One who disassents; a dissenter.
Want of assiduity or care.
To subject to disassimilation.
The decomposition of complex substances, within the organism, into simpler ones suitable only for excretion, with evolution of energy, -- a normal nutritional process the reverse of assimilation; downward metabolism; -- now more commonly called catabolism.
Having power to disassimilate; of the nature of disassimilation.
To disconnect from things associated; to disunite; to dissociate.
To blast by the influence of a baleful star.
Disastrously.
Full of unpropitious stellar influences; unpropitious; ill-boding.
To unrobe; to undress.
To diminish.
To deprive of credit or authority; to discredit.
To retard; to repel; to do damage to.
Misfortune.
Misadventurous; unfortunate.
To disavow.
To refuse strongly and solemnly to own or acknowledge; to deny responsibility for, approbation of, and the like; to disclaim; to disown; as, he was charged with embezzlement, but he disavows the crime.
able to be disavowed.
The act of disavowing, disclaiming, or disowning; rejection and denial.
Disavowal.
One who disavows.
Disavowal.
To become separated, broken up, dissolved, or scattered; especially, to quit military service by breaking up organization.
The act of disbanding.
To expel from the bar, or the legal profession; to deprive (an attorney, barrister, or counselor) of his status and privileges as such.
To strip of bark; to bark.
Act of disbarring.
To debase or degrade.
To misbecome.
The act of disbelieving;; a state of the mind in which one is fully persuaded that an opinion, assertion, or doctrine is not true; refusal of assent, credit, or credence; denial of belief.
Not to believe; to refuse belief or credence to; to hold not to be true or actual.
One who disbelieves, or refuses belief; an unbeliever. Specifically, one who does not believe the Christian religion.
To drive from a bench or seat.
To unbend.
To unbind; to loosen.
To clear from blame.
Disembodied.
Converting forest land into cleared or arable land; removal of a forest.
To disembowel.
To divest of a branch or branches; to tear off.
To deprive of buds or shoots, as for training, or economizing the vital strength of a tree.
To relieve one's self of a burden; to ease the mind.
To strip of burgeons or buds; to disbud.
To pay out; to expend; -- usually from a public fund or treasury.
The act of disbursing or paying out.
One who disburses money.
To disburden; to relieve of a load.
A flat round plate A circular structure either in plants or animals; as, a blood disc, a germinal disc, etc. Same as Disk.
a person who plays records or compact disks of recorded music; a person who selects and plays recorded music for broadcast over the radio, often making comments about the music or other topics and also announcing commercial advertising messages; also, one who plays recorded music at a dance or social gathering, especially as a profession.
To uncage.
Pertaining to, or resembling, a disk; as, discal cells.
To pull off shoes or sandals from.
Deprived off shoes or sandals; unshod; discalced.
The act of pulling off the shoes or sandals.
Unshod; barefooted; -- in distinction from calced.
To drive from a camp.
To melt; to dissolve; to thaw.
See Descant, n.
To deprive of capacity; to incapacitate.
The act of discarding; also, the card or cards discarded.
Rejection; dismissal.
Stripped of flesh.
To strip; to undress.
To yield or give up; to depart.
To debate; to discuss.
Controversy; disputation; discussion.
One who arbitrates or decides.
To see or understand the difference; to make distinction; as, to discern between good and evil, truth and falsehood.
Discernment.
One who, or that which, discerns, distinguishes, perceives, or judges; as, a discerner of truth, of right and wrong.
Capable of being discerned by the eye or the understanding; as, a star is discernible by the eye; the identity of difference of ideas is discernible by the understanding.
The quality of being discernible.
In a manner to be discerned; perceptibly; visibly.
Acute; shrewd; sagacious; sharp-sighted.
In a discerning manner; with judgment; judiciously; acutely.
The act of discerning.
To tear in pieces; to rend.
Capability or liableness to be discerped.
Capable of being discerped.
The act of pulling to pieces, or of separating the parts.
Tending to separate or disunite parts.
Departure.
The act of discharging; the act of relieving of a charge or load; removal of a load or burden; unloading; as, the discharge of a ship; discharge of a cargo.
One who, or that which, discharges. Specifically, in electricity, an instrument for discharging a Leyden jar, or electrical battery, by making a connection between the two surfaces; a discharging rod.
Disheveled.
To deprive of status as a church, or of membership in a church.
To divide; to cleave in two.
Bearing disks.
Bearing the stamens on a discoid outgrowth of the receptacle; -- said of a subclass of plants. Cf. Calycifloral.
Discoid.
A genus of Branchiopoda, having a disklike shell, attached by one valve, which is perforated by the peduncle.
Ungirded; loosely dressed.
To part; to divide.
To teach; to train.
The state of being a disciple or follower in doctrines and precepts.
A female disciple.
Capable of being disciplined or improved by instruction and training.
The quality of being improvable by discipline.
Relating to discipline.
A flagellant. See Flagellant.
One who disciplines; one who excels in training, especially with training, especially with regard to order and obedience; one who enforces rigid discipline; a stickler for the observance of rules and methods of training; as, he is a better disciplinarian than scholar.
Pertaining to discipline; intended for discipline; corrective; belonging to a course of training.
To educate; to develop by instruction and exercise; to train.
One who disciplines.
To disavow or renounce all part, claim, or share.
One who disclaims, disowns, or renounces.
A disavowing or disowning.
To disclaim; to expel.
To injure one's good name; to slander.
To take off a cloak from; to uncloak.
Disclosure.
Represented with wings expanded; -- applied to doves and other birds not of prey.
One who discloses.
The act of disclosing, uncovering, or revealing; bringing to light; exposure.
To clear from clouds.
To divest of a clout.
A shutting off; exclusion.
To depart; to quit the coast (that is, the side or border) of anything; to be separated.
Applied to a form of egg cleavage seen in osseous fishes, which occurs only in a small disk that separates from the rest of the egg.
A thrower of the discus. A statue of an athlete holding the discus, or about to throw it.
One of the tree frogs.