A medicine that causes perspiration; a diaphoretic or a sudorific.
Haste; diligence.
Winter.
A warming cathartic medicine, made of aloes and canella bark.
One who has high and controlling authority in sacred things; the chief of a sacred order; as, princely hierarchs.
Pertaining to a hierarch.
Of or pertaining to a hierarchy; ordered in a hierarchy.
The principles or authority of a hierarchy.
Dominion or authority in sacred things.
Consecrated to sacred uses; sacerdotal; pertaining to priests.
Government by ecclesiastics; a hierarchy.
In hieroglyphics.
One versed in hieroglyphics.
A form of sacred or hieratic writing.
Written in, or pertaining to, hierograms; expressive of sacred writing.
A writer of hierograms; also, one skilled in hieroglyphics.
Of or pertaining to sacred writing.
Sacred writing.
The worship of saints or sacred things.
Pertaining to hierology.
One versed in, or whostudies, hierology.
A treatise on sacred things; especially, the science which treats of the ancient writings and inscriptions of the Egyptians, or a treatise on that science.
Divination by observing the objects offered in sacrifice.
A priest who becomes a martyr.
The sacred secretary or recorder sent by each state belonging to the Amphictyonic Council, along with the deputy or minister.
A consecrated place; esp., a temple.
See Jeronymite.
The presiding priest who initiated candidates at the Eleusinian mysteries; one who teaches the mysteries and duties of a religion or an arcane discipline; an expositor; as, In his television series /Cosmos/, Carl Sagan became the foremost hierophant of modern cosmology..
Of or relating to hierophants or their teachings.
Divination by inspection of entrails of victims offered in sacrifice.
A receptacle for sacred objects.
A sacred or holy work or worship.
See Highfaluting.
A plant of the genus Verbascum (Verbascum Thapsus); the common mullein. [Also high-taper and hag-taper.]
To hawk or peddle provisions.
In confusion; topsy-turvy.
One who higgles.
To rise; as, the sun higheth.
a chair designed for feeding a very young child, having four long legs and a footrest and a detachable tray, which rests in front of the child, holds the food, and also serves as a restraint, to keep the child from falling out of the chair.
The most ethical and honest method; -- used mostly in the phrase to take the high road (as in an election campaign). Contrasted with low road.
a public secondary school usually including grades 9 through 12; as, he goes to the neighborhood highschool.
the tide when the water is highest; high tide.
conceited and arrogant; imperious.
Inflated, as with conceit.
Bred in high life; of pure blood.
Of lofty structure; tall.
Of or pertaining to, or favoring, the party called the High Church, or their doctrines or policy. See High Church, under High, a.
The principles of the high-church party.
One who holds high-church principles.
The state of being a high-churchman.
Having a strong, deep, or glaring color; flushed.
Having lofty arches.
the branch of particle physics which studies collisions of particles accelerated to such high energy that new fundamental particles are generated in the process. The creation of new particles of very high energy is required to permit the study of the most fundamental relations between forms of matter, so as to understand the fundamental nature of matter. The high energies also reproduce the high-temperature conditions at the earliest phase of the big bang, allowing generation of some data relevant to understanding the nature and evolution of the universe.
Pampered; fed luxuriously.
Finished with great care; polished.
Elevated; proud.
Elated.
A spree; a revel.
Overbearing; oppressive; arbitrary; violent; as, a high-handed act.
Full of courage or nobleness; high-souled.
The European green woodpecker or yaffle.
The flicker; -- called also high-hole.
A laced boot, ankle high.
Having abundance of mettle; ardent; full of fire; as, a high-mettled steed.
Proud; arrogant.
The quality of being highminded; nobleness; magnanimity.
Having high antlers; bearing full-grown antlers aloft.
high in pitch or frequency; -- used of sounds and voices. Opposite of low.
vigorously energetic or forceful.
Having or involving a pressure greatly exceeding that of the atmosphere; -- said of steam, air, water, etc., and of steam, air, or hydraulic engines, water wheels, etc.
The office, dignity, or position of a high priest.
High-priesthood.
Possessed of noble or honorable principles.
Highly rectified; very strongly alcoholic; as, high-proof spirits.
Elevated; raised aloft; upreared.
Reaching high or upward; hence, ambitious; aspiring.
Of a strong red color.
Enriched with spice and condiments; hence, exciting; piquant.
Looking upward; supercilious.
Having a high or noble spirit; honorable.
Pompous; noisy; ostentatious; as, high-sounding words or titles.
same as fast; as, fast film. Opposite of slow.
Full of spirit or natural fire; haughty; courageous; impetuous; not brooking restraint or opposition.
A horse that moves with a high step or proud gait; hence, a person having a proud bearing.
having or moving with a high step; as, a high-stepping horse.
Having a lofty spirit; haughty.
Strung to a high pitch; spirited; sensitive; as, a high-strung horse.
Inflated; boastful.
High in tone or sound.
A ship's masthead.
an important or influential person.
having, operating on, or powered by high voltage; as, a high-voltage generator; a high-voltage line.
Pertaining to water at its highest achieved level; of or pertaining to high water; as, the high-water marks on the walls after a flood.
Wrought with fine art or skill; elaborate.
An alcoholic beverage having a liquor such as whiskey mixed with water or a carbonated beverage, and usually served with ice in a tall glass.
A ruffian; one who hounds, or spies upon, another; app. esp. to the members of certain alleged societies among the Chinese.
a high diving board.
Of noble or aristocratic birth. Contrasted with lowborn and common.
One who lives high; also, in politics, a highflyer.
a person of intellectual or erudite tastes; an intellectual.
highly cultured or educated; pertaining to highly educated people; as, highbrow events such as the ballet or opera.
advanced in complexity or elaboration; as, higher mathematics.
A certificate awarded for completing a course of vocational education beyond secondary school, preparing the student for a career in business or certain practical arts. It is a term used in the United Kingdom.
A computer programming language with an instruction set allowing one instruction to code for several assembly language instructions.
having a rank above that of another.
A superior officer or official; a person having greater rank or station or quality than others; -- used chiefly in pl.
Rising higher; ascending.
Affectedly genteel; pretentious; haughty; snobbish.
High-flown, bombastic language.
One who is extravagant in pretensions, opinions, or manners; one who is highfaluting.
Same as highflier.
Extravagant in opinions or ambition.
Same as highjacking.
The seizure of control of a vehicle while it is in transit, either to rob it or divert it to an alternate destination.
Elevated or mountainous land; (often in the pl.) an elevated region or country; as, the Highlands of Scotland.
of, located in, or characteristic of high or hilly country. Contrasted to lowland.
a soldier in a Scottish Highland regiment.
Highlanders, collectively.
The part of an image that has the most intense light.
In a high manner, or to a high degree; very much; as, highly esteemed.
very complex or intricate; -- used especially of technology.