Same as Wistaria.
A small South American monkey; a marmoset.
Attentively; observingly.
See Wishtonwish.
To know; to learn.
One who breaks jests; a joker.
One who affects repartee; a wit-cracker.
Barren of wit; destitute of genius.
Lit., wise men; The members of the national, or king's, council which sat to assist the king in administrative and judicial matters; also, the council.
A cone of paper which is placed in a vessel of lard or other fat, and used as a taper.
To bewitch; to fascinate; to enchant.
See Wych-elm.
The wych-elm. An American shrub or small tree (Hamamelis Virginica), which blossoms late in autumn.
The witch-hazel.
Sorcery; enchantment; witchcraft.
That witches or enchants; suited to enchantment or witchcraft; bewitching.
The middle of the night, especially midnight.
The sand martin, or bank swallow.
Art or skill of the mind; contrivance; invention; wit.
Blame; reproach.
Blameless.
pl. pres. of Wit.
A meeting of wise men; the national council, or legislature, of England in the days of the Anglo-Saxons, before the Norman Conquest.
The ladyfish (a).
Wise; sensible.
With denotes or expresses some situation or relation of nearness, proximity, association, connection, or the like.
With; -- put after its object, at the end of sentence or clause in which it stands.
A variety of epidote, of a reddish color, found in Scotland.
To retire; to retreat; to quit a company or place; to go away; as, he withdrew from the company.
The act of withdrawing; withdrawment; retreat; retraction.
One who withdraws; one who takes back, or retracts.
A room for retirement from another room, as from a dining room; a drawing-room.
The act of withdrawing; withdrawal.
To bind or fasten with withes.
A North American shrub (Viburnum nudum) whose tough osierlike shoots are sometimes used for binding sheaves.
To cause to fade, and become dry.
Injured or hurt in the withers, as a horse.
A piece of iron in a saddle near a horse's withers, to strengthen the bow.
Faded; dried up; shriveled; wilted; wasted; wasted away.
Tending to wither; causing to shrink or fade.
Barium carbonate occurring in white or gray six-sided twin crystals, and also in columnar or granular masses.
A withered person; one who is decrepit.
A second or reciprocal distress of other goods in lieu of goods which were taken by a first distress and have been eloigned; a taking by way of reprisal; -- chiefly used in the expression capias in withernam, which is the name of a writ used in connection with the action of replevin (sometimes called a writ of reprisal), which issues to a defendant in replevin when he has obtained judgment for a return of the chattels replevied, and fails to obtain them on the writ of return.
The ridge between the shoulder bones of a horse, at the base of the neck. See Illust. of Horse.
One who withholds.
The act of withholding.
In the inner part; inwardly; internally.
Within; inside; inwardly.
In the inner parts; inside.
On or art the outside; not on the inside; not within; outwardly; externally.
Outdoor; exterior.
Without.
Without; outside' outwardly. Cf. Withinforth.
To contradict; to gainsay; to deny; to renounce.
To set against; to oppose.
To stand against; to oppose; to resist, either with physical or moral force; as, to withstand an attack of troops; to withstand eloquence or arguments.
One who withstands, or opposes; an opponent; a resisting power.
o/ Withstand.
Quitch grass.
A kind of bindweed (Convolvulus arvensis).
Same as Withvine.
Made of withes; like a withe; flexible and tough; also, abounding in withes.
Knowledge.
Destitute of wit or understanding; wanting thought; hence, indiscreet; not under the guidance of judgment.
A person who has little wit or understanding; a pretender to wit or smartness.
To bear testimony; to give evidence; to testify.
One who witness.
Having (such) a wit or understanding; as, a quick-witted boy.
A witling.
A witty saying; a sentence or phrase which is affectedly witty; an attempt at wit; a conceit.
Possessed of wit; witty.
In a witty manner; wisely; ingeniously; artfully; with wit; with a delicate turn or phrase, or with an ingenious association of ideas.
The quality of being witty.
Knowingly; with knowledge; by design.
Like a wittol; cuckoldly.
Tin ore freed from earthy matter by stamping.
The golden oriole. The greater spotted woodpecker.
One who, or that which, feeds on or destroys wit.
To match to a wife; to provide with a wife.
Wifehood.
Wifeless.
Wifely.
pl. of Wife.
Enchanting; charming.
Resembling or becoming a wizard; wizardlike; weird.
The character or practices o/ wizards; sorcery; magic.
The weasand.
Having a shriveled, thin, withered face.
Dried; shriveled; withered; shrunken; weazen; as, a wizened old man.
Loathsome; disgusting; hateful.
See Woe.
A leguminous plant (Genista tinctoria) of Europe and Russian Asia, and adventitious in America; -- called also greenwood, greenweed, dyer's greenweed, and whin, wood-wash, wood-wax, and wood-waxen.
Colored or stained with woad.
See Weld.
See Wabble.
Wood.
A geld, or payment, for wood.
A deity corresponding to Odin, the supreme deity of the Scandinavians. Wednesday is named for him. See Odin.
Woeful; sorrowful.
Beset or overwhelmed with woe; immersed in grief or sorrow; woeful.
Woeful.
Full of woe; sorrowful; distressed with grief or calamity; afflicted; wretched; unhappy; sad.
In a woeful manner; sorrowfully; mournfully; miserably; dolefully.
The quality or state of being woeful; misery; wretchedness.
Wake.
See 2d Will.
See Weld.
imp. of Will. See Would.
A kind of club moss. See Lycopodium.
Club moss. See Lycopodium.
Any kind of spurge (Euphorbia); -- so called from its acrid milky juice.
An American shrub (Symphoricarpus occidentalis) which bears soft white berries.
Discovered, or first described, by Caspar Friedrich Wolff (1733-1794), the founder of modern embryology.
Originally, a large hound used in hunting wolves; now, any one of certain breeds of large dogs, some of which are nearly identical with the great Danes.
Like a wolf; having the qualities or form of a wolf; as, a wolfish visage; wolfish designs.
A little or young wolf.
A young wolf.
Same as Wolframite.
A salt of wolframic acid; a tungstate.
Of or pertaining to wolframium. See Tungstic.
Tungstate of iron and manganese, generally of a brownish or grayish black color, submetallic luster, and high specific gravity. It occurs in cleavable masses, and also crystallized. Called also wolfram.