Dress; trappings; equipment; specifically, the devices and equipments worn by soldiers.
To render quiet; to soothe.
The capital city of Ghana. Population (2000) = nk.
To put or bring into credit; to invest with credit or authority; to sanction.
The act of accrediting; as, letters of accreditation.
Pertaining to accremention.
The process of generation by development of blastema, or fission of cells, in which the new formation is in all respects like the individual from which it proceeds.
To accrue.
Continuous growth; an accretion.
Characterized by accretion; made up; as, accrete matter.
Marked or produced by accretion.
Relating to accretion; increasing, or adding to, by growth.
To accuse of a crime.
To hook, or draw to one's self as with a hook.
An encroachment; usurpation.
Accrument.
Something that accrues; advantage accruing.
The act of accruing; accretion; as, title by accruer.
The process of accruing, or that which has accrued; increase.
The act or posture of reclining on a couch, as practiced by the ancients at meals.
of or pertaining to acculturation (definition 3).
To recline, as at table.
The state of being accumbent or reclining.
One who reclines at table.
To encumber.
Collected; accumulated.
brought together into a group or crowd
The act of accumulating, the state of being accumulated, or that which is accumulated; as, an accumulation of earth, of sand, of evils, of wealth, of honors.
Characterized by accumulation; serving to collect or amass; cumulative; additional.
One who, or that which, accumulates, collects, or amasses.
The state of being accurate; freedom from mistakes, this exemption arising from carefulness; exact conformity to truth, or to a rule or model; precision; exactness; nicety; correctness; as, the value of testimony depends on its accuracy.
In exact or careful conformity to truth, or to some standard of requirement, the result of care or pains; free from failure, error, or defect; exact; as, an accurate calculator; an accurate measure; accurate expression, knowledge, etc.
In an accurate manner; exactly; precisely; without error or defect.
The state or quality of being accurate; accuracy; exactness; nicety; precision.
To devote to destruction; to imprecate misery or evil upon; to curse; to execrate; to anathematize.
Doomed to destruction or misery; cursed; hence, bad enough to be under the curse; execrable; detestable; exceedingly hateful; -- as, an accursed deed.
Liable to be accused or censured; chargeable with a crime or fault; blamable; -- with of.
Accusation.
An accuser.
Pertaining to the accusative case.
The accusative case.
In an accusative manner.
Accusatory.
By way accusation.
Pertaining to, or containing, an accusation; as, an accusatory libel.
To charge with, or declare to have committed, a crime or offense to charge with an offense, judicially or by a public process; -- with of; as, to accuse one of a high crime or misdemeanor.
Charged with offense; as, an accused person.
Accusation.
One who accuses; one who brings a charge of crime or fault.
serving to accuse; expressing accusation
In an accusing manner.
Custom.
Habitual; customary; wonted.
According to custom; ordinarily; customarily.
Custom; habitual use.
Customarily.
Usual; customary.
Familiar through use; usual; customary.
Habituation.
to get a grade of "A"; as, to ace an exam.
apathy and inactivity in the practice of virtue (personified as one of the deadly sins).
The potter's field, said to have lain south of Jerusalem, purchased with the bribe which Judas took for betraying his Master, and therefore called the field of blood. Fig.: A field of bloodshed.
not containing cells
Not centered; without a center.
One of the Acephala.
That division of the Mollusca which includes the bivalve shells, like the clams and oysters; -- so called because they have no evident head. Formerly the group included the Tunicata, Brachiopoda, and sometimes the Bryozoa. See Mollusca.
Belonging to the Acephala.
A fabulous people reported by ancient writers to have heads.
One who acknowledges no head or superior.
A larval entozo/n in the form of a subglobular or oval vesicle, or hydatid, filled with fluid, sometimes found in the tissues of man and the lower animals; -- so called from the absence of a head or visible organs on the vesicle. These cysts are the immature stages of certain tapeworms. Also applied to similar cysts of different origin.
Pertaining to, or resembling, the acephalocysts.
A canal or trench for irrigating land.
type genus of the Aceraceae; trees or shrubs having winged fruit.
the family of trees including the maples.
Acerose; needle-shaped.
Sour, bitter, and harsh to the taste, as unripe fruit; sharp and harsh.
To sour; to imbitter; to irritate.
Sour or severe.
Sourness and harshness.
Sourness of taste, with bitterness and astringency, like that of unripe fruit.
Pertaining to, or obtained from, the maple; as, aceric acid.
Having the nature of chaff; chaffy. Needle-shaped, having a sharp, rigid point, as the leaf of the pine.
Destitute of tentacles, as certain mollusks. Without antenn/, as some insects.
Pertaining to a heap.
Heaped, or growing in heaps, or closely compacted clusters.
A heaping up; accumulation.
Heaped up; tending to heap up.
Full of heaps.
Resembling little heaps.
The quality of being acescent; the process of acetous fermentation; a moderate degree of sourness.
A substance liable to become sour.
An acetabulum; or about one eighth of a pint.
Cup-shaped; saucer-shaped; acetabuliform.
The division of Cephalopoda in which the arms are furnished with cup-shaped suckers, as the cuttlefishes, squids, and octopus; the Dibranchiata. See Cephalopoda.
Furnished with fleshy cups for adhering to bodies, as cuttlefish, etc.
Shaped like a shallow cup; saucer-shaped; as, an acetabuliform calyx.
A limpid, colorless, inflammable liquid from the slow oxidation of alcohol under the influence of platinum black.
Acetic aldehyde. See Aldehyde.
A white crystalline solid, from ammonia by replacement of an equivalent of hydrogen by acetyl.
a white crystalline compound (HO.C6H4.NH.CO.CH3) used as an analgesic and also as an antipyretic. It has molecular weight 151.16. It is the active ingredient in the commercial analgesics Tylenol and Datril.
An amide formed from aniline and an acetyl group (C6H5.NH.CO.CH3); it is a white crystalline compound used as an analgesic and also as an antipyretic. It has molecular weight 135.16.
Used in salads; as, acetarious plants.
An acid pulp in certain fruits, as the pear.
A salt formed by the union of acetic acid with a base or positive radical; as, acetate of lead, acetate of potash.
Combined with acetic acid.
Of a pertaining to vinegar; producing vinegar; producing vinegar; as, acetic fermentation. Pertaining to, containing, or derived from, acetyl, as acetic ether, acetic acid. The latter is the acid to which the sour taste of vinegar is due.
The act of making acetous or sour; the process of converting, or of becoming converted, into vinegar.
An apparatus for hastening acetification.
To turn acid.
An instrument for estimating the amount of acetic acid in vinegar or in any liquid containing acetic acid.
The act or method of ascertaining the strength of vinegar, or the proportion of acetic acid contained in it.
A combination of acetic acid with glycerin.
To acetify.
Methyl ketol; also, any of various homologues of the same.
Same as Acetimeter.
A morbid condition characterized by the presence of ketone bodies (including acetone, acetoacetic acid and beta-hydroxybutyric acid) in the blood, as in diabetes.
A volatile liquid (CH3.CO.CH3); pyroacetic spirit; methyl ketone; -- obtained by fermentation, the distillation of certain acetates, or by the destructive distillation of citric acid, starch, sugar, or gum, with quicklime. It is commonly used as a solvent.
Of or pertaining to acetone; as, acetonic bodies.
Excess of ketone bodies (including acetone, acetoacetic acid and beta-hydroxybutyric acid) in the urine, as in starvation or diabetes
A white crystalline compound used as an analgesic and also as an antipyretic.
A crystalline ketone, CH3.CO.C6H5, which may be obtained by the dry distillation of a mixture of the calcium salts of acetic and benzoic acids. It is used as a hypnotic under the name of hypnone.