The state or quality of being ample; largeness; fullness; completeness.
An embrace.
Clasping or embracing a stem, as the base of some leaves.
Having the outer edge prominent; said of the wings of insects.
Enlargement; amplification.
Enlarging a conception by adding to that which is already known or received.
To amplify.
The act of amplifying or enlarging in dimensions; enlargement; extension.
Amplificatory.
Serving to amplify or enlarge; amplificative.
One who or that which amplifies.
To become larger.
State of being ample; extent of surface or space; largeness of dimensions; size.
In an ample manner.
same as ampule.
Same as Ampulla, 2.
a small glass bottle which has been or can be sealed hermetically by application of flame to a narrow opening at the top.
A narrow-necked vessel having two handles and bellying out like a jug.
Like a bottle or inflated bladder; bottle-shaped; swelling.
Resembling an ampulla.
Having an ampulla; flask-shaped; bellied.
Flask-shaped; dilated.
To prune or lop off, as branches or tendrils.
The act of amputating; esp. the operation of cutting off a limb or projecting part of the body.
One who amputates.
A woman's headband (sometimes of metal), for binding the front hair.
Immortality; also, the nectar conferring immortality. Ambrosial; immortal.
a genus of herbs and subshrubs with milky juice and showy bluish flowers; native from Europe to Asia Minor to Japan and North America.
A large city which is an industrial center and the official capital of The Netherlands. Population (2000) = 724,096.
An administrative territorial division in Denmark and Norway.
In a frenzied and reckless manner.
An ornament, gem, or scroll, or a package containing a relic, etc., worn as a charm or preservative against evils or mischief, such as diseases and witchcraft, and generally inscribed with mystic forms or characters. [Also used figuratively.]
Of or pertaining to an amulet; operating as a charm.
Full off dregs; foul.
Capable of being amused.
To muse; to mediate.
Diverted.
Deep thought; muse.
One who amuses.
A light field cannon, or stocked gun mounted on a swivel.
Giving amusement; diverting; as, an amusing story.
Having power to amuse or entertain the mind; fitted to excite mirth.
An explosive consisting of ammonium nitrate, a derivative of nitrobenzene, chlorated napthalene, and wood meal.
A friend.
Characterized by lack of the spinal cord.
An almond.
Akin to, or derived from, the almond.
Pertaining to, resembling, or made of, almonds.
An emulsion made of almonds; milk of almonds.
Of or pertaining to almonds; derived from amygdalin; as, amygdalic acid.
An organic acid (C6H5.CH(OH).COOH) extracted from bitter almonds; called also mandelic acid and /-Hydroxybenzeneacetic acid.
Almond-bearing.
A glucoside extracted from bitter almonds as a white, crystalline substance.
Of, pertaining to, or resembling, almonds.
A variety of trap or basaltic rock, containing small cavities, occupied, wholly or in part, by nodules or geodes of different minerals, esp. agates, quartz, calcite, and the zeolites. When the imbedded minerals are detached or removed by decomposition, it is porous, like lava.
Almond-shaped.
A univalent hydrocarbon radical, C5H11, of the paraffine series found in amyl alcohol or fusel oil, etc.
Pertaining to starch; of the nature of starch; starchy.
A compound of the radical amyl with oxygen and a positive atom or radical.
One of a group of metameric hydrocarbons, C5H10, of the ethylene series. The colorless, volatile, mobile liquid commonly called amylene is a mixture of different members of the group.
Pertaining to, or derived from, amyl; as, amylic ether.
A micro/rganism (Bacillus amylobacter) which develops in vegetable tissue during putrefaction.
That part of the starch granule or granulose which is soluble in water.
The formation of starch.
Of or pertaining to amylogen.
A starchlike substance.
Resembling or containing starch; starchlike.
A disorder characterized by deposit of extracellular amyloid{2} in organs or tissues in an amount that interferes with normal function of the affected organ; it is often secondary to chronic rheumatoid arthritis or tuberculosis or multiple myeloma. Called also amyloid degeneration waxy degeneration and lardaceous degeneration.
The conversion of starch into soluble products, as dextrins and sugar, esp. by the action of enzymes.
Effecting the conversion of starch into soluble dextrin and sugar; as, an amylolytic ferment.
Instrument for determining the amount of starch in a substance.
Starch-forming; amylogenic.
The diastase of the pancreatic juice.
One of the starch group (C6H10O5)n of the carbohydrates; as, starch, arabin, dextrin, cellulose, etc.
Characterized by lack of muscular tissue.
Wanting in muscle; without flesh.
Same as Amice, a hood or cape.
The European ring ousel (Turdus torquatus).
If; -- a word used by old English authors.
An it, that is, and it or if it. See An, conj.
Of each; an equal quantity; as, wine and honey, ana (or, contracted, aa) two ounces, / ij., that is, of wine and honey, each, two ounces.
The doctrine of the Anabaptists.
A name sometimes applied to a member of any sect holding that rebaptism is necessary for those baptized in infancy.
Relating or attributed to the Anabaptists, or their doctrines.
The doctrine, system, or practice, of Anabaptists.
To rebaptize; to rechristen; also, to rename.
A genus of fishes, remarkable for their power of living long out of water, and of making their way on land for considerable distances, and for climbing trees; the climbing fishes.
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./
Pertaining to anabasis; as, an anabatic fever.
suspended animation in organisms during periods of extreme drought from which they revive when moisture returns.
of or pertaining to anabiosis.
Pertaining to anabolism; an anabolic changes, or processes, more or less constructive in their nature.
any of a variety of synthetic derivatives or analogs of testosterone, which promote the increase of muscle mass and strength. The anabolic steroids are sometimes used by athletes to increase muscular strength so as to enhance their performance in competition. They have serious side effects, and the use of such compounds has been banned by many athletic regulatory committees.
The constructive metabolism of the body, as distinguished from catabolism.
A branch of a river that re/nters, or anastomoses with, the main stream; also, less properly, a branch which loses itself in sandy soil.
Reflecting of reflected; as, an anacamptic sound (and echo).
By reflection; as, echoes are sound produced anacamptically.
The science of reflected light, now called catoptrics.
Spineless, as certain fishes.
A group of teleostean fishes destitute of spiny fin-rays, as the cod.
Belonging to, or resembling, a family, or order, of plants of which the cashew tree is the type, and the species of sumac are well known examples.
Pertaining to, or derived from, the cashew nut; as, anacardic acid.
A genus of plants including the cashew tree. See Cashew.
An anacathartic medicine; an expectorant or an emetic.
A fresh-water weed of the frog's-bit family (Hydrocharidaceae), native to America. Transferred to England it became an obstruction to navigation. Called also waterweed and water thyme.
See Anchoret, Anchoretic.
An error in regard to the place of an event or a thing; a referring something to a wrong place.
Characterized by, or involving, anachronism; anachronistic.
A misplacing or error in the order of time; an error in chronology by which events are misplaced in regard to each other, esp. one by which an event is placed too early; falsification of chronological relation.
Erroneous in date; containing an anachronism.
To refer to, or put into, a wrong time.
Containing an anachronism; anachronistic.
Produced by the refraction of light, as seen through water; as, anaclastic curves.
That part of optics which treats of the refraction of light; -- commonly called dioptrics.
A figure by which a speaker appeals to his hearers or opponents for their opinion on the point in debate.
an abrupt change within a sentence from one syntactic structure to another.
Lacking grammatical sequence.
A lack of grammatical sequence or coherence in a sentence; an instance of a change of construction in a sentence so that the latter part does not syntactically correspond with the first part.
A large South American snake of the Boa family (Eunectes murinus), which lives near rivers, and preys on birds and small mammals. The name is also applied to a similar large serpent (Python tigris) of Ceylon.
A poem after the manner of Anacreon; a sprightly little poem in praise of love and wine.
Pertaining to anachronism.