A coarse, narrow cloth, like frieze, used by the lower classes in the sixteenth century.
A wheel with cogs or teeth; a gear wheel. See Illust. of Gearing.
To inhabit or reside in company, or in the same place or country.
One who dwells with another, or in the same place or country.
The act or state of dwelling together, or in the same place with another.
A cohabitant.
A joint heir; one of two or more heirs; one of several entitled to an inheritance.
A female heir who inherits with other heiresses; a joint heiress.
The state of being a coheir.
A joint herald.
To stick together; to cleave; to be united; to hold fast, as parts of the same mass.
A sticking or cleaving together; union of parts of the same body; cohesion.
Sticking together; cleaving; as the parts of bodies; solid or fluid.
Light in which the phases of all electromagnetic waves at each point on a line normal to the direction of the the beam are identical. Coherent light is usually monochromatic, and the most common source of such light for practical uses is from a laser.
In a coherent manner.
Any device in which an imperfectly conducting contact between pieces of metal or other conductors loosely resting against each other is materially improved in conductivity by the influence of Hertzian waves; -- so called by Sir O. J. Lodge in 1894 on the assumption that the impact of the electic waves caused the loosely connected parts to cohere, or weld together, a condition easily destroyed by tapping. A common form of coherer as used in wireless telegraphy consists of a tube containing filings (usually a pinch of nickel and silver filings in equal parts) between terminal wires or plugs (called conductor plugs).
The state of being cohesible.
Capable of cohesion.
The act or state of sticking together; close union.
Holding the particles of a homogeneous body together; as, cohesive attraction; producing cohesion; as, a cohesive force.
To restrain.
Hindrance; restraint.
To repeat the distillation of, pouring the liquor back upon the matter remaining in the vessel.
The process of cohobating.
See Coehorn.
A body of about five or six hundred soldiers; the tenth part of a legion.
A perennial American herb (Caulophyllum thalictroides), whose rootstock is used in medicine; -- also called pappoose root. The name is sometimes also given to the Cimicifuga racemosa, and to two species of Act/a, plants of the Crowfoot family.
A Central and South American pinnate-leaved palm (Attalea cohune), the very large and hard nuts of which are turned to make fancy articles, and also yield an oil used as a substitute for coconut oil.
To cover or dress with, or as with, a coif.
Wearing a coif.
A hairdresser.
a woman hairdresser.
A headdress, or manner of dressing the hair.
A var. spelling of Coin, Quoin, a corner, wedge; -- chiefly used in the phrase coign of vantage, a position advantageous for action or observation.
A quoin.
The practice of quartering one's self as landlord on a tenant; a quartering of one's self on anybody.
A noise, tumult, bustle, or confusion.
curled or wound especially in concentric rings or spirals; as, a coiled snake ready to strike; the rope lay coiled on the deck. Opposite of uncoiled.
A testicle.
To manufacture counterfeit money.
The act or process of converting metal into money.
To occupy the same place in space, as two equal triangles, when placed one on the other.
The condition of occupying the same place in space; as, the coincidence of circles, surfaces, etc.
Coincidence.
One of two or more coincident events; a coincidence.
Coincident.
With coincidence.
One who coincides with another in an opinion.
One of several signs or symptoms indicating the same fact; as, a coindication of disease.
One who makes or stamps coin; a maker of money; -- usually, a maker of counterfeit money.
One who dwells with another, or with others.
To inhere or exist together, as in one substance.
Joint inheritance.
A coheir.
Having a common beginning.
To pollute.
Defilement.
Happening at the same instant.
Insurance jointly with another or others; specif., that system of fire insurance in which the insurer is treated as insuring himself to the extent of that part of the risk not covered by his policy, so that any loss is apportioned between him and the insurance company on the principle of average, as in marine insurance or between other insurers.
Equal in intensity or degree; as, the relations between 6 and 12, and 8 and 16, are cointense.
The condition of being of equal in intensity; -- applied to relations; as, 3:6 and 6:12 are relations of cointension.
A material for cordage, matting, etc., consisting of the prepared fiber of the outer husk of the cocoanut.
An inferior groom or lad employed by an esquire to carry the knight's arms and other necessaries.
To throw, as a stone. [Obs.] See Quoit.
A coming together; sexual intercourse; copulation.
To join; to conjoin.
One who swears to another's credibility.
To convert into coke.
A cockney.
The cocoanut.
A simpleton; a gull; a dupe.
Cuckold.
A short ridge connecting two higher elevations or mountains; the pass over such a ridge.
A genus of sterculiaceous trees, natives of tropical Africa, esp. Guinea, but now naturalized in tropical America, esp. in the West Indies and Brazil. Same as Cola nut, below.
One who labors with another; an associate in labor.
A utensil with a bottom perforated with little holes for straining liquids, mashed vegetable pulp, etc.; a strainer of wickerwork, perforated metal, or the like.
The act or process of straining or filtering.
The complement of the latitude, or the difference between any latitude and ninety degrees.
The process of straining; the matter strained; a strainer.
A kind of lace.
one of many subfamilies into which some classification systems subdivide the Liliaceae but not widely accepted: Colchicum; Gloriosa.
A powerful vegetable alkaloid, C17H19NO5, extracted from the Colchicum autumnale, or meadow saffron, as a white or yellowish amorphous powder, with a harsh, bitter taste; -- called also colchicia.
A genus of bulbous-rooted plants found in many parts of Europe, including the meadow saffron.
Polishing rouge; a reddish brown oxide of iron, used in polishing glass, and also as a pigment; -- called also crocus Martis.
To become cold.
Having cold blood; -- said of fish or animals whose blood is but little warmer than the water or air about them.
Wanting passion or feeling or emotional warmth; indifferent.
an absence of concern for the welfare of others; indifference to the suffering of others.
Brittle when cold (that is, below a red heat); as, cold-short iron.
Closed while too cold to become thoroughly welded; -- said of a forging or casting. An imperfection caused by such insufficient welding.
to to knock to the ground with force.
to put coldcream on (one's face).
A British wagtail.
Somewhat cold; cool; chilly.
In a cold manner; without warmth, animation, or feeling; with indifference; calmly.
The state or quality of being cold.
A plant of the Brassica or Cabbage genus; esp. that form of Brassica oleracea called rape and coleseed.
See Coalgoose.
A hydrous borate of lime occurring in transparent colorless or white crystals, also massive, in Southern California.
See Coletit.
One of the Coleoptera.
An order of insects having the anterior pair of wings (elytra) hard and horny, and serving as coverings for the posterior pair, which are membranous, and folded transversely under the others when not in use. The mouth parts form two pairs of jaws (mandibles and maxill/) adapted for chewing. Most of the Coleoptera are known as beetles and weevils.
One of the order of Coleoptera.
One versed in the study of the Coleoptera.
Having wings covered with a case or sheath; belonging to the Coleoptera.
A sheath in the embryo of grasses, inclosing the caulicle.
A kind of small black perch.
Bile; choler.
Pertaining to Samuel Taylor Coleridge, or to his poetry or metaphysics.
The common rape or cole.
A salad made of sliced cabbage.
See Colstaff.
A plant of several species of the Mint family, cultivated for its bright-colored or variegated leaves.
A variety of cabbage in which the leaves never form a compact head.
A crafty fox.
Of or pertaining to colic; affecting the bowels.
Of, pertaining to, or of the nature of, colic.
Pertaining to, or troubled with, colic; as, a colicky disorder; a colicky baby.
A bitter American herb of the Bloodwort family, with the leaves all radical, and the small yellow or white flowers in a long spike (Aletris farinosa and Aletris aurea). Called sometimes star grass, blackroot, blazing star, and unicorn root.
The American quail or bobwhite. The name is also applied to other related species. See Bobwhite.
a genus of birds including the New World quail and the bobwhites.