One who revolts.
Causing abhorrence mixed with disgust; exciting extreme repugnance; loathsome; as, revolting cruelty.
Capable of revolving; rotatory; revolving.
Rolled backward or downward.
The act of revolving, or turning round on an axis or a center; the motion of a body round a fixed point or line; rotation; as, the revolution of a wheel, of a top, of the earth on its axis, etc.
A revolutionist.
One who is engaged in effecting a revolution; a revolutionist.
The state of being in revolution; revolutionary doctrines or principles.
One engaged in effecting a change of government; a favorer of revolution.
To change completely, as by a revolution; as, to revolutionize a government.
Inclined to revolve things in the mind; meditative.
That may be revolved.
To cause to turn, as on an axis.
Act of revolving.
The act or state of revolving; revolution.
One who, or that which, revolves; specifically, a firearm ( commonly a pistol) with several chambers or barrels so arranged as to revolve on an axis, and be discharged in succession by the same lock; a repeater.
Making a revolution or revolutions; rotating; -- used also figuratively of time, seasons, etc., depending on the revolution of the earth.
To pull back with force.
A strong pulling or drawing back; withdrawal.
That which causes revulsion; specifically (Med.), a revulsive remedy or agent.
A row.
To wake again.
Regard; respect; consideration.
Worthy of reward.
One who rewards.
Yielding reward.
Having, or affording, no reward.
To rue.
A gunlock.
Rueful.
To win again, or win back.
Rule.
Realm.
To repeat in the same words; to reecho.
To write again.
Ruth.
A king.
Rain or rein.
An appelation applied after the manner of a proper name to the fox. Same as Renard.
To go on a military expedition.
The ground story of a building, either on a level with the street or raised slightly above it; -- said esp. of buildings on the continent of Europe.
Impregnated or tinctured with rhubarb.
Chrysophanic acid.
A minute smooth rodlike or fusiform structure found in the tissues of many Turbellaria.
A suborder of Turbellaria including those that have a simple cylindrical, or saclike, stomach, without an intestine.
Of or pertaining to the Rhabdocoela.
See Sagittal.
A minute calcareous rodlike structure found both at the surface and the bottom of the ocean; -- supposed by some to be a calcareous alga.
Same as Rabdology.
One of numerous minute rodlike structures formed of two or more cells situated behind the retinulae in the compound eyes of insects, etc. See Illust. under Ommatidium.
Same as Rabdomancy.
One of the several parts composing a rhabdom.
An extinct division of Hydrozoa which includes the graptolities.
A genus of marine Bryozoa in which the tubular cells have a centralchitinous axis and the tentacles are borne on a bilobed lophophore. It is the type of the order Pterobranchia, or Podostomata
A minute sphere composed of rhabdoliths.
See Rachialgia.
Of or pertaining to the rhachis; as, the rhachidian teeth of a mollusk.
A division of marine gastropods having a retractile proboscis and three longitudinal rows of teeth on the radula. It includes many of the large ornamental shells, as the miters, murices, olives, purpuras, volutes, and whelks. See Illust. in the Appendix.
A branch of inflorescence; the zigzag axis on which the florets are arranged in the spikelets of grasses.
Having gular teeth formed by a peculiar modification of the inferior spines of some of the vertebrae, as certain South African snakes (Dasypeltis) which swallow birds' eggs and use these gular teeth to crush them.
The spine.
See Rachitis.
Of or pertaining to Rhadamanthus; rigorously just; as, a Rhadamanthine judgment.
One of the three judges of the infernal regions; figuratively, a strictly just judge.
Rhetain.
Pertining to, or of the same horizon as, certain Mesozoic strata of the Rhetian Alps. These strata are regarded as closing the Triassic period. See the Chart of Geology.
A variety of the mineral cyanite.
See Ramadan.
Of or pertaining to a natural order of shrubs and trees (Rhamnaceae, or Rhamneae) of which the buckthorn (Rhamnus) is the type. It includes also the New Jersey tea, the supple-jack, and one of the plants called lotus (Zizyphus).
A genus of shrubs and small trees; buckthorn. The California Rhamnus Purshianus and the European Rhamnus catharticus are used in medicine. The latter is used for hedges.
A genus of pterodactyls in which the elongated tail supported a leathery expansion at the tip.
The horny covering of the bill of birds.
The continuation of the seed stalk along the side of an anatropous ovule or seed, forming a ridge or seam.
Minute transparent, often needle-shaped, crystals found in the tissues of plants.
Chrysophanic acid.
A rhapsodist.
A rhapsodist.
Of or pertaining to rhapsody; consisting of rhapsody; hence, confused; unconnected.
Anciently, one who recited or composed a rhapsody; especially, one whose profession was to recite the verses of Hormer and other epic poets.
To utter rhapsodies.
Divination by means of verses.
A recitation or song of a rhapsodist; a portion of an epic poem adapted for recitation, or usually recited, at one time; hence, a division of the Iliad or the Odyssey; -- called also a book.
The powerfully astringent root of a half-shrubby Peruvian plant (Krameria triandra). It is used in medicine and to color port wine.
Any one of three species of large South American ostrichlike birds of the genera Rhea and Pterocnemia. Called also the American ostrich.
A suborder of struthious birds including the rheas.
The peele.
Pertaining to, or designating, an acid (commonly called chrysophanic acid) found in rhubarb (Rheum).
Chrysophanic acid.
One of the berries or drupes of the European buckthorn; also, the buckthorn itself.
The doctrine of propositions or sentences.
Of or pertaining to Rheimis, or Reima, in France.
Of or pertaining to the river Rhine; as, Rhenish wine. Rhine wine.
A metallic wire used for regulating the resistance of a circuit, or varying the strength of an electric current, by inserting a greater or less length of it in the circuit.
A kind of motor speed controller permitting of very gradual variation in speed and of reverse. It is especially suitable for use with motor driven machine tools.
An instrument for measuring currents, especially the force or intensity of electrical currents; a galvanometer.
Of or pertaining to a rheometer or rheometry.
The measurement of the force or intensity of currents.
Any apparatus by which an electrical current is originated.
A connecting wire of an electric or voltaic apparatus, traversed by a current. One of the poles of a voltaic battery; an electrode.
An instrument for detecting the presence or movement of currents, as of electricity.
A contrivance for adjusting or regulating the strength of electrical currents, operating usually by the intercalation of resistance which can be varied at will.
An instrument which periodically or otherwise interrupts an electric current.
An instrument for reversing the direction of an electric current.
A monkey; the bhunder.
Pertaining to the ancient Rhaeti, or Rhaetians, or to Rhaetia, their country; as, the Rhetian Alps, now the country of Tyrol and the Grisons.
Same as Rhaetic.
Same as Rhaetizite.
A rhetorician.
The art of composition; especially, elegant composition in prose.
Of or pertaining to rhetoric; according to, or exhibiting, rhetoric; oratorical; as, the rhetorical art; a rhetorical treatise; a rhetorical flourish.
To play the orator.
Rhetorical amplification.
Suitable to a master of rhetoric.
To represent by a figure of rhetoric, or by personification.
A serous or mucous discharge, especially one from the eves or nose.
One affected with rheumatism.
A general disease characterized by painful, often multiple, local inflammations, usually affecting the joints and muscles, but also extending sometimes to the deeper organs, as the heart.
Of or pertaining to rheumatism.
Of or resembling rheum or rheumatism.
Pertaining to, or characterized by, rheum.
The class of skin disease developed by the dartrous diathesis. See under Dartrous.