Pertaining to the Enaliosauria. One of the Enaliosauria.
A substitution, as of one part of speech for another, of one gender, number, case, person, tense, mode, or voice, of the same word, for another.
To ambush.
Relating to the art of enameling; as, enamel painting.
Consisting of enamel; resembling enamel; smooth; glossy.
Coated or adorned with enamel; having a glossy or variegated surface; glazed.
One who enamels; a workman or artist who applies enamels in ornamental work.
To inflame with love; to charm; to captivate; -- with of, or with, before the person or thing; as, to be enamored with a lady; to be enamored of books or science.
The state of being enamored.
either of a pair of optical isomers of a chemical substance whose molecules are mirror images of each other, i. e., are related to each other as a right-handed to a left-handed glove; -- meaningful only for structures which have internal asymmetry.
Similar, but not superposable, i. e., related to each other as a right-handed to a left-handed glove; -- said of certain hemihedral crystals.
Serving to palliate; palliative.
An opposite passion or affection.
A figure of speech by which what is to be understood affirmatively is stated negatively, and the contrary; affirmation by contraries.
To arch.
Bent into a curve; -- said of a bend or other ordinary.
An iron-black mineral of metallic luster, occurring in small orthorhombic crystals, also massive. It contains sulphur, arsenic, copper, and often silver.
Same as Armed, 3.
A detailed exposition; relation.
See Enarthrosis.
A ball and socket joint, or the kind of articulation represented by such a joint. See Articulation.
Coming into being; nascent.
A swimming out.
Growing out.
Any unusual outgrowth from the surface of a thing, as of a petal; also, the capacity or act of producing such an outgrowth.
Lest that.
To sail away or over.
Embattled.
To imbibe.
See Embroude.
same as Encenia.
To confine in a cage; to coop up.
To register in a calendar; to calendar.
To form into a camp; to place in a temporary habitation, or quarters.
The act of pitching tents or forming huts, as by an army or traveling company, for temporary lodging or rest.
To canker.
The act of inclosing in a capsule; the growth of a membrane around (any part) so as to inclose it in a capsule.
To carnalize; to make gross.
An ornament on a frieze or capital, consisting of festoons of fruit, flowers, leaves, etc.
To inclose in or as if in a case. See Incase.
covered or protected with or as if with a case; as, products encased in leatherette.
The act of encasing; also, that which encases.
To turn into cash; to cash.
The payment in cash of a note, draft, etc.
An ulcer in the eye, upon the cornea, which causes the loss of the humors.
The method of painting in heated wax, or in any way where heat is used to fix the colors.
To hide in, or as in, a cave or recess.
Pregnant; with child.
A festival commemorative of the founding of a city or the consecration of a church; also, the ceremonies (as at Oxford and Cambridge, England) commemorative of founders or benefactors.
To offer incense to or upon; to burn incense.
any of numerous cycads of the genus Encephalartos having stout cylindrical trunks and a terminal crown of long, often spiny pinnate leaves.
Pertaining to the encephalon or brain.
Inflammation of the brain.
Hernia of the brain.
An encephaloid cancer.
The science which treats of the brain, its structure and functions.
The contents of the cranium; the brain.
Any disease or symptoms of disease referable to disorders of the brain; as, lead encephalopathy, the cerebral symptoms attending chronic lead poisoning.
The encephalon.
The act or art of dissecting the brain.
Having a head; -- said of most Mollusca; -- opposed to acephalous.
To chafe; to enrage; to heat.
Heating; burning.
To bind with a chain; to hold in chains.
The act of enchaining, or state of being enchained.
To seat in a chair.
To make run in a channel.
To charm by sorcery; to act on by enchantment; to get control of by magical words and rites.
Under the power of enchantment; possessed or exercised by enchanters; as, an enchanted castle.
One who enchants; a sorcerer or magician; also, one who delights as by an enchantment.
Having a power of enchantment; charming; fascinating.
The act of enchanting; the production of certain wonderful effects by the aid of demons, or the agency of supposed spirits; the use of magic arts, spells, or charms; incantation.
A woman versed in magical arts; a sorceress; also, a woman who fascinates.
A charge.
To incase or inclose in a border or rim; to surround with an ornamental casing, as a gem with gold; to encircle; to inclose; to adorn.
One who enchases.
To chasten.
Occasion, cause, or reason.
To inclose in a chest.
Handbook; a manual of devotions.
To cut with a chisel.
A genus of extinct Cretaceous fishes; -- so named from their spear-shaped teeth. They were allied to the pike (Esox).
A cartilaginous tumor growing from the interior of a bone.
Belonging to, or used in, a country; native; domestic; popular; common; -- said especially of the written characters employed by the common people of ancient Egypt, in distinction from the hieroglyphics. See Demotic.
The basal substance of the cell nucleus; a hyaline or granular substance, more or less fluid during life, in which the other parts of the nucleus are imbedded.
The primitive formative juice, from which the tissues, particularly the cellular tissue, are formed.
A cincture.
Burnt to cinders.
To form a circle about; to inclose within a circle or ring; to surround; as, to encircle one in the arms; the army encircled the city.
A small circle; a ring.
surrounding.
To clasp. See Inclasp.
To inclose within an alien territory.
The state of being an enclave.
A word which is joined to another so closely as to lose its proper accent, as the pronoun thee in prithee (pray thee).
Affixed; subjoined; -- said of a word or particle which leans back upon the preceding word so as to become a part of it, and to lose its own independent accent, generally varying also the accent of the preceding word.
In an enclitic manner; by throwing the accent back.
The art of declining and conjugating words.
To shut up in a cloister; to cloister.
To inclose. See Inclose.
surrounded or closed in, usually on all sides. Opposite of unenclosed.
the act of surrounding something with something else, so that it is inside the surrounding object.
Inclosure. See Inclosure.
To clothe.
To envelop in clouds; to cloud.
To carry in a coach.
To convert (a text, data) into a series of secret symbols by means of a code{5}; to encrypt.
To put in a coffin.
To render cold.
To furnish or surround with a collar.
To color.
The neck of horse.
See Encumber.
Hindrance; molestation.
One who praises; a panegyrist.
A panegyric.
Bestowing praise; praising; eulogistic; laudatory; as, an encomiastic address or discourse.
Encomium; panegyric.
Warm or high praise; panegyric; strong commendation.
To circumscribe or go round so as to surround closely; to encircle; to inclose; to environ; as, a ring encompasses the finger; an army encompasses a city; a voyage encompassing the world.
closely enveloping or surrounding on all sides.