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Tabbinet

A fabric like poplin, with a watered surface.

Tabby

To water; to cause to look wavy, by the process of calendering; to calender; as, to tabby silk, mohair, ribbon, etc.

Tabefaction

A wasting away; a gradual losing of flesh by disease.

Tabefy

To cause to waste gradually, to emaciate.

Tabellion

A secretary or notary under the Roman empire; also, a similar officer in France during the old monarchy.

Tabernacle

To dwell or reside for a time; to be temporary housed.

Tabernacular

Of or pertaining to a tabernacle, especially the Jewish tabernacle.

Tabes

Progressive emaciation of the body, accompanied with hectic fever, with no well-marked local symptoms.

Tabetic

Of or pertaining to tabes; of the nature of tabes; affected with tabes; tabid. One affected with tabes.

Tabid

Affected by tabes; tabetic.

Tablature

A painting on a wall or ceiling; a single piece comprehended in one view, and formed according to one design; hence, a picture in general.

Table

To live at the table of another; to board; to eat.

Table-land

A broad, level, elevated area of land; a plateau.

Tableau

A striking and vivid representation; a picture.

Tablecloth

A cloth for covering a table, especially one with which a table is covered before the dishes, etc., are set on for meals.

Tableman

A man at draughts; a piece used in playing games at tables. See Table, n., 10.

Tablespoon

A spoon of the largest size commonly used at the table; -- distinguished from teaspoon, dessert spoon, etc.

Tablespoonful

As much as a tablespoon will hold; enough to fill a tablespoon. It is usually reckoned as one half of a fluid ounce, or four fluid drams.

Tablet

A small table or flat surface.

Tableware

Ware, or articles collectively, for use during meals, including, for example, dishes, plates, bowls, knives, forks, and spoons.

Tabling

A forming into tables; a setting down in order.

Tabloid

Compressed or condensed, as into a tabloid; administrated in or as in tabloids, or small condensed bits; as, a tabloid form of imparting information.

Taboo

Set apart or sacred by religious custom among certain races of Polynesia, New Zealand, etc., and forbidden to certain persons or uses; hence, prohibited under severe penalties; interdicted; as, food, places, words, customs, etc., may be taboo.

Tabor

To make (a sound) with a tabor.

Taborite

One of certain Bohemian reformers who suffered persecution in the fifteenth century; -- so called from Tabor, a hill or fortress where they encamped during a part of their struggles.

Tabular

Having the form of, or pertaining to, a table (in any of the uses of the word).

Tabularization

The act of tabularizing, or the state of being tabularized; formation into tables; tabulation.

Tabulata

An artificial group of stony corals including those which have transverse septa in the calicles. The genera Pocillopora and Favosites are examples.

Tabulate

To form into a table or tables; to reduce to tables or synopses.

Tabulation

The act of forming into a table or tables; as, the tabulation of statistics.

Tac

A kind of customary payment by a tenant; -- a word used in old records.

Tac-au-tac

The parry which is connected with a riposte; also, a series of quick attacks and parries in which neither fencer gains a point.

Tacamahaca Tacamahac

A bitter balsamic resin obtained from tropical American trees of the genus Elaphrium (Elaphrium tomentosum and Elaphrium Tacamahaca), and also from East Indian trees of the genus Calophyllum; also, the resinous exhudation of the balsam poplar.

Tacaud

The bib, or whiting pout.

Tacet

It is silent; -- a direction for a vocal or instrumental part to be silent during a whole movement.

Tache

A spot, stain, or blemish.

Tachhydrite

A hydrous chloride of calcium and magnesium occurring in yellowish masses which rapidly deliquesce upon exposure. It is found in the salt mines at Stassfurt.

Tachina

Any one of numerous species of Diptera belonging to Tachina and allied genera. Their larvae are external parasites of other insects.

Tachistoscope

An apparatus for exposing briefly to view a screen bearing letters or figures. It is used in studying the range of attention, or the power of distinguishing separate objects in a single impression.

Tachograph

A recording or registering tachometer; also, its autographic record.

Tachometer

An instrument for measuring the velocity, or indicating changes in the velocity, of a moving body or substance.

Tachometry

Measurement by a tachometer; the science or use of tachometers.

Tachyglossa

A division of monotremes which comprises the spiny ant-eaters of Australia and New Guinea. See Illust. under Echidna.

Tachygraph

An example of tachygraphy; esp., an ancient Greek or Roman tachygraphic manuscript.

Tachygrapher

One who writes shorthand; a stenographer; esp., an ancient Greek or Roman notary.

Tachygraphy

The art or practice of rapid writing; shorthand writing; stenography.

Tachylyte

A vitreous form of basalt; -- so called because decomposable by acids and readily fusible.

Tachymeter

An instrument, esp. a transit or theodolite with stadia wires, for determining quickly the distances, bearings, and elevations of distant objects.

Tachyscope

An early form of animated-picture machine, devised in 1889 by Otto Ansch/tz of Berlin, in which the chronophotographs were mounted upon the periphery of a rotating wheel.

Tacit

Done or made in silence; implied, but not expressed; silent; as, tacit consent is consent by silence, or by not interposing an objection.

Taciturn

Habitually silent; not given to converse; not apt to talk or speak.

Tack

To change the direction of a vessel by shifting the position of the helm and sails; also (as said of a vessel), to have her direction changed through the shifting of the helm and sails. See Tack, v. t., 4.

Tacket

A small, broad-headed nail.

Tacking

A union of securities given at different times, all of which must be redeemed before an intermediate purchaser can interpose his claim.

tackle

An act of tackling{4}; as, brought down by a tackle by a lineman.

Tackled

Made of ropes tacked together.

Tackling

Furniture of the masts and yards of a vessel, as cordage, sails, etc.

Tacksman

One who holds a tack or lease from another; a tenant, or lessee.

Tacky

An ill-conditioned, ill-fed, or neglected horse; also, a person in a like condition.

Taconic

Designating, or pertaining to, the series of rocks forming the Taconic mountains in Western New England. They were once supposed to be older than the Cambrian, but later proved to belong to the Lower Silurian and Cambrian.

Tact

The sense of touch; feeling.

Tactable

Capable of being touched; tangible.

Tactful

Full of tact; characterized by a discerning sense of what is right, proper, or judicious.

Tactical Tactic

Of or pertaining to military or naval tactics; hence, pertaining to, or characterized by, planning or maneuvering for the short term; -- contrasted with strategic, planning for the long term.

Tactician

One versed in tactics; hence, a skillful maneuverer; an adroit manager.

Tactics

The science and art of disposing military and naval forces in order for battle, and performing military and naval evolutions. It is divided into grand tactics, or the tactics of battles, and elementary tactics, or the tactics of instruction.

Tactile

Of or pertaining to the organs, or the sense, of touch; perceiving, or perceptible, by the touch; capable of being touched; as, tactile corpuscles; tactile sensations.

Tactility

The quality or state of being tactile; perceptibility by touch; tangibleness.

Taction

The act of touching; touch; contact; tangency.

Tactual

Of or pertaining to the sense, or the organs, of touch; derived from touch.

Tadpole

The young aquatic larva of any amphibian. In this stage it breathes by means of external or internal gills, is at first destitute of legs, and has a finlike tail. Called also polliwig, polliwog, porwiggle, or purwiggy.

Tael

A denomination of money, in China, worth nearly six shillings sterling, or about a dollar and forty cents; also, a weight of one ounce and a third.

Taenia

A genus of intestinal worms which includes the common tapeworms of man. See Tapeworm.

Taeniata

A division of Ctenophora including those which have a long, ribbonlike body. The Venus's girdle is the most familiar example.

Taenidium

The chitinous fiber forming the spiral thread of the tracheae of insects. See Illust. of Trachea.

Taenioglossa

An extensive division of gastropod mollusks in which the odontophore is long and narrow, and usually bears seven rows of teeth. It includes a large number of families both marine and fresh-water.

Taenioid

Ribbonlike; shaped like a ribbon.

Taenioidea

The division of cestode worms which comprises the tapeworms. See Tapeworm.

Taeniola

One of the radial partitions which separate the internal cavities of certain medusae.

Taeniosomi

An order of fishes remarkable for their long and compressed form. The ribbon fishes are examples. See Ribbon fish, under Ribbon.

Taeping Taiping

Pertaining to or designating a dynasty with which one Hung-Siu-Chuen, a half-religious, half-political enthusiast, attempted to supplant the Manchu dynasty by the Taiping rebellion, incited by him in 1850 and suppressed by General Gordon about 1864.

Taffety Taffeta

A fine, smooth stuff of silk, having usually the wavy luster called watering. The term has also been applied to different kinds of silk goods, from the 16th century to modern times.

Taffrail

The upper part of a ship's stern, which is flat like a table on the top, and sometimes ornamented with carved work; the rail around a ship's stern.

Taffy

A kind of candy made of molasses or brown sugar boiled down and poured out in shallow pans.

Tag

A child's play in which one runs after and touches another, and then runs away to avoid being touched.

Tag sale

A sale of usually used items (such as furniture, clothing, household items or bric-a-brac), conducted by one or a small group of individuals, at a location which is not a normal retail establishment.

Tag-rag

The lowest class of people; the rabble. Cf. Rag, tag, and bobtail, under Bobtail.

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