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Restorer

One who, or that which, restores.

Restrain

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.

Restraint

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.

Restrict

To restrain within bounds; to limit; to confine; as, to restrict worlds to a particular meaning; to restrict a patient to a certain diet.

Restriction

The act of restricting, or state of being restricted; confinement within limits or bounds.

Restringe

To confine; to contract; to stringe.

Restringency

Quality or state of being restringent; astringency.

Restringent

Restringing; astringent; styptic. A restringent medicine.

Resty

Disposed to rest; indisposed toexercton; sluggish; also, restive.

Result

A flying back; resilience.

Resultance

The act of resulting; that which results; a result.

Resultant

That which results. A reultant force or motion. An eliminant.

Resultless

Being without result; as, resultless investigations.

Resumable

Capable of, or admitting of, being resumed.

Resumption

The act of resuming; as, the resumption of a grant, of delegated powers, of an argument, of specie payments, etc.

Resumptive

Taking back; resuming, or tending toward resumption; as, resumptive measures.

Resupinate

Inverted in position; appearing to be upside down or reversed, as the flowers of the orchis and the leaves of some plants.

Resupination

The state of luing on the back; the state of being resupinate, or reversed.

Resupine

Lying on the back; supine; hence, careless.

Resurgent

One who rises again, as from the dead.

Resurrect

To take from the grave; to disinter.

Resuscitable

Capable of resuscitation; as, resuscitable plants.

Resuscitant

One who, or that which resuscitates. Also used adjectively.

Resuscitation

The act of resuscitating, or state of being resuscitated.

Ret

To prepare for use, as flax, by separating the fibers from the woody part by process of soaking, macerating, and other treatment.

Retable

A shelf behind the altar, for display of lights, vases of flowers, etc.

Retail

To sell in small quantities, as by the single yard, pound, gallon, etc.; to sell directly to the consumer; as, to retail cloth or groceries.

Retailer

One who retails anything; as, a retailer of merchandise; a retailer of gossip; -- used also of businesses, including large corporations; as, Sears, Roebuck is one the the country's largest retailers.

Retainal

The act of retaining; retention.

Retainer

One who, or that which, retains.

Retake

To take or receive again.

Retaker

One who takes again what has been taken; a recaptor.

Retaliate

To return like for like; specifically, to return evil for evil; as, to retaliate upon an enemy.

Retaliation

The act of retaliating, or of returning like for like; retribution; now, specifically, the return of evil for evil; e.g., an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth.

Retaliatory

Tending to, or involving, retaliation; retaliative; as retaliatory measures.

Retardation

The act of retarding; hindrance; the act of delaying; as, the retardation of the motion of a ship; -- opposed to acceleration.

Retarded

having a limited or below normal mental ability; same as mentally retarded; -- used especially in relation to performance in academic tasks.

Retarder

One who, or that which, retards.

Retch

To care for; to heed; to reck.

Rete

A net or network; a plexus; particularly, a network of blood vessels or nerves, or a part resembling a network.

Retection

Act of disclosing or uncovering something concealed.

Retene

A white crystalline hydrocarbon, polymeric with benzene. It is extracted from pine tar, and is also found in certain fossil resins.

Retention

The act of retaining, or the state of being ratined.

Retentive

That which retains or confines; a restraint.

Retentivity

The power of retaining; retentive force; as, the retentivity of a magnet.

Retentor

A muscle which serves to retain an organ or part in place, esp. when retracted. See Illust. of Phylactolemata.

Retepore

Any one of several species of bryozoans of the genus Retepora. They form delicate calcareous corals, usually composed of thin fenestrated fronds.

Retex

To annual, as orders.

Retexture

The act of weaving or forming again.

Rethor

A rhetorician; a careful writer.

Retiarius

A gladiator armed with a net for entangling his adversary and a trident for despatching him.

Reticence

The quality or state of being reticent, or keeping silence; the state of holding one's tonque; refraining to speak of that which is suggested; uncommunicativeness.

Reticent

Inclined to keep silent; reserved; uncommunicative.

Reticular

Having the form of a net, or of network; formed with interstices; retiform; as, reticular cartilage; a reticular leaf.

Reticularia

An extensive division of rhizopods in which the pseudopodia are more or less slender and coalesce at certain points, forming irregular meshes. It includes the shelled Foraminifera, together with some groups which lack a true shell.

Reticulated Reticulate

Resembling network; having the form or appearance of a net; netted; as, a reticulated structure.

Reticulation

The quality or state of being reticulated, or netlike; that which is reticulated; network; an organization resembling a net.

Reticule

A little bag, originally of network; a woman's workbag, or a little bag to be carried in the hand.

Reticulose

Forming a network; characterized by a reticulated sructure.

Reticulum

The second stomach of ruminants, in which folds of the mucous membrane form hexagonal cells; -- also called the honeycomb stomach. The neuroglia.

Retiform

Composed of crossing lines and interstices; reticular; netlike; as, the retiform coat of the eye.

Retina

The delicate membrane by which the back part of the globe of the eye is lined, and in which the fibers of the optic nerve terminate. See Eye.

Retinaculum

A connecting band; a fraenum; as, the retinacula of the ileocaecal and ileocolic valves. One of the annular ligaments which hold the tendons close to the bones at the larger joints, as at the wrist and ankle.

Retinal

A retinoid compound (C20H28O), closely related to vitamin A, which is a component of the visual pigments in the eye. It is also called retinaldehyde and vitamin A aldehyde.

Retinalite

A translucent variety of serpentine, of a honey yellow or greenish yellow color, having a waxy resinlike luster.

Retineum

That part of the eye of an invertebrate which corresponds in function with the retina of a vertebrate.

Retinic

Of or pertaining to resin; derived from resin; specifically, designating an acid found in certain fossil resins and hydrocarbons.

Retinite

An inflammable mineral resin, usually of a yellowish brown color, found in roundish masses, sometimes with coal.

Retinoic acid

A retinoid compound (C20H28O2), closely related to vitamin A. It is also called tretinoin and vitamin A acid.

Retinoid

Resinlike, or resinform; resembling a resin without being such.

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