to be executed by electrocution in the electric chair.
A small mound of earth; ground slightly elevated; a small ridge.
imp. pl. p. p. of Ride.
Laughing.
One who, or that which, rides.
Having no rider; as, a riderless horse.
To form a ridge of; to furnish with a ridge or ridges; to make into a ridge or ridges.
The part of a harness which passes over the saddle, and supports the shafts of a cart; -- called also ridgerope, and ridger.
The backbone.
Same as Ridgelling.
A little ridge.
A half-castrated male animal.
See Ridgepole.
The timber forming the ridge of a roof, into which the rafters are secured.
See Life line (a), under Life.
So as to form ridges.
Having a ridge or ridges; rising in a ridge.
Ridicule.
Ridiculous.
One who ridicules.
To make ridiculous; to ridicule.
The quality or state of being ridiculous; ridiculousness; also, something ridiculous.
Fitted to excite ridicule; absurd and laughable; unworthy of serious consideration; as, a ridiculous dress or behavior.
The act or state of one who rides.
To hold ridottos.
See Rye.
Robbery.
The reedbuck, a South African antelope (Cervicapra arundinacea); -- so called from its frequenting dry places covered with high grass or reeds. Its color is yellowish brown. Called also inghalla, and rietbok.
A remaking or recasting; an adaptation, esp. of a literary work or musical composition.
Prevailing; prevalent; abounding.
A trough or sluice having cleats, grooves, or steps across the bottom for holding quicksilver and catching particles of gold when auriferous earth is washed; also, one of the cleats, grooves, or steps in such a trough. Also called ripple.
A curved file used in carving wool and marble.
Sweepings; refuse; the lowest order of society.
To grove; to channel; especially, to groove internally with spiral channels; as, to rifle a gun barrel or a cannon.
Any one of several species of beautiful birds of Australia and New Guinea, of the genera Ptiloris and Craspidophora, allied to the paradise birds.
A soldier armed with a rifle.
One who rifles; a robber.
The act or process of making the grooves in a rifled cannon or gun barrel. The system of grooves in a rifled gun barrel or cannon.
To burst open; to split.
A rafter.
To make free with; hence, to steal; to pilfer.
A gay, lively dance for one couple, -- said to have been borrowed from Provence in France.
See Irrigation.
A fixed star of the first magnitude in the left foot of the constellation Orion.
Growing stiff or numb.
One who rigs or dresses; one whose occupation is to fit the rigging of a ship.
Dress; tackle; especially (Naut.), the ropes, chains, etc., that support the masts and spars of a vessel, and serve as purchases for adjusting the sails, etc. See Illustr. of Ship and Sails.
Like a rig or wanton.
The European lance fish.
To recover the proper or natural condition or position; to become upright.
A turning directly about by the right, so as to face in the opposite direction; also, the quarter directly opposite; as, to turn to the right-about.
Containing a right angle or right angles; as, a right-angled triangle.
Situated or being on the right; nearer the right hand than the left; as, the right-hand side, room, or road.
Using the right hand habitually, or more easily than the left.
The state or quality of being right-handed; hence, skill; dexterity.
Having a right heart or disposition.
Formed by right lines; rectilineal; as, a right-lined angle.
Having a right or honest mind.
Straight; direct.
To do justice to.
Doing, or according with, that which is right; yielding to all their due; just; equitable; especially, free from wrong, guilt, or sin; holy; as, a righteous man or act; a righteous retribution.
Made righteous.
In a righteous manner; as, to judge righteously.
The quality or state of being righteous; holiness; purity; uprightness; rectitude.
One who sets right; one who does justice or redresses wrong.
Righteous; upright; just; good; -- said of persons.
According to right or justice.
The quality or state of being rightful; accordance with right and justice.
Destitute of right.
Straightly; directly; in front.
Straightness; as, the rightness of a line.
Toward the right.
To make righteous.
Righteously.
Righteousness.
Firm; stiff; unyielding; not pliant; not flexible.
The quality or state of being rigid; want of pliability; the quality of resisting change of form; the amount of resistance with which a body opposes change of form; -- opposed to flexibility, ductility, malleability, and softness.
In a rigid manner; stiffly.
The quality or state of being rigid.
Somewhat rigid or stiff; as, a rigidulous bristle.
See Reglet.
Consisting of rigmarole; frivolous; nonsensical; foolish.
A circle; hence, a diadem.
A woman's light scarflike head covering, usually knit or crocheted of wool.
A musical instrument formerly in use, consisting of several sticks bound together, but separated by beads, and played with a stick with a ball at its end.
The becoming stiff or rigid; the state of being rigid; rigidity; stiffness; hardness.
Rigidity in principle or practice; strictness; -- opposed to laxity.
One who is rigorous; -- sometimes applied to an extreme Jansenist.
Manifesting, exercising, or favoring rigor; allowing no abatement or mitigation; scrupulously accurate; exact; strict; severe; relentless; as, a rigorous officer of justice; a rigorous execution of law; a rigorous definition or demonstration.
See Legislature, Denmark.
A Danish coin worth about fifty-four cents. It was the former unit of value in Denmark.
A Swedish coin worth about twenty-seven cents. It was formerly the unit of value in Sweden.
To render turbid or muddy; to stir up; to roil.
Same as Relief, n., 5.
To run a small stream.
One of certain narrow, crooked valleys seen, by aid of the telescope, on the surface of the moon.
A little rill.
Roily.
To furnish with a rim; to border.
Having the percussion fulminate in a rim surrounding the base, distinguished from center-fire; -- said of cartridges; also, using rim-fire cartridges; as, a rim-fire gun. Such cartridges are now little used.
A narrow and elongated aperture; a cleft; a fissure.
A short cylinder connecting a trunnion with the body of a cannon. See Illust. of Cannon.
To rhyme. See Rhyme.
A tool for shaping the rimes of a ladder.
To compose in rhyme; to versify.
An implement for cutting, trimming, or ornamenting the rim of anything, as the edges of pies, etc.; also, a reamer.
Full of rimes, fissures, or chinks.
In a rimose manner.
State of being rimose.
Rimose.
To rumple; to wrinkle.
Abounding with rime; frosty.
An interior corner; a nook; hence, an angular recess or hollow bend in a mountain, river, cliff, or the like.
To remove the rind of; to bark.
A highly contagious distemper or murrain, affecting neat cattle, and less commonly sheep and goats; -- called also cattle plague, Russian cattle plague, and steppe murrain.
A small water course or gutter.
Destitute of a rind.
Having a rind or skin.
See Rind.
Having a rind
Increasing; strengthening; -- a direction indicating a sudden increase of force (abbreviated rf., rfz.) Cf. Forzando, and Sforzando.