To bind with a belt or sash; to gird.
One who girdles.
See Gyre.
See Gherkin.
any female friend; as, Mary and her girlfriend organized the party.
State or time of being a girl.
Like, or characteristic of, a girl; of or pertaining to girlhood; innocent; artless; immature; weak; as, girlish ways; girlish grief.
A garland; a prize.
To grin.
Of or pertaining to the Girondists.
A garfish.
The Babylonian god of fire; often invoked in incantations against sorcery.
Same as Girth.
To bind as with a girth.
A gantline.
A weapon with a scythe-shaped blade, and a separate long sharp point, mounted on a long staff and carried by foot soldiers.
Guise; manner.
A pledge.
A native hydrated silicate of alumina, lime, and potash, first noticed near Rome.
A resting place.
See Geat.
A Spanish gypsy.
A gown.
The corn cockle; also anciently applied to the Nigella, or fennel flower.
To play on gittern.
A musical instrument, of unknown character, supposed by some to have been used by the people of Gath, and thence obtained by David. It is mentioned in the title of Psalms viii., lxxxi., and lxxxiv.
Same as Joust.
In just, correct, or suitable time.
To give a gift or gifts.
A maneuver in which one offensive player passes the ball to another, then runs toward the basket to take a return pass.
p. p. a. from Give, v.
the quality of being granted as a supposition; of being acknowledged or assumed.
One who gives; a donor; a bestower; a grantor; one who imparts or distributes.
Fetters.
The act of bestowing as a gift; a conferring or imparting.
The space between the eyebrows, also including the corresponding part of the frontal bone; the mesophryon.
The median, convex lobe of the head of a trilobite. See Trilobite.
Becoming smooth or glabrous from age.
To make smooth, plain, or bare.
Smoothness; baldness.
Smooth; having a surface without hairs or any unevenness.
Smoothly coated with icing or crystals of sugar; iced; glazed; -- said of fruits, sweetmeats, cake, etc.
Pertaining to ice or to its action; consisting of ice; frozen; icy; esp., pertaining to glaciers; as, glacial phenomena.
One who attributes the phenomena of the drift, in geology, to glaciers.
To convert into, or cover with, ice.
Act of freezing.
An immense field or stream of ice, formed in the region of perpetual snow, and moving slowly down a mountain slope or valley, as in the Alps, or over an extended area, as in Greenland.
Pertaining to, consisting of or resembling, ice; icy.
A gentle slope, or a smooth, gently sloping bank; especially (Fort.), that slope of earth which inclines from the covered way toward the exterior ground or country (see Illust. of Ravelin).
To be glad; to rejoice.
To be or become glad; to rejoice.
One who makes glad.
An iris (Iris foetidissima) with purple flowers and evil-smelling leaves; Southern and Western Europe and North Africa.
Sword grass; any plant with sword-shaped leaves, especially the European Iris f/tidissima.
The European yellow-hammer.
Full of gladness; joyful; glad.
Sword-shaped; resembling a sword in form, as the leaf of the iris, or of the gladiolus.
Originally, a swordplayer; hence, one who fought with weapons in public, either on the occasion of a funeral ceremony, or in the arena, for public amusement.
Of or pertaining to gladiators, or to contests or combatants in general.
The art or practice of a gladiator.
Conduct, state, or art, of a gladiator.
Gladiatorial.
Swordplay; fencing; gladiatorial contest.
A lilylike plant, of the genus Gladiolus; -- called also corn flag.
The internal shell, or pen, of cephalopods like the squids.
State or quality of being glad; pleasure; joyful satisfaction; cheerfulness.
A state of gladness.
Pleased; joyful; cheerful.
The state of experiencing joy and pleasure.
A four-wheeled pleasure carriage with two inside seats, calash top, and seats for driver and footman.
See Gladen.
To smear with the white of an egg.
See Glair.
Glairy; covered with glair.
A glairy viscous substance, which forms on the surface of certain mineral waters, or covers the sides of their inclosures; -- called also baregin.
Like glair, or partaking of its qualities; covered with glair; viscous and transparent; slimy.
A weapon formerly used, consisting of a large blade fixed on the end of a pole, whose edge was on the outside curve; also, a light lance with a long sharp-pointed head.
A copious gummy secretion of the humor of the eyelids, in consequence of some disorder; blearedness; lippitude.
Same as glamour.
having an air of allure, romance and excitement; as, glamorous movie stars.
Glamour.
To shoot or dart suddenly or obliquely; to cast for a moment; as, to glance the eye.
Shooting, as light.
In a glancing manner; transiently; incidentally; indirectly.
A feeding on nuts or mast.
Affected with glanders; as, a glandered horse.
Of or pertaining to glanders; of the nature of glanders.
A highly contagious and very destructive disease of horses, asses, mules, etc., characterized by a constant discharge of sticky matter from the nose, and an enlargement and induration of the glands beneath and within the lower jaw. It may transmitted to dogs, goats, sheep, and to human beings.
Bearing acorns or other nuts; as, glandiferous trees.
Having the form of a gland or nut; resembling a gland.
Containing or supporting glands; consisting of glands; pertaining to glands.
The situation and structure of the secretory vessels in plants.
A small gland or secreting vessel.
Bearing glandules.
Same as Glandulous.
Quality of being glandulous; a collection of glands.
Containing glands; consisting of glands; pertaining to glands; resembling glands.
Smooth and bright or translucent; -- used almost exclusively of ice; as, skating on glare ice.
A natural family of Old World shorebirds: pratincoles and coursers.
Glairy.
Clear; notorious; open and bold; barefaced; as, a glaring crime.
A dazzling luster or brilliancy.
Of a dazzling luster; glaring; bright; shining; smooth.
The largest city in Scotland; a port in west central Scotland.
To reflect, as in a mirror; to mirror; -- used reflexively.
someone skilled creating objects such as bottles, vases, or other decorative or practical items from molten glass, especially one whose occupation is to make objects by blowing and shaping hot glass in its viscous semiliquid state.
The art and process of creating glass objects, by shaping glass when reduced by heat to a viscid state, using various manipulations with the hands, especially by inflating it by blowing through a tube. The process is used to manufacture a wide variety of useful and ornamental objects. The manufacture of simple glass objects has been automated, but complex glass objects are still made by the traditional hand processes.
The larval state (Phyllosoma) of the genus Palinurus and allied genera. It is remarkable for its strange outlines, thinness, and transparency. See Phyllosoma.
Mirror-faced; reflecting the sentiments of another.
Given to viewing one's self in a glass or mirror; finical.
A remarkable vitreous sponge, of the genus Hyalonema, first brought from Japan. It has a long stem, consisting of a bundle of long and large, glassy, siliceous fibers, twisted together.
A small, transparent, land snail, of the genus Vitrina.
A long, footless lizard (Ophiosaurus ventralis), of the Southern United States; -- so called from its fragility, the tail easily breaking into small pieces. It grows to the length of three feet. The name is applied also to similar species found in the Old World.
A siliceous sponge, of the genus Hyalonema, and allied genera; -- so called from their glassy fibers or spicules; -- called also vitreous sponge. See Glass-rope, and Euplectella.
one who cuts or grinds designs on glass.
Glassy; glazed.
Same as eyeglasses. See eyeglass{1}.
A fish of the great lakes; the wall-eyed pike.
Glassy; shining like glass.
A house where glass is made; a commercial house that deals in glassware.
So as to resemble glass.