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Quench

To become extinguished; to go out; to become calm or cool.

Quencher

One who, or that which, quenches.

Quenchless

Incapable of being quenched; inextinguishable; as, quenchless fire or fury.

Quenelle

A kind of delicate forcemeat, commonly poached and used as a dish by itself or for garnishing.

Quercitannic

Pertaining to, or designating, a tannic acid found in oak bark and extracted as a yellowish brown amorphous substance.

Quercite

A white crystalline substance, C6H7(OH)5, found in acorns, the fruit of the oak (Quercus). It has a sweet taste, and is regarded as a pentacid alcohol.

Quercitin

A yellow crystalline substance, occurring quite widely distributed in the vegetable kingdom, as in apple-tree bark, horse-chestnut leaves, etc., but originally obtained by the decomposition of quercitrin. Called also meletin.

Quercitrin

A glucoside extracted from the bark of the oak (Quercus) as a bitter citron-yellow crystalline substance, used as a pigment and called quercitron.

Quercitron

The yellow inner bark of the Quercus tinctoria, the American black oak, yellow oak, dyer's oak, or quercitron oak, a large forest tree growing from Maine to eastern Texas.

Quercus

A genus of trees constituted by the oak. See Oak.

Querele

A complaint to a court. See Audita Querela.

Querist

One who inquires, or asks questions.

Querl

A coil; a twirl; as, the qwerl of hair on the fore leg of a blooded horse.

Quern

A mill for grinding grain, the upper stone of which was turned by hand; -- used before the invention of windmills and watermills.

Querpo

The inner or body garments taken together. See Cuerpo.

Query

To put questions about; to elicit by questioning; to inquire into; as, to query the items or the amount; to query the motive or the fact.

Quesal

The long-tailed, or resplendent, trogon (Pharomachus mocinno, formerly Trogon resplendens), native of Southern Mexico and Central America. Called also quetzal, and golden trogon.

Quest

To go on a quest; to make a search; to go in pursuit; to beg.

Questant

One who undertakes a quest; a seeker.

Question

To inquire of by asking questions; to examine by interrogatories; as, to question a witness.

Questionable

Admitting of being questioned; inviting, or seeming to invite, inquiry.

Questionableness

The quality or state of being questionable, doubtful, or suspicious.

Questionary

One who makes it his business to seek after relics and carry them about for sale.

questionless

Beyond a question or doubt; doubtless; certainly.

Questman

One legally empowered to make quest of certain matters, esp. of abuses of weights and measures. A churchwarden's assistant; a sidesman. A collector of parish rents.

Questmonger

One who lays informations, and encourages petty lawsuits.

Questor

An officer who had the management of the public treasure; a receiver of taxes, tribute, etc.; treasurer of state.

Questorship

The office, or the term of office, of a questor.

Quet

The common guillemot.

Queue

To fasten, as hair, in a queue.

Quibble

To evade the point in question by artifice, play upon words, caviling, or by raising any insignificant or impertinent question or point; to trifle in argument or discourse; to equivocate.

Quibbler

One who quibbles; a caviler; also, a punster.

Quica

A small South American opossum (Didelphys quica), native of Guiana and Brazil. It feeds upon insects, small birds, and fruit.

Quichuan

Designating, or pertaining to, a linguistic stock of South American Indians, including the majority of the civilized tribes of the ancient Peruvian Empire with some wild tribes never subjugated by the Incas. Most of these Indians are short, but heavy and strong. They are brachycephalic and of remarkably low cranial capacity. Nevertheless, they represent one of the highest of native American civilizations, characterized by agricultural, military, and administrative skill rather than by science or literature, although they were adept potters, weavers, and goldsmiths, and preserved by the aid of the mnemonic quipu a body of legendary lore in part written down since the introduction of writing.

Quick

To revive; to quicken; to be or become alive.

quick-freeze

To freeze rapidly so as to preserve the natural juices and flavors; -- usually used of food or other biologicql matter.

Quick-sighted

Having quick sight or acute discernment; quick to see or to discern.

Quicken

To come to life; to become alive; to become vivified or enlivened; hence, to exhibit signs of life; to move, as the fetus in the womb.

Quickening

The act or process of making or of becoming quick.

Quicklime

Calcium oxide; unslacked lime; -- so called because when wet it develops great heat. See 4th Lime, 2.

Quickly

Speedily; with haste or celerity; soon; without delay; quick.

Quickness

The condition or quality of being quick or living; life.

Quicksand

Sand easily moved or readily yielding to pressure; especially, a deep mass of loose or moving sand mixed with water, sometimes found at the mouth of a river or along some coasts, and very dangerous, from the difficulty of extricating a person who begins sinking into it.

Quickset

To plant with living shrubs or trees for a hedge; as, to quickset a ditch.

Quicksilver

The metal mercury; -- so called from its resemblance to liquid silver.

Quicksilvered

Overlaid with quicksilver, or with an amalgam of quicksilver and tinfoil.

Quickstep

A lively, spirited march; also, a lively style of dancing.

Quickwork

All the submerged section of a vessel's planking. The planking between the spirketing and the clamps. The short planks between the portholes.

Quid

To drop from the mouth, as food when partially chewed; -- said of horses.

Quiddany

A confection of quinces, in consistency between a sirup and marmalade.

Quiddative

Constituting, or containing, the essence of a thing; quidditative.

Quiddit

A subtilty; an equivocation.

Quiddity

The essence, nature, or distinctive peculiarity, of a thing; that which answers the question, Quid est? or, What is it?

Quiddle

To spend time in trifling employments, or to attend to useful subjects in an indifferent or superficial manner; to dawdle.

Quidnunc

One who is curious to know everything that passes; one who knows, or pretends to know, all that is going on.

Quiesce

To be silent, as a letter; to have no sound.

Quiet

To become still, silent, or calm; -- often with down; as, be soon quieted down.

Quieter

One who, or that which, quiets.

Quietism

Peace or tranquillity of mind; calmness; indifference; apathy; dispassion; indisturbance; inaction.

Quietist

One of a sect of mystics originated in the seventeenth century by Molinos, a Spanish priest living in Rome. See Quietism.

Quietistic

Of or pertaining to the Quietists, or to Quietism.

Quietly

In a quiet state or manner; without motion; in a state of rest; as, to lie or sit quietly.

Quietness

The quality or state of being quiet; freedom from noise, agitation, disturbance, or excitement; stillness; tranquillity; calmness.

Quietude

Rest; repose; quiet; tranquillity.

Quietus

Final discharge or acquittance, as from debt or obligation; that which silences claims; (Fig.) rest; death.

Quill

To plaint in small cylindrical ridges, called quillings; as, to quill a ruffle.

Quillback

An American fresh-water fish (Ictiobus cyprinus syn. Carpiodes cyprinus); -- called also carp sucker, sailfish, spearfish, and skimback.

Quilled

Furnished with quills; also, shaped like quills.

Quilling

A band of linen, muslin, or the like, fluted, folded, or plaited so as somewhat to resemble a row of quills. One of the rounded plaits or flutings of such a band.

Quillwort

Any plant or species of the genus Isoetes, cryptogamous plants with a cluster of elongated four-tubed rushlike leaves, rising from a corm, and containing spores in their enlarged and excavated bases. There are about seventeen American species, usually growing in the mud under still, shallow water. So called from the shape of the shape of the leaves.

Quilt

To stitch or sew together at frequent intervals, in order to confine in place the several layers of cloth and wadding of which a garment, comforter, etc., may be made; as, to quilt a coat.

Quilter

One who, or that which, quilts.

Quilting

The act of stitching or running in patterns, as in making a quilt.

Quin

A European scallop (Pecten opercularis), used as food.

Quinaldine

A colorless liquid of a slightly pungent odor, C9H6N.CH3, first obtained as a condensation product of aldehyde and aniline, and regarded as a derivative of quinoline; -- called also methyl quinoline.

Quinary

Consisting of five; arranged by fives.

Quinazol

A complex nitrogenous base related to cinnoline.

Quince

The fruit of a shrub (Cydonia vulgaris) belonging to the same tribe as the apple. It somewhat resembles an apple, but differs in having many seeds in each carpel. It has hard flesh of high flavor, but very acid, and is largely used for marmalade, jelly, and preserves.

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