One who carries a club; a club bearer.
Bearing a club or a key.
A key; a glossary.
A callous growth, esp. one the foot; a corn.
A mantelpiece.
To scrape, scratch, or dig with a claw, or with the hand as a claw.
To flatter.
Furnished with claws.
Destitute of claws.
having a base shaped like a claw; -- of flower petals.
to sound loudly; -- of car horns.
To cover or manure with clay.
Stupid.
Wattles, or hurdles, made with stakes interwoven with osiers, to cover lodgments.
Consisting of clay; abounding with clay; partaking of clay; like clay.
Partaking of the nature of clay, or containing particles of it.
A large two-handed sword used formerly by the Scottish Highlanders.
an antipersonnel land mine designed to produce a high-velocity spray of steel fragments in a relatively narrow fan-shaped cone, directed toward the enemy. They are usually detonated by an electrical remote control.
An American genus of perennial herbs with delicate blossoms; -- sometimes called spring beauty.
Objects made from clay and baked in a kiln.
To render clean; to free from whatever is foul, offensive, or extraneous; to purify; to cleanse.
See Clear-cut.
With well-proportioned, unblemished limbs; as, a clean-limbed young fellow.
living in a manner above moral reproach; especially, abstaining from unlawful sexual intercourse and excessive drunkenness.
having the surface shaved to smoothness.
Well-proportioned; symmetrical.
One who, or that which, cleans.
a shop where dry cleaning is done.
The act of making clean.
In a cleanly manner.
State of being cleanly; neatness of person or dress.
In a clean manner; neatly.
The state or quality of being clean.
Capable of being cleansed.
To render clean; to free from fith, pollution, infection, guilt, etc.; to clean.
having been made clean. Opposite of dirty.
One who, or that which, cleanses; especially, a detergent or other preparation used for cleaning.
To become free from clouds or fog; to become fair; -- of the weather; -- often followed by up, off, or away.
To cut (a region of forest) clear of all trees. It is a method used for efficiently logging a portion of forest, but often has undesirable effects on the environment.
Acutely perceptive or discerning.
Having a clear understanding; quick of perception; intelligent.
Having a clear physical or mental vision; having a clear understanding.
Shining brightly.
Seeing with clearness; acutely perceptive, discerning; as, clear-sighted reason.
Acute discernment.
able to think clearly and accurately.
The act of removing anything; clearance.
The act of clearing; as, to make a thorough clearance.
To coat or paint with clearcole.
The quality of being cleared.
One who, or that which, clears.
The act or process of making clear.
In a clear manner.
The quality or state of being clear.
To stiffen with starch, and then make clear by clapping with the hands; as, to clearstarch muslin.
One who clearstarches.
A lepidopterous insect with partially transparent wings, of the family /geriad/, of which the currant and peach-tree borers are examples.
To strengthen with a cleat.
Capable of cleaving or being divided.
The act of cleaving or splitting.
To part; to open; to crack; to separate; as parts of bodies; as, the ground cleaves by frost.
A variety of albite, white and lamellar in structure.
One who cleaves, or that which cleaves; especially, a butcher's instrument for cutting animal bodies into joints or pieces.
A species of Galium (Galium Aparine), having a fruit set with hooked bristles, which adhere to whatever they come in contact with; -- called also, goose grass, catchweed, etc.
Charged with another bearing of the same figure, and of the color of the field, so large that only a narrow border of the first bearing remains visible; -- said of any heraldic bearing. Compare Voided.
See Cl/ch/.
The upper stratum of fuller's earth.
Stiff, stubborn, clayey, or tenacious; as, a cledgy soil.
The redshank.
To seize; clutch; snatch; catch; pluck.
A character used in musical notation to determine the position and pitch of the scale as represented on the staff.
A space or opening made by splitting; a crack; a crevice; as, the cleft of a rock.
Having a cloven foot.
To ingraft by cleaving the stock and inserting a scion.
A small breeze or horsefly.
the closed spore-bearing structure of some fungi (especially Aspergillaceae and Eurysiphaceae) from which spores are released only by decay or disintegration; -- called also cleistothecium.
Having, beside the usual flowers, other minute, closed flowers, without petals or with minute petals; -- said of certain species of plants which possess flowers of two or more kinds, the closed ones being so constituted as to insure self-fertilization.
the closed spore-bearing structure of some fungi (especially Aspergillaceae and Eurysiphaceae) from which spores are released only by decay or disintegration; -- called also cleistocarp.
To starve; to famish.
A genus of flowering plants, of many species, mostly climbers, having feathery styles, which greatly enlarge in the fruit; -- called also virgin's bower.
Clemency.
Disposition to forgive and spare, as offenders; mildness of temper; gentleness; tenderness; mercy.
Mild in temper and disposition; merciful; compassionate.
Of or pertaining to Clement, esp. to St. Clement of Rome and the spurious homilies attributed to him, or to Pope Clement V. and his compilations of canon law.
See Clinch.
a queen of Egypt; b. 69 b. c., d. 30 b. c.
To make appeal; to cry out.
A genus of fresh-water leeches, furnished with a proboscis. They feed upon mollusks and worms.
A water clock; a contrivance for measuring time by the graduated flow of a liquid, as of water, through a small aperture. See Illust. in Appendix.
See Kleptomania.
Same as Clearstory.
The upper story of the nave of a church, containing windows, and rising above the aisle roofs.
A chorister boy.
Learned; erudite; clerical.
Of or pertaining to the clergy; clerical; clerkily; learned.
Entitled to, or admitting, the benefit of clergy; as, a clergyable felony.
An ordained minister; a man regularly authorized to preach the gospel, and administer its ordinances; in England usually restricted to a minister of the Established Church.
Same as Clerical.
Of or pertaining to the clergy; suitable for the clergy.
An excessive devotion to the interests of the sacerdotal order; undue influence of the clergy; sacerdotalism.
garments worn by the clergy.
The state of being a clergyman.
a natural family of beetles that prey on other insects.
a witty satiric verse containing two rhymed couplets and mentioning a famous person.
The literati, or well educated class.
A clergyman or ecclesiastic.
A feast for the benefit of the parish clerk.
Unlearned.
Scholarlike.
Scholarship.
In a scholarly manner.
State, quality, or business of a clerk.
A divination by throwing dice or casting lots.
Inheritance; heritage.
See Clearstory.
Possessing quickness of intellect, skill, dexterity, talent, or adroitness; expert.
Somewhat clever.
In a clever manner.
The quality of being clever; skill; dexterity; adroitness.
A piece of metal bent in the form of an oxbow, with the two ends perforated to receive a pin, used on the end of the tongue of a plow, wagen, etc., to attach it to a draft chain, whiffletree, etc.; -- called also clavel, clevy.
To direct; to guide, as by a thread.