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Moonless

Being without a moon or moonlight.

Moonlight

To work at a second job in addition to one's main occupation; -- often done at night, hence the word.

Moonlighter

One who follows an occupation or pastime by moonlight; A moonshiner. In Ireland, one of a band that engaged in agrarian outrages by night. A serenader by moonlight. One who works at a second job in addition to his main occupation.

Moonrise

The rising of the moon above the horizon; also, the time of its rising.

Moonsail

A sail sometimes carried in light winds, above a skysail.

Moonseed

A climbing plant of the genus Menispermum; -- so called from the crescentlike form of the seeds.

Moonset

The descent of the moon below the horizon; also, the time when the moon sets.

Moonshee

A Muslim professor or teacher of language.

Moonshiner

A person engaged in illicit distilling; -- so called because the work is largely done at night.

Moonstone

A nearly pellucid variety of feldspar, showing pearly or opaline reflections from within. It is used as a gem. The best specimens come from Ceylon.

Moonstruck

Mentally affected or deranged by the supposed influence of the moon; lunatic.

moonwalk

a kind of dance step in which the dancer seems to be sliding backward on the spot; as, Michael Jackson perfected the moonwalk in the 1980s.

Moonwort

The herb lunary or honesty. See Honesty. Any fern of the genus Botrychium, esp. Botrychium Lunaria; -- so named from the crescent-shaped segments of its frond.

Moony

A follower of the Rev. Sun Myun Moon; a member of the Unification Church; -- often considered disparaging.

Moor

To cast anchor; to become fast.

moor fowl moorfowl

A reddish-brown grouse (Lagopus Scoticus) of upland moors of Great Britain; the European ptarmigan, or red grouse, also called the moorgame.

Moorball

A fresh-water alga (Cladophora Aegagropila) which forms a globular mass.

Mooress

A female Moor; a Moorish woman.

moorhen

A black gallinule (Gallinula chloropus) that inhabits ponds and lakes.

Mooring

The act of confining a ship to a particular place, by means of anchors or fastenings.

Moorish

Of or pertaining to Morocco or the Moors; in the style of the Moors.

Moorland

Land consisting of a moor or moors.

Moorpan

A clayey layer or pan underlying some moors, etc.

Moorstone

A species of English granite, used as a building stone.

Mooruk

A species of cassowary (Casuarius Bennetti) found in New Britain, and noted for its agility in running and leaping. It is smaller and has stouter legs than the common cassowary. Its crest is bilobed; the neck and breast are black; the back, rufous mixed with black; and the naked skin of the neck, blue.

Moory

A kind of blue cloth made in India.

moose

A large cervine mammal (Alces alces syn. Alces machlis, syn Alces Americanus), native of the Northern United States and Canada. The adult male is about as large as a horse, and has very large, palmate antlers. It closely resembles the European elk, and by many Zoologists is considered the same species. See Elk.

Moosewood

The striped maple (Acer Pennsylvanicum). Leatherwood.

moot

A ring for gauging wooden pins.

Moot

Subject, or open, to argument or discussion; undecided; debatable; mooted.

Moot-hill

A hill of meeting or council; an elevated place in the open air where public assemblies or courts were held by the Saxons; -- called, in Scotland, mute-hill.

Mooter

A disputer of a mooted case.

Mootman

One who argued moot cases in the inns of court.

Mop

To rub or wipe with a mop, or as with a mop; as, to mop a floor; to mop one's face with a handkerchief.

mop-headed

having a bushy top without a leader; -- of trees; as, mop-headed cabbage palms.

Mopboard

A narrow board nailed against the wall of a room next to the floor; skirting board; baseboard. See Baseboard.

Mope

A dull, spiritless person.

Mopish

Dull; spiritless; dejected.

Moplah

One of a class of Muslims in Malabar.

Moppet

A rag baby; a puppet made of cloth; hence, also, in fondness, a little girl, or a woman.

Moquette

A kind of carpet having a short velvety pile.

Mora

Delay; esp., culpable delay; postponement.

Moraine

An accumulation of earth and stones carried forward and deposited by a glacier.

Morale

The moral condition, or the condition in other respects, so far as it is affected by, or dependent upon, moral considerations, such as zeal, spirit, hope, and confidence; mental state, as of a body of men, an army, and the like.

Moralism

A maxim or saying embodying a moral truth.

Moralist

One who moralizes; one who teaches or animadverts upon the duties of life; a writer of essays intended to correct vice and inculcate moral duties.

moralistic

narrowly and conventionally moral; -- of people.

Morality

The relation of conformity or nonconformity to the moral standard or rule; quality of an intention, a character, an action, a principle, or a sentiment, when tried by the standard of right.

Moralization

The act of moralizing; moral reflections or discourse.

Moralize

To make moral reflections; to regard acts and events as involving a moral.

Morally

In a moral or ethical sense; according to the rules of morality.

morals

motivation based on ideas of right and wrong.

Morass

A tract of soft, wet ground; a marsh; a fen.

Moratorium

A period during which an obligor has a legal right to delay meeting an obligation, esp. such a period granted, as to a bank, by a moratory law.

Moratory

Of or pertaining to delay; esp., designating a law passed, as in a time of financial panic, to postpone or delay for a period the time at which notes, bills of exchange, and other obligations, shall mature or become due.

Moravian

One of a religious sect called the United Brethren (an offshoot of the Hussites in Bohemia), which formed a separate church of Moravia, a northern district of Austria, about the middle of the 15th century. After being nearly extirpated by persecution, the society, under the name of The Renewed Church of the United Brethren, was reestablished in 1722-35 on the estates of Count Zinzendorf in Saxony. Called also Herrnhuter.

Morbid

Not sound and healthful; induced by a diseased or abnormal condition; diseased; sickly; as, a morbid condition; a morbid constitution; a morbid state of the juices of a plant.

Morbidezza

Delicacy or softness in the representation of flesh.

Morbidity

The quality or state of being morbid.

Morbidness

The quality or state of being morbid; morbidity.

Morbillous

Pertaining to the measles; partaking of the nature of measels, or resembling the eruptions of that disease; measly.

Morbose

Proceeding from disease; morbid; unhealthy.

Mordacious

Biting; given to biting; hence, figuratively, sarcastic; severe; scathing.

Mordacity

The quality of being mordacious; biting severity, or sarcastic quality.

Mordant

To subject to the action of, or imbue with, a mordant; as, to mordant goods for dyeing.

Mordente

An embellishment resembling a trill.

Mordicant

Biting; acrid; as, the mordicant quality of a body.

More

To make more; to increase.

moreen

A thick woolen fabric, watered or with embossed figures; -- used in upholstery, for curtains, etc.

morel

Nightshade; -- so called from its blackish purple berries.

Morello

A kind of nearly black cherry with dark red flesh and juice, -- used chiefly for preserving.

Morendo

Dying; a gradual decrescendo at the end of a strain or cadence.

Moreover

Beyond what has been said; further; besides; in addition; furthermore; also; likewise.

Morepork

The Australian crested goatsucker (Aegotheles Novae-Hollandiae). Also applied to other allied birds, as Podargus Cuveiri.

Mores

Customs; habits; esp., moral customs conformity to which is more or less obligatory; customary law.

Moresque

Of or pertaining to, or in the manner or style of, the Moors; Moorish. The Moresque style of architecture or decoration. See Moorish architecture, under Moorish.

Morgan

John Pierpont Morgan, a noted American financier and philanthropist; 1837-1913.

Morganatic

Pertaining to, in the manner of, or designating, a kind of marriage, called also left-handed marriage, between a man of superior rank and a woman of inferior, in which it is stipulated that neither the latter nor her children shall enjoy the rank or inherit the possessions of her husband.

Morgay

The European small-spotted dogfish, or houndfish. See the Note under Houndfish.

Morgue

A place where the bodies of dead persons are kept, until they are identified, or claimed by their friends; a deadhouse.

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