Stibium), etc. See the list of names and symbols under
Element.
(v. t.) To symbolize.
(n.) An officer of government, invested with different powers in
different countries; a magistrate.
(n.) An agent of a corporation, or of any body of men engaged in
a business enterprise; an advocate or patron; an assignee.
(n.) Connected system or order; union of things; a number of
things jointed together; organism.
(n.) That part of grammar which treats of the construction of
sentences; the due arrangement of words in sentences in their necessary
relations, according to established usage in any language.
(n.) See Syphon.
(a.) Of or pertaining to a syrt; resembling syrt, or quicksand.
(a.) Same as Sirup, Sirupy.
(n.) An assemblage of objects arranged in regular subordination,
or after some distinct method, usually logical or scientific; a
complete whole of objects related by some common law, principle, or
end; a complete exhibition of essential principles or facts, arranged
in a rational dependence or connection; a regular union of principles
or parts forming one entire thing; as, a system of philosophy; a system
of government; a system of divinity; a system of botany or chemistry; a
military system; the solar system.
(n.) Hence, the whole scheme of created things regarded as
forming one complete plan of whole; the universe.
(n.) Regular method or order; formal arrangement; plan; as, to
have a system in one's business.
(n.) The collection of staves which form a full score. See
Score, n.
(n.) An assemblage of parts or organs, either in animal or
plant, essential to the performance of some particular function or
functions which as a rule are of greater complexity than those
manifested by a single organ; as, the capillary system, the muscular
system, the digestive system, etc.; hence, the whole body as a
functional unity.
(n.) One of the stellate or irregular clusters of intimately
united zooids which are imbedded in, or scattered over, the surface of
the common tissue of many compound ascidians.
(n.) The point of an orbit, as of the moon or a planet, at which
it is in conjunction or opposition; -- commonly used in the plural.
(n.) The coupling together of different feet; as, in Greek
verse, an iambic syzygy.
(n.) Any one of the segments of an arm of a crinoid composed of
two joints so closely united that the line of union is obliterated on
the outer, though visible on the inner, side.
(n.) The immovable union of two joints of a crinoidal arm.
T () the twentieth letter of the English alphabet, is a nonvocal
consonant. With the letter h it forms the digraph th, which has two
distinct sounds, as in thin, then. See Guide to Pronunciation,
//262-264, and also //153, 156, 169, 172, 176, 178-180.
(a.) Soft, like fruit that is too ripe; quashy; swash.
(v. t.) To furnish with shelves; as, to shelve a closet or a
library.
(v. t.) To place on a shelf. Hence: To lay on the shelf; to put
aside; to dismiss from service; to put off indefinitely; as, to shelve
an officer; to shelve a claim.
(v. i.) To incline gradually; to be slopping; as, the bottom
shelves from the shore.
() of Shine
(n.) Sloth; idleness.
(n.) Sleight.
(v. t.) To overthrow; to demolish.
(v. t.) To make even or level.
(v. t.) To throw heedlessly.
(superl.) Not decidedly marked; not forcible; inconsiderable;
unimportant; insignificant; not severe; weak; gentle; -- applied in a
great variety of circumstances; as, a slight (i. e., feeble) effort; a
slight (i. e., perishable) structure; a slight (i. e., not deep)
impression; a slight (i. e., not convincing) argument; a slight (i. e.,
not thorough) examination; slight (i. e., not severe) pain, and the
like.
(superl.) Not stout or heavy; slender.
(superl.) Foolish; silly; weak in intellect.
(v. t.) To disregard, as of little value and unworthy of notice;
to make light of; as, to slight the divine commands.
(n.) The act of slighting; the manifestation of a moderate
degree of contempt, as by neglect or oversight; neglect; indignity.
(adv.) Slightly.
(n.) To take or seize hastily, abruptly, or without permission
or ceremony; as, to snatch a loaf or a kiss.
(n.) To seize and transport away; to rap.
(v. i.) To attempt to seize something suddenly; to catch; --
often with at; as, to snatch at a rope.
(n.) A hasty catching or seizing; a grab; a catching at, or
attempt to seize, suddenly.
(n.) A short period of vigorous action; as, a snatch at weeding
after a shower.
(n.) A small piece, fragment, or quantity; a broken part; a
scrap.
(n.) The handle of a scythe; a snead.