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Cushat

The ringdove or wood pigeon.

Cushion

To seat or place on, or as on a cushion.

cushioned

furnished with a cushion or other device to reduce hardness.

cushioning

soft or resilient material used to fill or give shape or protect or add comfort.

Cushite

A descendant of Cush, the son of Ham and grandson of Noah.

cushy

not requiring strong efforts; easy; -- said of paid employment; as, He got a cushy job in a large company.

Cusk

A large, edible, marine fish (Brosmius brosme), allied to the cod, common on the northern coasts of Europe and America; -- called also tusk and torsk.

Cusp

To furnish with a cusp or cusps.

Cuspid

One of the canine teeth; -- so called from having but one point or cusp on the crown. See Tooth.

Cuspidated Cuspidate

Having a sharp end, like the point of a spear; terminating in a hard point; as, a cuspidate leaf.

Cuspidor

Any ornamental vessel used as a spittoon; hence, to avoid the common term, a spittoon of any sort.

cussed

stubbornly persistent in wrongdoing; obstinate.

Cussedness

Disposition to willful wrongdoing; malignity; perversity; cantankerousness; obstinacy.

Custard

A mixture of milk and eggs, sweetened, and baked or boiled.

Custodial

Relating to custody or guardianship.

Custodian

One who has care or custody, as of some public building; a keeper or superintendent.

Custody

A keeping or guarding; care, watch, inspection, for keeping, preservation, or security.

custom-made

made specially for a specific purpose; -- of articles of manufacture. Contrasted with mass-produced, standardized.

Customary

A book containing laws and usages, or customs; as, the Customary of the Normans.

Customhouse

The building where customs and duties are paid, and where vessels are entered or cleared.

customs

money collected under a tariff; a duty imposed on imported goods.

Custos

A keeper; a custodian; a superintendent.

Cut

Gashed or divided, as by a cutting instrument.

cut-in

a still inserted and interrupting the action.

Cut-off

That which cuts off or shortens, as a nearer passage or road.

Cut-out

A species of switch for changing the current from one circuit to another, or for shortening a circuit. A device for breaking or separating a portion of circuit.

cut-rate

a price below the standard price.

cutaneous

Of or pertaining to the skin; existing on, or affecting, the skin; as, a cutaneous disease; cutaneous absorption; cutaneous respiration; cutaneous nerves; a cutaneous infection.

Cutaway

Having a part cut off or away; having the corners rounded or cut away.

cutback

a reduction in quantity or rate; a reduction in the amount of an activity or the funding for an activity; as, cutbacks in government research funding increased unemployment among scientists; the recession caused a cutback in auto production.

Cute

Clever; sharp; shrewd; ingenious; cunning.

Cuticle

The scarfskin or epidermis. See Skin.

cuticula

the outer body wall of an insect.

Cuticular

Pertaining to the cuticle, or external coat of the skin; epidermal.

Cutin

A waxy substance containing fatty acids, soaps, and resinous material which, combined with cellulose, forms a substance nearly impervious to water and constituting the cuticle in plants.

Cutinization

The conversion of cell walls into a material which repels water, as in cork.

cutlas

variant spelling of cutlass.

Cutlass

A short, heavy, curving sword, used in the navy. See Curtal ax.

cutlassfish cutlass fish

a peculiar, long, thin, marine fish (Trichiurus lepturus) of the southern United States and West Indies, having a long whiplike scaleless body and sharp daggerlike teeth; -- called also frostfish, saber fish, silver eel, and, improperly, swordfish; also, several related members of the genus Trichiurus. It is closely related to snake mackerel.

Cutler

One who makes or deals in cutlery, or knives and other cutting instruments.

Cutlet

A piece of meat, especially of veal or mutton, cut for broiling.

Cutling

The art of making edged tools or cutlery.

Cutose

A variety of cellulose, occuring as a fine transparent membrane covering the aerial organs of plants, and forming an essential ingredient of cork; by oxidation it passes to suberic acid.

Cutpurse

One who cuts purses for the sake of stealing them or their contents (an act common when men wore purses fastened by a string to their girdles); one who steals from the person; a pickpocket

Cutter

One who cuts; as, a stone cutter; a die cutter; esp., one who cuts out garments.

Cutting

Adapted to cut; as, a cutting tool.

Cuttlefish Cuttle

A cephalopod of the genus Sepia, having an internal shell, large eyes, and ten arms furnished with denticulated suckers, by means of which it secures its prey. The name is sometimes applied to dibranchiate cephalopods generally.

Cutwal

The chief police officer of a large city.

Cutwater

The fore part of a ship's prow, which cuts the water.

Cutwork

An ancient term for embroidery, esp. applied to the earliest form of lace, or to that early embroidery on linen and the like, from which the manufacture of lace was developed.

Cutworm

A caterpillar which at night eats off young plants of cabbage, corn, etc., usually at the ground. Some kinds ascend fruit trees and eat off the flower buds. During the day, they conceal themselves in the earth. The common cutworms are the larv/ of various species of Agrotis and related genera of noctuid moths.

Cyamelide

A white amorphous substance, regarded as a polymeric modification of isocyanic acid.

Cyamellone

A complex derivative of cyanogen, regarded as an acid, and known chiefly in its salts; -- called also hydromellonic acid.

Cyanic

Pertaining to, or containing, cyanogen.

Cyanide

A compound formed by the union of cyanogen with an element or radical.

Cyanin

The blue coloring matter of flowers; -- called also anthokyan and anthocyanin.

Cyanine

One of a series of artificial blue or red dyes obtained from quinoline and lepidine and used in calico printing.

Cyanite

A mineral occuring in thin-bladed crystals and crystalline aggregates, of a sky-blue color. It is a silicate of aluminium.

Cyanogen

A colorless, inflammable, poisonous gas, C2N2, with a peach-blossom odor, so called from its tendency to form blue compounds; obtained by heating ammonium oxalate, mercuric cyanide, etc. It is obtained in combination, forming an alkaline cyanide when nitrogen or a nitrogenous compound is strongly ignited with carbon and soda or potash. It conducts itself like a member of the halogen group of elements, and shows a tendency to form complex compounds. The name is also applied to the univalent radical, CN (the half molecule of cyanogen proper), which was one of the first compound radicals recognized.

Cyanometer

An instrument for measuring degress of blueness.

Cyanopathy

A disease in which the body is colored blue in its surface, arising usually from a malformation of the heart, which causes an imperfect arterialization of the blood; blue jaundice.

Cyanophyll

A blue coloring matter supposed by some to be one of the component parts of chlorophyll.

Cyanosed

Rendered blue, as the surface of the body, from cyanosis or deficient a/ration of the blood.

Cyanosis

A condition in which, from insufficient a/ration of the blood, the surface of the body becomes blue. See Cyanopathy.

Cyanosite

Native sulphate of copper. Cf. Blue vitriol, under Blue.

Cyanotic

Relating to cyanosis; affected with cyanosis; as, a cyanotic patient; having the hue caused by cyanosis; as, a cyanotic skin.

Cyanotype

A photographic picture obtained by the use of a cyanide.

Cyanuric

Pertaining to, or derived from, cyanic and uric acids.

Cyathiform

In the form of a cup, a little widened at the top.

Cyatholith

A kind of coccolith, which in shape resembles a minute cup widened at the top, and varies in size from / to / of an inch.

Cyathophylloid

A fossil coral of the family Cyathophyllid/; sometimes extended to fossil corals of other related families belonging to the group Rugosa; -- also called cup corals. Thay are found in paleozoic rocks.

Cycad

Any plant of the natural order Cycadace/, as the sago palm, etc.

Cycadaceae

a natural family of ancient palmlike plants closely related to ferns in that fertilization is by means of spermatozoids.

Cycadaceous

Pertaining to, or resembling, an order of plants like the palms, but having exogenous wood. The sago palm is an example.

Cycadales

an order of primitive tropical gymnosperms abundant in the Mesozoic, now reduced to a few scattered tropical forms.

Cycadofilicales

an order of fossil gymnospermous trees or climbing plants from the Devonian: seed ferns.

Cycadopsida Cycadophytina Cycadophyta

a class or subdivision of plants comprising palmlike gymnosperms: it includes the surviving order Cycadales and several extinct orders; possibly not a natural group; in some systems considered a class (Cycadopsida) and in others a subdivision (Cycadophytina or Cycadophyta).

Cycas

A genus of trees, intermediate in character between the palms and the pines. The pith of the trunk of some species furnishes a valuable kind of sago.

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