One who strives to put another under obligation; an officious person; hence, a flatterer. Used also adjectively.
A toothpick.
A small piece of land inclosed with a hedge; a close.
To go on a picnic, or pleasure excursion; to eat in public fashion.
One who takes part in a picnic.
Like or pertaining to the Pici.
Any one of three isometric bases (C6H7N) related to pyridine, and obtained from bone oil, acrolein ammonia, and coal-tar naphtha, as colorless mobile liquids of strong odor; -- called also methyl pyridine.
One of many small loops, as of thread, forming an ornamental border, as on a ribbon.
A variety of carnation having petals of a light color variously dotted and spotted at the edges.
See Piquet.
The powder of aloes with canella, formerly officinal, employed as a cathartic.
A salt of picric acid.
Pertaining to, or designating, a strong organic acid (called picric acid), intensely bitter.
A dark green igneous rock, consisting largely of chrysolite, with hornblende, augite, biotite, etc.
A fibrous variety of serpentine.
A colorless viscous substance having a bitter-sweet taste.
A bitter white crystalline substance found in the cocculus indicus. It is a peculiar poisonous neurotic and intoxicant, and consists of a mixture of several neutral substances.
The hypothetical radical of picric acid, analogous to phenyl.
Of or pertaining to Picts; resembling the Picts.
A picture or hieroglyph representing and expressing an idea.
Of or pertaining to pictures; illustrated by pictures; forming pictures; representing with the clearness of a picture; as, a pictorial dictionary; a pictorial imagination.
Pictorial.
A race of people of uncertain origin, who inhabited Scotland in early times.
Pattern of coloration.
Capable of being pictured, or represented by a picture.
A picture.
To draw or paint a resemblance of; to delineate; to represent; to form or present an ideal likeness of; to bring before the mind.
Furnished with pictures; represented by a picture or pictures; as, a pictured scene.
One who makes pictures; a painter.
Forming, or fitted to form, a good or pleasing picture; representing with the clearness or ideal beauty appropriate to a picture; expressing that peculiar kind of beauty which is agreeable in a picture, natural or artificial; graphic; vivid; as, a picturesque scene or attitude; picturesque language.
Somewhat picturesque.
To picture.
A commercial weight varying in different countries and for different commodities. In Borneo it is 135/ lbs.; in China and Sumatra, 133/ lbs.; in Japan, 133/ lbs.; but sometimes 130 lbs., etc. Called also, by the Chinese, tan.
Any species of very small woodpeckers of the genus Picumnus and allied genera. Their tail feathers are not stiff and sharp at the tips, as in ordinary woodpeckers.
A genus of woodpeckers, including some of the common American and European species.
To deal in trifles; to concern one's self with trivial matters rather than with those that are important.
One who piddles.
Trifling; trivial; frivolous; paltry; -- applied to persons and things.
Any species of Pholas; a pholad. See Pholas.
See Pi.
Having spots and patches of black and white, or other colors; mottled; pied.
To unite by a coalescence of parts; to fit together; to join.
Not made of pieces; whole; entire.
In pieces; piecemeal.
A fragment; a scrap.
Divided into pieces.
One who supplies rolls of wool to the slubbing machine in woolen mills.
One who pieces; a patcher.
Work done by the piece or job; work paid for at a rate based on the amount of work done, rather than on the time employed.
Variegated with spots of different colors; party-colored; spotted; piebald.
Noting the region of foothills near the base of a mountain chain.
A manganesian kind of epidote, from Piedmont. See Epidote.
The state of being pied.
See Pedestal.
A man who makes or sells pies.
See Peen.
Full; having all the instruments.
A plant (Rheum Rhaponticum) the leafstalks of which are acid, and are used in making pies; the garden rhubarb.
An ancient court of record in England, formerly incident to every fair and market, of which the steward of him who owned or had the toll was the judge.
Any detached mass of masonry, whether insulated or supporting one side of an arch or lintel, as of a bridge; the piece of wall between two openings. Any additional or auxiliary mass of masonry used to stiffen a wall. See Buttress.
Same as Wharfage.
To enter; to penetrate; to make a way into or through something, as a pointed instrument does; -- used literally and figuratively.
That may be pierced.
Penetrated; entered; perforated.
A kind of gimlet for making vents in casks; -- called also piercer.
One who, or that which, pierces or perforates An instrument used in forming eyelets; a stiletto. A piercel.
Forcibly entering, or adapted to enter, at or by a point; perforating; penetrating; keen; -- used also figuratively; as, a piercing instrument, or thrust.
Of or pertaining to Pierides or Muses.
Any butterfly of the genus Pieris and related genera. See Cabbage butterfly, under Cabbage.
The Muses.
Blocks of stone or concrete heaped loosely in the water to make a foundation (as for a sea wall), a breakwater, a mole, etc.
The dipper, or water ouzel. The magpie.
A representation of the dead Christ, attended by the Virgin Mary or by holy women and angels.
The principle or practice of the Pietists.
One of a class of religious reformers in Germany in the 17th century who sought to revive declining piety in the Protestant churches; -- often applied as a term of reproach to those who make a display of religious feeling. Also used adjectively.
Of or pertaining to the Pietists; hence, in contempt, affectedly or demonstratively religious.
Veneration or reverence of the Supreme Being, and love of his character; loving obedience to the will of God, and earnest devotion to his service.
The lapwing, or pewit.
An instrument for measuring the compressibility of liquids.
A fife; also, a rude kind of oboe or a bagpipe with an inflated skin for reservoir.
Act of piffling; trifling talk or action; piddling; twaddle.
To bring forth (pigs); to bring forth in the manner of pigs; to farrow.
Having small, deep-set eyes.
Having a head like a pig; hence, figuratively: stupidity obstinate; perverse; stubborn.
Having the upper jaw projecting beyond the lower, with the upper incisors in advance of the lower; -- said of dogs.
Boar hunting; -- so called by Anglo-Indians.
To pluck; to fleece; to swindle by tricks in gambling.
Having a breast like a pigeon, -- the sternum being so prominent as to constitute a deformity; chicken-breasted.
Timid; easily frightened; chicken-hearted.
Pigeon-hearted.
The dove's-foot geranium (Geranium molle).
To place in the pigeonhole of a case or cabinet; hence, to put away; to lay aside indefinitely; as, to pigeonhole a letter or a report.
A place for pigeons; a dovecote.
Having the toes turned in.
A wing of a pigeon, or a wing like it.
Any one of several species of salt-water grunts; -- called also hogfish. A sculpin. The name is also applied locally to several other fishes.
A marine fish (Scorp/na porcus), native of Europe. It is reddish brown, mottled with dark brown and black.
A piggin. See 1st Pig.
A place where swine are kept.
A small wooden pail or tub with an upright stave for a handle, -- often used as a dipper.
Relating to, or like, a pig; greedy.
Pitched; fixed; determined.
A small inclosure.
See Pygmean.
Any material from which a dye, a paint, or the like, may be prepared; particularly, the refined and purified coloring matter ready for mixing with an appropriate vehicle.
Of or pertaining to pigments; furnished with pigments.
A deposition, esp. an excessive deposition, of coloring matter; as, pigmentation of the liver.
Colored; specifically (Biol.), filled or imbued with pigment; as, pigmented epithelial cells; pigmented granules.
Pigmental.
See Pygmy.
To pledge or pawn.
The act of pledging or pawning.
Pledging, pawning.
A pledge or pawn.
See Groundnut (d). The bitter-flavored nut of a species of hickory (Carya glabra syn. Carya porcina); also, the tree itself.
A pen, or sty, for pigs.
The skin of a pig, -- used chiefly for making saddles; hence, a colloquial or slang term for a saddle.
A word of endearment for a girl or woman.
A pigpen.
The tail of a pig.
Having a tail like a pig's; as, the pigtailed baboon.