Of or pertaining to trichinae or trichinosis; affected with, or containing, trichinae; as, trichinous meat.
Like or pertaining to the genus Trichiurus or family Trichiuridae, comprising the scabbard fishes and hairtails.
Of, like, or pertaining to, Trichiurus.
A genus of fishes comprising the hairtails. See Hairtail.
A chloride having three atoms of chlorine in the molecule.
The gill of a crustacean in which the branchial filaments are slender and cylindrical, as in the crawfishes.
A lasso cell.
The slender, hairlike cell which receives the fertilizing particles, or antherozoids, in red seaweeds.
Any fern of the genus Trichomanes. The fronds are very delicate and often translucent, and the sporangia are borne on threadlike receptacles rising from the middle of cup-shaped marginal involucres. Several species are common in conservatories; two are native in the United States.
Affected with a disease which causes agglutination and matting together; -- said of the hair when affected with plica. See Plica, 1.
A hair on the surface of leaf or stem, or any modification of a hair, as a minute scale, or star, or gland. The sporangia of ferns are believed to be of the nature of trichomes.
The special cell in red algae which produces or bears a trichogyne. See Illust. of Trichogyne.
One of the Trichoptera.
A suborder of Neuroptera usually having the wings covered with minute hairs. It comprises the caddice flies, and is considered by some to be a distinct order.
Of, pertaining to, or characterizing, the Trichoptera.
An instrument, as a lyre or harp, having three strings.
An extensive group of wormlike animals characterized by being more or less covered with cilia.
Divided into three parts, or into threes; three-forked; as, a trichotomous stem.
Division into three parts.
Exhibiting trichroism; pleochroic; pleochroism.
The quality possessed by some crystals of presenting different colors in three different directions.
Having or existing in three different phases of color; having three distinct color varieties; -- said of certain birds and insects.
The quality, state, or phenomenon of being trichromatic.
Containing three atoms of chromium.
Having three heads, or three origins; as, a tricipital muscle.
To deceive by cunning or artifice; to impose on; to defraud; to cheat; as, to trick another in the sale of a horse.
A trigger.
The art of dressing up; artifice; stratagem; fraud; imposture.
The quality of being tricky.
Dress; ornament.
Given to tricks; artful in making bargains; given to deception and cheating; knavish.
The act or state of trickling; also, that which trickles; a small stream; drip.
Decoration.
The quality or state of being tricksy; trickiness.
One who tricks; a deceiver; a tricker; a cheat.
Exhibiting artfulness; trickish.
An old game resembling backgammon.
Given to tricks; practicing deception; trickish; knavish.
Triclinic.
Of or pertaining to a triclinium, or to the ancient mode of reclining at table.
Having, or characterized by, three unequal axes intersecting at oblique angles. See the Note under crystallization.
A couch for reclining at meals, extending round three sides of a table, and usually in three parts. A dining room furnished with such a triple couch.
Having three cocci, or roundish carpels.
Having three colors.
Having three horns.
Represented with three bodies conjoined to one head, as a lion.
Three-ribbed; having three ribs from the base.
A fabric of woolen, silk, or cotton knitted, or women to resemble knitted work.
Of or pertaining to tricrotism; characterized by tricrotism.
That condition of the arterial pulse in which there is a triple beat. The pulse curve obtained in the sphygmographic tracing characteristic of tricrotism shows two secondary crests in addition to the primary.
Tricrotic.
Curved in three directions; as, a tricurvate spicule (see Illust. of Spicule).
Having three cusps, or points; tricuspidate; as, a tricuspid molar.
Three-pointed; ending in three points; as, a tricuspidate leaf.
A three-wheeled velocipede. See Illust. under Velocipede. Cf. Bicycle.
A genus of very large marine bivalve shells found on the coral reefs of the Indian and Pacific Oceans. One species (Tridacna gigas) often weighs four or five hundred pounds, and is sometimes used for baptismal fonts. Called also paw shell, and fountain shell.
Having three fingers or toes, or composed of three movable parts attached to a common base.
Tridactyl.
The jacksnipe.
Short and ready; fleet; as, a tride pace; -- a term used by sportsmen.
A hydrocarbon, C13H28, of the methane series, which is a probable ingredient both of crude petroleum and of kerosene, and is produced artificially as a light colorless liquid.
Of, pertaining to, or designating, that acid of the fatty acids heterologous with tridecane. It is a white crystalline substance.
A hydrocarbon, C13H26, of the ethylene series, corresponding to tridecane, and obtained from Burmah petroleum as a light colorless liquid; -- called also tridecylene, and tridecene.
Having three teeth or prongs; tridentate.
Having three teeth; three-toothed.
Having three prongs; trident; tridentate; as, a tridented mace.
Bearing a trident.
Of or pertaining to Trent, or the general church council held in that city.
A triple octave, or twenty-second.
Having three dimensions; extended in three different directions.
A riding. See Trithing.
Lasting three lays; also, happening every third day.
Pure silica, like quartz, but crystallizing in hexagonal tables. It is found in trachyte and similar rocks.
imp. p. p. of Try. Proved; tested; faithful; trustworthy; as, a tried friend.
See Trihedral.
Something which takes place or appears once in three years.
Once in three years.
A Roman copper coin, equal to one third of the as. See 3d As, 2.
One who tries; one who makes experiments; one who examines anything by a test or standard.
The commander of a trireme. At Athens, one who (singly, or jointly with other citizens) had to fit out a trireme for the public service.
The office duty of a trierarch.
Kept or occurring once in three years; triennial.
Festival games celebrated once in three years.
A tertiary amine analogous to trimethylamine.
See Trigeminal.
To plow the third time before sowing, as land.
Facing three ways; arranged in three vertical ranks, as the leaves of veratrum.
Having, or surrounded by, three fasciae, or bands.
Cleft to the middle, or slightly beyond the middle, into three parts; three-cleft.
Having three pipes.
To make of no importance; to treat as a trifle.
One who trifles.
Being of small value or importance; trivial; paltry; as, a trifling debt; a trifling affair.
Three-flowered; having or bearing three flowers; as, a triflorous peduncle.
A concurrence of three waves.
Having three leaves or leaflets, as clover. See Illust. of Shamrock.
Having three leaflets.
A genus of leguminous herbs with densely spiked flowers and usually trifoliate leaves; trefoil. There are many species, all of which are called clover. See Clover.
Sweet trefoil.
The gallery or open space between the vaulting and the roof of the aisles of a church, often forming a rich arcade in the interior of the church, above the nave arches and below the clearstory windows.
Having a triple form or character.
The state of being triform, or of having a threefold shape.
Having three branches or forks; trichotomous.
A stone, block of wood, or anything else, placed under a wheel or barrel to prevent motion; a scotch; a skid.
One who has been married three times; also, one who has three husbands or three wives at the same time.
Having three sorts of flowers in the same head, -- male, female, and hermaphrodite, or perfect, flowers.
The act of marrying, or the state of being married, three times; also, the offense of having three husbands or three wives at the same time.
Having three bellies; -- said of a muscle.
Of, pertaining to, or designating, the fifth pair of cranial nerves, which divide on each side of the head into three main branches distributed to the orbits, jaws, and parts of the mouth; trifacial.
Born three together; being one of three born at the same birth; also, threefold.
Of, pertaining to, or designating, an acid, C4H7N3O2, obtained, by the action of the vapor of cyanic acid on cold aldehyde, as a white crystalline substance having a slightly acid taste and faint smell; -- called also ethidene-biuret or ethylidene-biuret.
A book composed of sheets so folded that each one makes thirty-two leaves; hence, indicating, more or less definitely, a size of book; -- usually written 32mo, or 32/, and called thirty-twomo.
A catch to hold the wheel of a carriage on a declivity.
A trental.
A glyceride formed by the replacement of three hydrogen atoms in glycerin by acid radicals.
An ornament in the frieze of the Doric order, repeated at equal intervals. Each triglyph consists of a rectangular tablet, slightly projecting, and divided nearly to the top by two parallel and perpendicular gutters, or channels, called glyphs, into three parts, or spaces, called femora. A half channel, or glyph, is also cut upon each of the perpendicular edges of the tablet. See Illust. of Entablature.
Consisting of, or pertaining to, triglyphs.
The quality or state of being trig; smartness; neatness.
Having three angles, or corners; triangular; as, a trigonal stem, one having tree prominent longitudinal angles.
A smooth triangular area on the inner surface of the bladder, limited by the apertures of the ureters and urethra.
A genus of pearly bivalve shells, numerous extinct species of which are characteristic of the Mesozoic rocks. A few living species exist on the coast of Australia.