Intentionally.
See Intendant, n.
One who intends.
Attention; consideration; knowledge; understanding.
Made tender or soft; softened.
The act or process of intenerating, or the state of being intenerated; softening.
Incapable of holding or containing.
To intensify.
The act or process of intensifying; intensification; climax.
Adding intensity; intensifying.
Intently.
The state or quality of being intense; intensity; as, the intenseness of heat or cold; the intenseness of study or thought.
The act or process of intensifying, or of making more intense.
made more severe or intense, especially in law.
One who or that which intensifies or strengthens; in photography, an agent used to intensify the lights or shadows of a picture.
To become intense, or more intense; to act with increasing power or energy.
increasing in strength or intensity.
Increasing the force or intensity of; intensive; as, the intensitive words of a sentence.
That which intensifies or emphasizes; an intensive verb or word.
In an intensive manner; by increase of degree.
The quality or state of being intensive; intensity.
The act of turning the mind toward an object; hence, a design; a purpose; intention; meaning; drift; aim.
Intention.
Done by intention or design; intended; designed; as, the act was intentional, not accidental. Opposite of unintentional or unintended.
The quality or state of being intentional; purpose; design.
In an intentional manner; with intention; by design; of purpose.
Having designs; -- chiefly used in composition; as, well-intentioned, having good designs; ill-intentioned, having ill designs.
Attentive; intent.
Attentively; closely.
Closeness of attention or application of mind; attentiveness.
In an intent manner; as, the eyes intently fixed.
The state or quality of being intent; close application; attention.
To deposit and cover in the earth; to bury; to inhume; as, to inter a dead body.
To act upon each other; as, two agents mutually interact.
Intermediate action.
Added or placed between the parts of another thing, as a clause inserted parenthetically in a sentence.
Intermediate agency.
An intermediate agent.
Entrail or inside.
Between alveoli; as, the interalveolar septa between adjacent air cells in the lungs.
Of or pertaining to the interambulacra.
In echinoderms, one of the areas or zones intervening between two ambulacra. See Illust. of Ambulacrum.
Situated between rivers.
To animate or inspire mutually.
The interweaving of branches of trees.
Situated between joints or articulations; as, interarticular cartilages and ligaments.
Between atoms; situated, or acting, between the atoms of bodies; as, interatomic forces.
Existing between royal courts.
Between the auricles; as, the interauricular partition of the heart.
Situated in an interaxis.
Situated within or between the axils of leaves.
The space between two axes. See Axis, 6.
Patchwork.
Between the arms.
See Thalamencephalon.
Between the branchi/.
To breed by crossing different stocks of animals or plants.
Intercalary.
Situated between the external and internal carotid arteries; as, an intercarotid ganglion.
Between the carpal bone; as, intercarpal articulations, ligaments.
Within cartilage; endochondral; as, intercartilaginous ossification.
Between the cavernous sinuses; as, the intercavernous sinuses connecting the cavernous sinuses at the base of the brain.
To be, to come, or to pass, between; to separate.
The act of interceding; intercession; intervention.
Passing between; mediating; pleading.
One who intercedes; an intercessor; a mediator.
Lying between cells or cellules; as, intercellular substance, space, or fluids; intercellular blood channels.
Between centers.
The median of the three elements composing the centra of the vertebr/ in some fossil batrachians.
A part cut off or intercepted, as a portion of a line included between two points, or cut off two straight lines or curves.
One who, or that which, intercepts.
The act of intercepting; as, interception of a letter; interception of the enemy.
Intercepting or tending to intercept.
Same as intercepter.
The act of interceding; mediation; interposition between parties at variance, with a view to reconcilation; prayer, petition, or entreaty in favor of, or (less often) against, another or others.
Pertaining to, of the nature of, or characterized by, intercession or entreaty.
To entreat.
Intercessory.
Pertaining to, of the nature of, or characterized by, intercession; interceding; as, intercessory prayer.
To link together; to unite closely or firmly, as by a chain.
To make an interchange; to alternate.
The state or quality of being interchangeable; interchangeableness.
Mutual transfer; exchange.
An intervening or inserted chapter.
The act or state of coming or falling between; occurrence; incident.
Falling or coming between; happening accidentally.
Intercepting; stopping. One who, or that which, intercepts or stops anything on the passage.
A cutting off, through, or asunder; interruption.
The mutual right to civic privileges, in the different States.
See Episternum.
Between the clavicles; as, the interclavicular notch of the sternum. Of or pertaining to the interclavicle.
To shut in; to inclose.
To cloud.
To shut off or out from a place or course, by something intervening; to intercept; to cut off; to interrupt.
Interception; a stopping; obstruction.
Existing or carried on between colleges or universities; as, intercollegiate relations, rivalry, games, etc.
Situated between hills; -- applied especially to valleys lying between volcanic cones.
Between or among colonies; pertaining to the intercourse or mutual relations of colonies; as, intercolonial trade.
Between columns or pillars; as, the intercolumnar fibers of Poupart's ligament; an intercolumnar statue.
The clear space between two columns, measured at the bottom of their shafts.
Combat.
The act of coming between; intervention; interference.
The right or privilege of intercommoning.
Capable of being mutually communicated.
To communicate mutually; to interchange.
Mutual communication.
Mutual communion; as, an intercommunion of deities.
Intercommunication; community of possessions, religion, etc.
Mutual comparison of corresponding parts.
Between condyles; as, the intercondylar fossa or notch of the femur.
To become connected with one another.
having internal connections between parts.
a state of being connected reciprocally.
Connection between; mutual connection.
Between or among continents; subsisting or carried on between continents; as, intercontinental relations or commerce.
Convertible the one into the other; as, coin and bank notes are interconvertible.
Between the ribs; pertaining to, or produced by, the parts between the ribs; as, intercostal respiration, in which the chest is alternately enlarged and contracted by the intercostal muscles.
A commingling; intimate connection or dealings between persons or nations, as in common affairs and civilities, in correspondence or trade; communication; commerce; especially, interchange of thought and feeling; association; communion.
A crop grown among or between the rows of another crop; a catch crop.
The process or result of cross fertilization between different kinds of animals, or different varieties of plants.
Between crura; -- applied especially to the interneural plates in the vertebral column of many cartilaginous fishes.