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.
Auditory.
A changeling or elf child, -- that is, one left by fairies; a deformed or foolish child; a simpleton; an oaf.
A philosophic movement of the 18th century characterized by a lively questioning of authority, keen interest in matters of politics and general culture, and an emphasis on empirical method in science. It received its impetus from the unsystematic but vigorous skepticism of Pierre Bayle, the physical doctrines of Newton, and the epistemological theories of Locke, in the preceding century. Its chief center was in France, where it gave rise to the skepticism of Voltaire , the naturalism of Rousseau, the sensationalism of Condillac, and the publication of the /Encyclopedia/ by D'Alembert and Diderot. In Germany, Lessing, Mendelssohn, and Herder were representative thinkers, while the political doctrines of the leaders of the American Revolution and the speculations of Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Paine represented the movement in America.
Of or pertaining to Augeus, king of Elis, whose stable contained 3000 oxen, and had not been cleaned for 30 years. Hercules cleansed it in a single day.
a number to which another number (the addend) is added.
A carpenter's tool for boring holes larger than those bored by a gimlet. It has a handle placed crosswise by which it is turned with both hands. A pod auger is one with a straight channel or groove, like the half of a bean pod. A screw auger has a twisted blade, by the spiral groove of which the chips are discharge.
A priming tube connecting the charge chamber with the gallery, or place where the slow match is applied.
At all; in any degree.
A variety of pyroxene, usually of a black or dark green color, occurring in igneous rocks, such as basalt; -- also used instead of the general term pyroxene.
Pertaining to, or like, augite; containing augite as a principal constituent; as, augitic rocks.
Enlargement by addition; increase.
Capable of augmentation.
The act or process of augmenting, or making larger, by addition, expansion, or dilation; increase.
A word which expresses with augmented force the idea or the properties of the term from which it is derived; as, dullard, one very dull. Opposed to diminutive.
One who, or that which, augments or increases anything.
See Algorism.
To predict or foretell, as from signs or omens; to betoken; to presage; to infer.
Of or pertaining to augurs or to augury; betokening; ominous; significant; as, an augural staff; augural books.
The office of an augur.
The practice of augury.
An augur.
Relating to augurs or to augury.
An augur.
Full of augury; foreboding.
The office, or period of office, of an augur.
The art or practice of foretelling events by observing the actions of birds, etc.; divination.
The eighth month of the year, containing thirty-one days.
Of or pertaining to Augustus C/sar or to his times.
One of a class of divines, who, following St. Augustine, maintain that grace by its nature is effectual absolutely and creatively, not relatively and conditionally.
A member of one of the religious orders called after St. Augustine; an Austin friar.
The doctrines held by Augustine or by the Augustinians.
In an august manner.
The quality of being august; dignity of mien; grandeur; magnificence.
A name given to various species of arctic sea birds of the family Alcid/. The great auk, now extinct, is Alca impennis (or Plautus impennis) . The razor-billed auk is Alca torda. See Puffin, Guillemot, and Murre.
See Awkward.
At Oxford, England, a member of a hall, distinguished from a collegian.
Old; as, Auld Reekie (old smoky), i. e., Edinburgh.
A member of the conservative party in the Church of Scotland in the latter part of the 18th century. Same as Burgher, n., 2.
Of or pertaining to a pipe (flute) or piper.
The ceremony observed in conferring the degree of doctor of divinity in some European universities. It begins by a harangue of the chancellor addressed to the young doctor, who then receives the cap, and presides at the disputation (also called the aulic).
An ell. [Obs.] See Aune.
See Alnage and Alnager.
Same as Aam.
To figure or variegate.
Same as Ambry.
A form of Ambry, a closet; but confused with Almonry, as if a place for alms.
A rude balance for weighing, and a kind of weight, formerly used in England.
Ancestry.
A French cloth measure, of different parts of the country (at Paris, 0.95 of an English ell); -- now superseded by the meter.
The sister of one's father or mother; -- correlative to nephew or niece. Also applied to an uncle's wife.
To venture; to dare.
Adventurous.
Adventure; hap.
A familiar name for an aunt. In the southern United States a familiar term applied to aged negro women.
Any subtile, invisible emanation, effluvium, or exhalation from a substance, as the aroma of flowers, the odor of the blood, a supposed fertilizing emanation from the pollen of flowers, etc.
Of or pertaining to the ear; as, aural medicine and surgery.
Pertaining to, or resembling, the Aurantiace/, an order of plants (formerly considered natural), of which the orange is the type.
A combination of auric acid with a base; as, aurate or potassium.
Having ears. See Aurited.
Golden; gilded.
The chrysalis, or pupa of an insect, esp. when reflecting a brilliant golden color, as that of some of the butterflies. A genus of jellyfishes. See Discophora.
An amateur collector and breeder of insects, esp. of butterflies and moths; a lepidopterist.
A celestial crown or accidental glory added to the bliss of heaven, as a reward to those (as virgins, martyrs, preachers, etc.) who have overcome the world, the flesh, and the devil.
a yellow crystalline antibiotic (generic name chlortetracycline) used to treat certain bacterial and rickettsial diseases.
Of or pertaining to gold.
Brass-colored.
A hydrous carbonate of copper and zinc, found in pale green or blue crystalline aggregations. It yields a kind of brass on reduction.
The external ear, or that part of the ear which is prominent from the head. The chamber, or one of the two chambers, of the heart, by which the blood is received and transmitted to the ventricle or ventricles; -- so called from its resemblance to the auricle or external ear of some quadrupeds. See Heart.
Having ear-shaped appendages or lobes; auriculate; as, auricled leaves.
A species of Primula, or primrose, called also, from the shape of its leaves, bear's-ear. A species of Hirneola (Hirneola auricula), a membranaceous fungus, called also auricula Jud/, or Jew's-ear.
Of or pertaining to the ear, or to the sense of hearing; as, auricular nerves.
A kind of holothurian larva, with soft, blunt appendages. See Illustration in Appendix.
In an auricular manner.
A circle of feathers surrounding the opening of the ear of birds.
Having ears or appendages like ears; eared. Having lobes or appendages like the ear; shaped like the ear; auricled. Having an angular projection on one or both sides, as in certain bivalve shells, the foot of some gastropods, etc.
relating to or affecting the atria and ventricles of the heart.
Gold-bearing; containing or producing gold.
See Oriflamme.
Having the form of the human ear; ear-shaped.
to transform into gold.
The Charioteer, or Wagoner, a constellation in the northern hemisphere, situated between Perseus and Gemini. It contains the bright star Capella.