the act or process of subjecting to strong repeated blows.
An engine used in ancient times to beat down the walls of besieged places.
The act of battering or beating.
The act of one who bats; the management of a bat in playing games of ball.
To assail in battle; to fight.
A kind of broadax formerly used as an offensive weapon.
Experienced in combat, and therefore more effective at fighting; -- used mostly of infantry troops; as, battle-hardened veterans.
Embattled.
An instrument, with a handle and a flat part covered with parchment or crossed with catgut, used to strike a shuttlecock in play; also, the play of battledoor and shuttlecock.
same as battledoor.
a region where a battle is fought.
the line along which opposing armies face each other.
a region where a battle is fought; same as battlefield.
One of the solid upright parts of a parapet in ancient fortifications. The whole parapet, consisting of alternate solids and open spaces. At first purely a military feature, afterwards copied on a smaller scale with decorative features, as for churches.
Having battlements.
A student at Oxford who is supplied with provisions from the buttery; formerly, one who paid for nothing but what he called for, answering nearly to a sizar at Cambridge.
One who battologizes.
To keep repeating needlessly; to iterate.
A needless repetition of words in speaking or writing.
See Batten, and Baton.
The act of beating the woods, bushes, etc., for game. The game itself. The wanton slaughter of game.
An elevated river bed or sea bed.
The measuring of time by beating.
Belonging to, or resembling, a bat.
A springboard in a circus or gymnasium; -- called also batule board.
Shaped like a bat's wing; as, a bat's-wing burner.
A small copper coin, with a mixture of silver, formerly current in some parts of Germany and Switzerland. It was worth about four cents.
Same as Bawbee.
A trifling piece of finery; a gewgaw; that which is gay and showy without real value; a cheap, showy plaything.
See Bawbling.
A unit of transmission speed for information conveyed over a digital communications channel, usually taken as equal to the number of bits of information transmitted per second. The speed in bauds indicates the number of signalling events per second; however, since it is necessary in most cases to transmit control information along with the data, the data signalling rate may be smaller than the baud rate.
The richest kind of stuff used in garments in the Middle Ages, the web being gold, and the woof silk, with embroidery; -- made originally at Baghdad.
A belt. See Baldric.
See Balk.
Designating or conforming to either of the scales used by the French chemist Antoine Baum/ in the graduation of his hydrometers; of or relating to Baum/'s scales or hydrometers. There are two Baum/ hydrometers. One, which is used with liquids heavier than water, sinks to 0/ in pure water, and to 15/ in a 15 per cent salt solution; the other, for liquids lighter than water, sinks to 0/ in a 10 per cent salt solution and to 10/ in pure water. In both cases the graduation, based on the distance between these fundamental points, is continued along the stem as far as desired.
A form of acupuncture, followed by the rubbing of the part with a stimulating fluid.
Of or pertaining to bauxite.
Much talking; prattle; chatter.
A state in southern Germany.
Of or pertaining to Bavaria. A native or an inhabitant of Bavaria.
A kind of cloak or surtout.
A baboon.
A fagot of brushwood, or other light combustible matter, for kindling fires; refuse of brushwood.
A halfpenny.
A trinket. See Bauble.
Insignificant; contemptible.
A fine fellow; -- a term of endearment.
To procure women for lewd purposes.
Obscenely; lewdly.
Obscenity; lewdness.
A belt. See Baldric.
The practice of procuring women for the gratification of lust.
Dirty; foul; -- said of clothes.
A house of prostitution; a house of ill fame; a brothel.
Same as Bathorse.
A loud, prolonged cry; an outcry.
One who bawls.
An inclosure with mud or stone walls, for keeping cattle; a fortified inclosure.
A kind of hawk.
A badger.
A baker; originally, a female baker.
To dam, as water; -- with up or back.
The second tine of a stag's horn. See under Antler.
The East Indian weaver bird (Ploceus Philippinus).
A female dancer in the East Indies.
A violent thunder squall occurring on the south coast of Cuba, esp. near Bayamo. The gusts, called bayamo winds, are modified foehn winds.
Properly, a bay horse, but often any horse. Commonly in the phrase blind bayard, an old blind horse.
Blind; stupid.
A large, edible, siluroid fish of the Nile, of two species (Bagrina bayad and Bagrina docmac).
The fruit of the bay tree or Laurus nobilis. A tree of the West Indies related to the myrtle (Pimenta acris). The fruit of Myrica cerifera (wax myrtle); the shrub itself; -- called also candleberry tree.
A bolt with a barbed shank.
Having a bay or bays.
In the United States navy, a sick-bay nurse; -- now officially designated as hospital apprentice.
To stab with a bayonet.
An inlet from the Gulf of Mexico, from a lake, or from a large river, sometimes sluggish, sometimes without perceptible movement except from tide and wind.
See Baize.
In the East, an exchange, marketplace, or assemblage of shops where goods are exposed for sale.
An unidentified substance mentioned in the Bible (Gen. ii. 12, and Num. xi. 7), variously taken to be a gum, a precious stone, or pearls, or perhaps a kind of amber found in Arabia.
The order of Annulata which includes the leeches. See Hirudinea.
A cupping glass to which are attached a scarificator and an exhausting syringe.
An order of Nemertina, including the large leechlike worms (Malacobdella) often parasitic in clams.
To exist actually, or in the world of fact; to have existence.
The whole; all that is to be.
To run or drive (as a vessel or a boat) upon a beach; to strand; as, to beach a ship.
Bordered by a beach.
an area in hostile territory that has been occupied and is held to allow aditional troops and supplies to enter.
having an extensive gently sloping area of sand or gravel; -- of a shore or shoreline. Opposite of cliffy.
clothing to be worn at a beach.
Having a beach or beaches; formed by a beach or beaches; shingly.
To give light to, as a beacon; to light up; to illumine.
Money paid for the maintenance of a beacon; also, beacons, collectively.
Having no beacon.
To form beadlike bubbles.
imp. p. p. of bead, v. t. i..
Molding in imitation of beads.
A messenger or crier of a court; a servitor; one who cites or bids persons to appear and answer; -- called also an apparitor or summoner.
Office or jurisdiction of a beadle.
The state of being, or the personality of, a beadle.
A catalogue of persons, for the rest of whose souls a certain number of prayers are to be said or counted off on the beads of a chaplet; hence, a catalogue in general.
A small poisonous snake of North America (Elaps fulvius), banded with yellow, red, and black.
Ornamental work in beads.
Resembling beads; small, round, and glistening.
having eyes that gleam with malice.
A small hound, or hunting dog, twelve to fifteen inches high, used in hunting hares and other small game. See Illustration in Appendix.
hunting rabbits with beagles.
The bill or nib of a bird, consisting of a horny sheath, covering the jaws. The form varies much according to the food and habits of the bird, and is largely used in the classification of birds. A similar bill in other animals, as the turtles. The long projecting sucking mouth of some insects, and other invertebrates, as in the Hemiptera. The upper or projecting part of the shell, near the hinge of a bivalve. The prolongation of certain univalve shells containing the canal.
Having a beak or a beaklike point; beak-shaped.
A large drinking cup, with a wide mouth, supported on a foot or standard.
An ornament used in rich Norman doorways, resembling a head with a beak.
A bickern; a bench anvil with a long beak, adapted to reach the interior surfaces of sheet metal ware; the horn of an anvil.
To gather matter; to swell and come to a head, as a pimple.
To emit beams of light.
A small European flycatcher (Muscicapa grisola), so called because it often nests on a beam in a building.
Furnished with beams, as the head of a stag.
Beamy; radiant.
In a beaming manner.
The state of being beamy.
Emitting beams; radiant.
In a beaming manner; radiantly.
Not having a beam.
A small beam of light.