Capable of being exhaled or evaporated.
Having the quality of exhaling or evaporating.
The act or process of exhaling, or sending forth in the form of steam or vapor; evaporation.
To rise or be given off, as vapor; to pass off, or vanish.
Exhalation.
Exhalation.
breathing out; exhalation{1}.
The steam let out of a cylinder after it has done its work there.
same as burned-out, 1.
One who, or that which, exhausts or draws out.
Capability of being exhausted.
Capable of being exhausted, drained off, or expended. Opposite of inexhaustible.
Producing exhaustion; as, exhausting labors.
The act of draining out or draining off; the act of emptying completely of the contents.
Serving or tending to exhaust; exhibiting all the facts or arguments; as, an exhaustive method.
Not be exhausted; inexhaustible; as, an exhaustless fund or store.
Exhaustion; drain.
Exhaustion.
See Exedra.
To disinherit.
A disinheriting; disherison.
A disinheriting; disherison.
Any article, or collection of articles, displayed to view, as in an industrial exhibition; a display; as, this exhibit was marked A; the English exhibit.
One who exhibits; one who presents a petition, charge or bill.
The act of exhibiting for inspection, or of holding forth to view; manifestation; display.
One who has a pension or allowance granted for support.
a person with a compulsive desire to expose the genitals; -- usually a male.
compulsively attracting attention to oneself especially by boasting or exaggerated behavior.
Serving for exhibition; representative; exhibitory.
One who exhibits.
Exhibiting; publicly showing.
Exciting joy, mirth, or pleasure. That which exhilarates.
To become joyous.
elated, in high spirits, and envigorated. Opposite of dejected.
That exhilarates; cheering; gladdening.
The act of enlivening the spirits; the act of making glad or cheerful; a gladdening.
Exhortation.
The act of practice of exhorting; the act of inciting to laudable deeds; incitement to that which is good or commendable.
Serving to exhort; exhortatory; hortative.
Of or pertaining to exhortation; hortatory.
One who exhorts or incites.
Disinterred.
The act of exhuming that which has been buried; as, the exhumation of a body.
To dig out of the ground; to take out of a place of burial; to disinter.
See Exsiccate.
See Exsiccation.
Exigency.
The state of being exigent; urgent or exacting want; pressing necessity or distress; need; a case demanding immediate action, supply, or remedy; as, an unforeseen exigency.
See Exigenter.
Exigency; pressing necessity; decisive moment.
An officer in the Court of King's Bench and Common Pleas whose duty it was to make out exigents. The office is now abolished.
That may be exacted; repairable.
Scantiness; smallness; thinness.
Scanty; small; slender; diminutive.
Small; slender; thin; fine.
Banishment.
Pertaining to exile or banishment, esp. to that of the Jews in Babylon.
A sudden springing or leaping out.
Smallness; meagerness; slenderness; fineness, thinness.
Select; choice; hence, extraordinary, excellent.
To make empty; to render of no effect; to humble.
An emptying; an enfeebling; exhaustion; humiliation.
To be as a fact and not as a mode; to have an actual or real being, whether material or spiritual.
The state of existing or being; actual possession of being; continuance in being; as, the existence of body and of soul in union; the separate existence of the soul; immortal existence.
Existence.
Having being or existence; existing; being; occurring now; taking place.
Having existence.
a philosophical theory or attitude having various interpretations, generally emphasising the existence of the individual as a unique agent with free will and responsibility for his or her own acts, though living in a universe devoid of any certain knowledge of right and wrong; from one's plight as a free agent with uncertain guidelines may arise feelings of anguish. Existentialism is concerned more with concrete existence rather than abstract theories of essences; is contrasted with rationalism and empiricism; and is associated with Kierkegaard, Heidegger and Sartre, as well as others.
One who exists.
Capable of existence.
Esteem; opinion; reputation.
having existence or being or actuality; as, much of the beluga caviar existing in the world is found in the Soviet Union and Iran. Opposite of nonexistent.
The departure of a player from the stage, when he has performed his part.
Destructive; fatal.
One of a breed of horned sheep of Devonshire, England, having white legs and face and black nostrils. They are esp. valuable for mutton.
Situated or arising outside of the heart; as, exocardial murmurs; -- opposed to endocardiac.
The outer portion of a fruit, as the flesh of a peach or the rind of an orange. See Illust. of Drupe.
Pertaining to a bone or region on each side of the great foremen of the skull. The exoccipital bone, which often forms a part of the occipital in the adult, but is usually distinct in the young.
A genus of fishes, including the common flying fishes. See Flying fish.
To deprive of eyes.
Departure; exodus; esp., the exodus of the Israelites from Egypt.
Conducting influences from the spinal cord outward; -- said of the motor or efferent nerves. Opposed to esodic.
See Exode.
the branch of dentistry dealing with extraction of teeth.
a dentist specializing in the extraction of teeth.
A going out; particularly (the Exodus), the going out or journey of the Israelites from Egypt under the conduct of Moses; and hence, any large migration from a place.
Exodus; withdrawal.
Relating to exogamy; marrying outside of the limits of one's own tribe; -- opposed to endogenous.
The custom, or tribal law, which prohibits marriage between members of the same tribe; marriage outside of the tribe; -- opposed to endogamy.
A plant belonging to one of the greater part of the vegetable kingdom, and which the plants are characterized by having c wood bark, and pith, the wood forming a layer between the other two, and increasing, if at all, by the animal addition of a new layer to the outside next to the bark. The leaves are commonly netted-veined, and the number of cotyledons is two, or, very rarely, several in a whorl. Cf. Endogen.
Arising or growing from without; exogenous.
same as exogenous.
derived from or originating outside; pertaining to, or having the character of, an exogen; -- the opposite of endogenous.
A genus of Cretaceous fossil shells allied to oysters.
Obsolete; out of use; state; insipid.
See Exsolution.
To loose; to pay.
An officer of the Yeomen of the Guard; an Exempt.
To unload; to disburden; to discharge.
same as exculpated.
The act of disburdening, discharging, or freeing morally from a charge or imputation; also, the state of being disburdened or freed from a charge.
Freeing from a burden or obligation; tending to exonerate.
One who exonerates or frees from obligation.
The protrusion of the eyeball so that the eyelids will not cover it, in consequence of disease.
Of or pertaining to, or characterized by, exophthalmia.
Same as Exophthalmia.
Exophthalmia.
Not sheathed in another leaf.
See Ectosarc, and Ectoplasm.
The external branch of the appendages of Crustacea.
Very desirable.
A name given by Lestiboudois to dicotyledons; -- so called because the plumule is naked.
Capable of being moved by entreaty; pitiful; tender.
To persuade, or to gain, by entreaty.
Entreaty.
A going out of or beyond the usual or due limit; hence, enormity; extravagance; gross deviation from rule, right, or propriety; as, the exorbitances of the tongue or of deportment; exorbitance of demands.
Departing from an orbit or usual track; hence, deviating from the usual or due course; going beyond the appointed rules or established limits of right or propriety; excessive; extravagant; enormous; inordinate; as, exorbitant appetites and passions; exorbitant charges, demands, or claims.
In an exorbitant, excessive, or irregular manner; enormously.
To go out of the track; to deviate.
To cast out, as a devil, evil spirits, etc., by conjuration or summoning by a holy name, or by certain ceremonies; to expel (a demon) or to conjure (a demon) to depart out of a person possessed by one.
An exorcist.