A female archer.
The art or skill of an archer.
The use of the bow and arrows in battle, hunting, etc.; the art, practice, or skill of shooting with a bow and arrows.
pl. of Arch, n.
same as archesporium.
of or pertaining to an archespore.
a primitive cell or group of cells from which a mother cell develops.
Of or pertaining to an archetype; consisting a model (real or ideal) or pattern; original.
With reference to the archetype; originally. /Parts archetypally distinct./
The original pattern or model of a work; or the model from which a thing is made or formed.
Relating to an archetype; archetypal.
The vital principle or force which (according to the Paracelsians) presides over the growth and continuation of living beings; the anima mundi or plastic power of the old philosophers.
A group of Annelida remarkable for having no external segments or distinct ventral nerve ganglions.
Chief physician; -- a term applied, on the continent of Europe, to the first or body physician of princes and to the first physician of some cities.
A hollow blastula, supposed to be the primitive form; a c/loblastula.
Chief; primary; primordial.
Of or pertaining to an archdeacon.
That form of episcopacy in which the chief power is in the hands of archbishops.
Of or pertaining to an archbishop; as, Canterbury is an archiepiscopal see.
The station or dignity of an archbishop; archiepiscopacy.
The office of an archbishop; an archbishopric.
The higher order of clergy in Russia, including metropolitans, archbishops, and bishops.
A violet dye obtained from several species of lichen (Roccella tinctoria, etc.), which grow on maritime rocks in the Canary and Cape Verd Islands, etc.
Of or pertaining to the satiric Greek poet Archilochus; as, Archilochian meter.
A large theorbo, or double-necked lute, formerly in use, having the bass strings doubled with an octave, and the higher strings with a unison.
The high priest of the Persian Magi, or worshipers of fire.
A chief of a monastery, corresponding to abbot in the Roman Catholic church. A superintendent of several monasteries, corresponding to superior abbot, or father provincial, in the Roman Catholic church.
Of or pertaining to Archimedes, a celebrated Greek philosopher; constructed on the principle of Archimedes' screw; as, Archimedean drill, propeller, etc.
An extinct genus of Bryzoa characteristic of the subcarboniferous rocks. Its form is that of a screw.
The arched part of a structure.
the olfactory cortex of the cerebrum.
Of or pertaining to an archipelago.
The primitive form of fin, like that of Ceratodus.
A person skilled in the art of building; one who understands architecture, or makes it his occupation to form plans and designs of buildings, and to superintend the artificers employed.
Used in building; proper for building.
The science of architecture.
Pertaining to a master builder, or to architecture; evincing skill in designing or construction; constructive.
The science of architecture.
An architect.
A female architect.
Of or pertaining to the art of building; conformed to the rules of architecture.
The art or science of building; especially, the art of building houses, churches, bridges, and other structures, for the purposes of civil life; -- often called civil architecture.
A genus of gigantic cephalopods, allied to the squids, found esp. in the North Atlantic and about New Zealand.
The lower division of an entablature, or that part which rests immediately on the column, esp. in classical architecture. See Column. The group of moldings, or other architectural member, above and on both sides of a door or other opening, especially if square in form.
Furnished with an architrave.
Pertaining to, or contained in, archives or records.
The place in which public records or historic documents are kept.
a collection of records especially about an institution.
A keeper of archives or records.
The architectural member surrounding the curved opening of an arch, corresponding to the architrave in the case of a square opening. More commonly, the molding or other ornaments with which the wall face of the voussoirs of an arch is charged.
In an arch manner; with attractive slyness or roguishness; slyly; waggishly.
The grand marshal of the old German empire, a dignity that to the Elector of Saxony.
The quality of being arch; cleverness; sly humor free from malice; waggishness.
One of the chief magistrates in ancient Athens, especially, by pre/minence, the first of the nine chief magistrates.
The office of an archon.
An archon's term of office.
The group including man alone.
The substance from which attraction spheres develop in mitotic cell division, and of which they consist.
An archbishop or other chief prelate.
Same as Archpriest.
The absolute dominion of presbytery.
A chief priest; also, a kind of vicar, or a rural dean.
The chief primate.
A chief or transcendent traitor.
A chief treasurer. Specifically, the great treasurer of the German empire.
A way or passage under an arch.
A big, masculine wife.
Arch-shaped.
Arched; as, archy brows.
Having the form of an arch; curved.
An instrument for drawing a circular arc without the use of a central point; a cyclograph.
Constriction or contraction of some natural passage, as in constipation from inflammation.
The arctic circle.
a stout-bodied broad-winged moth with conspicuously striped or spotted wings; larvae are hairy caterpillars.
a family comprising the tiger moths.
A group of Arachnida. See Illust. in Appendix.
the burdock.
a genus of fur seals.
Of or pertaining to arctic lands; as, the arctogeal fauna.
A group of the Carnivora, that includes the bears, weasels, etc.
a genus of plants including the bearberry; manzanita.
a genus of herbs and subshrubs: African daisy.
A fixed star of the first magnitude in the constellation Bo/tes.
Of or pertaining to an arc.
Bent or curved in the form of a bow.
In the form of a bow.
The act of bending or curving; incurvation; the state of being bent; crookedness.
A crossbow.
A crossbowman; one who used the arcubalist.
See Arquebus.
A very fine sort of Persian silk.
a familu of wading birds incuding the herons, egrets, night herons, and bitterns.
Heat.
a wooded plateau in the Champagne-Ardenne region of France; the site of intense fighting in World Wars I and II.
Hot or burning; causing a sensation of burning; fiery; as, ardent spirits, that is, distilled liquors; an ardent fever.
any type of strongly alcoholic beverage prepared by distillation of an alcohol-containing fermented material.
In an ardent manner; eagerly; with warmth; affectionately; passionately.
Ardency.
Heat, in a literal sense; as, the ardor of the sun's rays.
Steep and lofty, in a literal sense; hard to climb.
In an arduous manner; with difficulty or laboriousness.
The quality of being arduous; difficulty of execution.
Burning; ardent.
The unit of superficial measure, being a square of which each side is ten meters in length; 100 square meters, or about 119.6 square yards.
Any plane surface, as of the floor of a room or church, or of the ground within an inclosure; an open space in a building.
Of or pertaining to an area; as, areal interstices (the areas or spaces inclosed by the reticulate vessels of leaves).
Backward; in or to the rear; behindhand.
A genus of palms, one species of which (Areca catechu) produces the areca nut, or betel nut, which is chewed in India and Southeast Asia with the leaf of the Piper Betle and lime.
one of four subclasses or superorder of Monocotyledones; comprises about 6400 species in 5 families of trees and shrubs and terrestrial herbs and a few free-floating aquatics including: Palmae; Araceae; Pandanaceae: and Lemnaceae.
To tell, declare, explain, or interpret; to divine; to guess; as, to aread a riddle or a dream.
In a reeking condition.
The act of drying, or the state of growing dry.
To dry, or make dry.
The area in the central part of an amphitheater, in which the gladiators fought and other shows were exhibited; -- so called because it was covered with sand.
Sandy or consisting largely of sand; of the nature of sand; easily disintegrating into sand; friable; as, arenaceous limestone.
Sandy; as, arenarious soil.
A sand bath; application of hot sand to the body.
In some provinces of Russia, one who farms the rents or revenues.
A palm tree (Saguerus saccharifer) which furnishes sago, wine, and fibers for ropes; the gomuti palm.
An ancient wormhole in sand, preserved in the rocks.
growing or living or burrowing in sand.