To speak or utter again.
The act of noticing with attention; the giving particular consideration to; hence, care; caution.
The state or quality of being respectable; the state or quality which deserves or commands respect.
Worthy of respect; fitted to awaken esteem; deserving regard; hence, of good repute; not mean; as, a respectable citizen.
Placed so as to face one another; -- said of animals.
One who respects.
Marked or characterized by respect; as, respectful deportment.
With regard or relation to; regarding; concerning; as, respecting his conduct there is but one opinion.
The act of respecting; respect; regard.
Noticing with attention; hence, careful; wary; considerate.
As relating to each; particularly; as each belongs to each; as each refers to each in order; as, let each man respectively perform his duty.
Having no respect; without regard; regardless.
Respectful; as, a respectuous silence.
To spell again.
To sprinkle; to scatter.
The act of sprinkling or scattering.
The quality or state of being respirable; respirableness.
Suitable for being breathed; adapted for respiration.
The act of respiring or breathing again, or catching one's breath.
Of or pertaining to respiration; as, respirational difficulties.
Of or pertaining to respiration; as, respirative organs.
A divice of gauze or wire, covering the mouth or nose, to prevent the inhalation of noxious substances, as dust or smoke. Being warmed by the breath, it tempers cold air passing through it, and may also be used for the inhalation of medicated vapors.
Of or pertaining to respiration; serving for respiration; as, the respiratory organs; respiratory nerves; the respiratory function; respiratory changes.
To breathe in and out; to inspire and expire,, as air; to breathe.
To give or grant a respite to. To delay or postpone; to put off. To keep back from execution; to reprieve.
Without respite.
The quality or state of being resplendent; brilliant luster; vivid brightness; splendor.
Shining with brilliant luster; very bright.
Resplendent; brilliant.
Resplendent.
To split again.
An answer; a response.
The act of responding; the state of being respondent; an answering.
One who responds. It corresponds in general to defendant. One who answers in certain suits or proceedings, generally those which are not according to the course of the common law, as in equity and admiralty causes, in petitions for partition, and the like; -- distinquished from appellant. One who maintains a thesis in reply, and whose province it is to refute objections, or overthrow arguments; -- distinguished from opponent.
A loan upon goods laden on board a ship. It differs from bottomry, which is a loan on the ship itself.
One who is answerable or responsible.
The act of responding.
Giving no response.
The state of being responsible, accountable, or answerable, as for a trust, debt, or obligation.
Liable to respond; likely to be called upon to answer; accountable; answerable; amenable; as, a guardian is responsible to the court for his conduct in the office.
The act of answering.
That responds; ready or inclined to respond.
Responsory; antiphonal.
The answer of the people to the priest in alternate speaking, in church service. A versicle sung in answer to the priest, or as a refrain.
In the Anglo-Indian army, a native commander of a ressala.
To be left; to remain; to continue to be.
A European leguminous plant (Ononis arvensis) with long, tough roots.
Stagnant; motionless.
To stagnate; to cease to flow.
Stagnation.
Persistent.
To state anew.
An eating house.
To restore.
The keeper of an eating house or a restaurant.
Restoration.
To force back against the current; as, to restem their backward course.
Being at rest; quiet.
A restive or stubborn horse.
Restiveness.
Formed like a rope; -- applied especially to several ropelike bundles or masses of fibers on the dorsal side of the medulla oblongata.
In a resty manner.
Act of quenching or extingishing.
The quality or state of being resty; sluggishness.
a. n. from Rest, v. t. i.
To quench or extinguish.
That which is restored or offered in place of something; a substitute.
The act of restoring anything to its rightful owner, or of making good, or of giving an equivalent for any loss, damage, or injury; indemnification.
One who makes restitution.
Unwilling to go on; obstinate in refusing to move forward; stubborn; drawing back.
Never resting; unquiet; uneasy; continually moving; as, a restless child.
Admitting of being restored; capable of being reclaimed; as, restorable land.
Restoration.
The act of restoring or bringing back to a former place, station, or condition; the fact of being restored; renewal; reestablishment; as, the restoration of friendship between enemies; the restoration of peace after war.
A Restorationist.
The belief or doctrines of the Restorationists.
One who believes in a temporary future punishment and a final restoration of all to the favor and presence of God; a Universalist.
Something which serves to restore; especially, a restorative medicine.
In a restorative manner.
A restaurateur.
Restorative.
Restoration.
Restoration.
One who, or that which, restores.
To draw back again; to hold back from acting, proceeding, or advancing, either by physical or moral force, or by any interposing obstacle; to repress or suppress; to keep down; to curb.
Capable of being restrained; controllable.
With restraint.
One who, or that which, restrains.
The act of restraining.
The act or process of restraining, or of holding back or hindering from motion or action, in any manner; hindrance of the will, or of any action, physical or mental.
To strengthen again; to fortify anew.
To restrain within bounds; to limit; to confine; as, to restrict worlds to a particular meaning; to restrict a patient to a certain diet.
The act of restricting, or state of being restricted; confinement within limits or bounds.
Restrictive.
To confine; to contract; to stringe.
Quality or state of being restringent; astringency.
Restringing; astringent; styptic. A restringent medicine.
To strive anew.
Disposed to rest; indisposed toexercton; sluggish; also, restive.
A second subjection.
To sublime again.
Act of sweating again.
A flying back; resilience.
The act of resulting; that which results; a result.
That which results. A reultant force or motion. An eliminant.
A result.
HAving results or effects.
Resultant.
Being without result; as, resultless investigations.
Capable of, or admitting of, being resumed.
To take back.
To summon again.
A second summons.
The act of resuming; as, the resumption of a grant, of delegated powers, of an argument, of specie payments, etc.
Taking back; resuming, or tending toward resumption; as, resumptive measures.
Inverted in position; appearing to be upside down or reversed, as the flowers of the orchis and the leaves of some plants.
Resupinate.
The state of luing on the back; the state of being resupinate, or reversed.
Lying on the back; supine; hence, careless.
To supply again.
The act of rising again; resurrection.