The second month of the Jewish ecclesiastical year, corresponding to our May.
A temple tower of the Babylonians or Assyrians, consisting of a lofty pyramidal structure, built in successive stages, with outside staircases, and a shrine at the top; -- called also zikkurat.
Same as Sicker.
To move in a zigzag manner; also, to have a zigzag shape.
The quality or state of being zigzag; crookedness.
Having sharp turns.
A temple tower of the Babylonians or Assyrians, consisting of a lofty pyramidal structure, built in successive stages, with outside staircases, and a shrine at the top; -- called also ziggurat.
A low, thorny, suffrutescent, crucifeous plant (Zilla myagroides) found in the deserts of Egypt. Its leaves are boiled in water, and eaten, by the Arabs.
A district or local division, as of a province.
A large, venomous, two-winged fly, native of Abyssinia. It is allied to the tsetse fly, and, like the latter, is destructive to cattle.
A kind of water found in copper mines; water impregnated with copper.
A sponge (Euspongia zimocca) of flat form and fine quality, from the Adriatic, about the Greek islands, and the coast of Barbary.
To coat with zinc; to galvanize.
Zinc chloride.
Pertaining to, containing, or resembling, zinc; zincous.
A binary compound of zinc.
Containing or affording zinc.
The act or process of applying zinc; the condition of being zincified, or covered with zinc; galvanization.
To coat or impregnate with zinc.
The act or process of applying zinc; galvanization.
Native zinc oxide; a brittle, translucent mineral, of an orange-red color; -- called also red zinc ore, and red oxide of zinc.
Pertaining to zinc, or having its appearance.
Electrically polarized like the surface of the zinc presented to the acid in a battery, which has zincous affinity.
The positive electrode of an electrolytic cell; anode.
A zinc plate prepared for printing by zincography; also, a print from such a plate.
An engraver on zinc.
The art or process of engraving or etching on zinc, in which the design is left in relief in the style of a wood cut, the rest of the ground being eaten away by acid.
Pertaining to, or resembling, zinc; -- said of the electricity of the zincous plate in connection with a copper plate in a voltaic circle; also, designating the positive pole.
Of or pertaining to zincography; as, zincographic processes.
Of, pertaining to, or containing, zinc; zincic; as, zincous salts. Hence, formerly, basic, basylous, as opposed to chlorous.
A gypsy.
A small, edible, freshwater European perch (Aspro zingel), having a round, elongated body and prominent snout.
Of or pertaining to ginger, or to a tribe (Zingibereae) of endogenous plants of the order Scitamineae. See Scitamineous.
See Zinc.
A steel-gray metallic mineral, a sulphide of antimony and lead.
See Zincky.
Any plant of the composite genus Zinnia, Mexican herbs with opposite leaves and large gay-colored blossoms. Zinnia elegans is the commonest species in cultivation.
A kind of mica containing lithium, often associated with tin ore.
The delundung.
Same as Zingiberaceous.
Among the Jews, a theory, plan, or movement for colonizing their own race in Palestine, the land of Zion, or, if that is impracticable, elsewhere, either for religious or nationalizing purposes; -- called also Zion movement.
To make, or move with, a sound like a zip{1}.
a full nine-digit zip code. See zip code.
Any one of a set of numbers assigned by the United States Postal Service to designate a particular postal delivery area. One or more zip codes are assigned to each post office. The numbers initially had five digits (the initial code), indicating state and post office. Later, four more optional digits were added (the expanded code) indicating the box number or delivery route. The full set of nine digits is also referred to as zip + 4. The code is appended in an address to the line bearing the city and state names, as in /Plainfield, NJ 07062/.
to affix a zip code to (an address or a letter).
a device for locking together two toothed edges by means of a sliding tab.
A natural family of cetaceans comprising the beaked whales; in some esp. former classifications included in the family Physeteridae.
See Xiphioid.
a device for locking together two toothed edges by means of a sliding tab.
quick and energetic.
The consort of Marduk.
A double fluoride of zirconium and hydrogen, or some other positive element or radical; as, zircofluoride of sodium.
A mineral consisting predominantly of zirconium silicate (Zr2SiO4) occurring in tetragonal crystals, usually of a brown or gray color. It consists of silica and zirconia. A red variety, used as a gem, is called hyacinth. Colorless, pale-yellow or smoky-brown varieties from Ceylon are called jargon.
Zirconia.
A salt of zirconic acid.
The oxide of zirconium (ZrO2), obtained as a white powder, and possessing both acid and basic properties. On account of its infusibility, and brilliant luminosity when incandescent, it is used as an ingredient of sticks for the Drummomd light.
Pertaining to, containing, or resembling, zirconium; as, zirconic oxide; zirconic compounds.
A rare element of the carbon-silicon group, intermediate between the metals and nonmetals, obtained from the mineral zircon as a dark sooty powder, or as a gray metallic crystalline substance. Symbol Zr. Atomic weight, 90.4.
A double eight-sided pyramid, a form common with tetragonal crystals; -- so called because this form often occurs in crystals of zircon.
a pimple.
An instrument of music used in Austria and Germany. It has from thirty to forty wires strung across a shallow sounding-board, which lies horizontally on a table before the performer, who uses both hands in playing on it. [Not to be confounded with the old lute-shaped cittern, or cithern.]
A tubular pasta in short pieces.
See Cittern.
A genus of grasses including Indian rice. See Indian rice, under Rice.
The suslik.
The tassels of twisted cords or threads on the corners of the upper garment worn by strict Jews. The Hebrew for this word is translated in both the Authorized and Revised Versions (Deut. xxii. 12) by the word /fringes./
A suborder of Actinaria, including Zoanthus and allied genera, which are permanently attached by their bases.
Same as Anthozoa.
Of or pertaining to the Zoantharia. One of the Anthozoa.
The zooids of a compound anthozoan, collectively.
Of or pertaining to the Zoanthacea.
A kind of monomania in which the patient believes himself transformed into one of the lower animals.
A genus of Actinaria, including numerous species, found mostly in tropical seas. The zooids or polyps resemble small, elongated actinias united together at their bases by fleshy stolons, and thus forming extensive groups. The tentacles are small and bright colored.
A kind of domestic cattle reared in Asia for its flesh and milk. It is supposed to be a hybrid between the zebu and the yak.
Same as Socle.
Same as Socle.
a trade name for simvastatin.
Of or pertaining to the zodiac; situated within the zodiac; as, the zodiacal planets.
A peculiar larval stage of certain decapod Crustacea, especially of crabs and certain Anomura.
An optical toy, in which figures made to revolve on the inside of a cylinder, and viewed through slits in its circumference, appear like a single figure passing through a series of natural motions as if animated or mechanically moved.
A Jewish cabalistic book attributed by tradition to Rabbi Simon ben Yochi, who lived about the end of the 1st century, a. d. Modern critics believe it to be a compilation of the 13th century.
Of or pertaining to animals, or animal life.
See Meride.
Having the characteristic of Zoilus, a bitter, envious, unjust critic, who lived about 270 years before Christ.
Resemblance to Zoilus in style or manner; carping criticism; detraction.
A grayish or whitish mineral occurring in orthorhombic, prismatic crystals, also in columnar masses. It is a silicate of alumina and lime, and is allied to epidote.
Reverence for animal life or belief in animal powers and influences, as among savages.
An Asiatic burrowing rodent (Siphneus aspalax) resembling the mole rat. It is native of the Altai Mountains.
In the style of Zola (see Zolaism).
The literary theories and practices of the French novelist Emile Zola (1840-1902); naturalism, esp. in a derogatory sense.
Literally, a customs union; specifically, applied to the several customs unions successively formed under the leadership of Prussia among certain German states for establishing liberty of commerce among themselves and common tariff on imports, exports, and transit.
See Zumbooruk.
A zone or band; a layer.
Of or pertaining to a zone; having the form of a zone or zones.
A belt or girdle which the Christians and Jews of the Levant were obliged to wear to distinguish them from Mohammedans.
A division of Mammalia in which the placenta is zonelike.
Divided by parallel planes; as, zonate tetraspores, found in certain red algae.
To girdle; to encircle.
Wearing a zone, or girdle.
Not having a zone; ungirded.
See Zonar.
Of or pertaining to a zone; zone-shaped.
A little zone, or girdle.
A zonule.
Any one of several of South African lizards of the genus Zonura, common in rocky situations.
Pertaining to zoochemistry.
Animal chemistry; particularly, the description of the chemical compounds entering into the composition of the animal body, in distinction from biochemistry.
Animal chemistry; zoochemistry.
One of the small green granulelike bodies found in the interior of certain stentors, hydras, and other invertebrates.
A cyst formed by certain Protozoa and unicellular plants which the contents divide into a large number of granules, each of which becomes a germ.
The common support, often branched, of certain species of social Infusoria.
The branched, and often treelike, support of the colonies of certain Infusoria.
One of the cells or tubes which inclose the feeling zooids of Bryozoa. See Illust. of Sea Moss.
A peculiar organic red coloring matter found in the feathers of various birds.
Of or pertaining zoogamy.
The sexual reproduction of animals.
Of or pertaining to zoogeny, animal production.
Of or pertaining to zoography.
The study or description of the geographical distribution of animals.
A colony or mass of bacteria imbedded in a viscous gelatinous substance. The zoogloea is characteristic of a transitory stage through which rapidly multiplying bacteria pass in the course of their evolution. Also used adjectively.
The doctrine of the formation of living beings.