Means or mode of expressing thoughts; language; tongue; form of speech.
Relating to a dialect; dialectical; as, a dialectical variant.
Same as Dialectics.
Pertaining to dialectics; logical; argumental.
In a dialectical manner.
One versed in dialectics; a logician; a reasoner.
That branch of logic which teaches the rules and modes of reasoning; the application of logical principles to discursive reasoning; the science or art of discriminating truth from error; logical discussion.
That branch of philology which is devoted to the consideration of dialects.
One skilled in dialectics.
The art of constructing dials; the science which treats of measuring time by dials.
A maker of dials; one skilled in dialing.
A dark green or bronze-colored laminated variety of pyroxene, common in certain igneous rocks.
Meeting and intersecting, as lines; not parallel; -- opposed to parallel.
A volatile, pungent, liquid hydrocarbon, C6H10, consisting of two allyl radicals.
Relating to a dialogue; dialogistical.
In the manner or nature of a dialogue.
An imaginary speech or discussion between two or more; dialogue.
A speaker in a dialogue.
Pertaining to a dialogue; having the form or nature of a dialogue.
Native carbonate of manganese; rhodochrosite.
To discourse in dialogue.
To express as in dialogue.
Having separate petals; polypetalous.
Di/resis. See Di/resis, 1.
Having the quality of unloosing or separating.
The material subjected to dialysis.
The act or process of dialysis.
To separate, prepare, or obtain, by dialysis or osmose; to pass through an animal membrane; to subject to dialysis.
Prepared by diffusion through an animal membrane; as, dialyzed iron.
The instrument or medium used to effect chemical dialysis.
A body having diamagnetic polarity.
Any substance, as bismuth, glass, phosphorous, etc., which in a field of magnetic force is differently affected from the ordinary magnetic bodies, as iron; that is, which tends to take a position at right angles to the lines of magnetic force, and is repelled by either pole of the magnet. Contrasted with paramagnetic and ferromagnetic.
In the manner of, or according to, diamagnetism.
The science which treats of diamagnetic phenomena, and of the properties of diamagnetic bodies.
Yielding diamonds.
Adamantine.
Any right line passing through the center of a figure or body, as a circle, conic section, sphere, cube, etc., and terminated by the opposite boundaries; a straight line which bisects a system of parallel chords drawn in a curve. A diametral plane.
A diameter.
Diametrically.
Of or pertaining to a diameter.
In a diametrical manner; directly; as, diametrically opposite.
Any compound containing two amido groups united with one or more acid or negative radicals, -- as distinguished from a diamine. Cf. Amido acid, under Amido, and Acid amide, under Amide.
A prefix or combining form of Diamine.
A compound containing two amido groups united with one or more basic or positive radicals, -- as contrasted with a diamide.
Resembling a diamond; made of, or abounding in, diamonds; as, a diamond chain; a diamond field.
The salt-marsh terrapin of the Atlantic coast (Malacoclemmys palustris).
Shaped like a diamond or rhombus.
Having figures like a diamond or lozenge.
To set with diamonds; to adorn; to enrich.
A liquid hydrocarbon, C10H20, of the ethylene series, regarded as a polymeric form of amylene.
Diana.
The daughter of Jupiter and Latona; a virgin goddess who presided over hunting, chastity, and marriage; -- identified with the Greek goddess Artemis.
A Linn/an class of plants having two stamens.
Diandrous.
Of or pertaining to the class Diandria; having two stamens.
Same as Columbium.
Pertaining to the discursive faculty, its acts or products.
The science of the dianoetic faculties, and their operations.
A genus of plants containing some of the most popular of cultivated flowers, including the pink, carnation, and Sweet William.
Same as Diapason.
Powdered aromatic herbs, sometimes made into little balls and strung together.
The octave, or interval which includes all the tones of the diatonic scale. Compare disdiapason.
The passage of the corpuscular elements of the blood from the blood vessels into the surrounding tissues, without rupture of the walls of the blood vessels.
a natural family of northern temperate low evergreen plants; in some classifications placed in its own order Diapensiales.
an order of plants, used in some classifications as coextensive with the family Diapensiaceae.
The interval of the fifth.
To draw flowers or figures, as upon cloth.
Same as Diaper, n., 2.
A woven silk stuff with transparent and colored figures; diaper work.
Transparent or translucent.
The quality of being diaphanous; transparency; pellucidness.
Having power to transmit light; transparent; diaphanous.
The art of imitating stained glass with translucent paper.
An instrument for measuring the transparency of the air.
A dark box constructed for viewing transparent pictures, with or without a lens.
A colored photograph produced by superimposing a translucent colored positive over a strong uncolored one.
Allowing light to pass through, as porcelain; translucent or transparent; pellucid; clear.
Translucently.
Relating to the measurement of the tactile sensibility of parts; as, diaphemetric compasses.
Diacoustic.
The doctrine of refracted sound; diacoustics.
Perspiration, or an increase of perspiration.
A medicine or agent which promotes perspiration.
Having the power to increase perspiration.
An instrument designed for transmitting pictures by telegraph.
A dividing membrane or thin partition, commonly with an opening through it.
Pertaining to a diaphragm; as, diaphragmatic respiration; the diaphragmatic arteries and nerves.
of or pertaining to diaphysis.
An abnormal prolongation of the axis of inflorescence.
Slightly increasing an insensible perspiration; mildly diaphoretic. A gentle diaphoretic.
Pertaining to a diapophysis.
The dorsal transverse, or tubercular, process of a vertebra. See Vertebra.
A form of government in which the supreme power is vested in two persons.
Pertaining to a diary; daily.
One who keeps a diary.
A morbidly frequent and profuse discharge of loose or fluid evacuations from the intestines, without tenesmus; a purging or looseness of the bowels; a flux.
Of or pertaining to diarrhea; like diarrhea.
Producing diarrhea, or a purging.
Relating to diarthrosis, or movable articulations.
A form of articulation which admits of considerable motion; a complete joint; abarticulation. See Articulation.
lasting for one day; as, a diary fever.
Lit., /Dispersion./ -- applied collectively: (a) To those Jews who, after the Exile, were scattered through the Old World, and afterwards to Jewish Christians living among heathen. Cf. James i. 1. (b) By extension, to Christians isolated from their own communion, as among the Moravians to those living, usually as missionaries, outside of the parent congregation.
A hydrate of alumina, often occurring in white lamellar masses with brilliant pearly luster; -- so named on account of its decrepitating when heated before the blowpipe.
A soluble enzyme, capable of converting starch and dextrin into sugar.
Pertaining to, or consisting of, diastase; as, diastasic ferment.
A forcible separation of bones without fracture.
Relating to diastase; having the properties of diastase; effecting the conversion of starch into sugar.
Intervening space; interval. An interval.
A vacant space, or gap, esp. between teeth in a jaw.
A double star; -- applied to the nucleus of a cell, when, during cell division, the loops of the nuclear network separate into two groups, preparatory to the formation of two daughter nuclei. See Karyokinesis.
The rhythmical expansion or dilatation of the heart and arteries; -- correlative to systole, or contraction.
Of or pertaining to diastole.
See under Intercolumniation.
The interval of a fourth.
Freely permeable by radiant heat.
The property of transmitting radiant heat; the quality of being diathermous.
The doctrine or the phenomena of the transmission of radiant heat.
Having the property of transmitting radiant heat; diathermal; -- opposed to athermanous.
Affording a free passage to heat; as, diathermic substances.
An instrument for examining the thermal resistance or heat-conducting power of liquids.
Same as Diathermal.