To chant; to recite with musical tones.
A chanting; recitation or reading with musical modulations.
See Canteen.
The use of cant; hypocrisy.
A woman who carries a canteen for soldiers; a vivandi/re.
A song or verses.
To cut in pieces; to cut out from.
A piece; a fragment; a corner.
One of the chief divisions of a long poem; a book.
To divide into small parts or districts; to mark off or separate, as a distinct portion or division.
Of or pertaining to a canton or cantons; of the nature of a canton.
Having a charge in each of the four corners; -- said of a cross on a shield, and also of the shield itself.
To divide into cantons or small districts.
A town or village, or part of a town or village, assigned to a body of troops for quarters; temporary shelter or place of rest for an army; quarters.
A cotton stuff showing a fine cord on one side and a satiny surface on the other.
A singer; esp. the leader of a church choir; a precentor.
Of or belonging to a cantor.
Of or pertaining to a cantor; as, the cantoris side of a choir; a cantoris stall.
A district comprising a hundred villages, as in Wales.
A charm; an incantation; a shell; a trick; adroit mischief.
Cheerful; sprightly; lively; merry.
A Canadian.
See Cannula, Cannular, and Cannulated.
Made of, pertaining to, or resembling, canvas or coarse cloth; as, a canvas tent.
A Species of duck (Aythya vallisneria), esteemed for the delicacy of its flesh. It visits the United States in autumn; particularly Chesapeake Bay and adjoining waters; -- so named from the markings of the plumage on its back.
Close inspection; careful review for verification; as, a canvass of votes.
One who canvasses.
Of or pertaining to cane or canes; abounding with canes.
A deep gorge, ravine, or gulch, between high and steep banks, worn by water courses.
The English form of the Spanish word Ca/on.
A song or air for one or more voices, of Proven/al origin, resembling, though not strictly, the madrigal. An instrumental piece in the madrigal style.
A short song, in one or more parts.
An inflammable, volatile, oily, liquid hydrocarbon, obtained by the destructive distillation of caoutchouc.
A tenacious, elastic, gummy substance obtained from the milky sap of several plants of tropical South America (esp. the euphorbiaceous tree Siphonia elastica or Hevea caoutchouc), Asia, and Africa. Being impermeable to liquids and gases, and not readly affected by exposure to air, acids, and alkalies, it is used, especially when vulcanized, for many purposes in the arts and in manufactures. Also called India rubber (because it was first brought from India, and was formerly used chiefly for erasing pencil marks) and gum elastic. See Vulcanization.
See Caoutchin.
To uncover the head respectfully.
The quality of being capable; capacity; capableness; esp. intellectual power or ability.
Possessing ability, qualification, or susceptibility; having capacity; of sufficient size or strength; as, a room capable of holding a large number; a castle capable of resisting a long assault.
The quality or state of being capable; capability; adequateness; competency.
to become active so as to be able to penetrate an ovum; -- of sperm, in the female reproduction system.
To quality.
Having capacity; able to contain much; large; roomy; spacious; extended; broad; as, a capacious vessel, room, bay, or harbor.
In a capacious manner or degree; comprehensively.
The quality of being capacious, as of a vessel, a reservoir a bay, the mind, etc.
an electrical phenomenon whereby an electric charge is stored.
To render capable; to enable; to qualify.
of or pertaining to capacitance.
a device used in electronic circuits to hold electrical charge, consisting of two conducting plates separated by a nonconducting (dielectric) medium; it is characterized by its capacitance.
The power of receiving or containing; extent of room or space; passive power; -- used in reference to physical things.
See Cap-a-pie.
From head to foot; at all points.
An ornamental covering or housing for a horse; the harness or trappings of a horse, taken collectively, especially when decorative.
A large South American monkey (Lagothrix Humboldtii), with prehensile tail.
A small traveling case or bandbox; formerly, a chest.
To gape.
A composite stone (quartz, schorl, and hornblende) in the walls of tin and copper lodes.
See Capelin.
Either of two small marine fishes formerly classified in the family Salmonid/, now within the smelt family Osmeridae: Mallotus villosus, very abundant on the coasts of Greenland, Iceland, Newfoundland, and Alaska; or Mallotus catervarius, found in the North Pacific. The Atlantic variety has been used as a bait for the cod.
A hood-shaped bandage for the head, the shoulder, or the stump of an amputated limb.
A brilliant star in the constellation Auriga.
The curate of a chapel; a chaplain.
The private orchestra or band of a prince or of a church.
A swelling, like a wen, on the point of the elbow (or the heel of the hock) of a horse, caused probably by bruises in lying down.
The musical director in a royal or ducal chapel; a choir-master.
The pungent grayish green flower bud of the European and Oriental caper (Capparis spinosa), much used for pickles.
The small olive-shaped berry of the European and Oriental caper, said to be used in pickles and as a condiment.
A species of black Old World grouse (Tetrao uragallus) of large size and fine flavor, found in northern Europe and formerly in Scotland; -- called also cock of the woods and horse of the wood.
To treat with cruel playfulness, as a cat treats a mouse; to abuse.
One who capers, leaps, and skips about, or dances.
a European weed (Hypochaeris radicata) widely naturalized in North America, having yellow flower heads and leaves resembling a cat's ears.
As much as will fill a cap.
A writ or process commanding the officer to take the body of the person named in it, that is, to arrest him; -- also called writ of capias.
See Capybara.
Having long filaments; resembling a hair; slender. See Capillary.
A sirup prepared from the maiden-hair, formerly supposed to have medicinal properties.
A filament.
The quality of being capillary.
A tube or vessel, extremely fine or minute.
A capillary blood vessel.
A bush of hair; frizzing of the hair.
In the shape or form of, a hair, or of hairs.
Having much hair; hairy.
Hooded; cowled.
Of or pertaining to the head.
The head or uppermost member of a column, pilaster, etc. It consists generally of three parts, abacus, bell (or vase), and necking. See these terms, and Column.
same as capitalization.
An economic system based on predominantly private (individual or corporate) investment in and ownership of the means of production, distribution, and exchange of goods and wealth; contrasted with socialism or especially communism, in which the state has the predominant role in the economy.
One who has capital; one who has money for investment, or money invested; esp. a person of large property, which is employed in business.
Of or relating to capitalism or capitalists.
The act or process of capitalizing.
To convert into capital, or to use as capital.
To turn (an opportunity) to one's advantage; to take advantage of (a situation); to profit from; as, to capitalize on an opponent's mistakes.
In a way involving the forfeiture of the head or life; as, to punish capitally.
The quality of being capital; preeminence.
Headlike in form; also, having the distal end enlarged and rounded, as the stigmas of certain flowers.
Of so much per head; as, a capitatim tax; a capitatim grant.
A numbering of heads or individuals.
See under Tenant.
Having a very small knoblike termination, or collected into minute capitula.
A division of annelids in which the gills arise from or near the head. See Tubicola.
Of or pertaining to the Capitol in Rome.
See Capitulum.
Of or pertaining to a chapter; capitulary.
In the manner or form of an ecclesiastical chapter.
Relating to the chapter of a cathedral; capitular.
To surrender or transfer, as an army or a fortress, on certain conditions.
A reducing to heads or articles; a formal agreement.
One who capitulates.
A summary.
A thick head of flowers on a very short axis, as a clover top, or a dandelion; a composite flower. A capitulum may be either globular or flat.
A balsam of the Spanish West Indies. See Copaiba.
See Capel.
A horse; a nag.
See Capelin.
The cap or coupling of a flail, through which the thongs pass which connect the handle and swingel.
Divination by means of the ascent or motion of smoke.
A limpid, colorless oil with a peculiar odor, obtained from beech tar.
A sort of cotton so short and fine that it can not be spun, used in the East Indies to line palanquins, to make mattresses, etc.
To cover with, or as with, a hood; hence, to hoodwink or blind.
To castrate; to make a capon of.
A young capon.