Capable of being erected; susceptible of being erected of dilated; as, erectile tissue.
The quality or state of being erectile.
the act of building or putting up.
The act of erecting, or raising upright; the act of constructing, as a building or a wall, or of fitting together the parts of, as a machine; the act of founding or establishing, as a commonwealth or an office; also, the act of rousing to excitement or courage.
Making erect or upright; raising; tending to erect.
In an erect manner or posture.
Uprightness of posture or form.
Having a position intermediate between erect and patent, or spreading.
One who, or that which, erects.
Before the /apse of a long time; soon; -- usually separated, ere long.
A gradual oxidation from exposure to air and moisture, as in the decay of old trees or of dead animals.
See Hermitage.
A hermit.
Of or pertaining to an eremite; hermitical; living in solitude.
Eremitic.
The state of a hermit; a living in seclusion from social life.
A creeping forth.
A snatching away.
A morbid degree of excitement or irritation in an organ.
Relating to erethism.
Some time ago; a little while before; heretofore.
the fictitious land described in the novel Erewhon by Samuel Butler.
A garden plot, usually about half an acre.
The unit of work or energy in the C. G. S. system, being the amount of work done by a dyne working through a distance of one centimeter; the amount of energy expended in moving a body one centimeter against a force of one dyne (981 dynes exert the same force as a one gram mass in the earth's gravitational field). One foot pound is equal to 13,560,000 ergs. The absolute Joule is equivalent to 107 ergs, which are equivalent to 0.2389 gram-calories at 15/ C. See also mechanical equivalent of heat under equivalent.
Potential energy; negative value of the force function.
To deduce logically, as conclusions.
An instrument for measuring energy in ergs.
Therefore; consequently; -- often used in a jocular way.
vitamin D2, one of the D vitamins, a group of related substances that prevent rickets.
An instrument for measuring and recording the work done by a single muscle or set of muscles, the rate of fatigue, etc.
A device for measuring, or an instrument for indicating, energy expended or work done; a dynamometer.
Work, measured in terms of the quantity of heat to which it is equivalent. same as Erg.
biological science applied to study the relation between workers and their environments.
a plant sterol that is converted into vitamin D by ultraviolet radiation.
A diseased condition of rye and other cereals, in which the grains become black, and often spur-shaped. It is caused by a parasitic fungus, Claviceps purpurea.
Pertaining to, or derived from, ergot; as, ergotic acid.
An extract made from ergot.
A diseased condition produced by eating rye affected with the ergot fungus.
Affected with the ergot fungus; as, ergotized rye.
a genus of reedlike grasses having spikes crowded in a panicle covered with long silky hairs.
A recompense formerly given by a murderer to the relatives of the murdered person.
A genus of shrubby plants, including the heaths, many of them producing beautiful flowers.
Belonging to the Heath family, or resembling plants of that family; consisting of heats.
an order including the Ericaceae; Clethraceae; Diapensiaceae; Epacridaceae; Lennoaceae; Pyrolaceae; and Monotropaceae.
A colorless oil (quickly becoming brown), with a pleasant odor, obtained by the decomposition of ericolin.
The Vulgate rendering of the Hebrew word qip/d, which in the /Authorized Version/ is translated bittern, and in the Revised Version, porcupine.
A glucoside found in the bearberry (and others of the Ericace/), and extracted as a bitter, yellow, amorphous mass.
A long, winding constellation extending southward from Taurus and containing the bright star Achernar.
a cosmopolitan genus of usually perennial herbs with asterlike flowers; the leaves were formerly used medicinally, but now are only occasionally so used.
Capable of being erected.
a genus including the bearded seal, Erignathus barbatus.
An early, and now a poetic, name of Ireland.
a natural family including the true hedgehogs.
Of the Hedgehog family; like, or characteristic of, a hedgehog.
the type genus of the family Erinaceidae, composed of hedgehogs.
The sea holly. See Eryngo.
A hydrous arseniate of copper, of an emerald-green color; -- so called from Erin, or Ireland, where it occurs.
An avenging deity; one of the Furies; sometimes, conscience personified.
An instrument for measuring the diameters of minute particles or fibers, from the size of the colored rings produced by the diffraction of the light in which the objects are viewed.
a genus of hairy herbs and shrubs of Western North America.
a genus of plant lice of the family Aphididae, consisting of one type of the wooly aphids.
A genus of dipterous insects whose young (called rat-tailed larv/) are remarkable for their long tapering tail, which spiracles at the tip, and for their ability to live in very impure and salt waters; -- also called drone fly.
Controversial.
a genus of songbirds, consisting of certain of the Old World thrushes.
a province of N Ethiopia on the Red Sea.
of or pertaining to Eritrea; as, Eritrean civil war.
Slothful.
A personification, in German and Scandinavian mythology, of a spirit or natural power supposed to work mischief and ruin, esp. to children.
To grieve; to feel sad.
See Ermine.
An Armenian.
To clothe with, or as with, ermine.
Clothed or adorned with the fur of the ermine.
See Note under Ermine, n., 4.
A hermit.
To stir with strong emotion; to grieve; to mourn. [Corrupted into yearn in modern editions of Shakespeare.]
A sea eagle, esp. the European white-tailed sea eagle (Hali/etus albicilla).
See Earnest.
Serious.
To eat into or away; to corrode; as, canker erodes the flesh.
Eaten away; gnawed; irregular, as if eaten or worn away.
A medicine which eats away extraneous growths; a caustic.
To lay out, as money; to deal out; to expend.
The act of giving out or bestowing.
causing sexual excitement when stimulated.
Love; the god of love; -- by earlier writers represented as one of the first and creative gods, by later writers as the son of Aphrodite, equivalent to the Latin god Cupid.
Irregular or uneven as if eaten or worn away.
The act or operation of eroding or eating away.
That erodes or gradually eats away; tending to erode; corrosive.
Without a beak.
A mark indicating a question; a note of interrogation.
A figure of speech by which a strong affirmation of the contrary, is implied under the form of an earnest interrogation, as in the following lines; -
An amorous composition or poem.
Of or pertaining to the passion of love; treating of love; amatory.
Erotic quality.
Herpetologist.
Herpetology.
To wander; to roam; to stray.
Liable to error; fallible.
Liability to error.
Erratic.
A wandering; state of being in error.
A special business intrusted to a messenger; something to be told or done by one sent somewhere for the purpose; often, a verbal message; a commission; as, the servant was sent on an errand; to do an errand. Also, one's purpose in going anywhere.
One who wanders about.
A group of ch/topod annelids, including those that are not confined to tubes. See Ch/topoda.
A wandering; a roving; esp., a roving in quest of adventures.
Plural of erratum. See Erratum.
One who deviates from common and accepted opinions; one who is eccentric or preserve in his intellectual character.
Erratic.
A wandering; a roving about.
An error or mistake in writing or printing.
A medicine designed to be snuffed up the nose, to promote discharges of mucus; a sternutatory. Causing or increasing secretion of nasal mucus.
capable of making an error.
Wandering; straying; deviating from the right course; -- hence, irregular; unnatural.
inadvertent incorrectness.
A wandering; a roving or irregular course.
Full of error; wrong.
One who encourages and propagates error; one who holds to error.
The bitter vetch (Ervum Ervilia).
Of or pertaining to the Celtic race in the Highlands of Scotland, or to their language.
See Arrish.