To form ideals.
An idealist.
In an ideal manner; by means of ideals; mentally.
Of or pertaining to an idealogue, or to idealization.
One given to fanciful ideas or theories; a theorist; a spectator.
To form in idea; to fancy.
The actual existence supposed to correspond with an idea; the correlate in real existence to the idea as a thought or existence.
The faculty or capacity of the mind for forming ideas; the exercise of this capacity; the act of the mind by which objects of sense are apprehended and retained as objects of thought.
Pertaining to, or characterized by, ideation.
The same; the same as above; -- often abbreviated id.
Identical.
The same; the selfsame; the very same; not different; as, the identical person or thing.
In diplomacy (esp. in the form identic), precisely agreeing in sentiment or opinion and form or manner of expression; -- applied to concerted action or language which is used by two or more governments in treating with another government.
In an identical manner; with respect to identity.
The quality or state of being identical; sameness.
Capable of being identified.
The act of identifying, or proving to be the same; also, the state of being identified.
recognized; having the identity established.
To become the same; to coalesce in interest, purpose, use, effect, etc.
serving to distinguish or identify an object, person, species or group; as, we were asked to describe any identifying marks or distinguishing features.
A set of images containing a wide variety of facial features, such as noses, hairlines, chins, etc. on transparencies which can be overlayed in combinations to build up a picture of a person; it is used by police agencies to create concrete images of a crime suspect from the descriptions of witnesses; the image created with the kit is also called an Identikit, or more properly an Identikit picture.
The doctrine taught by Schelling, that matter and mind, and subject and object, are identical in the Absolute; -- called also the system of identity or doctrine of identity.
The state or quality of being identical, or the same; sameness.
An ideo-motor movement.
Applied to those actions, or muscular movements, which are automatic expressions of dominant ideas, rather than the result of distinct volitional efforts, as the act of expressing the thoughts in speech, or in writing, while the mind is occupied in the composition of the sentence.
Of or relating to ideology.
The science which treats of the origin of ideas.
An original, pictorial element of writing; a kind of hieroglyph expressing no sound, but only an idea.
Same as Ideogram.
Of or pertaining to an ideogram; representing ideas by symbols, independently of sounds; as, 9 represents not the word /nine,/ but the idea of the number itself.
The system of writing in ideographic characters; also, anything so written.
The representation of ideas independently of sounds, or in an ideographic manner, as sometimes is done in shorthand writing, etc.
Of or pertaining to ideology.
concerned with or suggestive of ideas; as, an ideologic argument.
One who treats of ideas; one who theorizes or idealizes; one versed in the science of ideas, or who advocates the doctrines of ideology.
an adherent to or advocate of some ideology{3}.
The science of ideas.
The fifteenth day of March, May, July, and October, and the thirteenth day of the other months.
An individual cell, differing greatly from its neighbours in regard to size, structure, or contents.
Idiocracy.
Peculiarity of constitution; that temperament, or state of constitution, which is peculiar to a person; idiosyncrasy.
Peculiar in constitution or temperament; idiosyncratic.
The condition or quality of being an idiot; absence, or marked deficiency, of sense and intelligence.
Same as Idiophanous.
Electric by virtue of its own peculiar properties; capable of becoming electrified by friction; -- opposed to anelectric. An idioelectric substance.
A mark or signature peculiar to an individual; a trade-mark.
Of or pertaining to an idiograph.
Self-worship; excessive self-esteem.
the language or speech of one individual at a particular period in life.
The syntactical or structural form peculiar to any language; the genius or cast of a language.
Of or pertaining to, or conforming to, the mode of expression peculiar to a language; as, an idiomatic meaning; an idiomatic phrase.
Idiomorphous.
Having a form of its own.
Applied to a semipermanent contraction of a muscle, produced by a mechanical irritant.
Idiopathic.
Pertaining to idiopathy; characterizing a disease arising primarily, and not in consequence of some other disease or injury; -- opposed to symptomatic, sympathetic, and traumatic.
A peculiar, or individual, characteristic or affection.
Exhibiting interference figures without the aid of a polariscope, as certain crystals.
Same as Idioplasma.
That portion of the cell protoplasm which is the seat of all active changes, and which carries on the function of hereditary transmission; -- distinguished from the other portion, which is termed nutritive plasma. See Hygroplasm.
Repulsive by itself; as, the idiorepulsive power of heat.
A peculiarity of physical or mental constitution or temperament; a characteristic belonging to, and distinguishing, an individual; characteristic susceptibility; idiocrasy; eccentricity.
Of peculiar temper or disposition; belonging to one's peculiar and individual character.
A man in private station, as distinguished from one holding a public office.
Idiocy.
Rendered idiotic; befooled.
Self-heating; warmed, as the body of animal, by process going on within itself.
Common; simple.
In an idiotic manner.
A dictionary of a peculiar dialect, or of the words and phrases peculiar to one part of a country; a glossary.
Like an idiot; foolish.
An idiom; a form, mode of expression, or signification, peculiar to a language.
To become stupid.
Idiocy.
To spend in idleness; to waste; to consume; -- often followed by away; as, to idle away an hour a day.
Foolish; stupid.
Idle-headed; stupid.
The condition or quality of being idle (in the various senses of that word); uselessness; fruitlessness; triviality; inactivity; laziness.
One who idles; one who spends his time in inaction; a lazy person; a sluggard.
Idleness.
In a idle manner; ineffectually; vainly; lazily; carelessly; (Obs.) foolishly.
An artificial international language, selected by the /Delegation for the Adoption of an Auxillary International Language/ (founded at Paris in 1901), made public in 1907, and subsequently greatly revised and extended by a permanent committee or /Academy./ It is a revised and simplified form of Esperanto. It combines systematically the advantages of previous schemes with a thoroughly logical word formation, and has neither accented constants nor arbitrarily coined pronominal words. For each idea that root is selected which is already most international, on the principle of the /greatest facility for the greatest number of people./ The word /Ido/ means in the language itself /offspring./ The official name is: /Linguo Internaciona di la Delegitaro (Sistema Ido)./
Same as Vesuvianite.
An image or representation of anything.
An idolater.
A worshiper of idols; one who pays divine honors to images, statues, or representations of anything made by hands; one who worships as a deity that which is not God; a pagan.
A female worshiper of idols.
Idolatrous.
To make in idol of; to idolize.
Of or pertaining to idolatry; partaking of the nature of idolatry; given to idolatry or the worship of false gods; as, idolatrous sacrifices.
In a idolatrous manner.
The worship of idols, images, or anything which is not God; the worship of false gods.
Idolatrous.
The worship of idols.
A worshiper of idols.
To practice idolatry.
One who idolizes or loves to the point of reverence; an idolater.
A breaker of idols; an iconoclast.
Descriptive of idols.
Appearance or image; a phantasm; a spectral image; also, a mental image or idea.
Idolatrous.
Appropriate; suitable; proper; fit; adequate.
A morphological unit, consisting of two or more plastids, which does not possess the positive character of the person or stock, in distinction from the physiological organ or biorgan. See Morphon.
A bituminous substance obtained from the mercury mines of Idria, where it occurs mixed with cinnabar.
Of or pertaining to ancient Idumea, or Edom, in Western Asia. An inhabitant of Idumea, an Edomite.
A short poem; properly, a short pastoral poem; as, the idyls of Theocritus; also, any poem, especially a narrative or descriptive poem, written in an eleveted and highly finished style; also, by extension, any artless and easily flowing description, either in poetry or prose, of simple, rustic life, of pastoral scenes, and the like.
Of or belonging to idyls.
In case that; granting, allowing, or supposing that; -- introducing a condition or supposition.
Together.
Pertaining to, or obtained from, nux vomica or St. Ignatius's bean; as, igasuric acid.
An alkaloid found in nux vomica, and extracted as a white crystalline substance.
An Eskimo snow house.
Pertaining to, having the nature of, fire; containing fire; resembling fire; as, an igneous appearance.
Emitting sparks of fire when struck with steel; scintillating; as, ignescent stones.
A worshiper of fire.
Producing fire.
Flowing with fire.
To form into fire.
Produced by the action of fire, as lava.
Power over fire.
Presiding over fire; also, fiery.