See Enfeeble.
Not felicitous; unhappy; unfortunate; not fortunate or appropriate in application; not well said, expressed, or done; as, an infelicitous condition; an infelicitous remark; an infelicitous description; infelicitous words.
Not felonious, malignant, or criminal.
Felt inwardly; heartfelt.
See Infeudation.
See Enfeoff.
See Enfeoffment.
Capable of being inferred or deduced from premises.
Deduced or deducible by inference.
By way of inference; using inference.
Sacrifices offered to the souls of deceased heroes or friends.
A person lower in station, rank, intellect, etc., than another.
In an inferior manner, or on the inferior part.
An inhabitant of the infernal regions; also, the place itself.
In an infernal manner; diabolically.
The infernal regions; hell.
One of the Inferobranchiata.
A suborder of marine gastropod mollusks, in which the gills are between the foot and the mantle.
Having the gills on the sides of the body, under the margin of the mantle; belonging to the Inferobranchiata.
Inferable.
Not fertile; not productive; barren; sterile; unable to propagate its kind; as, an infertile soil; an infertile hybrid; -- of living things and of soil or land.
In an infertile manner.
The state or quality of being infertile; unproductiveness; barrenness.
To trouble greatly by numbers or by frequency of presence; to disturb; to annoy; to frequent and molest or harass; as, fleas infest dogs and cats; a sea infested with pirates.
The act of infesting or state of being infested; molestation; vexation; annoyance.
One who, or that which, infests.
Having no mirth; not festive or merry; dull; cheerless; gloomy; forlorn.
Lack of festivity, cheerfulness, or mirth; dullness; cheerlessness.
Mischievous; harmful; dangerous.
One who does not believe in the prevailing religious faith; a heathen; a freethinker; -- used especially by Christians and Muslims.
Arable and manured land kept continually under crop; -- distinguished from outfield.
contention among members of the same organization (usually concealed from outsiders), sometimes of a bitter, intense, or prolonged character.
To arrange in a file or rank; to place in order.
To cover with a film; to coat thinly; as, to infilm one metal with another in the process of gilding; to infilm the glass of a mirror.
To filter or sift in.
To penetrate gradually; -- sometimes used reflexively.
Of or pertaining to infiltration.
That which is infinite; boundless space or duration; infinity; boundlessness.
a series of instructions in a computer program which, when executed, cause a cyclic repetition of the same instructions, with no other action by the program, for as long as the program continues to be executed, or the loop is interrupted by some external action.
A causal relationship transmitted through an indefinite number of terms in a series, with no term that begins the causal chain.
Without bounds or limits; beyond or below assignable limits; as, an infinitely large or infinitely small quantity.
The state or quality of being infinite; infinity; greatness; immensity.
An infinitely small quantity; that which is less than any assignable quantity.
By infinitesimals; in infinitely small quantities; in an infinitesimal degree.
Pertaining to the infinite mood.
In the manner of an infinitive mood.
Infinite; perpetual, as a canon whose end leads back to the beginning. See Infinite, a., 5.
The quality or state of being infinite, or without limits; infiniteness.
Multiplied an infinite number of times.
To weaken; to enfeeble.
A person dwelling in, or having charge of, an infirmary, esp. in a monastic institution.
A hospital, or place where the infirm or sick are lodged and nursed gratuitously, or where out-patients are treated.
Weakening; annulling, or tending to make void.
An infirmary.
The state of being infirm; feebleness; an imperfection or weakness; esp., an unsound, unhealthy, or debilitated state; a disease; a malady; as, infirmity of body or mind.
In an infirm manner.
Infirmity; feebleness.
Something infixed.
A notation for commands or instructions in which the operator is inserted between the terms on which it operates. Contrasted with prefix notation and postfix notation.
To grow morbidly hot, congested, or painful; to become angry or incensed.
Set on fire; enkindled; heated; congested; provoked; exasperated.
The person or thing that inflames.
Susceptibility of taking fire readily; the state or quality of being inflammable.
Capable of being easily set fire; easily enkindled; combustible; as, inflammable oils or spirits.
The quality or state of being inflammable; inflammability.
In an inflammable manner.
The act of inflaming, kindling, or setting on fire; also, the state of being inflamed.
Inflammatory.
Tending to inflame, kindle, or irritate.
That may be inflated.
To expand; to fill; to distend.
Filled, as with air or gas; blown up; distended; as, a balloon inflated with gas.
One who, or that which, inflates; as, the inflaters of the stock exchange.
In a manner tending to inflate.
The act or process of inflating, or the state of being inflated, as with air or gas; distention; expansion; enlargement.
One who favors an increased or very large issue of paper money.
A blowing or breathing into; inflation; inspiration.
To turn from a direct line or course; to bend; to incline, to deflect; to curve; to bow.
Bent; turned; deflected.
The act of inflecting, or the state of being inflected.
Of or pertaining to inflection; having, or characterized by, inflection.
Capable of, or pertaining to, inflection; deflecting; as, the inflective quality of the air.
To incarnate.
To bend; to cause to become curved; to make crooked; to deflect.
Turned; bent.
The quality or state of being inflexible, or not capable of being bent or changed; unyielding stiffness; inflexibleness; rigidity; firmness of will or purpose; unbending pertinacity; steadfastness; resoluteness; unchangeableness; obstinacy.
Not capable of being bent; stiff; rigid; firm; unyielding.
The quality or state of being inflexible; inflexibility; rigidity; firmness.
In an inflexible manner.
Inflection.
Inflective.
An inflection; a bend or fold.
To give, cause, or produce by striking, or as if by striking; to apply forcibly; to lay or impose; to send; to cause to bear, feel, or suffer; as, to inflict blows; to inflict a wound with a dagger; to inflict severe pain by ingratitude; to inflict punishment on an offender; to inflict the penalty of death on a criminal.
One who inflicts.
The act of inflicting or imposing; as, the infliction of torment, or of punishment.
Causing infliction; acting as an infliction.
A flowering; the putting forth and unfolding of blossoms.
To flow in.
flowing inward.
To control or move by power, physical or moral; to affect by gentle action; to exert an influence upon; to modify, bias, or sway; to affect; to move; to persuade; to induce.
One who, or that which, influences.
Tending to influence; influential.
Flowing in.
Exerting or possessing influence or power; potent; efficacious; effective; strong; having authority or ascendency; as, an influential man, station, argument, etc.
In an influential manner.
An epidemic viral infectious disease characterized by acute nasal catarrh, or by inflammation of the throat or the bronchi, and usually accompanied by fever and general weakness; also called grippe. It is caused by several forms of RNA virus which mutate readily and thereby render vaccines prepared against older forms ineffective, often requiring a new form of vaccine for each new outbreak.
The act of flowing in; as, an influx of light.
A flowing in; infusion.
Influential.
Having a tendency to flow in; having influence; influential.
By influxion.
To wrap up or cover with folds; to envelop; to inwrap; to inclose; to involve.
The act of infolding; the state of being infolded.
To cover or overspread with, or as with, leaves.
To take form; to become visible or manifest; to appear.
Not in the regular, usual, or established form; not according to official, conventional, prescribed, or customary forms or rules; irregular; hence, without ceremony; as, an informal writing, proceeding, or visit.
The state of being informal; lack of regular, prescribed, or customary form; as, the informality of legal proceedings.
In an informal manner.
One who, or that which, informs, animates, or vivifies.
The act of informing, or communicating knowledge or intelligence.
information{4}.