A stupid person; a dunce. Stupid.
One who, or that which, dulls.
A blockhead; a dolt.
Somewhat dull; uninteresting; tiresome.
The state of being dull; slowness; stupidity; heaviness; drowsiness; bluntness; obtuseness; dimness; want of luster; want of vividness, or of brightness.
Dull.
In a dull manner; stupidly; slowly; sluggishly; without life or spirit.
See Doulocracy.
A seaweed of a reddish brown color, which is sometimes eaten, as in Scotland. The true dulse is Sarcophyllis edulis; the common is Rhodymenia. [Written also dillisk.]
The ring plover.
In a due, fit, or becoming manner; as it (anything) ought to be; properly; regularly.
Pertaining to, or set with, briers or bushes; brambly.
To put to silence.
To render simpler, so as to be comprehensible or usable by unintelligent people; to simplify; -- of texts or devices.
An exercising weight, consisting of two spheres or spheroids, connected by a short bar for a handle; used (often in pairs) for gymnastic exercise.
A framework on which dishes, food, etc., are passed from one room or story of a house to another; a lift for dishes, etc.; also, a piece of furniture with movable or revolving shelves.
same as dumfound.
same as astounded.
causing astonishment.
A bumblebee; also, a cockchafer.
In silence; mutely.
The quality or state of being dumb; muteness; silence; inability to speak.
Dumose.
To strike dumb; to confuse with astonishment.
same as dumbfounded.
To dumfound; to confound.
same as dumbfounding.
A dumbledor.
One who feigns dumbness.
One who is dumb.
Abounding with bushes and briers.
A car or boat for dumping refuse, etc.
a coarse term for defecation.
same as dump car.
a truck, usually with an open top, the carrying bopdy of which can be tilted so as to emptied its contents without handling.
The act of dumping loads from carts, especially loads of refuse matter; also, a heap of dumped matter.
a cart that can be tilted to empty the contents without handling them.
p. p. of dump, v. t.; as, The money was there, dumped all over the floor.
same as dump truck.
The state of being dumpy.
Dull; stupid; sad; moping; melancholy.
To make dumpy; to fold, or bend, as one part over another.
A roundish mass of dough boiled in soup, or as a sort of pudding; often, a cover of paste inclosing an apple or other fruit, and boiled or baked; as, an apple dumpling.
a gloomy mental state; same as 2nd dump{1}; -- used mostly in the phrase /in the dumps/.
Short and thick; of low stature and disproportionately stout.
the Sumerian and Babylonian god of pastures and vegetation; consort of Inanna.
Of a dark color; of a color partaking of a brown and black; of a dull brown color; swarthy.
The pochard; -- called also dunair, and dunker, or dun-curre. An American duck; the ruddy duck.
One backward in book learning; a child or other person dull or weak in intellect; a dullard; a dolt.
The realm or domain of dunces.
Dullness; stupidity.
Like a dunce; duncish.
To make stupid in intellect.
Somewhat like a dunce.
The lees or dregs of cane juice, used in the distillation of rum.
Thick-headed; stupid.
A dunce; a numskull; a blockhead.
See Dunderhead.
A low hill of drifting sand usually formed on the coats, but often carried far inland by the prevailing winds.
Codfish cured in a particular manner, so as to be of a superior quality.
To void excrement.
A coarse kind of unbleached cotton fabric; blue denim.
A close, dark prison, commonly, under ground, as if the lower apartments of the donjon or keep of a castle, these being used as prisons.
To shut up in a dungeon.
A fork for tossing dung.
A heap of dung.
A pit where dung and weeds rot for manure.
Full of dung; filthy; vile; low.
A yard where dung is collected.
One of a religious denomination whose tenets and practices are mainly those of the Baptists, but partly those of the Quakers; -- called also Tunkers, Dunkards, Dippers, and, by themselves, Brethren, and German Baptists, and they call their denomination the Church of the Brethren.
the name of a town and a battle fought there, in World War II (1940) when 330,000 Allied troops had to be evacuated from the beaches at Dunkirk in a desperate retreat under enemy fire. Most of the forces were safely evacuated to England.
the name of a town and a battle fought there, in World War II (1940) when 330,000 Allied troops had to be evacuated from the beaches at Dunkirk in a desperate retreat under enemy fire. Most of the forces were safely evacuated to England.
A species of sandpiper (Tringa alpina); -- called also churr, dorbie, grass bird, and red-backed sandpiper. It is found both in Europe and America.
Fagots, boughs, or loose materials of any kind, laid on the bottom of the hold for the cargo to rest upon to prevent injury by water, or stowed among casks and other cargo to prevent their motion.
One employed in soliciting the payment of debts.
Inclined to a dun color.
A slang shortening of I don't know or don't know; as, dunno where I lost my keys; Where'd he go? I dunno..
The hedge sparrow or hedge accentor.
Deaf; stupid.
A blow.
Beaten; hence, blunted.
A porpoise.
A composition for two performers; a duet.
See Dodecahedral, and Dodecahedron.
Consisting of twelve years.
A twelfth part; as, the duodecimals of an inch.
Divided into twelve parts.
A book consisting of sheets each of which is folded into twelve leaves; hence, indicating, more or less definitely, a size of a book; -- usually written 12mo or 12/.
Consisting of twelves.
Of or pertaining to the duodenum; as, duodenal digestion.
Containing twelve; twelvefold; increasing by twelves; duodecimal.
The part of the small intestines between the stomach and the jejunum. See Illust. of Digestive apparatus, under Digestive.
A picture printed from two half-tone plates made with the screen set at different angles, and usually printed in two shades of the same color or in black and one tint.
Consisting of two letters only; biliteral.
A cathedral. See Dome, 2.
Any picture printed in two shades of the same color, as duotypes and duographs are usually printed.
A print made from two half-tone plates made from the same negative, but etched differently.
To open; as, to dup the door.
Capable of being duped.
To deceive; to trick; to mislead by imposing on one's credulity; to gull; as, dupe one by flattery.
One who dupes another.
The act or practice of duping.
A double cocoon, made by two silkworms.
Double.
To arrange, as a telegraph line, so that two messages may be transmitted simultaneously; to equip with a duplex telegraphic outfit.
something which is duplex; -- used mostly in reference to a living unit, such as an apartment, in a building having two similar living units.
a device which switches electronic circuitry so that a radio antenna can function as either a transmitting or receiving antenna.
the quality of being reproducible.
capable of being duplicated.
Double; twofold.
To double; to fold; to render double.
The act of duplicating, or the state of being duplicated; a doubling; a folding over; a fold.
Having the quality of duplicating or doubling.
A doubling; a fold, as of a membrane.
exhibiting duplicity{2}; deceitful; double-dealing.
Doubleness; a twofold state.
See 2d Dubber.
Major; in the major mode; as, C dur, that is, C major.
Short form for Dura mater.
The state or quality of being durable; the power of uninterrupted or long continuance in any condition; the power of resisting agents or influences which tend to cause changes, decay, or dissolution; lastingness.
Able to endure or continue in a particular condition; lasting; not perishable or changeable; not wearing out or decaying soon; enduring; as, durable cloth; durable happiness.