Established by a decree; definitive; settled.
To decrease.
A crying down; a clamorous censure; condemnation by censure.
One who decries.
To deprive of a crown; to discrown.
The removal of a crust.
To cry down; to censure as faulty, mean, or worthless; to clamor against; to blame clamorously; to discredit; to disparage.
to convert from a coded form into the original; -- of communications. Inverse of encrypt.
Act of lying down; decumbence.
An attitude assumed in lying down; as, the dorsal decubitus.
An accidental blowing off of, or other serious damage to, the breechblock of a gun; also, a removal of the breechblock for the purpose of disabling the gun.
Large; chief; -- applied to an extraordinary billow, supposed by some to be every tenth in order. [R.] Also used substantively.
a woody climber of southeastern US (Decumaria barbara) having white flowers in compound terminal clusters.
The act or posture of lying down.
Lying down; prostrate; recumbent.
In a decumbent posture.
Confinement to a sick bed, or time of taking to one's bed from sickness.
To make tenfold; to multiply by ten.
A head or chief over ten; especially, an officer who commanded a division of ten soldiers.
The office of a decurion.
The act of running down; a lapse.
Extending downward; -- said of a leaf whose base extends downward and forms a wing along the stem.
A flowing; also, a hostile incursion.
Running down; decurrent.
In a decursive manner.
To cut short; to curtail.
Act of cutting short.
A set or squad of ten men under a decurion.
To cross at an acute angle; to cut or divide in the form of X; to intersect; -- said of lines in geometrical figures, rays of light, nerves, etc.
Crossed; intersected.
In a decussate manner.
Act of crossing at an acute angle, or state of being thus crossed; an intersection in the form of an X; as, the decussation of lines, nerves, etc.
Intersecting at acute angles.
Crosswise; in the form of an X.
A hydrocarbon radical, C10H21., never existing alone, but regarded as the characteristic constituent of a number of compounds of the paraffin series.
Allied to, or containing, the radical decyl.
See D/dalian.
See D/dalous.
A division, at one end of a tennis court, for spectators.
Dead.
To bring to shame; to disgrace.
Disgrace; dishonor.
Disgraceful; unbecoming.
The shedding of teeth.
To set apart and consecrate, as to a divinity, or for sacred uses; to devote formally and solemnly; as, to dedicate vessels, treasures, a temple, or a church, to a religious use.
wholly committed to a purpose or cause; as, a dedicated musician.
One to whom a thing is dedicated; -- correlative to dedicator.
The act of setting apart or consecrating to a divine Being, or to a sacred use, often with religious solemnities; solemn appropriation; as, the dedication of Solomon's temple.
One who dedicates; more especially, one who inscribes a book to the favor of a patron, or to one whom he desires to compliment.
Dedicatory.
Dedication.
A writ to commission private persons to do some act in place of a judge, as to examine a witness, etc.
The act of yielding; surrender.
Feeling no compunction; apathetic.
To lead forth.
Inference; deduction; thing deduced.
Deducibleness.
Capable of being deduced or inferred; derivable by reasoning, as a result or consequence.
The quality of being deducible; deducibility.
By deduction.
That deduces; inferential.
To lead forth or out.
taken away. Opposite of added.
Capable of being deducted, taken away, or withdrawn.
Act or process of deducing or inferring.
Of or pertaining to deduction; capable of being deduced from premises; deducible.
By deduction; by way of inference; by consequence.
The pilot whale or blackfish.
Delight; pleasure.
The division of that which is morphologically one organ into two or more, as the division of an organ of a plant into a pair or cluster.
an electrode with a large interior cavity, shaped like the letter "D", used in opposed pairs to accelerate particles in a cyclotron.
To convey or transfer by deed; as, he deeded all his estate to his eldest son.
Full of deeds or exploits; active; stirring.
Not performing, or not having performed, deeds or exploits; inactive.
performance of moral or religious acts; salvation is not by deeds, but by faith; to do good deeds.
Industrious; active.
Opinion; judgment.
A judge in the Isle of Man who decides controversies without process.
That which is deep, especially deep water, as the sea or ocean; an abyss; a great depth.
Hot liquified fat used to deep-fry food. See deep-fry.
having eyes set well behind the brow; characteristic of the bony face of a cadaver.
To fry in deep fat.
Deeply fetched or drawn.
Fried in fat or oil deep enough to cover the object.
to cook by immersing in hot fat or oil.
Laid deeply; formed with cunning and sagacity; secretly and carefully planned; as, deep-laid plans.
taken from an undergrround mine; -- as contrasted with coal obtained from a strip mine; as, deep-mined coal.
Having a loud and sonorous voice.
Profoundly book- learned.
well-established; as, deep-rooted prejudice.
Of or pertaining to the deeper parts of the sea; as, a deep-sea line (i. e., a line to take soundings at a great depth); deep-sea lead; deep-sea soundings, explorations, etc.
same as deep-rooted.
having a sunken area.
to discard in a deep body of water; -- also used figuratively, to discard contemptuously.
Having a deep waist, as when, in a ship, the poop and forecastle are much elevated above the deck.
having waters of great depth; as, a deep-water port.
To become deeper; as, the water deepens at every cast of the lead; the plot deepens.
At or to a great depth; far below the surface; as, to sink deeply.
The state or quality of being deep, profound, mysterious, secretive, etc.; depth; profundity; -- opposed to shallowness.
Any animal; especially, a wild animal.
A deerlike, or thin, ill-formed neck, as of a horse.
any of various tall perennial herbs constituting the genus Frasera; it is widely distributed in warm dry upland areas of the US Pacific states.
A plant (Liatris odoratissima) whose fleshy leaves give out a fragrance compared to vanilla.
A shrub of the blueberry group (Vaccinium stamineum); also, its bitter, greenish white berry; -- called also squaw huckleberry.
An American genus (Rhexia) of perennial herbs, with opposite leaves, and showy flowers (usually bright purple), with four petals and eight stamens, -- the only genus of the order Melastomace/ inhabiting a temperate clime.
One of a large and fleet breed of hounds used in hunting deer; a staghound.
A chevrotain. See Kanchil, and Napu.
The skin of a deer, or the leather which is made from it.
One who practices deerstalking.
The hunting of deer on foot, by stealing upon them unawares.
A dais.
An invocation of, or address to, the Supreme Being.
A goddess.
See Dev.
To destroy or mar the face or external appearance of; to disfigure; to injure, spoil, or mar, by effacing or obliterating important features or portions of; as, to deface a monument; to deface an edifice; to deface writing; to deface a note, deed, or bond; to deface a record.
having the external appearance impaired, usually deliberately.
The act of defacing, or the condition of being defaced; injury to the surface or exterior; obliteration.
One who, or that which, defaces or disfigures.
To cause to fail.
Failure; miscarriage.
Failure.