One of the largest African antelopes (Hippotragusnasomaculatus or Oryx nasomaculatus).
being in addition [to something else]
To award; to adjudge.
a number that is added to another number.
A thing to be added; an appendix or addition.
A serpent.
A genus of ferns (Ophioglossum), whose seeds are produced on a spike resembling a serpent's tongue. The yellow dogtooth violet.
The common bistort or snakeweed (Polygonum bistorta).
The quantity of being addible; capability of addition.
Capable of being added.
See Adze.
To apply habitually; to devote; to habituate; -- with to.
The quality or state of being addicted; attachment.
The state of being addicted; devotion; inclination.
The capital city of Ethiopia. Population (2000) = 2,200,186.
An addition, or a thing added.
The act of adding two or more things together; -- opposed to subtraction or diminution.
Something added.
By way of addition.
Additional.
Additive.
Proper to be added; positive; -- opposed to subtractive.
Tending to add; making some addition.
To earn by labor.
A foolish or dull-witted fellow.
Dull-witted; stupid.
Stupidity.
Earnings.
To adjudge.
Set or turned back to back.
To prepare one's self.
marked with a destination; -- of mail
One to whom anything is addressed.
The act of addressing or directing one's course.
a printer that automatically prints addresses on letters for mailing.
To bring forward or offer, as an argument, passage, or consideration which bears on a statement or case; to cite; to allege.
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.
One who adduces.
Capable of being adduced.
To draw towards a common center or a middle line.
The act of adducing or bringing forward.
Adducing, or bringing towards or to something.
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.
To sweeten; to soothe.
To revoke, as a legacy, grant, etc., or to satisfy it by some other gift.
A Spanish red wine made of the first ripe grapes.
A governor of a province; a commander.
A provisional name for a plant which has not had its flowers botanically examined, and therefore has not been referred to its proper genus.
Same as Atheling.
Applied to sexual zooids of hydroids, that have a saclike form and do not become free; -- opposed to phanerocodonic.
An animal having feet that are not apparent.
A /brotherhood,/ or collection of stamens in a bundle; -- used in composition, as in the class names, Monadelphia, Diadelphia, etc.
Having coalescent or clustered filaments; -- said of stamens; as, adelphous stamens. Usually in composition; as, monadelphous.
Taken away.
The revocation or taking away of a grant, donation, legacy, or the like.
Pain in a gland. Called also adenodynia
Shaped like a gland; adenoid.
Glandular inflammation.
Glandular inflammation.
Pertaining to adenography.
That part of anatomy which describes the glands.
Of or relating to a gland.
Glandlike; glandular.
Pertaining to adenology.
The part of physiology that treats of the glands.
A benign tumor of epithelial tissue with a glandlike structure.
Pathological enlargement of a lymph node.
Producing glands.
Having glands on the leaves.
The hardening of a gland.
Like a gland; full of glands; glandulous; adenous.
Pertaining to adenotomy.
Dissection of, or incision into, a gland or glands.
Same as Adenose.
Animal fat; lard.
Well skilled; completely versed; thoroughly proficient.
An obtaining; attainment.
A skilled alchemist.
The quality of being adept; skill.
The state or quality of being adequate, proportionate, or sufficient; a sufficiency for a particular purpose; as, the adequacy of supply to the expenditure.
To equalize; to make adequate.
In an adequate manner.
The quality of being adequate; suitableness; sufficiency; adequacy.
The act of equalizing; act or result of making adequate; an equivalent.
The division or defective coherence of an organ that is usually entire.
One who held the real presence of Christ's body in the eucharist, but not by transubstantiation.
See Affected, 5.
See Affiliated.
See Affiliation.
See Affluxion.
Clinging, as by hooks.
To stick fast or cleave, as a glutinous substance does; to become joined or united; as, wax to the finger; the lungs sometimes adhere to the pleura.
The quality or state of adhering.
The state or quality of being adherent; adherence.
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.
In an adherent manner.
One who adheres; an adherent.
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.
Sticky; tenacious, as glutinous substances.
In an adhesive manner.
The quality of sticking or adhering; stickiness; tenacity of union.
To admit, as a person or thing; to take in.
The act of adhibiting; application; use.
To exhort; to advise.
Advice; exhortation.
Containing counsel or warning; hortatory; advisory.
Not giving out or receiving heat.
Not transmitting the actinic rays.
A genus of ferns, the leaves of which shed water; maidenhair. Also, the black maidenhair, a species of spleenwort.
Religious indifference.
One of the German Protestants who, with Melanchthon, held some opinions and ceremonies to be indifferent or nonessential, which Luther condemned as sinful or heretical.
Pertaining to matters indifferent in faith and practice.
Same as Adiaphorist.
Indifferent or neutral.
Indifference.
Not pervious to heat.
A farewell; commendation to the care of God at parting.
To set in order; to array; to attire; to deck, to dress.
Adieu; farewell; good-by; -- chiefly used among Spanish-speaking people; as, adios amigos (good-bye friends).
Becoming fatty.
Pertaining to, or derived from, fatty or oily substances; -- applied to certain acids obtained from fats by the action of nitric acid.