A person devoted to luxury and pleasure; a voluptuary.
Of or pertaining to the Sybarites; resembling the Sybarites; luxurious; wanton; effeminate.
Luxuriousness; effeminacy; wantonness; voluptuousness.
See Sycamore.
A large tree (Ficus Sycomorus) allied to the common fig. It is found in Egypt and Syria, and is the sycamore, or sycamine, of Scripture. The American plane tree, or buttonwood. A large European species of maple (Acer Pseudo-Platanus).
A groom.
Silver, pounded into ingots of the shape of a shoe, and used as currency. The most common weight is about one pound troy.
Having the capacity of bearing several successive crops of fruit without perishing; as, sychnocarpous plants.
A nodule of flint, or a pebble, which resembles a fig.
Of, pertaining to, or designating, an acid obtained by the oxidation of sycoceryl alcohol.
A radical, of the aromatic series, regarded as an essential ingredient of certain compounds found in the waxy resin of an Australian species of fig.
The missel thrush.
A division of calcareous sponges.
A collective fleshy fruit, in which the ovaries are hidden within a hollow receptacle, as in the fig.
The character or characteristic of a sycophant.
To play the sycophant.
Sycophancy.
Of or pertaining to a sycophant; characteristic of a sycophant; meanly or obsequiously flattering; courting favor by mean adulation; parasitic.
Like a sycophant; obsequiously flattering.
Sycophancy.
To play the sycophant.
Sycophancy.
A pustular eruption upon the scalp, or the beared part of the face, whether due to ringworm, acne, or impetigo.
A kind of Bohemian earthenware resembling the Wedgwood ware.
Saw.
Orig., a rock composed of quartz, hornblende, and feldspar, anciently quarried at Syene, in Upper Egypt, and now called granite. A granular, crystalline, ingeous rock composed of orthoclase and hornblende, the latter often replaced or accompanied by pyroxene or mica. Syenite sometimes contains nephelite (elaeolite) or leucite, and is then called nephelite (elaeolite) syenite or leucite syenite.
Relating to Syene; as, Syenitic inscriptions.
See Sike.
See Sicker.
A young herring (Clupea harengus).
A syllabary.
A table of syllables; more especially, a table of the indivisible syllabic symbols used in certain languages, as the Japanese and Cherokee, instead of letters.
Syllable.
Of or pertaining to a syllable or syllables; as, syllabic accent.
In a syllabic manner.
To form or divide into syllables; to syllabify.
The act of forming syllables; the act or method of dividing words into syllables. See Guide to Pron., /275.
Same as Syllabication.
To form or divide into syllables.
The expressing of the sounds of a language by syllables, rather than by an alphabet or by signs for words.
One who forms or divides words into syllables, or is skilled in doing this.
To syllabify.
To pronounce the syllables of; to utter; to articulate.
Same as Syllabub.
A compendium containing the heads of a discourse, and the like; an abstract.
A figure of speech by which a word is used in a literal and metaphorical sense at the same time.
Of or pertaining to a syllepsis; containing syllepsis.
Any one of numerous species of marine annelids of the family Syllidae.
The regular logical form of every argument, consisting of three propositions, of which the first two are called the premises, and the last, the conclusion. The conclusion necessarily follows from the premises; so that, if these are true, the conclusion must be true, and the argument amounts to demonstration
Of or pertaining to a syllogism; consisting of a syllogism, or of the form of reasoning by syllogisms; as, syllogistic arguments or reasoning.
In a syllogistic manner.
A reasoning by syllogisms.
To reason by means of syllogisms.
One who syllogizes.
An imaginary being inhabiting the air; a fairy.
A little sylph; a young or diminutive sylph.
Like a sylph.
Sylphlike.
Like a sylph; airy; graceful.
Same as Silva.
A liquid hydrocarbon obtained together with furfuran (tetrol) by the distillation of pine wood; -- called also methyl tetrol, or methyl furfuran.
A telluride of gold and silver, (Au, Ag)Te2, of a steel gray, silver white, or brass yellow. It often occurs in implanted crystals resembling written characters, and hence is called graphic tellurium. H., 1.5-2. Sp.gr., 7.9-8.3.
An old name for tellurium.
A salt of sylvic acid.
Sylvan.
Sylvan.
Of, pertaining to, or resembling, pine or its products; specifically, designating an acid called also abeitic acid, which is the chief ingredient of common resin (obtained from Pinus sylvestris, and other species).
Of or pertaining to the family of warblers (Sylvicolidae). See Warbler.
The cultivation of forest trees for timber or other purposes; forestry; arboriculture.
One who cultivates forest trees, especially as a business.
Native potassium chloride.
See Simar.
See Cimbal.
The living together in more or less imitative association or even close union of two dissimilar organisms. In a broad sense the term includes parasitism, or antagonistic symbiosis or antipathetic symbiosis, in which the association is disadvantageous or destructive to one of the organisms, but ordinarily it is used of cases where the association is advantageous, or often necessary, to one or both, and not harmful to either. When there is bodily union (in extreme cases so close that the two form practically a single body, as in the union of algae and fungi to form lichens, and in the inclusion of algae in radiolarians) it is called conjunctive symbiosis; if there is no actual union of the organisms (as in the association of ants with myrmecophytes), disjunctive symbiosis.
Pertaining to, or characterized by, or living in, a state of symbiosis.
To symbolize.
See Symbolics.
Of or pertaining to a symbol or symbols; of the nature of a symbol; exhibiting or expressing by resemblance or signs; representative; as, the figure of an eye is symbolic of sight and knowledge.
The study of ancient symbols that branch of historic theology which treats of creeds and confessions of faith; symbolism; -- called also symbolic.
The act of symbolizing, or the state of being symbolized; as, symbolism in Christian art is the representation of truth, virtues, vices, etc., by emblematic colors, signs, and forms.
One who employs symbols.
Characterized by the use of symbols; as, symbolistic poetry.
The act of symbolizing; symbolical representation.
To make to agree in properties or qualities.
One who symbolizes.
Pertaining to a symbology; versed in, or characterized by, symbology.
One who practices, or who is versed in, symbology.
The art of expressing by symbols.
An order of slender eel-like fishes having the gill openings confluent beneath the neck. The pectoral arch is generally attached to the skull, and the entire margin of the upper jaw is formed by the premaxillary. Called also Symbranchia.
Commensurable; symmetrical.
One eminently studious of symmetry of parts.
Symmetrical.
Involving or exhibiting symmetry; proportional in parts; having its parts in due proportion as to dimensions; as, a symmetrical body or building.
Same as Symmetrian.
One eminently studious of symmetry of parts.
To make proportional in its parts; to reduce to symmetry.
A due proportion of the several parts of a body to each other; adaptation of the form or dimensions of the several parts of a thing to each other; the union and conformity of the members of a work to the whole.
Inclined to sympathy; sympathizing.
Sympathetic.
In a sympathetic manner.
One who sympathizes; a sympathizer.
To experience together.
One who sympathizes.
Feeling corresponding to that which another feels; the quality of being affected by the affection of another, with feelings correspondent in kind, if not in degree; fellow-feeling.
Having the petals united; gamopetalous.
Symphonious.
Agreeing in sound; accordant; harmonious.
A composer of symphonies.
To agree; to be in harmony.
A consonance or harmony of sounds, agreeable to the ear, whether the sounds are vocal or instrumental, or both.
An order of small apterous insects having an elongated body, with three pairs of thoracic and about nine pairs of abdominal legs. They are, in many respects, intermediate between myriapods and true insects.
Of or pertaining to to symphysis.
The operation of dividing the symphysis pubis for the purpose of facilitating labor; -- formerly called the Sigualtian section.
An articulation formed by intervening cartilage; as, the pubic symphysis. The union or coalescence of bones; also, the place of union or coalescence; as, the symphysis of the lower jaw. Cf. Articulation.
Symphyseotomy.
Coalescence; a growing into one with another word.
A sensitive kind of barometer, in which the pressure of the atmosphere, acting upon a liquid, as oil, in the lower portion of the instrument, compresses an elastic gas in the upper part.
Plaiting or joining together; -- said of a bone next above the quadrate in the mandibular suspensorium of many fishes, which unites together the other bones of the suspensorium. The symplectic bone.
The repetition of a word or phrase at the beginning and another at the end of successive clauses; as, Justice came down from heaven to view the earth; Justice returned to heaven, and left the earth.
A sympodium.
Composed of superposed branches in such a way as to imitate a simple axis; as, a sympodial stem.