- aneurism
- angelize
- angering
- anginous
- anginose
- affirmer
- affixing
- affixion
- afflatus
- angulate
- angulose
- angulous
- anhelose
- anhelous
- affluent
- affodill
- afforded
- afforest
- affrayed
- affrayer
- abaction
- abaculus
- abacuses
- affright
- affronte
- affusion
- aflicker
- arranged
- arranger
- arrantly
- arrasene
- arrastre
- aflutter
- aftereye
- animally
- animated
- animater
- animator
- anisette
- ankerite
- ankylose
- annalist
- annalize
- annealed
- annealer
- anneloid
- annexing
- annexion
- annotate
- annotine
- announce
- annoying
- annoyful
- annoying
- annoyous
- annually
- annueler
- annulled
- annulary
- annulate
- annuller
- annuloid
- annulose
- anointed
- anointer
- anomural
- anomuran
- anophyte
- anorexia
- anorthic
- anourous
- anserine
- anserous
- answered
- answerer
- antacrid
- antagony
- antalgic
- antecede
- antedate
- antefact
- antefixa
- antelope
- antennae
- antennal
- antepast
- antepone
- anteport
- anterior
- antevert
- anthelia
- anthelix
- anthesis
- arraying
- arrested
- arrestee
- antiarin
- arrester
- arrhizal
- arriving
- arrogant
- arrogate
- arrosion
- arsenate
- arsenide
- arsenite
- arteriac
- arterial
- arteries
- artfully
- anticked
- articled
- artifice
- anticous
- antidote
- antilogy
- antimask
- antimere
- artilize
- artistic
- artistry
- againbuy
- againsay
- agalloch
- antimony
- antinomy
- antiphon
- antipode
- antipole
- antipope
- artotype
- aruspice
- aruspicy
- arvicole
- asbestic
- asbestus
- asbestos
- ascended
- ascidian
- antipyic
- antiscii
- antithet
- antitype
- antitypy
- antlered
- ascidium
- ascribed
- antozone
- antrorse
- assinego
- agastric
- agedness
- agencies
- agenesic
- agenesis
- agential
- aggerate
- aggerose
- anything
- anywhere
- aoristic
- aortitis
- apagogic
- apastron
- apathist
- apathies
- apellous
- aperient
- apertion
- aperture
- aspartic
- asperate
- asperity
- asperous
- aspersed
- asperser
- asphodel
- asphyxia
- aspirant
- aspirate
- aggrieve
- agiotage
- agitable
- agitated
- aphakial
- aphanite
- aphelion
- aphetism
- aphetize
- aphidian
- aphonous
- aphorism
- aphorist
- aphorize
- aphthoid
- aphthong
- aphthous
- apiarian
- apiarist
- apicular
- agitator
- aglimmer
- aglitter
- aglossal
- agminate
- agnation
- agnition
- agnostic
- agonized
- aplastic
- aplotomy
- aplustre
- agraphia
- agraphic
- agrarian
- agreeing
- agrestic
- agrimony
- agronomy
- apodixis
- apodosis
- apogamic
- apograph
- apologer
- apologue
- aigrette
- aiguille
- apophyge
- apoplexy
- apositic
- apostasy
- apostate
- airiness
- airwards
- akinesia
- akinesic
- aposteme
- alacrify
- alacrity
- alalonga
- alarming
- alarmist
- apostume
- apothegm
- appalled
- albacore
- albicant
- albicore
- albiness
- albinism
- appanage
- apparent
- albolith
- albumose
- appealed
- appealer
- appeared
- alburnum
- alcahest
- alchemic
- alcohate
- appearer
- appealed
- appeaser
- alcyonic
- aldehyde
- appellee
- appellor
- appenage
- appended
- appendix
- aldermen
- aleatory
- alebench
- aleberry
- alehouse
- appetent
- appetite
- appetize
- applause
- alestake
- aleurone
- alewives
- acerbity
- acervate
- acervose
- acescent
- acetable
- acetated
- admiring
- absterge
- absterse
- abstract
- ampullae
- ampullar
- assailed
- assailer
- amputate
- amuletic
- amurcous
- amusable
- amusette
- amyelous
- anabasis
- anabatic
- anabolic
- assaying
- assecure
- assemble
- assented
- assenter
- asserted
- asserter
- assertor
- assessed
- assessee
- anaglyph
- anagogic
- assessor
- assident
- assiento
- assigned
- assignat
- assignee
- assigner
- assignor
- assinego
- assisted
- assister
- assistor
- assizing
- assonant
- assonate
- assorted
- assuaged
- assuager
- anagraph
- analcime
- analcite
- analects
- analecta
- analemma
- analepsy
- analogal
- analogic
- analogon
- analogue
- assuming
- assument
- assuming
- analogue
- analyser
- analyses
- analysis
- analytic
- analyzed
- analyzer
- anapaest
- anaphora
- anapnoic
- anarchal
- anarchic
- anasarca
- anastate
- anathema
- anatifer
- assuring
- anatomic
- ancestor
- ancestry
- asterisk
- asterism
- asternal
- asteroid
- asthenia
- asthenic
- astomous
- astonied
- anchored
- anchoret
- astonish
- astonied
- astragal
- anchusin
- ancienty
- anconeal
- anconeus
- astringe
- astrofel
- astroite
- anconoid
- andesine
- andesite
- anecdote
- anemonin
- astucity
- astyllen
- aswooned
- asystole
- ataraxia
- atechnic
- atheling
- atheneum
- atherine
- atheroma
- athletic
- a-tiptoe
- atlantal
- atlantes
- atmology
- atmolyze
- atomical
- atomizer
- atonable
- atrocity
- atrophic
- atropine
- atropism
- atropous
- attached
- attacked
- attacker
- attaghan
- attained
- attemper
- attended
- attender
- attentat
- attently
- attercop
- attested
- attester
- attestor
- attiring
- attitude
- attorney
- attuning
- atypical
- audacity
- audience
- auditing
- audition
- auditive
- auditory
- auditual
- auguring
- augurate
- augurial
- augurous
- auguries
- augustly
- aularian
- auntrous
- auricled
- auriform
- auspices
- abetting
- abetment
- abeyance
- abeyancy
- abhorred
- abhorrer
- abidance
- applique
- alfenide
- alfresco
- algaroba
- algidity
- algology
- applying
- apposite
- appraise
- algorism
- alguazil
- alienage
- appraise
- alienage
- alienate
- alienism
- alienist
- alighted
- apprised
- apprizal
- apprizer
- approach
- appropre
- approval
- approved
- approver
- alinasal
- aliquant
- alitrunk
- apricate
- alizarin
- alkahest
- alkalies
- alkalify
- alkaline
- alkalize
- alkaloid
- alkargen
- alkarsin
- apronful
- apterous
- aptitude
- alkermes
- allanite
- allaying
- allecret
- aptychus
- apyretic
- apyrexia
- aquarial
- aquarium
- aquatile
- aquatint
- aqueduct
- alleging
- allegory
- aqueduct
- aquiform
- aquiline
- aquosity
- araceous
- arachnid
- allerion
- alleyway
- alliable
- alligate
- araguato
- araneose
- araneous
- arangoes
- arapaima
- allision
- allmouth
- allocate
- allodial
- allodium
- arbalest
- arbalist
- arbitral
- allogamy
- allopath
- allotted
- arborary
- arboreal
- arboreta
- arborist
- arborous
- arbuscle
- allottee
- allotter
- allowing
- archaism
- archaist
- archaize
- alloying
- alloyage
- allspice
- allthing
- alluding
- alluring
- allusion
- archduke
- allusion
- allusive
- allusory
- alluvial
- alluvion
- alluvium
- allwhere
- allylene
- archical
- almsdeed
- almsfolk
- archival
- archives
- archlute
- archness
- archwife
- archwise
- arciform
- alomancy
- alopecia
- alouatte
- arcuated
- ardently
- ardurous
- alphabet
- alpigene
- alquifou
- altarage
- areolate
- altarage
- altarist
- altering
- alterant
- alterity
- abasedly
- abashing
- abatable
- abatised
- abattoir
- abbacies
- abbatial
- abdicant
- abdicate
- abditive
- abditory
- abducing
- abducted
- aretaics
- argental
- argentan
- argentic
- abductor
- abelmosk
- aberrant
- aberrate
- altheine
- although
- altincar
- altitude
- altrices
- altruism
- altruist
- aluminic
- aluminum
- alunogen
- alveated
- alveolar
- alveolus
- amadavat
- amandine
- amaracus
- amaranth
- argentry
- argosies
- arguable
- amassing
- amazedly
- amazeful
- ambition
- amblotic
- amblygon
- ambreate
- ambrosin
- ambs-ace
- ambulant
- ambulate
- ambushed
- argument
- argutely
- ambusher
- amelcorn
- amenable
- amenably
- amenance
- amending
- amercing
- aridness
- arietate
- arillate
- aristate
- amicable
- amicably
- amidogen
- amission
- ammodyte
- ammoniac
- ammonium
- amnestic
- armament
- armature
- armchair
- amniotic
- amoebean
- amoebian
- amoeboid
- amoebous
- amortise
- armgaunt
- armillae
- armoniac
- armorial
- amortize
- amounted
- amovable
- ampelite
- armorist
- armories
- armozeen
- armozine
- aromatic
- arousing
- arpeggio
- arquated
- arquebus
- amphigen
- amphipod
- amphoral
- amphoric
- ampliate
- aspiring
- austrine
- autarchy
- authorly
- autocrat
- autogamy
- automata
- autonomy
- autopsic
- autoptic
- autotype
- autotypy
- autumnal
- auxiliar
- avadavat
- availing
- avellane
- avenging
- aventail
- aventure
- averring
- averaged
- averment
- aversely
- aversion
- abietene
- abietite
- abiogeny
- abjectly
- abjugate
- aversion
- averting
- aviaries
- aviation
- avicular
- avidious
- avifauna
- avoiding
- avouched
- avoucher
- avowable
- avowance
- avulsion
- awaiting
- awakened
- awakener
- awanting
- awarding
- awearied
- awninged
- axillars
- axillary
- ayegreen
- azotized
- azureous
- abjuring
- ablation
- ablative
- ablegate
- ableness
- accroach
- accruing
- accumber
- absolved
- absolver
- absonant
- absonous
- absorbed
- absorber
- accuracy
- accurate
- accursed
- accusant
- accusing
- accustom
- acentric
- acerbate
- acerbity
- adnation
- adopting
- adoption
- adoptive
- adorable
- adorably
- adorning
- adreamed
- adaption
- adaptive
- addendum
- addicted
- addition
- abstrude
- abstruse
- absurdly
- abundant
- abusable
- abuseful
- abutting
- abutment
- acalephs
- acanthus
- acardiac
- acaridan
- acarpous
- acaudate
- acauline
- acaulose
- acaulous
- acceding
- accensor
- accented
- accentor
- accepted
- ablution
- abluvion
- abnegate
- abnormal
- abomasum
- abomasus
- aborsive
- abortion
- abortive
- abounded
- abradant
- abrading
- abrasion
- abrasive
- abricock
- abridged
- abridger
- abrogate
- abruptly
- abscissa
- absented
- absentee
- absenter
- absently
- absinthe
- anteroom
- aweather
- axletree
- accepter
- acceptor
- accident
- accismus
- accolade
- addition
- additive
- additory
- addlings
- addorsed
- adducing
- adducent
- adductor
- adelopod
- adelphia
- adenalgy
- adenitis
- adrogate
- adroitly
- adscript
- adstrict
- adularia
- adulator
- adultery
- aduncity
- aduncous
- adustion
- advanced
- advancer
- adverted
- advising
- advisory
- advocacy
- advocate
- advowson
- adynamia
- adynamic
- affected
- affecter
- affeerer
- affeeror
- afferent
- affiance
- acologic
- aconital
- aconitia
- aconitic
- acosmism
- acosmist
- acoustic
- acquaint
- acquired
- acquirer
- acranial
- acreable
- acridity
- acrimony
- acritude
- acroatic
- acrodont
- acrolein
- acrolith
- acromial
- acromion
- accorded
- accorder
- accosted
- accouple
- accouter
- accoutre
- accredit
- accresce
- acetonic
- achatour
- achenium
- achenial
- achieved
- achiever
- achilous
- acholous
- achroous
- achylous
- achymous
- aciculae
- acicular
- acidific
- acidness
- acierage
- acinaces
- affinity
- affirmed
- acrostic
- acrotism
- actiniae
- actinias
- actinism
- actinium
- actinoid
- actinost
- actinula
- activate
- actively
- activity
- actually
- actuated
- actuator
- acuation
- aculeate
- admitted
- admitter
- admonish
- adeption
- adequacy
- adequate
- adfected
- adhamant
- adhering
- adherent
- adhesion
- adhesive
- adipsous
- adjacent
- adjoined
- adjudged
- adjudger
- adjugate
- adjument
- adjuvant
- adjuring
- adjusted
- adapting
- ames-ace
- adynamic
- aecidium
- aegilops
- aegrotat
- aerating
- aeration
- aerially
- aeriform
- aerocyst
- aerolite
- aerolith
- aerology
- aeronaut
- aerostat
- aesculin
- aesthete
- aestival
- aestuary
- aestuous
- aethogen
- affamish
- affected
- adjuster
- adjutage
- adjutant
- adjutory
- adjutrix
- adjuvant
(n.) A soft, pulsating, hollow tumor, containing blood,
arising from the preternatural dilation or rupture of the coats of an
artery.
(v. t.) To raise to the state of an angel; to render angelic.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Anger
(a.) Alt. of Anginose
(a.) Pertaining to angina or angina pectoris.
(n.) One who affirms.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Affix
(n.) Affixture.
(n.) A breath or blast of wind.
(n.) A divine impartation of knowledge; supernatural impulse;
inspiration.
(a.) Alt. of Angulated
(v. t.) To make angular.
(a.) Angulous.
(a.) Angular; having corners; hooked.
(a.) Anhelous; panting.
(a.) Short of breath; panting.
(a.) Flowing to; flowing abundantly.
(a.) Abundant; copious; plenteous; hence, wealthy; abounding
in goods or riches.
(n.) A stream or river flowing into a larger river or into a
lake; a tributary stream.
(n.) Asphodel.
(imp. & p. p.) of Afford
(v. t.) To convert into a forest; as, to afforest a tract of
country.
(p. p.) of Affray
(n.) One engaged in an affray.
(n.) Stealing cattle on a large scale.
(n.) A small tile of glass, marble, or other substance, of
various colors, used in making ornamental patterns in mosaic pavements.
(pl. ) of Abacus
(v. t.) To impress with sudden fear; to frighten; to alarm.
(p. a.) Affrighted.
(n.) Sudden and great fear; terror. It expresses a stronger
impression than fear, or apprehension, perhaps less than terror.
(n.) The act of frightening; also, a cause of terror; an
object of dread.
(a.) Face to face, or front to front; facing.
(n.) The act of pouring upon, or sprinkling with a liquid, as
water upon a child in baptism.
(n.) The act of pouring water or other fluid on the whole or a
part of the body, as a remedy in disease.
(adv. & a.) In a flickering state.
(imp. & p. p.) of Arrange
(n.) One who arranges.
(adv.) Notoriously, in an ill sense; infamously; impudently;
shamefully.
(n.) A material of wool or silk used for working the figures
in embroidery.
(n.) A rude apparatus for pulverizing ores, esp. those
containing free gold.
(adv. & a.) In a flutter; agitated.
(v. t.) To look after.
(adv.) Physically.
(imp. & p. p.) of Animate
(a.) Endowed with life; full of life or spirit; indicating
animation; lively; vigorous.
(n.) One who animates.
(n.) One who, or that which, animates; an animater.
(n.) A French cordial or liqueur flavored with anise seeds.
(n.) A mineral closely related to dolomite, but containing
iron.
(v. t. & i.) Same as Anchylose.
(n.) A writer of annals.
(v. t.) To record in annals.
(imp. & p. p.) of Anneal
(n.) One who, or that which, anneals.
(n.) An animal resembling an annelid.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Annex
(n.) Annexation.
(n.) To explain or criticize by notes; as, to annotate the
works of Bacon.
(v. i.) To make notes or comments; -- with on or upon.
(n.) A bird one year old, or that has once molted.
(v. t.) To give public notice, or first notice of; to make
known; to publish; to proclaim.
(v. t.) To pronounce; to declare by judicial sentence.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Annoy
(a.) Annoying.
(a.) That annoys; molesting; vexatious.
(a.) Troublesome; annoying.
(adv.) Yearly; year by year.
(n.) A priest employed in saying annuals, or anniversary
Masses.
(imp. & p. p.) of Annul
(a.) Having the form of a ring; annular.
(n.) One of the Annulata.
(a.) Alt. of Annulated
(n.) One who annuls.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the Annuloida.
(a.) Furnished with, or composed of, rings or ringlike
segments; ringed.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the Annulosa.
(imp. & p. p.) of Anoint
(n.) One who anoints.
(a.) Alt. of Anomuran
(a.) Irregular in the character of the tail or abdomen; as,
the anomural crustaceans.
(n.) One of the Anomura.
(n.) A moss or mosslike plant which cellular stems, having
usually an upward growth and distinct leaves.
(n.) Alt. of Anorexy
(a.) Having unequal oblique axes; as, anorthic crystals.
(a.) See Anurous.
(a.) Pertaining to, or resembling, a goose, or the skin of a
goose.
(a.) Pertaining to the Anseres.
(a.) Resembling a goose; silly; simple.
(imp. & p. p.) of Answer
(n.) One who answers.
(a.) Corrective of acrimony of the humors.
(n.) Contest; opposition; antagonism.
(a.) Alleviating pain.
(n.) A medicine to alleviate pain; an anodyne.
(v. t. & i.) To go before in time or place; to precede; to
surpass.
(n.) Prior date; a date antecedent to another which is the
actual date.
(n.) Anticipation.
(v. t.) To date before the true time; to assign to an earlier
date; thus, to antedate a deed or a bond is to give it a date anterior
to the true time of its execution.
(v. t.) To precede in time.
(v. t.) To anticipate; to make before the true time.
(n.) Something done before another act.
(pl. ) of Antefix
(n.) One of a group of ruminant quadrupeds, intermediate
between the deer and the goat. The horns are usually annulated, or
ringed. There are many species in Africa and Asia.
(pl. ) of Antenna
(a.) Belonging to the antennae.
(n.) A foretaste.
(v. t.) To put before; to prefer.
(n.) An outer port, gate, or door.
(a.) Before in time; antecedent.
(a.) Before, or toward the front, in place; as, the anterior
part of the mouth; -- opposed to posterior.
(v. t.) To prevent.
(v. t.) To displace by anteversion.
(pl. ) of Anthelion
(n.) Same as Antihelix.
(n.) The period or state of full expansion in a flower.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Array
(imp. & p. p.) of Arrest
(v.) The person in whose hands is the property attached by
arrestment.
(n.) A poisonous principle obtained from antiar.
(n.) One who arrests.
(n.) The person at whose suit an arrestment is made.
(a.) Alt. of Arrhizous
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Arrive
(a.) Making, or having the disposition to make, exorbitant
claims of rank or estimation; giving one's self an undue degree of
importance; assuming; haughty; -- applied to persons.
(a.) Containing arrogance; marked with arrogance; proceeding
from undue claims or self-importance; -- applied to things; as,
arrogant pretensions or behavior.
(v. t.) To assume, or claim as one's own, unduly, proudly, or
presumptuously; to make undue claims to, from vanity or baseless
pretensions to right or merit; as, the pope arrogated dominion over
kings.
(n.) A gnawing.
(n.) A salt of arsenic acid.
(n.) A compound of arsenic with a metal, or positive element
or radical; -- formerly called arseniuret.
(n.) A salt formed by the union of arsenious acid with a base.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the windpipe.
(a.) Of or pertaining to an artery, or the arteries; as,
arterial action; the arterial system.
(a.) Of or pertaining to a main channel (resembling an
artery), as a river, canal, or railroad.
(pl. ) of Artery
(adv.) In an artful manner; with art or cunning; skillfully;
dexterously; craftily.
(imp. & p. p.) of Antic
(imp. & p. p.) of Article
(a.) Bound by articles; apprenticed; as, an articled clerk.
(n.) A handicraft; a trade; art of making.
(n.) Workmanship; a skillfully contrived work.
(n.) Artful or skillful contrivance.
(n.) Crafty device; an artful, ingenious, or elaborate trick.
[Now the usual meaning.]
(a.) Facing toward the axis of the flower, as in the introrse
anthers of the water lily.
(n.) A remedy to counteract the effects of poison, or of
anything noxious taken into the stomach; -- used with against, for, or
to; as, an antidote against, for, or to, poison.
(n.) Whatever tends to prevent mischievous effects, or to
counteract evil which something else might produce.
(v. t.) To counteract or prevent the effects of, by giving or
taking an antidote.
(v. t.) To fortify or preserve by an antidote.
(n.) A contradiction between any words or passages in an
author.
(n.) A secondary mask, or grotesque interlude, between the
parts of a serious mask.
(n.) One of the two halves of bilaterally symmetrical animals;
one of any opposite symmetrical or homotypic parts in animals and
plants.
(v. t.) To make resemble.
(a.) Alt. of Artistical
(n.) Works of art collectively.
(n.) Artistic effect or quality.
(n.) Artistic pursuits; artistic ability.
(v. t.) To redeem.
(v. t.) To gainsay.
(n.) Alt. of Agallochum
(n.) An elementary substance, resembling a metal in its
appearance and physical properties, but in its chemical relations
belonging to the class of nonmetallic substances. Atomic weight, 120.
Symbol, Sb.
(n.) Opposition of one law or rule to another law or rule.
(n.) An opposing law or rule of any kind.
(n.) A contradiction or incompatibility of thought or
language; -- in the Kantian philosophy, such a contradiction as arises
from the attempt to apply to the ideas of the reason, relations or
attributes which are appropriate only to the facts or the concepts of
experience.
(n.) A musical response; alternate singing or chanting. See
Antiphony, and Antiphone.
(n.) A verse said before and after the psalms.
(n.) One of the antipodes; anything exactly opposite.
(n.) The opposite pole; anything diametrically opposed.
(n.) One who is elected, or claims to be, pope in opposition
to the pope canonically chosen; esp. applied to those popes who resided
at Avignon during the Great Schism.
(n.) A kind of autotype.
(n.) A soothsayer of ancient Rome. Same as Aruspex.
(n.) Prognostication by inspection of the entrails of victims
slain sacrifice.
(n.) A mouse of the genus Arvicola; the meadow mouse. There
are many species.
(a.) Of, pertaining to, or resembling asbestus; inconsumable;
asbestine.
(n.) Alt. of Asbestos
(n.) A variety of amphibole or of pyroxene, occurring in long
and delicate fibers, or in fibrous masses or seams, usually of a white,
gray, or green-gray color. The name is also given to a similar variety
of serpentine.
(imp. & p. p.) of Ascend
(n.) One of the Ascidioidea, or in a more general sense, one
of the Tunicata. Also as an adj.
(a.) Checking or preventing suppuration.
(n.) An antipyic medicine.
(n. pl.) The inhabitants of the earth, living on different
sides of the equator, whose shadows at noon are cast in opposite
directions.
(n.) An antithetic or contrasted statement.
(n.) That of which the type is the pattern or representation;
that which is represented by the type or symbol.
(n.) Opposition or resistance of matter to force.
(a.) Furnished with antlers.
(n.) A pitcher-shaped, or flask-shaped, organ or appendage of
a plant, as the leaves of the pitcher plant, or the little bladderlike
traps of the bladderwort (Utricularia).
(n.) A genus of simple ascidians, which formerly included most
of the known species. It is sometimes used as a name for the
Ascidioidea, or for all the Tunicata.
(imp. & p. p.) of Ascribe
(n.) A compound formerly supposed to be modification of
oxygen, but now known to be hydrogen dioxide; -- so called because
apparently antagonistic to ozone, converting it into ordinary oxygen.
(a.) Forward or upward in direction.
(n.) A stupid fellow.
(a.) Having to stomach, or distinct digestive canal, as the
tapeworm.
(n.) The quality of being aged; oldness.
(pl. ) of Agency
(a.) Characterized by sterility; infecund.
(n.) Any imperfect development of the body, or any anomaly of
organization.
(a.) Of or pertaining to an agent or an agency.
(v. t.) To heap up.
(a.) In heaps; full of heaps.
(n.) Any object, act, state, event, or fact whatever; thing of
any kind; something or other; aught; as, I would not do it for
anything.
(n.) Expressing an indefinite comparison; -- with as or like.
(adv.) In any measure; anywise; at all.
(adv.) In any place.
(a.) Indefinite; pertaining to the aorist tense.
(n.) Inflammation of the aorta.
(a.) Alt. of Apagogical
(n.) That point in the orbit of a double star where the
smaller star is farthest from its primary.
(n.) One who is destitute of feeling.
(pl. ) of Apathy
(a.) Destitute of skin.
(a.) Gently opening the bowels; laxative.
(n.) An aperient medicine or food.
(n.) The act of opening; an opening; an aperture.
(n.) The act of opening.
(n.) An opening; an open space; a gap, cleft, or chasm; a
passage perforated; a hole; as, an aperture in a wall.
(n.) The diameter of the exposed part of the object glass of a
telescope or other optical instrument; as, a telescope of four-inch
aperture.
(a.) Pertaining to, or derived, asparagine; as, aspartic acid.
(v. t.) To make rough or uneven.
(n.) Roughness of surface; unevenness; -- opposed to
smoothness.
(n.) Roughness or harshness of sound; that quality which
grates upon the ear; raucity.
(n.) Roughness to the taste; sourness; tartness.
(n.) Moral roughness; roughness of manner; severity;
crabbedness; harshness; -- opposed to mildness.
(n.) Sharpness; disagreeableness; difficulty.
(a.) Rough; uneven.
(imp. & p. p.) of Asperse
(a.) Having an indefinite number of small charges scattered or
strewed over the surface.
(a.) Bespattered; slandered; calumniated.
(n.) One who asperses; especially, one who vilifies another.
(n.) A general name for a plant of the genus Asphodelus. The
asphodels are hardy perennial plants, several species of which are
cultivated for the beauty of their flowers.
(n.) Alt. of Asphyxy
(a.) Aspiring.
(n.) One who aspires; one who eagerly seeks some high position
or object of attainment.
(v. t.) To pronounce with a breathing, an aspirate, or an h
sound; as, we aspirate the words horse and house; to aspirate a vowel
or a liquid consonant.
(n.) A sound consisting of, or characterized by, a breath like
the sound of h; the breathing h or a character representing such a
sound; an aspirated sound.
(n.) A mark of aspiration (/) used in Greek; the asper, or
rough breathing.
(n.) An elementary sound produced by the breath alone; a surd,
or nonvocal consonant; as, f, th in thin, etc.
(a.) Alt. of Aspirated
(v. t.) To give pain or sorrow to; to afflict; hence, to
oppress or injure in one's rights; to bear heavily upon; -- now
commonly used in the passive TO be aggrieved.
(v. i.) To grieve; to lament.
(n.) Exchange business; also, stockjobbing; the maneuvers of
speculators to raise or lower the price of stocks or public funds.
(a.) Capable of being agitated, or easily moved.
(imp. & p. p.) of Agitate
(a.) Pertaining to aphakia; as, aphakial eyes.
(n.) A very compact, dark-colored /ock, consisting of
hornblende, or pyroxene, and feldspar, but neither of them in
perceptible grains.
(n.) That point of a planet's or comet's orbit which is most
distant from the sun, the opposite point being the perihelion.
(n.) An aphetized form of a word.
(v. t.) To shorten by aphesis.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the family Aphidae.
(n.) One of the aphides; an aphid.
(a.) Without voice; voiceless; nonvocal.
(n.) A comprehensive maxim or principle expressed in a few
words; a sharply defined sentence relating to abstract truth rather
than to practical matters.
(n.) A writer or utterer of aphorisms.
(v. i.) To make aphorisms.
(a.) Of the nature of aphthae; resembling thrush.
(n.) A letter, or a combination of letters, employed in
spelling a word, but in the pronunciation having no sound.
(a.) Pertaining to, or caused by, aphthae; characterized by
aphtae; as, aphthous ulcers; aphthous fever.
(a.) Of or relating to bees.
(n.) One who keeps an apiary.
(a.) Situated at, or near, the apex; apical.
(n.) One who agitates; one who stirs up or excites others; as,
political reformers and agitators.
(n.) One of a body of men appointed by the army, in Cromwell's
time, to look after their interests; -- called also adjutators.
(n.) An implement for shaking or mixing.
(adv. & a.) In a glimmering state.
(adv. & a.) Glittering; in a glitter.
(a.) Without tongue; tongueless.
(a.) Alt. of Agminated
(n.) Consanguinity by a line of males only, as distinguished
from cognation.
(n.) Acknowledgment.
(a.) Professing ignorance; involving no dogmatic; pertaining
to or involving agnosticism.
(n.) One who professes ignorance, or denies that we have any
knowledge, save of phenomena; one who supports agnosticism, neither
affirming nor denying the existence of a personal Deity, a future life,
etc.
(imp. & p. p.) of Agonize
(a.) Not plastic or easily molded.
(n.) Simple incision.
(n.) An ornamental appendage of wood at the ship's stern,
usually spreading like a fan and curved like a bird's feather.
(n.) The absence or loss of the power of expressing ideas by
written signs. It is one form of aphasia.
(a.) Characterized by agraphia.
(a.) Pertaining to fields, or lands, or their tenure; esp.,
relating to an equal or equitable division of lands; as, the agrarian
laws of Rome, which distributed the conquered and other public lands
among citizens.
(a.) Wild; -- said of plants growing in the fields.
(n.) One in favor of an equal division of landed property.
(n.) An agrarian law.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Agree
(a.) Pertaining to fields or the country, in opposition to the
city; rural; rustic; unpolished; uncouth.
(n.) A genus of plants of the Rose family.
(n.) The name is also given to various other plants; as, hemp
agrimony (Eupatorium cannabinum); water agrimony (Bidens).
(n.) The management of land; rural economy; agriculture.
(n.) Full demonstration.
(n.) The consequent clause or conclusion in a conditional
sentence, expressing the result, and thus distinguished from the
protasis or clause which expresses a condition. Thus, in the sentence,
"Though he slay me, yet will I trust in him," the former clause is the
protasis, and the latter the apodosis.
(a.) Relating to apogamy.
(n.) A copy or transcript.
(n.) A teller of apologues.
(n.) A story or relation of fictitious events, intended to
convey some moral truth; a moral fable.
(n.) The small white European heron. See Egret.
(n.) A plume or tuft for the head composed of feathers, or of
gems, etc.
(n.) A tuft like that of the egret.
(n.) A feathery crown of seed; egret; as, the aigrette or down
of the dandelion or the thistle.
(n.) A needle-shaped peak.
(n.) An instrument for boring holes, used in blasting.
(n.) The small hollow curvature given to the top or bottom of
the shaft of a column where it expands to meet the edge of the fillet;
-- called also the scape.
(n.) Sudden diminution or loss of consciousness, sensation,
and voluntary motion, usually caused by pressure on the brain.
(a.) Destroying the appetite, or suspending hunger.
(n.) An abandonment of what one has voluntarily professed; a
total desertion of departure from one's faith, principles, or party;
esp., the renunciation of a religious faith; as, Julian's apostasy from
Christianity.
(n.) One who has forsaken the faith, principles, or party, to
which he before adhered; esp., one who has forsaken his religion for
another; a pervert; a renegade.
(n.) One who, after having received sacred orders, renounces
his clerical profession.
(a.) Pertaining to, or characterized by, apostasy; faithless
to moral allegiance; renegade.
(v. i.) To apostatize.
(n.) The state or quality of being airy; openness or exposure
to the air; as, the airiness of a country seat.
(n.) Lightness of spirits; gayety; levity; as, the airiness of
young persons.
(adv.) Toward the air; upward.
(n.) Paralysis of the motor nerves; loss of movement.
(a.) Pertaining to akinesia.
(n.) An abscess; a swelling filled with purulent matter.
(v. t.) To rouse to action; to inspirit.
(n.) A cheerful readiness, willingness, or promptitude; joyous
activity; briskness; sprightliness; as, the soldiers advanced with
alacrity to meet the enemy.
(n.) Alt. of Alilonghi
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Alarm
(a.) Exciting, or calculated to excite, alarm; causing
apprehension of danger; as, an alarming crisis or report. --
A*larm"ing*ly, adv.
(n.) One prone to sound or excite alarms, especially, needless
alarms.
(n.) See Aposteme.
(n.) Alt. of Apophthegm
(imp. & p. p.) of Appall
(n.) See Albicore.
(a.) Growing or becoming white.
(n.) A name applied to several large fishes of the Mackerel
family, esp. Orcynus alalonga. One species (Orcynus thynnus), common in
the Mediterranean and Atlantic, is called in New England the horse
mackerel; the tunny.
(n.) A female albino.
(n.) The state or condition of being an albino: abinoism;
leucopathy.
(n.) The portion of land assigned by a sovereign prince for
the subsistence of his younger sons.
(n.) A dependency; a dependent territory.
(n.) That which belongs to one by custom or right; a natural
adjunct or accompaniment.
(a.) Capable of being seen, or easily seen; open to view;
visible to the eye; within sight or view.
(a.) Clear or manifest to the understanding; plain; evident;
obvious; known; palpable; indubitable.
(a.) Appearing to the eye or mind (distinguished from, but not
necessarily opposed to, true or real); seeming; as the apparent motion
or diameter of the sun.
(n.) An heir apparent.
(n.) A kind of plastic cement, or artificial stone, consisting
chiefly of magnesia and silica; -- called also albolite.
(n.) A compound or class of compounds formed from albumin by
dilute acids or by an acid solution of pepsin. Used also in
combination, as antialbumose, hemialbumose.
(imp. & p. p.) of Appeal
(n.) One who makes an appeal.
(imp. & p. p.) of Appear
(n.) The white and softer part of wood, between the inner bark
and the hard wood or duramen; sapwood.
(n.) Same as Alkahest.
(a.) Alt. of Alchemical
(n.) Shortened forms of Alcoholate.
(n.) One who appears.
(imp. & p. p.) of Appease
(n.) One who appeases; a pacifier.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the Alcyonaria.
(n.) A colorless, mobile, and very volatile liquid obtained
from alcohol by certain processes of oxidation.
(n.) The defendant in an appeal; -- opposed to appellant.
(n.) The person who is appealed against, or accused of crime;
-- opposed to appellor.
(n.) The person who institutes an appeal, or prosecutes
another for a crime.
(n.) One who confesses a felony committed and accuses his
accomplices.
(n.) See Appanage.
(imp. & p. p.) of Append
(n.) Something appended or added; an appendage, adjunct, or
concomitant.
(n.) Any literary matter added to a book, but not necessarily
essential to its completeness, and thus distinguished from supplement,
which is intended to supply deficiencies and correct inaccuracies.
(pl. ) of Alderman
(a.) Depending on some uncertain contingency; as, an aleatory
contract.
(n.) A bench in or before an alehouse.
(n.) A beverage, formerly made by boiling ale with spice,
sugar, and sops of bread.
(n.) A house where ale is retailed; hence, a tippling house.
(a.) Desiring; eagerly desirous.
(n.) The desire for some personal gratification, either of the
body or of the mind.
(n.) Desire for, or relish of, food or drink; hunger.
(n.) Any strong desire; an eagerness or longing.
(n.) Tendency; appetency.
(n.) The thing desired.
(v. t.) To make hungry; to whet the appetite of.
(n.) The act of applauding; approbation and praise publicly
expressed by clapping the hands, stamping or tapping with the feet,
acclamation, huzzas, or other means; marked commendation.
(n.) A stake or pole projecting from, or set up before, an
alehouse, as a sign; an alepole. At the end was commonly suspended a
garland, a bunch of leaves, or a "bush."
(n.) An albuminoid substance which occurs in minute grains
("protein granules") in maturing seeds and tubers; -- supposed to be a
modification of protoplasm.
(pl. ) of Alewife
(pl. ) of Alewife
(n.) Harshness, bitterness, or severity; as, acerbity of
temper, of language, of pain.
(v. t.) To heap up.
(a.) Heaped, or growing in heaps, or closely compacted
clusters.
(a.) Full of heaps.
(a.) Turning sour; readily becoming tart or acid; slightly
sour.
(n.) A substance liable to become sour.
(n.) An acetabulum; or about one eighth of a pint.
(a.) Combined with acetic acid.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Admire
(a.) Expressing admiration; as, an admiring glance.
(v. t.) To make clean by wiping; to wipe away; to cleanse;
hence, to purge.
(v. t.) To absterge; to cleanse; to purge away.
(a.) Withdraw; separate.
(a.) Considered apart from any application to a particular
object; separated from matter; existing in the mind only; as, abstract
truth, abstract numbers. Hence: ideal; abstruse; difficult.
(a.) Expressing a particular property of an object viewed
apart from the other properties which constitute it; -- opposed to
concrete; as, honesty is an abstract word.
(a.) Resulting from the mental faculty of abstraction; general
as opposed to particular; as, "reptile" is an abstract or general name.
(a.) Abstracted; absent in mind.
(a.) To withdraw; to separate; to take away.
(a.) To draw off in respect to interest or attention; as, his
was wholly abstracted by other objects.
(a.) To separate, as ideas, by the operation of the mind; to
consider by itself; to contemplate separately, as a quality or
attribute.
(a.) To epitomize; to abridge.
(a.) To take secretly or dishonestly; to purloin; as, to
abstract goods from a parcel, or money from a till.
(a.) To separate, as the more volatile or soluble parts of a
substance, by distillation or other chemical processes. In this sense
extract is now more generally used.
(v. t.) To perform the process of abstraction.
(a.) That which comprises or concentrates in itself the
essential qualities of a larger thing or of several things.
Specifically: A summary or an epitome, as of a treatise or book, or of
a statement; a brief.
(a.) A state of separation from other things; as, to consider
a subject in the abstract, or apart from other associated things.
(a.) An abstract term.
(a.) A powdered solid extract of a vegetable substance mixed
with sugar of milk in such proportion that one part of the abstract
represents two parts of the original substance.
(pl. ) of Ampulla
(a.) Alt. of Ampullary
(imp. & p. p.) of Assail
(n.) One who assails.
(v. t.) To prune or lop off, as branches or tendrils.
(v. t.) To cut off (a limb or projecting part of the body)
(a.) Of or pertaining to an amulet; operating as a charm.
(a.) Full off dregs; foul.
(a.) Capable of being amused.
(n.) A light field cannon, or stocked gun mounted on a swivel.
(a.) Wanting the spinal cord.
(n.) A journey or expedition up from the coast, like that of
the younger Cyrus into Central Asia, described by Xenophon in his work
called "The Anabasis."
(n.) The first period, or increase, of a disease;
augmentation.
(a.) Pertaining to anabasis; as, an anabatic fever.
(a.) Pertaining to anabolism; an anabolic changes, or
processes, more or less constructive in their nature.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Assay
(n.) The act or process of testing, esp. of analyzing or
examining metals and ores, to determine the proportion of pure metal.
(v. t.) To make sure or safe; to assure.
(v. t.) To collect into one place or body; to bring or call
together; to convene; to congregate.
(v. i.) To meet or come together, as a number of individuals;
to convene; to congregate.
(v. i.) To liken; to compare.
(imp. & p. p.) of Assent
(n.) One who assents.
(imp. & p. p.) of Assert
(n.) One who asserts; one who avers pr maintains; an assertor.
(n.) One who asserts or avers; one who maintains or vindicates
a claim or a right; an affirmer, supporter, or vindicator; a defender;
an asserter.
(imp. & p. p.) of Assess
(n.) One who is assessed.
(n.) Any sculptured, chased, or embossed ornament worked in
low relief, as a cameo.
(a.) Alt. of Anagogical
(v.) One appointed or elected to assist a judge or magistrate
with his special knowledge of the subject to be decided; as legal
assessors, nautical assessors.
(v.) One who sits by another, as next in dignity, or as an
assistant and adviser; an associate in office.
(v.) One appointed to assess persons or property for the
purpose of taxation.
(a.) Usually attending a disease, but not always; as, assident
signs, or symptoms.
(n.) A contract or convention between Spain and other powers
for furnishing negro slaves for the Spanish dominions in America, esp.
the contract made with Great Britain in 1713.
(imp. & p. p.) of Assign
(n.) One of the notes, bills, or bonds, issued as currency by
the revolutionary government of France (1790-1796), and based on the
security of the lands of the church and of nobles which had been
appropriated by the state.
(v.) A person to whom an assignment is made; a person
appointed or deputed by another to do some act, perform some business,
or enjoy some right, privilege, or property; as, an assignee of a
bankrupt. See Assignment (c). An assignee may be by special appointment
or deed, or be created by jaw; as an executor.
(v.) In England, the persons appointed, under a commission of
bankruptcy, to manage the estate of a bankrupt for the benefit of his
creditors.
(n.) One who assigns, appoints, allots, or apportions.
(n.) An assigner; a person who assigns or transfers an
interest; as, the assignor of a debt or other chose in action.
(n.) See Asinego.
(imp. & p. p.) of Assist
(n.) An assistant; a helper.
(n.) A assister.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Assize
(a.) Having a resemblance of sounds.
(a.) Pertaining to the peculiar species of rhyme called
assonance; not consonant.
(v. i.) To correspond in sound.
(imp. & p. p.) of Assort
(a.) Selected; culled.
(imp. & p. p.) of Assuage
(n.) One who, or that which, assuages.
(n.) An inventory; a record.
(n.) A white or flesh-red mineral, of the zeolite family,
occurring in isometric crystals. By friction, it acquires a weak
electricity; hence its name.
(n.) Analcime.
(n. pl.) Alt. of Analecta
(n. pl.) A collection of literary fragments.
(n.) An orthographic projection of the sphere on the plane of
the meridian, the eye being supposed at an infinite distance, and in
the east or west point of the horizon.
(n.) An instrument of wood or brass, on which this projection
of the sphere is made, having a movable horizon or cursor; -- formerly
much used in solving some common astronomical problems.
(n.) A scale of the sun's declination for each day of the
year, drawn across the torrid zone on an artificial terrestrial globe.
() Recovery of strength after sickness.
() A species of epileptic attack, originating from gastric
disorder.
(a.) Analogous.
(a.) Of or belonging to analogy.
(n.) Analogue.
(n.) That which is analogous to, or corresponds with, some
other thing.
(n.) A word in one language corresponding with one in another;
an analogous term; as, the Latin "pater" is the analogue of the English
"father."
(n.) An organ which is equivalent in its functions to a
different organ in another species or group, or even in the same group;
as, the gill of a fish is the analogue of a lung in a quadruped,
although the two are not of like structural relations.
(n.) A species in one genus or group having its characters
parallel, one by one, with those of another group.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Assume
(n.) A patch; an addition; a piece put on.
(a.) Pretentious; taking much upon one's self; presumptuous.
(n.) A species or genus in one country closely related to a
species of the same genus, or a genus of the same group, in another:
such species are often called representative species, and such genera,
representative genera.
(n.) Same as Analyze, Analyzer, etc.
(pl. ) of Analysis
(n.) A resolution of anything, whether an object of the senses
or of the intellect, into its constituent or original elements; an
examination of the component parts of a subject, each separately, as
the words which compose a sentence, the tones of a tune, or the simple
propositions which enter into an argument. It is opposed to synthesis.
(n.) The separation of a compound substance, by chemical
processes, into its constituents, with a view to ascertain either (a)
what elements it contains, or (b) how much of each element is present.
The former is called qualitative, and the latter quantitative analysis.
(n.) The tracing of things to their source, and the resolving
of knowledge into its original principles.
(n.) The resolving of problems by reducing the conditions that
are in them to equations.
(n.) A syllabus, or table of the principal heads of a
discourse, disposed in their natural order.
(n.) A brief, methodical illustration of the principles of a
science. In this sense it is nearly synonymous with synopsis.
(n.) The process of ascertaining the name of a species, or its
place in a system of classification, by means of an analytical table or
key.
(a.) Alt. of Analytical
(imp. & p. p.) of Analyze
(n.) One who, or that which, analyzes.
(n.) The part of a polariscope which receives the light after
polarization, and exhibits its properties.
() Alt. of Anapaestic
(n.) A repetition of a word or of words at the beginning of
two or more successive clauses.
(a.) Relating to respiration.
(a.) Lawless; anarchical.
(a.) Alt. of Anarchical
(n.) Dropsy of the subcutaneous cellular tissue; an effusion
of serum into the cellular substance, occasioning a soft, pale,
inelastic swelling of the skin.
(n.) One of a series of substances formed, in secreting cells,
by constructive or anabolic processes, in the production of protoplasm;
-- opposed to katastate.
(n.) A ban or curse pronounced with religious solemnity by
ecclesiastical authority, and accompanied by excommunication. Hence:
Denunciation of anything as accursed.
(n.) An imprecation; a curse; a malediction.
(n.) Any person or thing anathematized, or cursed by
ecclesiastical authority.
(n.) Same as Anatifa.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Assure
(a.) That assures; tending to assure; giving confidence.
(a.) Alt. of Anatomical
(n.) One from whom a person is descended, whether on the
father's or mother's side, at any distance of time; a progenitor; a
fore father.
(n.) An earlier type; a progenitor; as, this fossil animal is
regarded as the ancestor of the horse.
(n.) One from whom an estate has descended; -- the correlative
of heir.
(n.) Condition as to ancestors; ancestral lineage; hence,
birth or honorable descent.
(n.) A series of ancestors or progenitors; lineage, or those
who compose the line of natural descent.
(n.) The figure of a star, thus, /, used in printing and
writing as a reference to a passage or note in the margin, to supply
the omission of letters or words, or to mark a word or phrase as having
a special character.
(n.) A constellation.
(n.) A small cluster of stars.
(n.) An asterisk, or mark of reference.
(n.) Three asterisks placed in this manner, /, to direct
attention to a particular passage.
(n.) An optical property of some crystals which exhibit a
star-shaped by reflected light, as star sapphire, or by transmitted
light, as some mica.
(a.) Not sternal; -- said of ribs which do not join the
sternum.
(n.) A starlike body; esp. one of the numerous small planets
whose orbits lie between those of Mars and Jupiter; -- called also
planetoids and minor planets.
(n.) Alt. of Astheny
(a.) Characterized by, or pertaining to, debility; weak;
debilitating.
(a.) Not possessing a mouth.
(p. p.) Stunned; astonished. See Astony.
(imp. & p. p.) of Anchor
(a.) Held by an anchor; at anchor; held safely; as, an
anchored bark; also, shaped like an anchor; forked; as, an anchored
tongue.
(a.) Having the extremities turned back, like the flukes of an
anchor; as, an anchored cross.
(n.) Alt. of Anchorite
(v. t.) To stun; to render senseless, as by a blow.
(v. t.) To strike with sudden fear, terror, or wonder; to
amaze; to surprise greatly, as with something unaccountable; to
confound with some sudden emotion or passion.
(imp. & p. p.) of Astony
(n.) A convex molding of rounded surface, generally from half
to three quarters of a circle.
(n.) A round molding encircling a cannon near the mouth.
(n.) A resinoid coloring matter obtained from alkanet root.
(n.) Age; antiquity.
(n.) Seniority.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the ancon or elbow.
(n.) A muscle of the elbow and forearm.
(v. t.) To bind fast; to constrict; to contract; to cause
parts to draw together; to compress.
(v. t.) To bind by moral or legal obligation.
(n.) Alt. of Astrofell
(n.) A radiated stone or fossil; star-stone.
(a.) Elbowlike; anconal.
(n.) A kind of triclinic feldspar found in the Andes.
(n.) An eruptive rock allied to trachyte, consisting
essentially of a triclinic feldspar, with pyroxene, hornblende, or
hypersthene.
(n.) Unpublished narratives.
(n.) A particular or detached incident or fact of an
interesting nature; a biographical incident or fragment; a single
passage of private life.
(n.) An acrid, poisonous, crystallizable substance, obtained
from some species of anemone.
(n.) Craftiness; astuteness.
(n.) A small dam to prevent free passage of water in an adit
or level.
(adv.) In a swoon.
(n.) A weakening or cessation of the contractile power of the
heart.
(n.) Alt. of Ataraxy
(a.) Without technical or artistic knowledge.
(n.) An Anglo-Saxon prince or nobleman; esp., the heir
apparent or a prince of the royal family.
(n.) Alt. of Athenaeum
(n.) A small marine fish of the family Atherinidae, having a
silvery stripe along the sides. The European species (Atherina
presbyter) is used as food. The American species (Menidia notata) is
called silversides and sand smelt. See Silversides.
(n.) An encysted tumor containing curdy matter.
(n.) A disease characterized by thickening and fatty
degeneration of the inner coat of the arteries.
(a.) Of or pertaining to athletes or to the exercises
practiced by them; as, athletic games or sports.
(a.) Befitting an athlete; strong; muscular; robust; vigorous;
as, athletic Celts.
(adv.) On tiptoe; eagerly expecting.
(a.) Relating to the atlas.
(a.) Anterior; cephalic.
(n. pl.) Figures or half figures of men, used as columns to
support an entablature; -- called also telamones. See Caryatides.
(n.) That branch of science which treats of the laws and
phenomena of aqueous vapor.
(v. t.) To subject to atmolysis; to separate by atmolysis.
(a.) Of or pertaining to atoms.
(a.) Extremely minute; tiny.
(n.) One who, or that which, atomizes; esp., an instrument for
reducing a liquid to spray for disinfecting, cooling, or perfuming.
(a.) Admitting an atonement; capable of being atoned for;
expiable.
(n.) Enormous wickedness; extreme heinousness or cruelty.
(n.) An atrocious or extremely cruel deed.
(a.) Relating to atrophy.
(n.) A poisonous, white, crystallizable alkaloid, extracted
from the Atropa belladonna, or deadly nightshade, and the Datura
Stramonium, or thorn apple. It is remarkable for its power in dilating
the pupil of the eye. Called also daturine.
(n.) A condition of the system produced by long use of
belladonna.
(a.) Not inverted; orthotropous.
(imp. & p. p.) of Attach
(imp. & p. p.) of Attack
(n.) One who attacks.
(n.) See Yataghan.
(imp. & p. p.) of Attain
(v. t.) To reduce, modify, or moderate, by mixture; to temper;
to regulate, as temperature.
(v. t.) To soften, mollify, or moderate; to soothe; to temper;
as, to attemper rigid justice with clemency.
(v. t.) To mix in just proportion; to regulate; as, a mind
well attempered with kindness and justice.
(v. t.) To accommodate; to make suitable; to adapt.
(imp. & p. p.) of Attend
(n.) One who, or that which, attends.
(n.) An attempt; an assault.
(n.) A proceeding in a court of judicature, after an
inhibition is decreed.
(n.) Any step wrongly innovated or attempted in a suit by an
inferior judge.
(adv.) Attentively.
(n.) A spider.
(n.) A peevish, ill-natured person.
(imp. & p. p.) of Attest
(n.) Alt. of Attestor
(n.) One who attests.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Attire
(n.) The posture, action, or disposition of a figure or a
statue.
(n.) The posture or position of a person or an animal, or the
manner in which the parts of his body are disposed; position assumed or
studied to serve a purpose; as, a threatening attitude; an attitude of
entreaty.
(n.) Fig.: Position as indicating action, feeling, or mood;
as, in times of trouble let a nation preserve a firm attitude; one's
mental attitude in respect to religion.
(n.) A substitute; a proxy; an agent.
(n.) One who is legally appointed by another to transact any
business for him; an attorney in fact.
(n.) A legal agent qualified to act for suitors and defendants
in legal proceedings; an attorney at law.
(v. t.) To perform by proxy; to employ as a proxy.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Attune
(a.) That has no type; devoid of typical character; irregular;
unlike the type.
(n.) Daring spirit, resolution, or confidence;
venturesomeness.
(n.) Reckless daring; presumptuous impudence; -- implying a
contempt of law or moral restraints.
(a.) The act of hearing; attention to sounds.
(a.) Admittance to a hearing; a formal interview, esp. with a
sovereign or the head of a government, for conference or the
transaction of business.
(a.) An auditory; an assembly of hearers. Also applied by
authors to their readers.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Audit
(n.) The act of hearing or listening; hearing.
(a.) Of or pertaining to hearing; auditory.
(a.) Of or pertaining to hearing, or to the sense or organs of
hearing; as, the auditory nerve. See Ear.
(n.) An assembly of hearers; an audience.
(n.) An auditorium.
(a.) Auditory.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Augur
(v. t. & i.) To make or take auguries; to augur; to predict.
(n.) The office of an augur.
(a.) Relating to augurs or to augury.
(a.) Full of augury; foreboding.
(pl. ) of Augury
(adv.) In an august manner.
(a.) Relating to a hall.
(n.) At Oxford, England, a member of a hall, distinguished
from a collegian.
(a.) Adventurous.
(a.) Having ear-shaped appendages or lobes; auriculate; as,
auricled leaves.
(a.) Having the form of the human ear; ear-shaped.
(pl. ) of Auspice
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Abet
(n.) The act of abetting; as, an abetment of treason, crime,
etc.
(n.) Expectancy; condition of being undetermined.
(n.) Suspension; temporary suppression.
(n.) Abeyance.
(imp. & p. p.) of Abhor
(n.) One who abhors.
(n.) The state of abiding; abode; continuance; compliance
(with).
(a.) Ornamented with a pattern (which has been cut out of
another color or stuff) applied or transferred to a foundation; as,
applique lace; applique work.
(n.) An alloy of nickel and silver electroplated with silver.
(adv. & a.) In the open-air.
(n.) The Carob, a leguminous tree of the Mediterranean region;
also, its edible beans or pods, called St. John's bread.
(n.) The Honey mesquite (Prosopis juliflora), a small tree
found from California to Buenos Ayres; also, its sweet, pulpy pods. A
valuable gum, resembling gum arabic, is collected from the tree in
Texas and Mexico.
(n.) Chilliness; coldness
(n.) coldness and collapse.
(n.) The study or science of algae or seaweeds.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Apply
(a.) Very applicable; well adapted; suitable or fit; relevant;
pat; -- followed by to; as, this argument is very apposite to the case.
(v. t.) To set a value; to estimate the worth of, particularly
by persons appointed for the purpose; as, to appraise goods and
chattels.
(v. t.) To estimate; to conjecture.
(n.) Alt. of Algorithm
(n.) An inferior officer of justice in Spain; a warrant
officer; a constable.
(n.) The state or legal condition of being an alien.
(v. t.) To praise; to commend.
(n.) The state of being alienated or transferred to another.
(a.) Estranged; withdrawn in affection; foreign; -- with from.
(v. t.) To convey or transfer to another, as title, property,
or right; to part voluntarily with ownership of.
(v. t.) To withdraw, as the affections; to make indifferent of
averse, where love or friendship before subsisted; to estrange; to
wean; -- with from.
(n.) A stranger; an alien.
(n.) The status or legal condition of an alien; alienage.
(n.) The study or treatment of diseases of the mind.
(n.) One who treats diseases of the mind.
(imp. & p. p.) of Alight
(imp. & p. p.) of Apprise
(n.) See Appraisal.
(n.) An appraiser.
(n.) A creditor for whom an appraisal is made.
(v. i.) To come or go near, in place or time; to draw nigh; to
advance nearer.
(v. i.) To draw near, in a figurative sense; to make advances;
to approximate; as, he approaches to the character of the ablest
statesman.
(v. t.) To bring near; to cause to draw near; to advance.
(v. t.) To come near to in place, time, or character; to draw
nearer to; as, to approach the city; to approach my cabin; he
approached the age of manhood.
(v. t.) To take approaches to.
(v. i.) The act of drawing near; a coming or advancing near.
(v. i.) A access, or opportunity of drawing near.
(v. i.) Movements to gain favor; advances.
(v. i.) A way, passage, or avenue by which a place or
buildings can be approached; an access.
(v. i.) The advanced works, trenches, or covered roads made by
besiegers in their advances toward a fortress or military post.
(v. i.) See Approaching.
(v. t.) To appropriate.
(n.) Approbation; sanction.
(imp. & p. p.) of Approve
(n.) One who approves. Formerly, one who made proof or trial.
(n.) An informer; an accuser.
(n.) One who confesses a crime and accuses another. See 1st
Approvement, 2.
(v. t.) A bailiff or steward; an agent.
(a.) Pertaining to expansions of the nasal bone or cartilage.
(a.) An aliquant part of a number or quantity is one which
does not divide it without leaving a remainder; thus, 5 is an aliquant
part of 16. Opposed to aliquot.
(n.) The segment of the body of an insect to which the wings
are attached; the thorax.
(v. t. & i.) To bask in the sun.
(n.) A coloring principle, C14H6O2(OH)2, found in madder, and
now produced artificially from anthracene. It produces the Turkish
reds.
(n.) The fabled "universal solvent" of the alchemists; a
menstruum capable of dissolving all bodies.
(pl. ) of Alkali
(v. t.) To convert into an alkali; to give alkaline properties
to.
(v. i.) To become changed into an alkali.
(a.) Of or pertaining to an alkali or to alkalies; having the
properties of an alkali.
(v. t.) To render alkaline; to communicate the properties of
an alkali to.
(a.) Alt. of Alkaloidal
(n.) An organic base, especially one of a class of substances
occurring ready formed in the tissues of plants and the bodies of
animals.
(n.) Same as Cacodylic acid.
(n.) A spontaneously inflammable liquid, having a repulsive
odor, and consisting of cacodyl and its oxidation products; -- called
also Cadel's fuming liquid.
(n.) The quantity an apron can hold.
(a.) Destitute of wings; apteral; as, apterous insects.
(a.) Destitute of winglike membranous expansions, as a stem or
petiole; -- opposed to alate.
(n.) A natural or acquired disposition or capacity for a
particular purpose, or tendency to a particular action or effect; as,
oil has an aptitude to burn.
(n.) A general fitness or suitableness; adaptation.
(n.) Readiness in learning; docility; aptness.
(n.) A compound cordial, in the form of a confection, deriving
its name from the kermes insect, its principal ingredient.
(n.) A silicate containing a large amount of cerium. It is
usually black in color, opaque, and is related to epidote in form and
composition.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Allay
(n.) A kind of light armor used in the sixteenth century, esp.
by the Swiss.
(n.) A shelly plate found in the terminal chambers of ammonite
shells. Some authors consider them to be jaws; others, opercula.
(a.) Without fever; -- applied to days when there is an
intermission of fever.
(n.) Alt. of Apyrexy
(a.) Alt. of Aquarian
(n.) An artificial pond, or a globe or tank (usually with
glass sides), in which living specimens of aquatic animals or plants
are kept.
(a.) Inhabiting the water.
(n.) Alt. of Aquatinta
(n.) A conductor, conduit, or artificial channel for conveying
water, especially one for supplying large cities with water.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Allege
(n.) A figurative sentence or discourse, in which the
principal subject is described by another subject resembling it in its
properties and circumstances. The real subject is thus kept out of
view, and we are left to collect the intentions of the writer or
speaker by the resemblance of the secondary to the primary subject.
(n.) Anything which represents by suggestive resemblance; an
emblem.
(n.) A figure representation which has a meaning beyond notion
directly conveyed by the object painted or sculptured.
(n.) A canal or passage; as, the aqueduct of Sylvius, a
channel connecting the third and fourth ventricles of the brain.
(a.) Having the form of water.
(a.) Belonging to or like an eagle.
(a.) Curving; hooked; prominent, like the beak of an eagle; --
applied particularly to the nose
(n.) The condition of being wet or watery; wateriness.
(a.) Of or pertaining to an order of plants, of which the
genus Arum is the type.
(n.) An arachnidan.
(n.) Am eagle without beak or feet, with expanded wings.
(n.) An alley.
(a.) Able to enter into alliance.
(v. t.) To tie; to unite by some tie.
(n.) A South American monkey, the ursine howler (Mycetes
ursinus). See Howler, n., 2.
(a.) Of the aspect of a spider's web; arachnoid.
(a.) Cobweblike; extremely thin and delicate, like a cobweb;
as, the araneous membrane of the eye. See Arachnoid.
(pl. ) of Arango
(n.) A large fresh-water food fish of South America.
(n.) The act of dashing against, or striking upon.
(n.) The angler.
(v. t.) To distribute or assign; to allot.
(v. t.) To localize.
(a.) Pertaining to allodium; freehold; free of rent or
service; held independent of a lord paramount; -- opposed to feudal;
as, allodial lands; allodial system.
(a.) Anything held allodially.
(n.) Freehold estate; land which is the absolute property of
the owner; real estate held in absolute independence, without being
subject to any rent, service, or acknowledgment to a superior. It is
thus opposed to feud.
(n.) Alt. of Arbalist
(n.) A crossbow, consisting of a steel bow set in a shaft of
wood, furnished with a string and a trigger, and a mechanical device
for bending the bow. It served to throw arrows, darts, bullets, etc.
(a.) Of or relating to an arbiter or an arbitration.
(n.) Fertilization of the pistil of a plant by pollen from
another of the same species; cross-fertilization.
(n.) An allopathist.
(imp. & p. p.) of Allot
(a.) Of or pertaining to trees; arboreal.
(a.) Of or pertaining to a tree, or to trees; of nature of
trees.
(a.) Attached to, found in or upon, or frequenting, woods or
trees; as, arboreal animals.
(pl. ) of Arboretum
(n.) One who makes trees his study, or who is versed in the
knowledge of trees.
(a.) Formed by trees.
(n.) A dwarf tree, one in size between a shrub and a tree; a
treelike shrub.
(n.) One to whom anything is allotted; one to whom an
allotment is made.
(n.) One who allots.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Allow
(a.) An ancient, antiquated, or old-fashioned, word,
expression, or idiom; a word or form of speech no longer in common use.
(a.) Antiquity of style or use; obsoleteness.
(n.) Am antiquary.
(n.) One who uses archaisms.
(v. t.) To make appear archaic or antique.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Alloy
(n.) The act or art of alloying metals; also, the combination
or alloy.
(n.) The berry of the pimento (Eugenia pimenta), a tree of the
West Indies; a spice of a mildly pungent taste, and agreeably aromatic;
Jamaica pepper; pimento. It has been supposed to combine the flavor of
cinnamon, nutmegs, and cloves; and hence the name. The name is also
given to other aromatic shrubs; as, the Carolina allspice (Calycanthus
floridus); wild allspice (Lindera benzoin), called also spicebush,
spicewood, and feverbush.
(adv.) Altogether.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Allude
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Allure
(a.) That allures; attracting; charming; tempting.
(n.) A figurative or symbolical reference.
(n.) A prince of the imperial family of Austria.
(n.) A reference to something supposed to be known, but not
explicitly mentioned; a covert indication; indirect reference; a hint.
(a.) Figurative; symbolical.
(a.) Having reference to something not fully expressed;
containing an allusion.
(a.) Allusive.
(a.) Pertaining to, contained in, or composed of, alluvium;
relating to the deposits made by flowing water; washed away from one
place and deposited in another; as, alluvial soil, mud, accumulations,
deposits.
(n.) Wash or flow of water against the shore or bank.
(n.) An overflowing; an inundation; a flood.
(n.) Matter deposited by an inundation or the action of
flowing water; alluvium.
(n.) An accession of land gradually washed to the shore or
bank by the flowing of water. See Accretion.
(n.) Deposits of earth, sand, gravel, and other transported
matter, made by rivers, floods, or other causes, upon land not
permanently submerged beneath the waters of lakes or seas.
(adv.) Everywhere.
(n.) A gaseous hydrocarbon, C3H4, homologous with acetylene;
propine.
(pref.) Chief; primary; primordial.
(n.) An act of charity.
(n.) Persons supported by alms; almsmen.
(a.) Pertaining to, or contained in, archives or records.
(pl. ) of Archive
(n.) Alt. of Archilute
(n.) The quality of being arch; cleverness; sly humor free
from malice; waggishness.
(n.) A big, masculine wife.
(adv.) Arch-shaped.
(a.) Having the form of an arch; curved.
(n.) Divination by means of salt.
(n.) Alt. of Alopecy
(n.) One of the several species of howling monkeys of South
America. See Howler, 2.
(a.) Bent or curved in the form of a bow.
(adv.) In an ardent manner; eagerly; with warmth;
affectionately; passionately.
(a.) Burning; ardent.
(n.) The letters of a language arranged in the customary
order; the series of letters or signs which form the elements of
written language.
(n.) The simplest rudiments; elements.
(v. t.) To designate by the letters of the alphabet; to
arrange alphabetically.
(a.) Growing in Alpine regions.
(n.) A lead ore found in Cornwall, England, and used by
potters to give a green glaze to their wares; potter's ore.
(n.) The offerings made upon the altar, or to a church.
(a.) Alt. of Areolated
(n.) The profit which accrues to the priest, by reason of the
altar, from the small tithes.
(n.) A chaplain.
(n.) A vicar of a church.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Alter
(a.) Altering; gradually changing.
(n.) An alterative.
(n.) The state or quality of being other; a being otherwise.
(adv.) Abjectly; downcastly.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Abash
(a.) Capable of being abated; as, an abatable writ or
nuisance.
(a.) Provided with an abatis.
(n.) A public slaughterhouse for cattle, sheep, etc.
(pl. ) of Abbacy
(a.) Belonging to an abbey; as, abbatial rights.
(a.) Abdicating; renouncing; -- followed by of.
(n.) One who abdicates.
(v. t.) To surrender or relinquish, as sovereign power; to
withdraw definitely from filling or exercising, as a high office,
station, dignity; as, to abdicate the throne, the crown, the papacy.
(v. t.) To renounce; to relinquish; -- said of authority, a
trust, duty, right, etc.
(v. t.) To reject; to cast off.
(v. t.) To disclaim and expel from the family, as a father his
child; to disown; to disinherit.
(v. i.) To relinquish or renounce a throne, or other high
office or dignity.
(a.) Having the quality of hiding.
(n.) A place for hiding or preserving articles of value.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Abduce
(imp. & p. p.) of Abduct
(n.) The ethical theory which excludes all relations between
virtue and happiness; the science of virtue; -- contrasted with
eudemonics.
(a.) Of or pertaining to silver; resembling, containing, or
combined with, silver.
(n.) An alloy of nickel with copper and zinc; German silver.
(a.) Pertaining to, derived from, or containing, silver; --
said of certain compounds of silver in which this metal has its lowest
proportion; as, argentic chloride.
(n.) One who abducts.
(n.) A muscle which serves to draw a part out, or form the
median line of the body; as, the abductor oculi, which draws the eye
outward.
(n.) An evergreen shrub (Hibiscus -- formerly Abelmoschus --
moschatus), of the East and West Indies and Northern Africa, whose
musky seeds are used in perfumery and to flavor coffee; -- sometimes
called musk mallow.
(a.) Wandering; straying from the right way.
(a.) Deviating from the ordinary or natural type; exceptional;
abnormal.
(v. i.) To go astray; to diverge.
(n.) Asparagine.
(conj.) Grant all this; be it that; supposing that;
notwithstanding; though.
(n.) See Tincal.
(n.) Space extended upward; height; the perpendicular
elevation of an object above its foundation, above the ground, or above
a given level, or of one object above another; as, the altitude of a
mountain, or of a bird above the top of a tree.
(n.) The elevation of a point, or star, or other celestial
object, above the horizon, measured by the arc of a vertical circle
intercepted between such point and the horizon. It is either true or
apparent; true when measured from the rational or real horizon,
apparent when from the sensible or apparent horizon.
(n.) The perpendicular distance from the base of a figure to
the summit, or to the side parallel to the base; as, the altitude of a
triangle, pyramid, parallelogram, frustum, etc.
(n.) Height of degree; highest point or degree.
(n.) Height of rank or excellence; superiority.
(n.) Elevation of spirits; heroics; haughty airs.
(n. pl.) Nursers, -- a term applied to those birds whose young
are hatched in a very immature and helpless condition, so as to require
the care of their parents for some time; -- opposed to praecoces.
(n.) Regard for others, both natural and moral; devotion to
the interests of others; brotherly kindness; -- opposed to egoism or
selfishness.
(n.) One imbued with altruism; -- opposed to egoist.
(a.) Of or containing aluminium; as, aluminic phosphate.
(n.) See Aluminium.
(n.) A white fibrous mineral frequently found on the walls of
mines and quarries, chiefly hydrous sulphate of alumina; -- also called
feather alum, and hair salt.
(a.) Formed or vaulted like a beehive.
(a.) Of, pertaining to, or resembling, alveoli or little
cells, sacs, or sockets.
(n.) A cell in a honeycomb.
(n.) A small cavity in a coral, shell, or fossil
(n.) A small depression, sac, or vesicle, as the socket of a
tooth, the air cells of the lungs, the ultimate saccules of glands,
etc.
(n.) The strawberry finch, a small Indian song bird (Estrelda
amandava), commonly caged and kept for fighting. The female is olive
brown; the male, in summer, mostly crimson; -- called also red waxbill.
(n.) The vegetable casein of almonds.
(n.) A kind of cold cream prepared from almonds, for chapped
hands, etc.
(n.) A fragrant flower.
(n.) An imaginary flower supposed never to fade.
(n.) A genus of ornamental annual plants (Amaranthus) of many
species, with green, purplish, or crimson flowers.
(n.) A color inclining to purple.
(n.) Silver plate or vessels.
(pl. ) of Argosy
(a.) Capable of being argued; admitting of debate.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Amass
(adv.) In amazement; with confusion or astonishment.
(a.) Full of amazement.
(n.) The act of going about to solicit or obtain an office, or
any other object of desire; canvassing.
(n.) An eager, and sometimes an inordinate, desire for
preferment, honor, superiority, power, or the attainment of something.
(v. t.) To seek after ambitiously or eagerly; to covet.
(a.) Tending to cause abortion.
(n.) An obtuse-angled figure, esp. and obtuse-angled triangle.
(n.) A salt formed by the combination of ambreic acid with a
base or positive radical.
(n.) An early coin struck by the dukes of Milan, and bearing
the figure of St. Ambrose on horseback.
(n.) Double aces, the lowest throw of all at dice. Hence: Bad
luck; anything of no account or value.
(a.) Walking; moving from place to place.
(v. i.) To walk; to move about.
(imp. & p. p.) of Ambush
(n.) Proof; evidence.
(n.) A reason or reasons offered in proof, to induce belief,
or convince the mind; reasoning expressed in words; as, an argument
about, concerning, or regarding a proposition, for or in favor of it,
or against it.
(n.) A process of reasoning, or a controversy made up of
rational proofs; argumentation; discussion; disputation.
(n.) The subject matter of a discourse, writing, or artistic
representation; theme or topic; also, an abstract or summary, as of the
contents of a book, chapter, poem.
(n.) Matter for question; business in hand.
(n.) The quantity on which another quantity in a table
depends; as, the altitude is the argument of the refraction.
(n.) The independent variable upon whose value that of a
function depends.
(v. i.) To make an argument; to argue.
(adv.) In a subtle; shrewdly.
(n.) One lying in ambush.
(n.) A variety of wheat from which starch is produced; --
called also French rice.
(a.) Easy to be led; governable, as a woman by her husband.
(a.) Liable to be brought to account or punishment;
answerable; responsible; accountable; as, amenable to law.
(a.) Liable to punishment, a charge, a claim, etc.
(a.) Willing to yield or submit; responsive; tractable.
(adv.) In an amenable manner.
(n.) Behavior; bearing.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Amend
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Amerce
(n.) Aridity; dryness.
(v. i.) To butt, as a ram.
(a.) Alt. of Ariled
(a.) Having a pointed, beardlike process, as the glumes of
wheat; awned.
(a.) Having a slender, sharp, or spinelike tip.
(a.) Friendly; proceeding from, or exhibiting, friendliness;
after the manner of friends; peaceable; as, an amicable disposition, or
arrangement.
(adv.) In an amicable manner.
(n.) A compound radical, NH2, not yet obtained in a separate
state, which may be regarded as ammonia from the molecule of which one
of its hydrogen atoms has been removed; -- called also the amido group,
and in composition represented by the form amido.
(n.) Deprivation; loss.
(n.) One of a genus of fishes; the sand eel.
(n.) A kind of viper in southern Europe.
(a.) Alt. of Ammoniacal
(n.) Alt. of Gum ammoniac
(n.) A compound radical, NH4, having the chemical relations of
a strongly basic element like the alkali metals.
(a.) Causing loss of memory.
(n.) A body of forces equipped for war; -- used of a land or
naval force.
(n.) All the cannon and small arms collectively, with their
equipments, belonging to a ship or a fortification.
(n.) Any equipment for resistance.
(n.) Armor; whatever is worn or used for the protection and
defense of the body, esp. the protective outfit of some animals and
plants.
(n.) A piece of soft iron used to connect the two poles of a
magnet, or electro-magnet, in order to complete the circuit, or to
receive and apply the magnetic force. In the ordinary horseshoe magnet,
it serves to prevent the dissipation of the magnetic force.
(n.) Iron bars or framing employed for the consolidation of a
building, as in sustaining slender columns, holding up canopies, etc.
(n.) A chair with arms to support the elbows or forearms.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the amnion; characterized by an
amnion; as, the amniotic fluid; the amniotic sac.
(a.) Alternately answering.
(n.) One of the Amoebea.
(a.) Resembling an amoeba; amoeba-shaped; changing in shape
like an amoeba.
(a.) Like an amoeba in structure.
(n.) Alt. of Amortisement
(a.) With gaunt or slender legs. (?)
(pl. ) of Armilla
(a.) Ammoniac.
(a.) Belonging to armor, or to the heraldic arms or escutcheon
of a family.
(v. t.) To make as if dead; to destroy.
(v. t.) To alienate in mortmain, that is, to convey to a
corporation. See Mortmain.
(v. t.) To clear off or extinguish, as a debt, usually by
means of a sinking fund.
(imp. & p. p.) of Amount
(a.) Removable.
(n.) An earth abounding in pyrites, used by the ancients to
kill insects, etc., on vines; -- applied by Brongniart to a
carbonaceous alum schist.
(n.) One skilled in coat armor or heraldry.
(pl. ) of Armory
(n.) Alt. of Armozine
(n.) A thick plain silk, generally black, and used for
clerical.
(a.) Alt. of Aromatical
(n.) A plant, drug, or medicine, characterized by a fragrant
smell, and usually by a warm, pungent taste, as ginger, cinnamon,
spices.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Arouse
(n.) The production of the tones of a chord in rapid
succession, as in playing the harp, and not simultaneously; a strain
thus played.
(a.) Shaped like a bow; arcuate; curved.
(n.) Alt. of Arquebuse
(n.) An element that in combination produces amphid salt; --
applied by Berzelius to oxygen, sulphur, selenium, and tellurium.
(n.) One of the Amphipoda.
(a.) Alt. of Amphipodan
(a.) Pertaining to, or resembling, an amphora.
(a.) Produced by, or indicating, a cavity in the lungs, not
filled, and giving a sound like that produced by blowing into an empty
decanter; as, amphoric respiration or resonance.
(v. t.) To enlarge.
(a.) Having the outer edge prominent; said of the wings of
insects.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Aspire
(a.) That aspires; as, an Aspiring mind.
(n.) Southern; southerly; austral.
(n.) Self-sufficiency.
(a.) Authorial.
(a.) An absolute sovereign; a monarch who holds and exercises
the powers of government by claim of absolute right, not subject to
restriction; as, Autocrat of all the Russias (a title of the Czar).
(a.) One who rules with undisputed sway in any company or
relation; a despot.
(n.) Self-fertilization, the fertilizing pollen being derived
from the same blossom as the pistil acted upon.
(pl. ) of Automaton
(n.) The power or right of self-government; self-government,
or political independence, of a city or a state.
(n.) The sovereignty of reason in the sphere of morals; or
man's power, as possessed of reason, to give law to himself. In this,
according to Kant, consist the true nature and only possible proof of
liberty.
(a.) Alt. of Autopsical
(a.) Alt. of Autoptical
(n.) A facsimile.
(n.) A photographic picture produced in sensitized pigmented
gelatin by exposure to light under a negative; and subsequent washing
out of the soluble parts; a kind of picture in ink from a gelatin
plate.
(n.) The art or process of making autotypes.
(a.) Of, belonging to, or peculiar to, autumn; as, an autumnal
tint; produced or gathered in autumn; as, autumnal fruits; flowering in
autumn; as, an autumnal plant.
(a.) Past the middle of life; in the third stage.
(a.) Auxiliary.
(n.) An auxiliary.
(n.) Same as Amadavat.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Avail
(a.) In the form of four unhusked filberts; as, an avellane
cross.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Avenge
(n.) The movable front to a helmet; the ventail.
(n.) Accident; chance; adventure.
(n.) A mischance causing a person's death without felony, as
by drowning, or falling into the fire.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Aver
(imp. & p. p.) of Average
(v. t.) The act of averring, or that which is averred;
affirmation; positive assertion.
(v. t.) Verification; establishment by evidence.
(v. t.) A positive statement of facts; an allegation; an offer
to justify or prove what is alleged.
(adv.) Backward; in a backward direction; as, emitted
aversely.
(adv.) With repugnance or aversion; unwillingly.
(n.) A turning away.
(n.) Opposition or repugnance of mind; fixed dislike;
antipathy; disinclination; reluctance.
(n.) A volatile oil distilled from the resin or balsam of the
nut pine (Pinus sabiniana) of California.
(n.) A substance resembling mannite, found in the needles of
the common silver fir of Europe (Abies pectinata).
(n.) Same as Abiogenesis.
(adv.) Meanly; servilely.
(v. t.) To unyoke.
(n.) The object of dislike or repugnance.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Avert
(pl. ) of Aviary
(n.) The art or science of flying.
(a.) Of or pertaining to a bird or to birds.
(a.) Avid.
(n.) The birds, or all the kinds of birds, inhabiting a
region.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Avoid
(imp. & p. p.) of Avouch
(n.) One who avouches.
(a.) Capable of being avowed, or openly acknowledged, with
confidence.
(n.) Act of avowing; avowal.
(n.) Upholding; defense; vindication.
(n.) A tearing asunder; a forcible separation.
(n.) A fragment torn off.
(n.) The sudden removal of lands or soil from the estate of
one man to that of another by an inundation or a current, or by a
sudden change in the course of a river by which a part of the estate of
one man is cut off and joined to the estate of another. The property in
the part thus separated, or cut off, continues in the original owner.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Await
(imp. & p. p.) of Awaken
(n.) One who, or that which, awakens.
(a.) Missing; wanting.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Award
(p. p.) Wearied.
(a.) Furnished with an awning.
(n. pl.) Feathers connecting the under surface of the wing and
the body, and concealed by the closed wing.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the axilla or armpit; as, axillary
gland, artery, nerve.
(a.) Situated in, or rising from, an axil; of or pertaining to
an axil.
(n.) The houseleek (Sempervivum tectorum).
(imp. & p. p.) of Azotize
(a.) Of a fine blue color; azure.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Abjure
(n.) A carrying or taking away; removal.
(n.) Extirpation.
(n.) Wearing away; superficial waste.
(a.) Taking away or removing.
(a.) Applied to one of the cases of the noun in Latin and some
other languages, -- the fundamental meaning of the case being removal,
separation, or taking away.
() The ablative case.
(v. t.) To send abroad.
(n.) A representative of the pope charged with important
commissions in foreign countries, one of his duties being to bring to a
newly named cardinal his insignia of office.
(n.) Ability of body or mind; force; vigor.
(v. t.) To hook, or draw to one's self as with a hook.
(v. t.) To usurp, as jurisdiction or royal prerogatives.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Accrue
(v. t.) To encumber.
(imp. & p. p.) of Absolve
(n.) One who absolves.
(a.) Discordant; contrary; -- opposed to consonant.
(a.) Discordant; inharmonious; incongruous.
(imp. & p. p.) of Absorb
(n.) One who, or that which, absorbs.
(n.) The state of being accurate; freedom from mistakes, this
exemption arising from carefulness; exact conformity to truth, or to a
rule or model; precision; exactness; nicety; correctness; as, the value
of testimony depends on its accuracy.
(a.) In exact or careful conformity to truth, or to some
standard of requirement, the result of care or pains; free from
failure, error, or defect; exact; as, an accurate calculator; an
accurate measure; accurate expression, knowledge, etc.
(a.) Precisely fixed; executed with care; careful.
(p. p. & a.) Alt. of Accurst
(n.) An accuser.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Accuse
(v. t.) To make familiar by use; to habituate, familiarize, or
inure; -- with to.
(v. i.) To be wont.
(v. i.) To cohabit.
(n.) Custom.
(a.) Not centered; without a center.
(v. t.) To sour; to imbitter; to irritate.
(n.) Sourness of taste, with bitterness and astringency, like
that of unripe fruit.
(n.) The adhesion or cohesion of different floral verticils or
sets of organs.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Adopt
(n.) The act of adopting, or state of being adopted; voluntary
acceptance of a child of other parents to be the same as one's own
child.
(n.) Admission to a more intimate relation; reception; as, the
adoption of persons into hospitals or monasteries, or of one society
into another.
(n.) The choosing and making that to be one's own which
originally was not so; acceptance; as, the adoption of opinions.
(a.) Pertaining to adoption; made or acquired by adoption;
fitted to adopt; as, an adoptive father, an child; an adoptive
language.
(a.) Deserving to be adored; worthy of divine honors.
(a.) Worthy of the utmost love or respect.
(adv.) In an adorable manner.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Adorn
(p. p.) Visited by a dream; -- used in the phrase, To be
adreamed, to dream.
(n.) Adaptation.
(a.) Suited, given, or tending, to adaptation; characterized
by adaptation; capable of adapting.
(n.) A thing to be added; an appendix or addition.
(imp. & p. p.) of Addict
(n.) The act of adding two or more things together; -- opposed
to subtraction or diminution.
(v. t.) To thrust away.
(a.) Concealed or hidden out of the way.
(a.) Remote from apprehension; difficult to be comprehended or
understood; recondite; as, abstruse learning.
(adv.) In an absurd manner.
(a.) Fully sufficient; plentiful; in copious supply; --
followed by in, rarely by with.
(a.) That may be abused.
(a.) Full of abuse; abusive.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Abut
(n.) State of abutting.
(n.) That on or against which a body abuts or presses
(n.) The solid part of a pier or wall, etc., which receives
the thrust or lateral pressure of an arch, vault, or strut.
(n.) A fixed point or surface from which resistance or
reaction is obtained, as the cylinder head of a steam engine, the
fulcrum of a lever, etc.
(n.) In breech-loading firearms, the block behind the barrel
which receives the pressure due to recoil.
(pl. ) of Acalephan
(n.) A genus of herbaceous prickly plants, found in the south
of Europe, Asia Minor, and India; bear's-breech.
(n.) An ornament resembling the foliage or leaves of the
acanthus (Acanthus spinosus); -- used in the capitals of the Corinthian
and Composite orders.
(a.) Without a heart; as, an acardiac fetus.
(n.) One of a group of arachnids, including the mites and
ticks.
(a.) Not producing fruit; unfruitful.
(a.) Tailless.
(a.) Same as Acaulescent.
(a.) Alt. of Acaulous
(a.) Same as Acaulescent.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Accede
(n.) One of the functionaries who light and trim the tapers.
(imp. & p. p.) of Accent
(n.) One who sings the leading part; the director or leader.
(n.) A genus of European birds (so named from their sweet
notes), including the hedge warbler. In America sometimes applied to
the water thrushes.
(imp. & p. p.) of Accept
(n.) The act of washing or cleansing; specifically, the
washing of the body, or some part of it, as a religious rite.
(n.) The water used in cleansing.
(n.) A small quantity of wine and water, which is used to wash
the priest's thumb and index finger after the communion, and which
then, as perhaps containing portions of the consecrated elements, is
drunk by the priest.
(n.) That which is washed off.
(v. t.) To deny and reject; to abjure.
(a.) Not conformed to rule or system; deviating from the type;
anomalous; irregular.
(n.) Alt. of Abomasus
(n.) The fourth or digestive stomach of a ruminant, which
leads from the third stomach omasum. See Ruminantia.
(a.) Abortive.
(n.) The act of giving premature birth; particularly, the
expulsion of the human fetus prematurely, or before it is capable of
sustaining life; miscarriage.
(n.) The immature product of an untimely birth.
(n.) Arrest of development of any organ, so that it remains an
imperfect formation or is absorbed.
(n.) Any fruit or produce that does not come to maturity, or
anything which in its progress, before it is matured or perfect; a
complete failure; as, his attempt proved an abortion.
(v.) Produced by abortion; born prematurely; as, an abortive
child.
(v.) Made from the skin of a still-born animal; as, abortive
vellum.
(v.) Rendering fruitless or ineffectual.
(v.) Coming to naught; failing in its effect; miscarrying;
fruitless; unsuccessful; as, an abortive attempt.
(v.) Imperfectly formed or developed; rudimentary; sterile;
as, an abortive organ, stamen, ovule, etc.
(v.) Causing abortion; as, abortive medicines.
(v.) Cutting short; as, abortive treatment of typhoid fever.
(n.) That which is born or brought forth prematurely; an
abortion.
(n.) A fruitless effort or issue.
(n.) A medicine to which is attributed the property of causing
abortion.
(imp. & p. p.) of Abound
(n.) A material used for grinding, as emery, sand, powdered
glass, etc.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Abrade
(n.) The act of abrading, wearing, or rubbing off; the wearing
away by friction; as, the abrasion of coins.
(n.) The substance rubbed off.
(n.) A superficial excoriation, with loss of substance under
the form of small shreds.
(a.) Producing abrasion.
(n.) See Apricot.
(imp. & p. p.) of Abridge
(n.) One who abridges.
(a.) Abrogated; abolished.
(v. t.) To annul by an authoritative act; to abolish by the
authority of the maker or his successor; to repeal; -- applied to the
repeal of laws, decrees, ordinances, the abolition of customs, etc.
(v. t.) To put an end to; to do away with.
(adv.) In an abrupt manner; without giving notice, or without
the usual forms; suddenly.
(adv.) Precipitously.
(n.) One of the elements of reference by which a point, as of
a curve, is referred to a system of fixed rectilineal coordinate axes.
(imp. & p. p.) of Absent
(n.) One who absents himself from his country, office, post,
or duty; especially, a landholder who lives in another country or
district than that where his estate is situated; as, an Irish absentee.
(n.) One who absents one's self.
(adv.) In an absent or abstracted manner.
(n.) The plant absinthium or common wormwood.
(n.) A strong spirituous liqueur made from wormwood and brandy
or alcohol.
(n.) A room before, or forming an entrance to, another; a
waiting room.
(adv.) On the weather side, or toward the wind; in the
direction from which the wind blows; -- opposed to alee; as, helm
aweather!
(n.) A bar or beam of wood or iron, connecting the opposite
wheels of a carriage, on the ends of which the wheels revolve.
(n.) A spindle or axle of a wheel.
(n.) A person who accepts; a taker.
(n.) A respecter; a viewer with partiality.
(n.) An acceptor.
(n.) One who accepts
(n.) one who accepts an order or a bill of exchange; a drawee
after he has accepted.
(n.) Literally, a befalling; an event that takes place without
one's foresight or expectation; an undesigned, sudden, and unexpected
event; chance; contingency; often, an undesigned and unforeseen
occurrence of an afflictive or unfortunate character; a casualty; a
mishap; as, to die by an accident.
(n.) A property attached to a word, but not essential to it,
as gender, number, case.
(n.) A point or mark which may be retained or omitted in a
coat of arms.
(n.) A property or quality of a thing which is not essential
to it, as whiteness in paper; an attribute.
(n.) A quality or attribute in distinction from the substance,
as sweetness, softness.
(n.) Any accidental property, fact, or relation; an accidental
or nonessential; as, beauty is an accident.
(n.) Unusual appearance or effect.
(n.) Affected refusal; coyness.
(n.) A ceremony formerly used in conferring knighthood,
consisting am embrace, and a slight blow on the shoulders with the flat
blade of a sword.
(n.) A brace used to join two or more staves.
(n.) Anything added; increase; augmentation; as, a piazza is
an addition to a building.
(n.) That part of arithmetic which treats of adding numbers.
(n.) A dot at the right side of a note as an indication that
its sound is to be lengthened one half.
(n.) A title annexed to a man's name, to identify him more
precisely; as, John Doe, Esq.; Richard Roe, Gent.; Robert Dale, Mason;
Thomas Way, of New York; a mark of distinction; a title.
(n.) Something added to a coat of arms, as a mark of honor; --
opposed to abatement.
(a.) Proper to be added; positive; -- opposed to subtractive.
(a.) Tending to add; making some addition.
(n. pl.) Earnings.
(a.) Set or turned back to back.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Adduce
(a.) Bringing together or towards a given point; -- a word
applied to those muscles of the body which pull one part towards
another. Opposed to abducent.
(n.) A muscle which draws a limb or part of the body toward
the middle line of the body, or closes extended parts of the body; --
opposed to abductor; as, the adductor of the eye, which turns the eye
toward the nose.
(n.) An animal having feet that are not apparent.
(n.) A "brotherhood," or collection of stamens in a bundle; --
used in composition, as in the class names, Monadelphia, Diadelphia,
etc.
(n.) Pain in a gland.
(n.) Glandular inflammation.
(v. t.) To adopt (a person who is his own master).
(adv.) In an adroit manner.
(a.) Held to service as attached to the soil; -- said of
feudal serfs.
(n.) One held to service as attached to the glebe or estate; a
feudal serf.
(n.) See Astrict, and Astriction.
(n.) A transparent or translucent variety of common feldspar,
or orthoclase, which often shows pearly opalescent reflections; --
called by lapidaries moonstone.
(n.) A servile or hypocritical flatterer.
(n.) The unfaithfulness of a married person to the marriage
bed; sexual intercourse by a married man with another than his wife, or
voluntary sexual intercourse by a married woman with another than her
husband.
(n.) Adulteration; corruption.
(n.) Lewdness or unchastity of thought as well as act, as
forbidden by the seventh commandment.
(n.) Faithlessness in religion.
(n.) The fine and penalty imposed for the offense of adultery.
(n.) The intrusion of a person into a bishopric during the
life of the bishop.
(n.) Injury; degradation; ruin.
(n.) Curvature inwards; hookedness.
(a.) Curved inwards; hooked.
(n.) The act of burning, or heating to dryness; the state of
being thus heated or dried.
(n.) Cauterization.
(imp. & p. p.) of Advance
(a.) In the van or front.
(a.) In the front or before others, as regards progress or
ideas; as, advanced opinions, advanced thinkers.
(a.) Far on in life or time.
(n.) One who advances; a promoter.
(n.) A second branch of a buck's antler.
(imp. & p. p.) of Advert
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Advise
(a.) Having power to advise; containing advice; as, an
advisory council; their opinion is merely advisory.
(n.) The act of pleading for or supporting; work of
advocating; intercession.
(n.) One who pleads the cause of another. Specifically: One
who pleads the cause of another before a tribunal or judicial court; a
counselor.
(n.) One who defends, vindicates, or espouses any cause by
argument; a pleader; as, an advocate of free trade, an advocate of
truth.
(n.) Christ, considered as an intercessor.
(n.) To plead in favor of; to defend by argument, before a
tribunal or the public; to support, vindicate, or recommend publicly.
(v. i.) To act as advocate.
(n.) The right of presenting to a vacant benefice or living in
the church. [Originally, the relation of a patron (advocatus) or
protector of a benefice, and thus privileged to nominate or present to
it.]
(n.) Considerable debility of the vital powers, as in typhoid
fever.
(a.) Pertaining to, or characterized by, debility of the vital
powers; weak.
(p. p. & a.) Regarded with affection; beloved.
(p. p. & a.) Inclined; disposed; attached.
(p. p. & a.) Given to false show; assuming or pretending to
possess what is not natural or real.
(p. p. & a.) Assumed artificially; not natural.
(p. p. & a.) Made up of terms involving different powers of
the unknown quantity; adfected; as, an affected equation.
(n.) One who affects, assumes, pretends, or strives after.
(n.) Alt. of Affeeror
(n.) One who affeers.
(a.) Bearing or conducting inwards to a part or organ; --
opposed to efferent; as, afferent vessels; afferent nerves, which
convey sensations from the external organs to the brain.
(n.) Plighted faith; marriage contract or promise.
(n.) Trust; reliance; faith; confidence.
(v. t.) To betroth; to pledge one's faith to for marriage, or
solemnly promise (one's self or another) in marriage.
(v. t.) To assure by promise.
(a.) Pertaining to acology.
(a.) Of the nature of aconite.
(n.) Same as Aconitine.
(a.) Of or pertaining to aconite.
(n.) A denial of the existence of the universe as distinct
from God.
(n.) One who denies the existence of the universe, or of a
universe as distinct from God.
(a.) Pertaining to the sense of hearing, the organs of
hearing, or the science of sounds; auditory.
(n.) A medicine or agent to assist hearing.
(v. t.) Acquainted.
(v. t.) To furnish or give experimental knowledge of; to make
(one) to know; to make familiar; -- followed by with.
(v. t.) To communicate notice to; to inform; to make
cognizant; -- followed by with (formerly, also, by of), or by that,
introducing the intelligence; as, to acquaint a friend with the
particulars of an act.
(v. t.) To familiarize; to accustom.
(imp. & p. p.) of Acquire
(n.) A person who acquires.
(a.) Wanting a skull.
(a.) Of an acre; per acre; as, the acreable produce.
(n.) Alt. of Acridness
(n.) A quality of bodies which corrodes or destroys others;
also, a harsh or biting sharpness; as, the acrimony of the juices of
certain plants.
(n.) Sharpness or severity, as of language or temper;
irritating bitterness of disposition or manners.
(n.) Acridity; pungency joined with heat.
(a.) Same as Acroamatic.
(n.) One of a group of lizards having the teeth immovably
united to the top of the alveolar ridge.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the acrodonts.
(n.) A limpid, colorless, highly volatile liquid, obtained by
the dehydration of glycerin, or the destructive distillation of neutral
fats containing glycerin. Its vapors are intensely irritating.
(n.) A statue whose extremities are of stone, the trunk being
generally of wood.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the acromion.
(n.) The outer extremity of the shoulder blade.
(imp. & p. p.) of Accord
(n.) One who accords, assents, or concedes.
(imp. & p. p.) of Accost
(a.) Supported on both sides by other charges; also, side by
side.
(v. t.) To join; to couple.
(v. t.) Alt. of Accoutre
(v. t.) To furnish with dress, or equipments, esp. those for
military service; to equip; to attire; to array.
(v. t.) To put or bring into credit; to invest with credit or
authority; to sanction.
(v. t.) To send with letters credential, as an ambassador,
envoy, or diplomatic agent; to authorize, as a messenger or delegate.
(v. t.) To believe; to credit; to put trust in.
(v. t.) To credit; to vouch for or consider (some one) as
doing something, or (something) as belonging to some one.
(v. i.) To accrue.
(v. i.) To increase; to grow.
(a.) Of or pertaining to acetone; as, acetonic bodies.
(n.) Purveyor; acater.
(n.) A small, dry, indehiscent fruit, containing a single
seed, as in the buttercup; -- called a naked seed by the earlier
botanists.
(a.) Pertaining to an achene.
(imp. & p. p.) of Achieve
(n.) One who achieves; a winner.
(a.) Without a lip.
(a.) Lacking bile.
(a.) Colorless; achromatic.
(a.) Without chyle.
(a.) Without chyme.
(pl. ) of Acicula
(a.) Needle-shaped; slender like a needle or bristle, as some
leaves or crystals; also, having sharp points like needless.
(a.) Producing acidity; converting into an acid.
(n.) Acidity; sourness.
(n.) The process of coating the surface of a metal plate (as a
stereotype plate) with steellike iron by means of voltaic electricity;
steeling.
(n.) A short sword or saber.
(n.) Relationship by marriage (as between a husband and his
wife's blood relations, or between a wife and her husband's blood
relations); -- in contradistinction to consanguinity, or relationship
by blood; -- followed by with, to, or between.
(n.) Kinship generally; close agreement; relation; conformity;
resemblance; connection; as, the affinity of sounds, of colors, or of
languages.
(n.) Companionship; acquaintance.
(n.) That attraction which takes place, at an insensible
distance, between the heterogeneous particles of bodies, and unites
them to form chemical compounds; chemism; chemical or elective affinity
or attraction.
(n.) A relation between species or highe/ groups dependent on
resemblance in the whole plan of structure, and indicating community of
origin.
(n.) A superior spiritual relationship or attraction held to
exist sometimes between persons, esp. persons of the opposite sex;
also, the man or woman who exerts such psychical or spiritual
attraction.
(imp. & p. p.) of Affirm
(n.) A composition, usually in verse, in which the first or
the last letters of the lines, or certain other letters, taken in
order, form a name, word, phrase, or motto.
(n.) A Hebrew poem in which the lines or stanzas begin with
the letters of the alphabet in regular order (as Psalm cxix.). See
Abecedarian.
(n.) Alt. of Acrostical
(n.) Lack or defect of pulsation.
(pl. ) of Actinia
(pl. ) of Actinia
(n.) The property of radiant energy (found chiefly in solar or
electric light) by which chemical changes are produced, as in
photography.
(n.) A supposed metal, said by Phipson to be contained in
commercial zinc; -- so called because certain of its compounds are
darkened by exposure to light.
(a.) Having the form of rays; radiated, as an actinia.
(n.) One of the bones at the base of a paired fin of a fish.
(n. pl.) A kind of embryo of certain hydroids (Tubularia),
having a stellate form.
(v. t.) To make active.
(adv.) In an active manner; nimbly; briskly; energetically;
also, by one's own action; voluntarily, not passively.
(adv.) In an active signification; as, a word used actively.
(n.) The state or quality of being active; nimbleness;
agility; vigorous action or operation; energy; active force; as, an
increasing variety of human activities.
(adv.) Actively.
(adv.) In act or in fact; really; in truth; positively.
(imp. & p. p.) of Actuate
(n.) One who actuates, or puts into action.
(n.) Act of sharpening.
(a.) Having a sting; covered with prickles; sharp like a
prickle.
(a.) Having prickles, or sharp points; beset with prickles.
(a.) Severe or stinging; incisive.
(imp. & p. p.) of Admit
(a.) Received as true or valid; acknowledged.
(n.) One who admits.
(v. t.) To warn or notify of a fault; to reprove gently or
kindly, but seriously; to exhort.
(v. t.) To counsel against wrong practices; to cation or
advise; to warn against danger or an offense; -- followed by of,
against, or a subordinate clause.
(v. t.) To instruct or direct; to inform; to notify.
(a.) An obtaining; attainment.
(n.) The state or quality of being adequate, proportionate, or
sufficient; a sufficiency for a particular purpose; as, the adequacy of
supply to the expenditure.
(a.) Equal to some requirement; proportionate, or
correspondent; fully sufficient; as, powers adequate to a great work;
an adequate definition.
(a.) To equalize; to make adequate.
(a.) To equal.
(v.) See Affected, 5.
(a.) Clinging, as by hooks.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Adhere
(a.) Sticking; clinging; adhering.
(a.) Attached as an attribute or circumstance.
(a.) Congenitally united with an organ of another kind, as
calyx with ovary, or stamens with petals.
(n.) One who adheres; one who adheres; one who follows a
leader, party, or profession; a follower, or partisan; a believer in a
particular faith or church.
(n.) That which adheres; an appendage.
(n.) The action of sticking; the state of being attached;
intimate union; as, the adhesion of glue, or of parts united by growth,
cement, or the like.
(n.) Adherence; steady or firm attachment; fidelity; as,
adhesion to error, to a policy.
(n.) Agreement to adhere; concurrence; assent.
(n.) The molecular attraction exerted between bodies in
contact. See Cohesion.
(n.) Union of surface, normally separate, by the formation of
new tissue resulting from an inflammatory process.
(n.) The union of parts which are separate in other plants, or
in younger states of the same plant.
(a.) Sticky; tenacious, as glutinous substances.
(a.) Apt or tending to adhere; clinging.
(a.) Quenching thirst, as certain fruits.
(a.) Lying near, close, or contiguous; neighboring; bordering
on; as, a field adjacent to the highway.
(n.) That which is adjacent.
(imp. & p. p.) of Adjoin
(imp. & p. p.) of Adjudge
(n.) One who adjudges.
(v. t.) To yoke to.
(n.) Help; support; also, a helper.
(n.) A substance added to an immunogenic agent to enhance the
production of antibodies.
(n.) A substance added to a formulation of a drug which
enhances the effect of the active ingredient.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Adjure
(imp. & p. p.) of Adjust
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Adapt
(n.) Same as Ambs-ace.
(a.) Characterized by the absence of power or force.
(n.) A form of fruit in the cycle of development of the Rusts
or Brands, an order of fungi, formerly considered independent plants.
(n.) An ulcer or fistula in the inner corner of the eye.
(n.) The great wild-oat grass or other cornfield weed.
(n.) A genus of plants, called also hardgrass.
(n.) A medical certificate that a student is ill.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Aerate
(n.) Exposure to the free action of the air; airing; as,
aeration of soil, of spawn, etc.
(n.) A change produced in the blood by exposure to the air in
respiration; oxygenation of the blood in respiration; arterialization.
(n.) The act or preparation of charging with carbonic acid gas
or with oxygen.
(adv.) Like, or from, the air; in an aerial manner.
(a.) Having the form or nature of air, or of an elastic fluid;
gaseous. Hence fig.: Unreal.
(n.) One of the air cells of algals.
(n.) A stone, or metallic mass, which has fallen to the earth
from distant space; a meteorite; a meteoric stone.
(n.) Same as A/rolite.
(n.) That department of physics which treats of the
atmosphere.
(n.) An aerial navigator; a balloonist.
(n.) A balloon.
(n.) A balloonist; an aeronaut.
(n.) Same as Esculin.
(n.) One who makes much or overmuch of aesthetics.
(a.) Of or belonging to the summer; as, aestival diseases.
(n. & a.) See Estuary.
(a.) Glowing; agitated, as with heat.
(n.) A compound of nitrogen and boro/, which, when heated
before the blowpipe, gives a brilliant phosphorescent; boric nitride.
(v. t. & i.) To afflict with, or perish from, hunger.
(imp. & p. p.) of Affect
(n.) One who, or that which, adjusts.
(n.) Same as Ajutage.
(n.) A helper; an assistant.
(n.) A regimental staff officer, who assists the colonel, or
commanding officer of a garrison or regiment, in the details of
regimental and garrison duty.
(n.) A species of very large stork (Ciconia argala), a native
of India; -- called also the gigantic crane, and by the native name
argala. It is noted for its serpent-destroying habits.
(a.) Serving to help or assist; helping.
(n.) A female helper or assistant.
(a.) Helping; helpful; assisting.
(n.) An assistant.
(n.) An ingredient, in a prescription, which aids or modifies
the action of the principal ingredient.