A female intruder.
To inclose as in a trunk; to incase.
Of or pertaining to intrusion.
One who intrudes; especially, one who favors the appointment of a clergyman to a parish, by a patron, against the wishes of the parishioners.
Apt to intrude; characterized by intrusion; entering without right or welcome.
To deliver (something) to another in trust; to deliver to (another) something in trust; to commit or surrender (something) to another with a certain confidence regarding his care, use, or disposal of it; as, to intrust a servant with one's money or intrust money or goods to a servant.
The introduction of a tube into an organ to keep it open, as into the larynx in croup.
Pertaining to, or derived from, intuition; characterized by intuition; perceived by intuition; intuitive.
The doctrine that the perception or recognition of primary truth is intuitive, or direct and immediate; -- opposed to sensationalism, and experientialism.
One who holds the doctrine of intuitionalism.
Same as Intuitionalism.
Same as Intuitionalist.
In an intuitive manner.
The doctrine that the ideas of right and wrong are intuitive.
To enlarge or expand with heat; to swell; specifically, to swell up or bubble up under the action of heat, as before the blowpipe.
Swelling up; expanding.
Unburied.
To intone. Cf. Entune.
To render turbid; to darken; to confuse.
A swelling; the act of swelling, or state of being swelled.
A bruise; a contusion.
Received into some other thing or part, as a sword into a sheath; invaginated.
To be or to become intwined.
The act of intwining, or the state of being intwined.
To twist into or together; to interweave.
See Innuendo.
A substance of very wide occurrence. It is found dissolved in the sap of the roots and rhizomes of many composite and other plants, as Inula, Helianthus, Campanula, etc., and is extracted by solution as a tasteless, white, semicrystalline substance, resembling starch, with which it is isomeric, having fructose units in place of most of the glucose units. It is intermediate in nature between starch and sugar, and replaces starch as the reserve food in Compositae. Called also dahlin, helenin, alantin, alant starch, etc.
A substance resembling inulin, found in the unripe bulbs of the dahlia.
To shade; to darken.
Anointed.
The act of anointing, or the state of being anointed; unction; specifically (Med.), the rubbing of ointments into the pores of the skin, by which medicinal agents contained in them, such as mercury, iodide of potash, etc., are absorbed.
The lack of unctuosity; freedom from greasiness or oiliness; as, the inunctuosity of porcelain clay.
Overflowing.
Void of understanding.
Uncivil; unpolished; rude. Opposite of urbane.
Lack of urbanity or courtesy; unpolished manners or deportment; inurbaneness; rudeness.
To pass into use; to take or have effect; to be applied; to serve to the use or benefit of; as, a gift of lands inures to the heirs.
Use; practice; discipline; habit; custom.
To put in an urn, as the ashes of the dead; hence, to bury; to intomb.
Unusual.
Lack of use; disuse.
Burnt in.
The act of burning or branding.
Useless; unprofitable.
Uselessness; the quality of being unprofitable; unprofitableness; as, the inutility of vain speculations and visionary projects.
Unutterable; inexpressible.
To make an invasion.
One who invades; an assailant; an encroacher; an intruder.
same as invasive{1}.
To insert as in a sheath; to produce intussusception in.
Sheathed. Having one portion of a hollow organ drawn back within another portion.
Strength; health.
Wanting health; valetudinary.
To make or render invalid or infirm.
To render invalid; to weaken or lessen the force of; to destroy the authority of; to render of no force or effect; to overthrow; as, to invalidate an agreement or argument.
deprived of legal force.
tending to invalidate or prove false.
The act of inavlidating, or the state of being invalidated.
See Invalid, n.
The condition of an invalid; sickness; infirmity.
Invalidity; as, the invalidness of reasoning.
Not valorous; cowardly.
Valuable beyond estimation; inestimable; priceless; precious.
Inestimably.
Inestimable.
The quality of being invariable; invariableness; constancy; uniformity.
An invariable quantity; a constant.
Always; in every case.
The property of remaining invariable under prescribed or implied conditions.
An invariable quantity; specifically, a function of the coefficients of one or more forms, which remains unaltered, when these undergo suitable linear transformations.
Tending to invade; characterized by invasion; aggressive.
To inveigh.
Having a border or outline composed of semicircles with the convexity outward; -- the opposite of engrailed.
An inveighing against; invective.
An expression which inveighs or rails against a person; a severe or violent censure or reproach; something uttered or written, intended to cast opprobrium, censure, or reproach on another; a harsh or reproachful accusation; -- followed by against, having reference to the person or thing affected; as, an invective against tyranny.
In an invective manner.
To declaim or rail (against some person or thing); to utter censorious and bitter language; to attack with harsh criticism or reproach, either spoken or written; to use invectives; -- with against; as, to inveigh against character, conduct, manners, customs, morals, a law, an abuse.
One who inveighs.
To lead astray as if blind; to persuade to something evil by deceptive arts or flattery; to entice; to insnare; to seduce; to wheedle.
The act of inveigling, or the state of being inveigled; that which inveigles; enticement; seduction.
One who inveigles.
To cover, as with a veil.
The quality of being invendible; invendibleness; unsalableness.
Not vendible or salable.
See Envenom.
One who invents.
Full of invention.
Capable of being invented.
Quality of being inventible.
Inventive.
Able and apt to invent; quick at contrivance; ready at expedients; as, an inventive head or genius.
One who invents or finds out something new; a contriver; especially, one who invents mechanical devices, new drugs, new processes, or other useful objects or procedures.
Of or pertaining to an inventory.
To make an inventory of; to make a list, catalogue, or schedule of; to insert or register in an account of goods; as, a merchant inventories his stock.
the act or process of making an inventory; making an itemized list of merchandise or supplies on hand.
A woman who invents.
Lack of veracity.
Lack of verisimilitude or likelihood; improbability.
A kind of full sleeveless cape, fitting closely about the neck.
That which is inverse.
In an inverse order or manner; by inversion; -- opposed to directly.
An inverted arch.
An enzyme capable of effecting the inversion of cane suger, producing invert sugar. It is found in many plants and in the intestines of animals. By extension, any enzyme which splits cane sugar, milk sugar, lactose, etc., into monosaccharides.
Same as Invertebrate.
A comprehensive division of the animal kingdom, including all except the Vertebrata.
Destitute of a backbone; having no vertebr/; of or pertaining to the Invertebrata. One of the Invertebrata.
Having no backbone; invertebrate.
A device which converts direct current to alternating current.
In an inverted order.
Incapable of being turned or changed.
An enzyme which causes cane sugar to take up a molecule of water and be converted into invert sugar.
To make an investment; as, to invest in stocks; -- usually followed by in.
Covering; clothing.
Unsearchable; inscrutable.
To pursue a course of investigation and study; to make investigation.
the work of inquiring into something thoroughly and systematically.
The act of investigating; the process of inquiring into or following up; research; study; inquiry, esp. patient or thorough inquiry or examination; as, the investigations of the philosopher and the mathematician; the investigations of the judge, the moralist.
Given to investigation; inquisitive; curious; searching.
One who searches diligently into a subject.
Of or pertaining to an investigation; accomplished by investigation; designed to find information or ascertain facts; as, investigatory committee; the investigatory excesses of the prosecutor.
the act or process of expending resources, especially money, to achieve rewards.