The outer membrane of the grains of pollen of flowering plants.
To quench; to put out, as a light or fire; to stifle; to cause to die out; to put an end to; to destroy; as, to extinguish a flame, or life, or love, or hope, a pretense or a right.
Capable of being quenched, destroyed, or suppressed.
caused to die out because of the absence or withdrawal of reinforcement; -- of a conditioned response.
One who, or that which, extinguishes; esp., a hollow cone or other device for extinguishing a flame, as of a torch or candle.
The act of extinguishing, putting out, or quenching, or the state of being extinguished; extinction; suppression; destruction; nullification; as, the extinguishment of fire or flame, of discord, enmity, or jealousy, or of love or affection.
To extirpate.
Capable of being extirpated or eradicated; as, an extirpable plant.
To pluck up by the stem or root; to root out; to eradicate, literally or figuratively; to destroy wholly; as, to extirpate weeds; to extirpate a tumor; to extirpate a sect; to extirpate error or heresy.
The act of extirpating or rooting out, or the state of being extirpated; eradication; excision; total destruction; as, the extirpation of weeds from land, of evil from the heart, of a race of men, of heresy.
Capable of rooting out, or tending to root out.
One who extirpates or roots out; a destroyer.
Extirpative.
Extirpator.
Relating to the inspection of entrails for prognostication.
Exogenous.
To place on high; to lift up; to elevate.
One who extols; one who praises.
Praise.
Serving or tending to extort.
Extorted.
One who practices extortion.
The act of extorting; the act or practice of wresting anything from a person by force, by threats, or by any undue exercise of power; undue exaction; overcharge.
Extortionate.
Characterized by extortion; oppressive; hard.
One who practices extortion; an extortionist.
One who practices extortion.
Extortionate.
Something in addition to what is due, expected, or customary; esp., an added charge or fee, or something for which an additional charge is made; as, at some hotels air conditioning is an extra.
Inserted exterior to the eyes; -- said of the antenn/ of certain insects.
Not prescribed by official duty.
Outside of the uterus, or womb.
Situated outside of a joint.
Growing outside of the axils; as, an extra-axillary bud.
Outside of the branchial arches; -- said of the cartilages thus placed in some fishes.
Situated outside of a capsule, esp. outside the capsular ligament of a joint.
located or occurring outside of a living cell or cells; as, extracellular fluid. Opposite of intracellular.
That which is extracted or drawn out.
Capable of being extracted.
Having the form, appearance, or nature, of an extract.
The act of extracting, or drawing out; as, the extraction of a tooth, of a bone or an arrow from the body, of a stump from earth, of a passage from a book, of an essence or tincture.
Anything extracted; an extract.
One who, or that which, extracts A forceps or instrument for extracting substances. A device for withdrawing a cartridge or spent cartridge shell from the chamber of the barrel.
Consisting not in words, but in realities.
Subject, or liable, to extradition, as a fugitive from justice.
To deliver up by one government to another, as a fugitive from justice. See Extradition.
The surrender or delivery of an alleged criminal by one State or sovereignty to another having jurisdiction to try charge.
The exterior curve of an arch; esp., the upper curved face of the whole body of voussoirs. See Intrados.
Forming no part of the dowry; as, extradotal property.
Away from the leaves, or inserted in a different place from them; as, extrafoliaceous prickles.
Pertaining to that which is out of doors.
Belonging to another race or kind.
Out of or beyond the power authority of a court or judge; beyond jurisdiction; not valid as a part of a judicial proceeding; as, extrajudicial oaths, judgments, etc., are null and void.
Being beyond the limit or bounds; as, extraliminary land.
Lying outside of the domain of logic.
A sending out; emission.
Beyond the material world.
Outside of the walls, as of a fortified or walled city.
State of being without or beyond a thing; foreignness.
Not belonging to, or dependent upon, a thing; without or beyond a thing; not essential or intrinsic; foreign; as, to separate gold from extraneous matter.
In an extraordinary manner or degree.
The quality of being extraordinary.
That which is extraordinary; -- used especially in the plural; as, extraordinaries excepted, there is nothing to prevent success.
Beyond the limits of a parish.
Not subject to physical laws or methods.
Foreign to a profession; not within the ordinary limits of professional duty or business.
Not within of pertaining to the same province or jurisdiction.
Not comprehended within a rule or rules.
the ability to perceive or gain information about external facts or events by means other than the senses.
Pertaining to a part of the columella of the ear, which, in many animals, projects beyond the connection with the stapes. The extrastapedial part of columella.
a hypothetical form of life existing outside the Earth or its atmosphere, especially intelligent life on other planets or in other solar systems; as, what would you say to an extraterrestrial?.
Beyond the limits of a territory or particular jurisdiction; exterritorial.
The state of being beyond the limits of a particular territory A fiction by which a public minister, though actually in a foreign country, is supposed still to remain within the territory of his own sovereign or nation.
Beyond or outside of the tropics.
Extracted; descended.
A wandering beyond proper limits; an excursion or sally from the usual way, course, or limit.
Extravagance.
One who is confined to no general rule.
In an extravagant manner; wildly; excessively; profusely.
The state of being extravagant or in excess; excess; extravagance.
A composition, as in music, or in the drama, designed to produce effect by its wild irregularity; esp., a musical caricature.
To rove.
A wandering beyond limits; excess.
To pass by infiltration or effusion from the normal channel, such as a blood vessel or a lymphatic, into the surrounding tissue; -- said of blood, lymph, etc.
The act of forcing or letting out of its proper vessels or ducts, as a fluid; effusion; as, an extravasation of blood after a rupture of the vessels.
Outside the vessels; -- said of the substance of all the tissues. Destitute of vessels; non-vascular.
Let out of the veins.
The act of throwing out; the state of being turned or thrown out.
Extraction.
The utmost point or verge; that part which terminates a body; extremity.
Having no extremes; infinite.
In an extreme manner or state; in the utmost degree; to the utmost point; exceedingly; as, extremely hot or cold.
A supporter of extreme doctrines or practice; one who holds extreme opinions.
The extreme part; the utmost limit; the farthest or remotest point or part; as, the extremities of a country.
the point located farthest from the middle of something.
Capable of being extricated.
To free, as from difficulties or perplexities; to disentangle; to disembarrass; as, to extricate a person from debt, peril, etc.
freed from an entanglement or difficulty.
The act or process of extricating or disentangling; a freeing from perplexities; disentanglement.
Not contained in or belonging to a body; external; outward; unessential; -- opposed to intrinsic.
Extrinsic.
The state or quality of being extrinsic.
Seeking or going out after external objects.
Extrorse.
Facing outwards, or away from the axis of growth; -- said esp. of anthers occupying the outer side of the filament.
The condition of being turned wrong side out; as, extroversion of the bladder.
A person who is extroverted; a person who is marked by an interest in others or concerned primarily with external reality. Contrasted with introvert.
directed outward; marked by an interest in other people or concerned primarily with external reality.
To construct.
A building up; construction.
Constructive.
A builder.
To thrust out; to force, press, or push out; to expel; to drive off or away.
The act of thrusting or pushing out; a driving out; expulsion.
Forced out at the surface; as, extrusive rocks; -- contrasted with intrusive.
A swelling or rising; protuberance.
Extuberance.
Swollen out; protuberant.
To swell out.
Protuberance.
A swelling or rising.