To throw or bring down from an elevation, place of honor and authority, or the like.
To make alien; to deprive of the privileges of birth.
Deprived or destitute of natural feelings; unnatural.
Neglect or refusal to obey; violation of a command or prohibition.
Disobedience.
Neglecting or refusing to obey; omitting to do what is commanded, or doing what is prohibited; refractory; not observant of duty or rules prescribed by authority; -- applied to persons and acts.
In a disobedient manner.
Disobedience.
Disobedient.
To refuse or neglect to obey; to violate commands; to be disobedient.
One who disobeys.
The act of disobliging.
Releasing from obligation.
To do an act which contravenes the will or desires of; to offend by an act of unkindness or incivility; to displease; to refrain from obliging; to be unaccommodating to.
Release from obligation.
One who disobliges.
Not obliging; not disposed to do a favor; unaccommodating; as, a disobliging person or act.
To turn away from the west; to throw out of reckoning as to longitude.
The state of being unemployed; want of occupation.
Want or difference of belief; disbelief.
To open.
To throw out of the proper orbit; to unsphere.
Disorder.
Inordinate; irregular; vicious.
To disturb the order of; to derange or disarrange; to throw into confusion; to confuse.
Thrown into disorder; deranged; as, a disordered house, judgment.
The state of being disorderly.
In a disorderly manner; without law or order; irregularly; confusedly.
Disarrangement; disturbance.
Inordinate; disorderly.
Inordinately.
The state of being in disorder; derangement; confusion.
The act of disorganizing; destruction of system.
To destroy the organic structure or regular system of (a government, a society, a party, etc.); to break up (what is organized); to throw into utter disorder; to disarrange.
One who disorganizes or causes disorder and confusion.
To turn away from the east; to confuse as to which way is east; to cause to lose one's bearings.
To turn away from the east, or (figuratively) from the right or the truth.
having lost one's bearings physically or mentally.
causing disorientation: causing confusion of directions.
To refuse to own or acknowledge as belonging to one's self; to disavow or deny, as connected with one's self personally; as, a parent can hardly disown his child; an author will sometimes disown his writings.
having social connections repudiated.
the refusal to acknowledge (something or somebody) as one's own.
Act of disowning.
To deoxidate; to deoxidize.
Deoxidation.
To deprive of oxygen; to deoxidize.
Deoxidation.
To roam.
To separate (a pair).
To spread out; to expand.
Act of dispanding, or state of being dispanded.
Removed from paradise.
Inequality in marriage; marriage with an inferior.
Matching any one in marriage under his or her degree; injurious union with something of inferior excellence; a lowering in rank or estimation.
One who disparages or dishonors; one who vilifies or disgraces.
expressing a low opinion of; same as derogatory; as, disparaging remarks about the new house.
In a manner to disparage or dishonor; slightingly.
Unequal; dissimilar; separate.
Things so unequal or unlike that they can not be compared with each other.
Act of disappearing; disappearance.
Inequality; difference in age, rank, condition, or excellence; dissimilitude; -- followed by between, in, of, as to, etc.; as, disparity in, or of, years; a disparity as to color.
To throw (a park or inclosure); to treat (a private park) as a common.
To scatter abroad.
To make allowance for the dispart in (a gun), when taking aim.
Freedom from passion; an undisturbed state; apathy.
Free from passion; not warped, prejudiced, swerved, or carried away by passion or feeling; judicial; calm; composed.
Free from passion; dispassionate.
The act of sending a message or messenger in haste or on important business.
One who dispatches.
Bent on haste; intent on speedy execution of business or any task; indicating haste; quick; as, dispatchful looks.
The act of dispatching.
Lack of sympathy; want of passion; apathy.
To deprive of the claim of a pauper to public support; to deprive of the privilege of suing in forma pauperis.
To free a state of pauperism, or from paupers.
To send off with speed; to dispatch.
To drive away by scattering, or so to cause to vanish; to clear away; to banish; to dissipate; as, to dispel a cloud, vapors, cares, doubts, illusions.
See Dispense.
To spend; to lay out; to expend.
One who dispends or expends; a steward.
Capable of being dispensed or administered.
Quality of being dispensable.
A place where medicines are prepared and dispensed; esp., a place where the poor can obtain medical advice and medicines gratuitously or at a nominal price.
The act of dispensing or dealing out; distribution; often used of the distribution of good and evil by God to man, or more generically, of the acts and modes of his administration.
Granting dispensation.
By dispensation.
A distributer; a dispenser.
In the way of dispensation; dispensatively.
A book or medicinal formulary containing a systematic description of drugs, and of preparations made from them. It is usually, but not always, distinguished from a pharmacop/ia in that it issued by private parties, and not by an official body or by government.
Expense; profusion; outlay.
distributed or weighed out in carefully determined portions; as, medicines dispensed to the sick.
One who, or that which, dispenses; a distributer; as, a dispenser of favors.
To deprive of inhabitants; to depopulate.
One who, or that which, dispeoples; a depopulator.
To sprinkle.
Containing only two seeds; two-seeded.
To scatter; to sprinkle.
The act or result of dispersing or scattering; dispersion.
To separate; to go or move into different parts; to vanish; as, the company dispersed at ten o'clock; the clouds disperse.
Scattered.
Dispersedness.
One that disperses.
The act or process of scattering or dispersing, or the state of being scattered or separated; as, the Jews in their dispersion retained their rites and ceremonies; a great dispersion of the human family took place at the building of Babel.
Tending to disperse.
To deprive of personality or individuality.
To deprive of cheerful spirits; to depress the spirits of; to dishearten; to discourage.
Depressed in spirits; deprived of cheer or enthusiasm; disheartened; discouraged; daunted.
causing dejection; discouraging. Opposite of encouraging.
Depression of spirits; discouragement.
Full of despite; cruel; spiteful; pitiless.
To change the place of; to remove from the usual or proper place; to put out of place; to place in another situation; as, the books in the library are all displaced.
Capable of being displaced.
The act of displacing, or the state of being displaced; a putting out of place.
Want of complacency or gratification; envious displeasure; dislike.
One that displaces.
To remove (what is planted or fixed); to unsettle and take away; to displace; to root out; as, to displant inhabitants.
The act of displanting; removal; displacement.
To untwist; to uncurl; to unplat.
An opening or unfolding; exhibition; manifestation.
Unfolded; expanded; exhibited conspicuously or ostentatiously.
One who, or that which, displays.
To discipline; to correct.