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Verjuice

The sour juice of crab apples, of green or unripe grapes, apples, etc.; also, an acid liquor made from such juice.

Vermeil

Vermilion; also, the color of vermilion, a bright, beautiful red.

Vermeologist

One who treats of vermes, or worms; a helminthologist.

Vermeology

A discourse or treatise on worms; that part of Zoology which treats of worms; helminthology.

Vermes

An extensive artificial division of the animal kingdom, including the parasitic worms, or helminths, together with the nemerteans, annelids, and allied groups. By some writers the branchiopods, the bryzoans, and the tunicates are also included. The name was used in a still wider sense by Linnaeus and his followers. A more restricted group, comprising only the helminths and closely allied orders.

Vermetus

Any one of many species of marine gastropods belonging to Vermetus and allied genera, of the family Vermetidae. Their shells are regularly spiral when young, but later in life the whorls become separate, and the shell is often irregularly bent and contorted like a worm tube.

Vermicelli

The flour of a hard and small-grained wheat made into dough, and forced through small cylinders or pipes till it takes a slender, wormlike form, whence the Italian name. When the paste is made in larger tubes, it is called macaroni.

Vermicide

A medicine which destroys intestinal worms; a worm killer.

Vermicular

Of or pertaining to a worm or worms; resembling a worm; shaped like a worm; especially, resembling the motion or track of a worm; as, the vermicular, or peristaltic, motion of the intestines. See Peristaltic.

Vermiculate

Wormlike in shape; covered with wormlike elevations; marked with irregular fine lines of color, or with irregular wavy impressed lines like worm tracks; as, a vermiculate nut.

Vermiculated

Made or marked with irregular wavy lines or impressions; vermiculate.

Vermiculation

The act or operation of moving in the manner of a worm; continuation of motion from one part to another; as, the vermiculation, or peristaltic motion, of the intestines.

Vermicule

A small worm or insect larva; also, a wormlike body.

Vermiculite

A group of minerals having, a micaceous structure. They are hydrous silicates, derived generally from the alteration of some kind of mica. So called because the scales, when heated, open out into wormlike forms.

Vermiform

Resembling a worm in form or motions; vermicular; as, the vermiform process of the cerebellum.

Vermiformia

A tribe of worms including Phoronis. See Phoronis.

Vermifugal

Tending to prevent, destroy, or expel, worms or vermin; anthelmintic.

Vermifuge

A medicine or substance that expels worms from animal bodies; an anthelmintic.

Vermilinguia

A tribe of edentates comprising the South American ant-eaters. The tongue is long, slender, exsertile, and very flexible, whence the name. A tribe of Old World lizards which comprises the chameleon. They have long, flexible tongues.

Vermilion

To color with vermilion, or as if with vermilion; to dye red; to cover with a delicate red.

Verminly

Resembling vermin; in the manner of vermin.

Verminous

Tending to breed vermin; infested by vermin.

Vermivorous

Devouring worms; feeding on worms; as, vermivorous birds.

Vermuth

A liqueur made of white wine, absinthe, and various aromatic drugs, used to excite the appetite.

Vernacular

The vernacular language; one's mother tongue; often, the common forms of expression in a particular locality, opposed to literary or learned forms.

Vernacularization

The act or process of making vernacular, or the state of being made vernacular.

Vernage

A kind of sweet wine from Italy.

vernal

Of or pertaining to the spring; appearing in the spring; as, vernal bloom.

Vernant

Flourishing, as in spring; vernal.

Vernation

The arrangement of the leaves within the leaf bud, as regards their folding, coiling, rolling, etc.; prefoliation.

Vernicose

Having a brilliantly polished surface, as some leaves.

Vernier

A short scale made to slide along the divisions of a graduated instrument, as the limb of a sextant, or the scale of a barometer, for indicating parts of divisions. It is so graduated that a certain convenient number of its divisions are just equal to a certain number, either one less or one more, of the divisions of the instrument, so that parts of a division are determined by observing what line on the vernier coincides with a line on the instrument.

Vernile

Suiting a slave; servile; obsequious.

Vernility

Fawning or obsequious behavior; servility.

Vernine

An alkaloid extracted from the shoots of the vetch, red clover, etc., as a white crystalline substance.

Vernonin

A glucoside extracted from the root of a South African plant of the genus Vernonia, as a deliquescent powder, and used as a mild heart tonic.

Veronese

Of or pertaining to Verona, in Italy. A native of Verona; collectively, the people of Verona.

Veronica

A portrait or representation of the face of our Savior on the alleged handkerchief of Saint Veronica, preserved at Rome; hence, a representation of this portrait, or any similar representation of the face of the Savior. Formerly called also Vernacle, and Vernicle.

Verriculate

Having thickset tufts of parallel hairs, bristles, or branches.

Verrucose

Covered with wartlike elevations; tuberculate; warty; verrucous; as, a verrucose capsule.

Verruculose

Minutely verrucose; as, a verruculose leaf or stalk.

Verrugas

An endemic disease occurring in the Andes in Peru, characterized by warty tumors which ulcerate and bleed. It is probably due to a special bacillus, and is often fatal.

Vers

A verse or verses. See Verse, n.

Versant

The slope of a side of a mountain chain; hence, the general slope of a country; aspect.

Versatility

The quality or state of being versatile; versatileness.

Verse

To make verses; to versify.

Versemonger

A writer of verses; especially, a writer of commonplace poetry; a poetaster; a rhymer; -- used humorously or in contempt.

Versicle

A little verse; especially, a short verse or text said or sung in public worship by the priest or minister, and followed by a response from the people.

Versicular

Of or pertaining to verses; designating distinct divisions of a writing.

Versification

The act, art, or practice, of versifying, or making verses; the construction of poetry; metrical composition.

Versifier

One who versifies, or makes verses; as, not every versifier is a poet.

Versify

To relate or describe in verse; to compose in verse.

Version

A change of form, direction, or the like; transformation; conversion; turning.

Versionist

One who makes or favors a version; a translator.

Verso

The reverse, or left-hand, page of a book or a folded sheet of paper; -- opposed to recto.

Versor

The turning factor of a quaternion.

Verst

A Russian measure of length containing 3,500 English feet.

Versual

Of or pertaining to a verse.

Versus

Against; as, John Doe versus Richard Roe; -- chiefly used in legal language, and abbreviated to v. or vs.

Versute

Crafty; wily; cunning; artful.

Vert

Everything that grows, and bears a green leaf, within the forest; as, to preserve vert and venison is the duty of the verderer. The right or privilege of cutting growing wood.

Vertebrally

At or within a vertebra or vertebrae; -- distinguished from interverterbrally.

Vertebrarterial

Of or pertaining to a vertebra or vertebrae and an artery; -- said of the foramina in the transverse processes of cervical vertebrae and of the canal which they form for the vertebral artery and vein.

Vertebrata

One of the grand divisions of the animal kingdom, comprising all animals that have a backbone composed of bony or cartilaginous vertebrae, together with Amphioxus in which the backbone is represented by a simple undivided notochord. The Vertebrata always have a dorsal, or neural, cavity above the notochord or backbone, and a ventral, or visceral, cavity below it. The subdivisions or classes of Vertebrata are Mammalia, Aves, Reptilia, Amphibia, Pisces, Marsipobranchia, and Leptocardia.

Vertebrated Vertebrate

Having a backbone, or vertebral column, containing the spinal marrow, as man, quadrupeds, birds, amphibia, and fishes.

Vertex

A turning point; the principal or highest point; top; summit; crown; apex.

Verticality

The quality or state of being vertical; verticalness.

Vertically

In a vertical manner, position, or direction; perpendicularly; as, to look down vertically; to raise a thing vertically.

Verticil

A circle either of leaves or flowers about a stem at the same node; a whorl.

Verticillaster

A whorl of flowers apparently of one cluster, but composed of two opposite axillary cymes, as in mint. See Illust. of Whorl.

Verticillated Verticillate

Arranged in a transverse whorl or whorls like the rays of a wheel; as, verticillate leaves of a plant; a verticillate shell.

Verticity

The quality or power of turning; revolution; rotation.

Verticle

An axis; a hinge; a turning point.

Vertiginous

Turning round; whirling; rotary; revolving; as, a vertiginous motion.

Vertigo

Dizziness or swimming of the head; an affection of the head in which objects, though stationary, appear to move in various directions, and the person affected finds it difficult to maintain an erect posture; giddiness.

Vertu

Virtue; power. See Virtue.

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