A dog.
A German epic poem on the Messiah, by Klopstock.
The expected king and deliverer of the Hebrews; the Savior; Christ.
The state or office of the Messiah.
Of or relating to the Messiah; as, the Messianic office or character.
The Messiah.
The tenth month of the French republican calendar dating from September 22, 1792. It began June 19, and ended July 18. See Vend/miaire.
Sirs; gentlemen; -- abbreviated to Messrs., which is used as the plural of Mr.
Of or pertaining to Messina, or its inhabitans.
An associate in a mess.
A dwelling house, with the adjacent buildings and curtilage, and the adjoining lands appropriated to the use of the household.
Most.
The offspring of a white person and a quadroon; -- so called in the West Indies.
See Mister, a trade.
See Mestizo.
The offspring of an Indian or a negro and a European or person of European stock.
A kind of brass. See Maslin.
A repetition at the end of a stanza.
p. p. of Mete, to dream.
A transition from one subject to another.
A change or mutation; a change of disease, symptoms, or treatment.
A comprehensive group of insects, including those that undegro a metamorphosis.
An insect which undergoes a metamorphosis.
Of or pertaining to metamorphosis; pertaining to, or involving, change.
Metabolism.
The act or process, by which living tissues or cells take up and convert into their own proper substance the nutritive material brought to them by the blood, or by which they transform their cell protoplasm into simpler substances, which are fitted either for excretion or for some special purpose, as in the manufacture of the digestive enzymes. Hence, metabolism may be either constructive (anabolism), or destructive (catabolism).
A product of metabolism; a substance produced by metabolic action, as urea.
To change by a metabolic process. See Metabolism.
Of or pertaining to the lobe of the carapace of crabs covering the posterior branchiae.
Of or pertaining to the metacarpus. A metacarpal bone.
That part of the skeleton of the hand or forefoot between the carpus and phalanges. In man it consists of five bones. See Illust. of Artiodactyla.
The point of intersection of a vertical line through the center of gravity of the fluid displaced by a floating body which is tipped through a small angle from its position of equilibrium, and the inclined line which was vertical through the center of gravity of the body when in equilibrium.
A colorless liquid of an agreeable odor, C6H10O, obtained by distilling a mixture of sugar and lime; -- so called because formerly regarded as a polymeric modification of acetone.
A white, amorphous, insoluble substance regarded as a polymeric variety of chloral.
An error committed in chronology by placing an event after its real time.
The power of changing color at will by the expansion of special pigment cells, under nerve influence, as seen in many reptiles, fishes, etc.
Sulphide of mercury in isometric form and black in color.
A defect in pronouncing the letter m, or a too frequent use of it.
A polymeric modification of acrolein obtained by heating it with caustic potash. It is a crystalline substance having an aromatic odor.
A process projecting backward and downward from the acromion of the scapula of some mammals.
Discoidal by derivation; -- applied especially to the placenta of man and apes, because it is supposed to have been derived from a diffused placenta.
Of or pertaining to the two posterior gastric lobes of the carapace of crabs.
Measurement, especially of coal.
The change of form which one animal species undergoes in a series of successively produced individuals, extending from the one developed from the ovum to the final perfected individual. Hence, metagenesis involves the production of sexual individuals by nonsexual means, either directly or through intervening sexless generations. Opposed to monogenesis. See Alternate generation, under Generation.
Of or pertaining to metagenesis.
Metagenetic.
Cross-billed; -- said of certain birds, as the crossbill.
Anagrammatism.
By or pertaining to metagraphy.
The art or act of rendering the letters of the alphabet of one language into the possible equivalents of another; transliteration.
To cover with metal; as, to metal a ship's bottom; to metal a road.
A hypothetical radical derived from ammonium by the substitution of metallic atoms in place of hydrogen.
Any language that can be used to describe another language or system of symbols.
A form of albumin found in ascitic and certain serous fluids. It is sometimes regarded as a mixture of albumin and mucin.
A white crystalline substance isomeric with, and obtained from, acetic aldehyde by polymerization, and reconvertible into the same.
The continuation of a trope in one word through a succession of significations, or the union of two or more tropes of a different kind in one word.
Exchange; replacement; substitution; metathesis.
Of or pertaining to a metalepsis.
Metaleptic.
Of or pertaining to a metal; of the nature of metal; resembling metal; as, a metallic appearance; a metallic alloy.
See Metallic.
In a metallic manner; by metallic means.
The production and working or manufacture of metals.
Producing metals; yielding metals.
Having the form or structure of a metal.
A substance of variable composition, but resembling a soft, dark-colored metal, used in the bearings of machines for obviating friction, and as a substitute for lubricants.
A worker in metals, or one skilled in metals.
The act or process of metallizing.
To impart metallic properties to; to impregnate with a metal.
A coloring produced by the deposition of some metallic compound; specifically, the prismatic tints produced by depositing a film of peroxide of lead on polished steel by electricity.
The art or process of coloring metals.
A print made by metallography.
Pertaining to, or by means of, metallography.
One who writes on the subject of metals.
The science or art of metals and metal working; also, a treatise on metals.
Having the appearance of a metal.
Metalloid.
An instrument like a pianoforte, but having metal bars instead of strings. An instrument like the xylophone, but having metallic instead of wooden bars.
Metalorganic.
Treatment of disease by applying metallic plates to the surface of the body.
Of or pertaining to metallurgy.
One who works in metals, or prepares them for use; one who is skilled in metallurgy.
The art of working metals, comprehending the whole process of separating them from other matters in the ore, smelting, refining, and parting them; sometimes, in a narrower sense, only the process of extracting metals from their ores.
A worker in metals.
Beyond the scope or province of logic.
Pertaining to, or denoting, any one of a series of compounds of certain metallic elements with organic radicals; as, zinc methyl, sodium ethyl, etc.; now usually organometallic.
Any one of several metameric forms of the same substance, or of different substances having the same composition; as, xylene has three metamers, viz., orthoxylene, metaxylene, and paraxylene; an isomer.
One of successive or homodynamous parts in animals and plants; one of a series of similar parts that follow one another in a vertebrate or articulate animal, as in an earthworm; a segment; a somite. See Illust. of Loeven's larva.
Having the same molecular formula, but possessing a different bonding structure and different properties; as, methyl ether and ethyl alcohol are metameric compounds. See Isomeric.
In a metameric manner.
The symmetry of a metameric structure; serial symmetry; the state of being made up of metameres.
Subject to change; changeable; variable.
The state or quality of being metamorphic; the process by which the material of rock masses has been more or less recrystallized by heat, pressure, etc., as in the change of sedimentary limestone to marble.
One who believes that the body of Christ was merged into the Deity when he ascended.
To metamorphose.
Same as Metamorphosis.
One who metamorphoses.
Changing the form; transforming.
A larval crustacean in a stage following the nauplius, and having about seven pairs of appendages.
Of or pertaining to the metanephros.
The most posterior of the three pairs of embryonic renal organs developed in many vertebrates.
The dorsal portion of the metaphorax of insects.
A salt of metantimonic acid.
Pertaining to, or designating, an acid (formerly called antimonic acid) analogous to metaphosphoric acid, and obtained as a white amorphous insoluble substance, (HSbO3). Formerly, designating an acid, which is now properly called pyroantimonic acid, and analogous to pyrophosphoric acid.
Pertaining to, or designating, a supposed acid obtained from pectin.
A substance obtained from, and resembling, pectin, and occurring in overripe fruits.
An intermediate product formed in the gastric digestion of albuminous matter.
The transference of the relation between one set of objects to another set for the purpose of brief explanation; a compressed simile; e. g., the ship plows the sea.
Of or pertaining to metaphor; comprising a metaphor; not literal; figurative; tropical; as, a metaphorical expression; a metaphorical sense.
One who makes metaphors.
A salt of metaphosphoric acid.
Pertaining to, or designating, a monobasic acid, HPO3, analogous to nitric acid, and, by heating phosphoric acid, obtained as a crystalline substance, commonly called glacial phosphoric acid. Compare the tribasic orthophosphoric acid.
A verbal translation; a version or translation from one language into another, word for word; a literal translation; -- opposed to paraphrase.
Translated literally.
Metaphrase.
A literal translator.
Close, or literal.
Metaphysical.
Of or pertaining to metaphysics.
In the manner of metaphysical science, or of a metaphysician.
One who is versed in metaphysics.