Everlasting.
the highest mountain in the world, situated in Nepal and Tibet; 29,028 feet high.
A swamp or low tract of land inundated with water and interspersed with hummocks, or small islands, and patches of high grass; as, the everglades of Florida.
An evergreen plant.
Eternal duration, past or future; eternity.
In an everlasting manner.
The state of being everlasting; endless duration; indefinite duration.
Living always; immoral; eternal; as, the everliving God.
During eternity; always; forever; for an indefinite period; at all times; -- often used substantively with for.
Pertaining to Evernia, a genus of lichens; as, evernic acid.
To overthrow or subvert.
The act of eversing; destruction.
Tending to evert or overthrow; subversive; with of.
To overthrow; to subvert.
All the parts which compose a whole collection or aggregate number, considered in their individuality, all taken separately one by one, out of an indefinite number.
Every person.
each one; every one; each of two. See Every.
Every one.
Used or fit for every day; common; usual; as, an everyday suit of clothes.
Everybody; -- commonly separated, every one.
Whatever pertains to the subject under consideration; all things.
At any or all times; every instant.
In every place; in all places; hence, in every part; thoroughly; altogether.
Ubiquity; omnipresence.
See Eavesdrop.
See Eavesdropper.
To investigate.
The common newt or eft. In America often applied to several species of aquatic salamanders.
To vibrate.
To dispossess by a judicial process; to dispossess by paramount right or claim of such right; to eject; to oust.
The act or process of evicting; or state of being evicted; the recovery of lands, tenements, etc., from another's possession by due course of law; dispossession by paramount title or claim of such title; ejectment; ouster.
To render evident or clear; to prove; to evince; as, to evidence a fact, or the guilt of an offender.
One who gives evidence.
Clear to the vision; especially, clear to the understanding, and satisfactory to the judgment; as, the figure or color of a body is evident to the senses; the guilt of an offender can not always be made evident.
Relating to, or affording, evidence; indicative; especially, relating to the evidences of Christianity.
Furnishing evidence; asserting; proving; evidential.
In an evident manner; clearly; plainly.
State of being evident.
A waking up or awakening.
In an evil manner; not well; ill; badly; unhappily; injuriously; unkindly.
See Evil eye under Evil, a.
Possessed of the supposed evil eye; also, looking with envy, jealousy, or bad design; malicious.
Having a bad countenance or appearance; ill-favored; blemished; deformed.
Having evil dispositions or intentions; disposed to mischief or sin; malicious; malignant; wicked.
a person who performs an evil deed; one who sins (without repenting).
evil behavior.
In an evil manner; not well; ill.
The condition or quality of being evil; badness; viciousness; malignity; vileness; as, evilness of heart; the evilness of sin.
To conquer; to subdue.
The act of evincing or proving, or the state of being evinced.
Capable of being proved or clearly brought to light; demonstrable.
Tending to prove; having the power to demonstrate; demonstrative; indicative.
To emasculate; to dispossess of manhood.
Castration.
To take out the entrails of; to disembowel; to gut.
A disemboweling.
Avoidable.
To shun; to avoid.
A shunning; avoidance.
To shun.
Eternal; everlasting.
Eternity.
To call out or forth; to summon; to evoke.
The act of calling out or forth.
Calling forth; serving to evoke; developing.
One who calls forth.
To call out; to summon forth.
Apt to fly away.
A flying out or up.
A curve from which another curve, called the involute or evolvent, is described by the end of a thread gradually wound upon the former, or unwound from it. See Involute. It is the locus of the centers of all the circles which are osculatory to the given curve or evolvent.
The faculty possessed by all substances capable of self-nourishment of manifesting the nutritive acts by changes of form, of volume, or of structure.
The act of unfolding or unrolling; hence, any process of growth or development; as, the evolution of a flower from a bud, or an animal from the egg.
Relating to evolution.
Relating to evolution; as, evolutionary discussions.
The theory of, or belief in, evolution. See Evolution, 6 and 7.
One skilled in evolutions.
To become open, disclosed, or developed; to pass through a process of evolution.
The act of evolving, or the state of being evolved; evolution.
The involute of a curve. See Involute, and Evolute.
To vomit.
The act of vomiting.
To publish abroad.
A divulging.
The act of plucking out; a rooting out.
A yew.
The female of the sheep, and of sheeplike animals.
Having a neck like a ewe; -- said of horses in which the arch of the neck is deficient, being somewhat hollowed out.
A kind of wide-mouthed pitcher or jug; esp., one used to hold water for the toilet.
An office or place of household service where the ewers were formerly kept.
The newt.
Without (some right); not including the right to have; as, a stock selling ex dividend (a stock for which the right to a dividend has expired the previous day); ex interest; ex rights.
a former gambler.
a former mayor.
Proceeding from office or authority.
by virtue of an office or position.
a former president.
a person who has served in the armed forces.
a person who was formerly a spouse.
An offering to a church in fulfillment of a vow.
To render more violent or bitter; to irritate; to exasperate; to imbitter, as passions or disease.
Making worse.
The act of rendering more violent or bitter; the state of being exacerbated or intensified in violence or malignity; as, exacerbation of passion.
Increase of irritation or violence, particularly the increase of a fever or disease.
The act of heaping up.
To remove the kernel form.
Removal of the kernel.
To practice exaction.
An exactor.
Oppressive or unreasonably severe in making demands or requiring the exact fulfillment of obligations; harsh; severe.
The act of demanding with authority, and compelling to pay or yield; compulsion to give or furnish; a levying by force; a driving to compliance; as, the exaction to tribute or of obedience; hence, extortion.
The quality of being exact; exactness.
In an exact manner; precisely according to a rule, standard, or fact; accurately; strictly; correctly; nicely.
The condition of being exact; accuracy; nicety; precision; regularity; as, exactness of judgement or deportment.
One who exacts or demands by authority or right; hence, an extortioner; also, one unreasonably severe in injunctions or demands.
A woman who is an exactor.
To whet or sharpen.
In old writers, the operations concerned in the removal of parts of the body.
To heap up; to accumulate.
Enlarged beyond bounds or the truth.
That exaggerates; enlarging beyond bounds.
The act of heaping or piling up.