Loading earlier words…
Prosaist

A writer of prose; an unpoetical writer.

Prosal

Of or pertaining to prose; prosaic.

Proscenium

The part where the actors performed; the stage.

Proscolex

An early larval form of a trematode worm; a redia. See Redia.

Proscribe

To doom to destruction; to put out of the protection of law; to outlaw; to exile; as, Sylla and Marius proscribed each other's adherents.

Proscriber

One who, or that which, proscribes, denounces, or prohibits.

Proscript

A proscription; a prohibition; an interdict.

Proscription

The act of proscribing; a dooming to death or exile; outlawry; specifically, among the ancient Romans, the public offer of a reward for the head of a political enemy; as, under the triumvirate, many of the best Roman citizens fell by proscription.

Proscriptive

Of or pertaining to proscription; consisting in, or of the nature of, proscription; proscribing.

Prosector

One who makes dissections for anatomical illustration; usually, the assistant of a professional anatomist.

Prosecutable

Capable of being prosecuted; liable to prosecution.

Prosecution

The act or process of prosecuting, or of endeavoring to gain or accomplish something; pursuit by efforts of body or mind; as, the prosecution of a scheme, plan, design, or undertaking; the prosecution of war.

Prosecutor

One who prosecutes or carries on any purpose, plan, or business.

Proselyte

To convert to some religion, opinion, or system; to bring over.

Proselytism

The act or practice of proselyting; the making of converts to a religion or a religious sect, or to any opinion, system, or party.

Proseminary

A seminary which prepares pupils for a higher institution.

Prosencephalon

The anterior segment of the brain, including the cerebrum and olfactory lobes; the forebrain. The cerebrum.

Prosenchyma

A general term applied to the tissues formed of elongated cells, especially those with pointed or oblique extremities, as the principal cells of ordinary wood.

Prosiliency

The act of leaping forth or forward; projection.

Prosiness

The quality or state of being prosy; tediousness; tiresomeness.

Prosing

Writing prose; speaking or writing in a tedious or prosy manner.

Prosiphon

A minute tube found in the protoconch of ammonites, and not connected with the true siphon.

Prosit

Lit., may it do (you) good; -- a salutation used in well wishing, esp. among Germans, as in drinking healths; -- also used in the contracted form prost.

Prosobranchiata

The highest division, or subclass, of gastropod mollusks, including those that have the gills situated anteriorly, or forward of the heart, and the sexes separate.

Prosocoele

The entire cavity of the prosencephalon.

Prosodical

Of or pertaining to prosody; according to the rules of prosody.

Prosody

That part of grammar which treats of the quantity of syllables, of accent, and of the laws of versification or metrical composition.

Prosoma

The anterior of the body of an animal, as of a cephalopod; the thorax of an arthropod.

Prosopolepsy

Respect of persons; especially, a premature opinion or prejudice against a person, formed from his external appearance.

Prosopopoeia

A figure by which things are represented as persons, or by which things inanimate are spoken of as animated beings; also, a figure by which an absent person is introduced as speaking, or a deceased person is represented as alive and present. It includes personification, but is more extensive in its signification.

Prosopulmonata

A division of pulmonate mollusks having the breathing organ situated on the neck, as in the common snail.

Prospect

To make a search; to seek; to explore, as for mines or the like; as, to prospect for gold.

Prospection

The act of looking forward, or of providing for future wants; foresight.

Prospective

The scene before or around, in time or in space; view; prospect.

Prospector

One who prospects; especially, one who explores a region for minerals and precious metals.

Prospectus

A summary, plan, or scheme of something proposed, affording a prospect of its nature; especially, an exposition of the scheme of an unpublished literary work.

Prosper

To be successful; to succeed; to be fortunate or prosperous; to thrive; to make gain.

Prosperity

The state of being prosperous; advance or gain in anything good or desirable; successful progress in any business or enterprise; attainment of the object desired; good fortune; success; as, commercial prosperity; national prosperity.

Prosperous

Tending to prosperity; favoring; favorable; helpful.

Prosphysis

A growing together of parts; specifically, a morbid adhesion of the eyelids to each other or to the eyeball.

Prost

a contracted form of prosit.

Prostate

Standing before; -- applied to a gland which is found in the males of most mammals, and is situated at the neck of the bladder where this joins the urethra. The prostate gland.

Prostatic

Of or pertaining to the prostate gland.

Prosternum

The ventral plate of the prothorax of an insect.

Prosthesis

The addition to the human body of some artificial part, to replace one that is wanting, as a log or an eye; -- called also prothesis.

Prosthetic

Of or pertaining to prosthesis; prefixed, as a letter or letters to a word.

Prostibulous

Of or pertaining to prostitutes or prostitution; meretricious.

Prostitute

A woman giver to indiscriminate lewdness; a strumpet; a harlot.

Prostitution

The act or practice of prostituting or offering the body to an indiscriminate intercourse with men; common lewdness of a woman.

Prostitutor

One who prostitutes; one who submits himself, of or offers another, to vile purposes.

Prostomium

That portion of the head of an annelid situated in front of the mouth.

Prostrate

To lay fiat; to throw down; to level; to fell; as, to prostrate the body; to prostrate trees or plants.

Prostration

The act of prostrating, throwing down, or laying fiat; as, the prostration of the body.

Prostyle

Having columns in front. A prostyle portico or building.

Prosylogism

A syllogism preliminary or logically essential to another syllogism; the conclusion of such a syllogism, which becomes a premise of the following syllogism.

Protactic

Giving a previous narrative or explanation, as of the plot or personages of a play; introductory.

Protagon

A nitrogenous phosphorized principle found in brain tissue. By decomposition it yields neurine, fatty acids, and other bodies.

Protagonist

One who takes the leading part in a drama; hence, one who takes lead in some great scene, enterprise, conflict, or the like.

Protamin

An amorphous nitrogenous substance found in the spermatic fluid of salmon. It is soluble in water, which an alkaline reaction, and unites with acids and metallic bases.

Protandric

Having male sexual organs while young, and female organs later in life.

Protatic

Of or pertaining to the protasis of an ancient play; introductory.

Proteaceous

Of or pertaining to the Proteace/, an order of apetalous evergreen shrubs, mostly natives of the Cape of Good Hope or of Australia.

Protean

Of or pertaining to Proteus; characteristic of Proteus.

Protect

To cover or shield from danger or injury; to defend; to guard; to preserve in safety; as, a father protects his children.

Protection

The act of protecting, or the state of being protected; preservation from loss, injury, or annoyance; defense; shelter; as, the weak need protection.

Protectionism

The doctrine or policy of protectionists. See Protection, 4.

Protective

Affording protection; sheltering; defensive.

Protector

One who, or that which, defends or shields from injury, evil, oppression, etc.; a defender; a guardian; a patron.

Protectoral

Of or pertaining to a protector; protectorial; as, protectoral power.

Protectorate

Government by a protector; -- applied especially to the government of England by Oliver Cromwell.

Proteg/e Protege

One under the care and protection of another, especially one receiving counseling and assistance in career development.

Proteid

An older, imprecise term replaced by protein.

Proteidea

An order of aquatic amphibians having prominent external gills and four legs. It includes Proteus and Menobranchus (Necturus). Called also Proteoidea, and Proteida.

Proteiform

Changeable in form; resembling a Proteus, or an am/ba.

Protein

any polymer of an amino acid joined by peptide (amide) bonds. Most natural proteins have alpha-amino acids as the monomeric constituents. All classical enzymes are composed of protein, and control most of the biochemical transformations carrie dout in living cells. They may be soluble, as casein, albumins, and other globular proteins, or insoluble (e. g. "structural proteins"), as collagen or keratin. "albumin", an older term for protein, is now used primarily to refer to certain specific soluble globular proteins found in eggs or blood serum, e.g. bovine serum albumin, the main soluble protein in teh serum of cattle, used as an enzymatically inert protein in biochemical research.

Proteles

A South Africa genus of Carnivora, allied to the hyenas, but smaller and having weaker jaws and teeth. It includes the aard-wolf.

Protend

To hold out; to stretch forth.

Loading more words…