State of being interior.
to incorporate within oneself.
Internally; inwardly.
The state of being between; a coming or lying between or among; intervention; also, that which lies between.
Lying or being between or among; intervening; as, interjacent isles.
To ejaculate parenthetically.
To make a dissonant, discordant noise one with another; to talk or chatter noisily.
To throw one's self between or among; to come between; to interpose.
Thrown in between other words or phrases; parenthetical; ejaculatory; as, an interjectional remark.
To convert into, or to use as, an interjection.
In an interjectional manner.
Interjectional.
To join mutually; to unite.
The space or interval between two joists.
A mutual joining.
To knit together; to unite closely; to intertwine.
To know mutually.
Mutual knowledge or acquaintance.
To unite, as by lacing together; to insert or interpose one thing within another; to intertwine; to interweave.
The act of interlacing, or the state of being interlaced; also, that which is interlaced.
Between lammell/ or lamin/; as, interlamellar spaces.
Placed between, or containing, lamin/ or plates.
The state of being interlaminated.
The lapse or interval of time between two events.
To lay or place among or between.
A leaf inserted between other leaves; a blank leaf inserted, as in a book.
To insert a leaf or leaves in; to bind with blank leaves inserted between the others; as, to interleave a book.
To libel mutually.
Contained between lines; written or inserted between lines already written or printed; containing interlineations; as, an interlinear manuscript, translation, etc.
Interlinear. A book containing interlineations.
A language used as an intermediate language in translating from a source language to a target language; -- used especially in machine translation by computers; as, some machine translation systems use Esperanto as an interlingua.
Correction or alteration by writing between the lines; interlineation.
An intermediate or connecting link.
Between lobes; as, the interlobar notch of the liver; the interlobar ducts of a gland.
Between lobules; as, the interlobular branches of the portal vein.
A placing or coming between; interposition.
To unite by locking or linking together; to secure in place by mutual fastening.
Connected together in such a manner that the parts work together as a single unit, or in a coordianted manner.
Interpolated discussion or dialogue.
A female interlocutor.
To run between parties and intercept without right the advantage that one should gain from the other; to traffic without a proper license; to intrude; to forestall others; to intermeddle.
One who interlopes; one who unlawfully intrudes upon a property, a station, or an office; one who interferes wrongfully or officiously.
To let in light upon, as by cutting away branches.
Act of thinning a wood to let in light.
Shining between.
Inserted in the manner of an interlude; having or containing interludes.
An actor who performs in an interlude.
A flowing between; intervening water.
Belonging or pertaining to the time when the moon, at or near its conjunction with the sun, is invisible.
Between the mandibles; interramal; as, the intermandibular space.
Connection by marriage; reciprocal marriage; giving and taking in marriage, as between two families, tribes, races, castes, or nations.
To become connected by marriage between their members; to give and take mutually in marriage; -- said of families, ranks, races, castes, etc.
See Premaxilla.
Between the maxillary bones. Of or pertaining to the intermaxill/. An intermaxilla.
Something done in the meantime; interlude.
A flowing between.
To intermix; to mingle.
One who meddles with, or intrudes into, the affairs of others.
Inclined or disposed to intermeddle.
The act of improperly interfering.
A short musical dramatic piece, of a light and pleasing, sometimes a burlesque, character; an interlude introduced between the acts of a play or an opera.
Interposition; intervention.
The middle pair of tail feathers, or middle rectrices.
Lying between; intervening; intermediate.
Intermediate.
One who, or that which, is intermediate; an interagent; a go-between; a mediator.
A person who intermediates between others, especially in negotiations; an intermediary; a mediator.
A school having grades at a level between the lower primary grades and the upper secondary grades, being variously grades 4 through 6, or grades 7 through 9, etc.
In an intermediate manner; by way of intervention.
The act of coming between; intervention; mediation; interposition.
A mediator.
Intermediate.
To intermeddle; to intermix.
Between members or limbs; as, intermembral homology, the correspondence of the limbs with each other.
Within or beneath a membrane; as, intermembranous ossification.
The act or ceremony of depositing a dead body in the earth; burial; sepulture; inhumation.
To mention among other things, or casually or incidentally.
Within the mesentery; as, the intermesenteric, or aortic, plexus.
Between the metacarpal bones.
Between the metatarsal bones.
An interlude; an intermede. See Intermede.
To flash or shine between or among.
A shining between or among.
Reciprocal migration; interchange of dwelling place by migration.
Without termination; admitting no limit; boundless; endless; wearisomely protracted; as, interminable space or duration; interminable sufferings; an interminable sermon.
The state of being endless.
Without end or limit.
To menace; to threaten.
Interminable; interminate; endless; unending.
A menace or threat.
To intersect or penetrate with mines.
To be mixed or incorporated.
Interference; interposition.
Having temporary cessations; not continual; intermittent.
To cease for a time or at intervals; to moderate; to be intermittent, as a fever.
Act or state of intermitting; intermission.
An intermittent fever or disease.
With intermissions; in an intermittent manner; intermittingly.
With intermissions; at intervals.
To be mixed together; to be intermingled.
In a mixed manner.
A mass formed by mixture; a mass of ingredients mixed.
Capacity of things to move among each other; as, the intermobility of fluid particles.
The space between two modillions.
Between mountains; as, intermontane soil.
Being, between worlds or orbs.
Intermundane.
Lying between walls; inclosed by walls.
To wall in; to inclose.
Between muscles; as, intermuscular septa.
Interchange; mutual or reciprocal change.
Mutual.
To put for safe keeping in the interior of a place or country; to confine to one locality; as, to intern troops which have fled for refuge to a neutral country.
A resident physician in a hospital, especially one who has recently received the Doctorate and is practising under supervision of experienced physicians, as a continuation of the training process; a house physician; also called houseman in Britain.
Designating, or pertaining to, any engine (called an Internal-combustion engine) in which the heat or pressure energy necessary to produce motion is developed in the engine cylinder, as by the explosion of a gas, and not in a separate chamber, as in a steam-engine boiler. The gas used may be a fixed gas, or one derived from alcohol, ether, gasoline (petrol), naphtha, oil (petroleum), etc. There are three main classes: (1) gas engines proper, using fixed gases, as coal, blast-furnace, or producer gas; (2) engines using the vapor of a volatile fluid, as the typical gasoline (petrol) engine; (3) oil engines, using either an atomized spray or the vapor (produced by heat) of a comparatively heavy oil, as petroleum or kerosene. In all of these the gas is mixed with a definite amount of air, the charge is composed in the cylinder and is then exploded either by a flame of gas (flame ignition -- now little used), by a hot tube (tube ignition) or the like, by an electric spark (electric ignition, the usual method is gasoline engines, or by the heat of compression, as in the Diesel engine. Gas and oil engines are chiefly of the stationary type. Gasoline engines are largely used for automobile vehicles, boats, etc. Most internal-combustion engines use the Otto (four-stroke) cycle, though many use the two-stroke cycle. They are almost universally trunk engines and single-acting. Because of the intense heat produced by the frequent explosions, the cylinders must be cooled by a water jacket (water-cooled) or by air currents (air cooled) to give the maximum thermodynamic efficiency and to avoid excessive friction or seizing.
Same as internalize.
The state of being internal or within; interiority.
learning (of values or attitudes etc.) that is incorporated within yourself.
to incorporate within oneself.
Inwardly; within the enveloping surface, or the boundary of a thing; within the body; beneath the surface.
Between the nasal cavities; as, the internasal cartilage.