of or pertaining to attention.
Heedful; intent; observant; regarding with care or attention.
the quality of paying careful attention; attentiveness to detail.
Attentively.
Making thin, as fluids; diluting; rendering less dense and viscid; diluent. A medicine that thins or dilutes the fluids; a diluent.
To become thin, slender, or fine; to grow less; to lessen.
Made thin or slender.
The act or process of making slender, or the state of being slender; emaciation.
Poison; venom; corrupt matter from a sore.
A spider.
To fill up with alluvial earth.
The act of filling up with earth, or of forming land with alluvial earth.
Witness; testimony; attestation.
a person who attests to the genuineness of a document or signature by adding their own signature.
The act of attesting; testimony; witness; a solemn or official declaration, verbal or written, in support of a fact; evidence. The truth appears from the attestation of witnesses, or of the proper officer. The subscription of a name to a writing as a witness, is an attestation.
Of the nature of attestation.
Attesting; furnishing evidence.
One who attests.
A low story above the main order or orders of a facade, in the classical styles; -- a term introduced in the 17th century. Hence: A room or rooms behind that part of the exterior; all the rooms immediately below the roof.
Attic.
A favoring of, or attachment to, the Athenians.
To side with the Athenians.
Touching; bordering; contiguous.
To touch lightly.
Dress; clothes; headdress; anything which dresses or adorns; esp., ornamental clothing.
Provided with antlers, as a stag.
Attire; adornment.
One who attires.
The posture, action, or disposition of a figure or a statue.
Relating to attitude.
One who attitudinizes; a posture maker.
A practicing of attitudes; posture making.
To assume affected attitudes; to strike an attitude; to pose.
One who practices attitudes.
Rubbish or refuse consisting of broken rock containing little or no ore.
Lifting up; raising; as, an attollent muscle.
At once; together.
See At one.
To turn, or transfer homage and service, from one lord to another. This is the act of feudatories, vassals, or tenants, upon the alienation of the estate.
To perform by proxy; to employ as a proxy.
The chief law officer of the state, empowered to act in all litigation in which the law-executing power is a party, and to advise this supreme executive whenever required.
The practice or peculiar cleverness of attorneys.
The office or profession of an attorney; agency for another.
The act of a feudatory, vassal, or tenant, by which he consents, upon the alienation of an estate, to receive a new lord or superior, and transfers to him his homage and service; the agreement of a tenant to acknowledge the purchaser of the estate as his landlord.
Attraction.
The quality or fact of being attractable.
Capable of being attracted; subject to attraction.
One who, or that which, attracts.
Having power to attract.
That attracts.
An invisible power in a body by which it draws anything to itself; the power in nature acting mutually between bodies or ultimate particles, tending to draw them together, or to produce their cohesion or combination, and conversely resisting separation.
That which attracts or draws; an attraction; an allurement.
The quality or degree of attractive power.
One who, or that which, attracts.
That which attracts, as a magnet.
To adorn with trapping; to array.
Frequent handling or touching.
Capable of being attributed; ascribable; imputable.
That which is attributed; a quality which is considered as belonging to, or inherent in, a person or thing; an essential or necessary property or characteristic.
The act of attributing or ascribing, as a quality, character, or function, to a thing or person, an effect to a cause.
A word that denotes an attribute; esp. a modifying word joined to a noun; an adjective or adjective phrase.
In an attributive manner.
Rubbed; worn by friction.
The act of rubbing together; friction; the act of wearing by friction, or by rubbing substances together; abrasion.
of or pertaining to attrition (definition 4).
Matter pulverized by attrition.
Poisonous; malignant; malicious.
In twain; asunder.
Between.
Twisted; distorted; awry.
To speak reproachfully of; to twit; to upbraid.
Betwixt.
In two; in twain; asunder.
That has no type; devoid of typical character; irregular; unlike the type.
An open air concert in the morning, as distinguished from an evening serenade; also, a pianoforte composition suggestive of morning.
Succession to the goods of a stranger not naturalized.
An alb.
An inn.
A broken gait of a horse, between an amble and a gallop; -- commonly called a Canterbury gallop.
Flaxen-colored.
The part of the neck nearest the back.
Property; possession.
That which is superadded; augmentation.
To sell by auction.
Of or pertaining to an auction or an auctioneer.
To sell by auction; to auction.
Birdcatching; fowling.
Daring; spirited; adventurous.
In an audacious manner; with excess of boldness; impudently.
The quality of being audacious; impudence; audacity.
Daring spirit, resolution, or confidence; venturesomeness.
same as aoudad.
An English poet in the U. S. Born 1907, died 1973.
of or pertaining to W. H. Auden.
The quality of being audible; power of being heard; audible capacity.
That which may be heard.
The quality of being audible.
So as to be heard.
The act of hearing; attention to sounds.
A hearer; especially a catechumen in the early church.
One whose thoughts take the form of mental sounds or of internal discourse rather than of visual or motor images.
the part of a transmitted signal which conveys the sound of the event represented by the signal, such as that of a television program.
pertaining to a method of teaching language that focuses on listening and speaking.
a system of electronic equipment for recording or reproducing sound.
pertaining to or using audiovisual aids in teaching or exposition
a cassette for audio tape.
the measurement of hearing.
An instrument by which the power of hearing can be gauged and recorded on a scale.
the measurement of hearing.
magnetic tape for use in recording sound.
materials using sight or sound to present information; -- usually used in the plural.
An instrument which, placed against the teeth, conveys sound to the auditory nerve and enables the deaf to hear more or less distinctly; a dentiphone.
To settle or adjust an account.
The act of hearing or listening; hearing.
Of or pertaining to hearing; auditory.
A hearer or listener.
Auditory.
The part of a church, theater, or other public building, assigned to the audience.
The office or function of auditor.
An assembly of hearers; an audience.
A female hearer.