Relating to cyanosis; affected with cyanosis; as, a cyanotic patient; having the hue caused by cyanosis; as, a cyanotic skin.
A photographic picture obtained by the use of a cyanide.
A salt of cyanuric acid.
A cyanide.
Pertaining to, or derived from, cyanic and uric acids.
In the form of a cup, a little widened at the top.
A kind of coccolith, which in shape resembles a minute cup widened at the top, and varies in size from / to / of an inch.
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.
Any plant of the natural order Cycadace/, as the sago palm, etc.
a natural family of ancient palmlike plants closely related to ferns in that fertilization is by means of spermatozoids.
Pertaining to, or resembling, an order of plants like the palms, but having exogenous wood. The sago palm is an example.
an order of primitive tropical gymnosperms abundant in the Mesozoic, now reduced to a few scattered tropical forms.
an order of fossil gymnospermous trees or climbing plants from the Devonian: seed ferns.
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).
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.
the pre-Mycenaean civilization on the Cyclades islands in the S Aegean sea.
A genus of plants of the Primrose family, having depressed rounded corms, and pretty nodding flowers with the petals so reflexed as to point upwards, whence it is called rabbits' ears. It is also called sow bread, because hogs are said to eat the corms.
A white amorphous substance, regarded as a glucoside, extracted from the corm of Cyclamen Europ/um.
A long gown or surcoat (cut off in front), worn in the Middle Ages. It was sometimes embroidered or interwoven with gold. Also, a rich stuff from which the gown was made.
To pass through a cycle{2} of changes; to recur in cycles.
To cause to pass through a cycle{2}.
Of or pertaining to a cycle or circle; moving in cycles; as, cyclical time.
A surface of the fourth degree, having certain special relations to spherical surfaces. The tore or anchor ring is one of the cyclides.
The act, art, or practice, of riding a cycle, esp. a bicycle or tricycle.
A cycler.
Having the gills around the margin of the body, as certain limpets.
One of the Cycloganoidei.
An order of ganoid fishes, having cycloid scales. The bowfin (Amia calva) is a living example.
See Arcograph.
One of the Cycloidei.
Pertaining to, or resembling, a cycloid; as, the cycloidal space is the space contained between a cycloid and its base.
An order of fishes, formerly proposed by Agassiz, for those with thin, smooth scales, destitute of marginal spines, as the herring and salmon. The group is now regarded as artificial.
Same as 2d and 3d Cycloid.
A contrivance for recording the revolutions of a wheel, as of a bicycle.
The art of measuring circles.
A violent storm, often of vast extent, characterized by high winds rotating about a calm center of low atmospheric pressure. This center moves onward, often with a velocity of twenty or thirty miles an hour.
Pertaining to a cyclone.
An apparatus to assist in locating the center of a cyclone.
See Note under Cyclops, 1.
The circle or compass of the arts and sciences (originally, of the seven so-called liberal arts and sciences); circle of human knowledge.
Pertaining to the Cyclops; characteristic of the Cyclops; huge; gigantic; vast and rough; massive; as, Cyclopean labors; Cyclopean architecture.
Belonging to the circle of the sciences, or to a cyclopedia; of the nature of a cyclopedia; hence, of great range, extent, or amount; as, a man of cyclopedic knowledge.
A maker of, or writer for, a cyclopedia.
a genus of tropical Old World ferns having closely crowded circular sori and no indusia.
Pertaining to the Cyclops; Cyclopean.
a colorless flammable gas (C3H6) with a three-carbon ring, sometimes used as an anesthetic.
One of a race of giants, sons of Neptune and Amphitrite, having but one eye, and that in the middle of the forehead. They were fabled to inhabit Sicily, and to assist in the workshops of Vulcan, under Mt. Etna.
a natural family comprising the lumpfishes.
the type genus of the Cyclopteridae, consisting of lumpfishes. It includes Cyclopterus lumpus of the North Atlantic.
A pictorial view which is extended circularly, so that the spectator is surrounded by the objects represented as by things in nature. The realistic effect is increased by putting, in the space between the spectator and the picture, things adapted to the scene represented, and in some places only parts of these objects, the completion of them being carried out pictorially.
A machine for measuring at any moment velocity of rotation, as of a wheel of a steam engine.
The circulation or movement of protoplasmic granules within a living vegetable cell.
a small genus of terrestrial ferns of tropical and subtropical southern hemisphere.
in more recent classifications superseded by the order Fucales.
a chemical substance produced by some soil fungi, which suppresses the cellular immune response by inhibiting T cell activation, and has been used in medicine to reduce foreign tissue rejection, especially subsequent to organ transplant surgery.
A division of Bryozoa, in which the cells have circular apertures.
A glass of fishes having a suckerlike mouth, without jaws, as the lamprey; the Marsipobranchii.
Pertaining to the Cyclostomi.
Relating to a structure composed of a circular range of columns, without a core or building within.
A contrivance for producing manifold copies of writing or drawing. The writing or drawing is done with a style carrying a small wheel at the end which makes minute punctures in the paper, thus converting it into a stencil. Copies are transferred with an inked roller.
a mild bipolar disorder.
of or pertaining to cyclothymia.
a particle accelerator that imparts energies of several million electron-volts to rapidly moving particles; it is used in investigations in nuclear physics and particle physics.
a genus of epiphytic or terrestrial tropical American orchids.
See Cider.
an order of ctenophores having two long pinnate tentacles.
a genus of plants including the quince.
A peculiar mucilaginous substance extracted from the seeds of the quince (Cydonia vulgaris), and regarded as a variety of amylose.
A young swan.
A constellation of the northern hemisphere east of, or following, Lyra; the Swan.
Cylindrical, or approaching a cylindrical form.
Having the form of a cylinder, or of a section of its convex surface; partaking of the properties of the cylinder.
the roundness of a 3-dimensional cylinder.
In the manner or shape of a cylinder; so as to be cylindrical.
the roundness of a 3-dimensional cylinder.
The quality or condition of being cylindrical.
Having the form of a cylinder.
A solid body resembling a right cylinder, but having the bases or ends elliptical.
Belonging to a scale used in measuring cylinders.
A slight covering; a scarf. See Simar.
A capping or crowning molding in classic architecture.
A musical instrument used by the ancients. It is supposed to have been similar to the modern kettle drum, though perhaps smaller.
A performer upon cymbals.
Shaped like a boat; (Bot.) elongated and having the upper surface decidedly concave, as the glumes of many grasses.
A genus of marine univalve shells; the gondola.
A scalloped or /pattypan/ variety of summer squash.
A flattish or convex flower cluster, of the centrifugal or determinate type, differing from a corymb chiefly in the order of the opening of the blossoms.
A colorless, liquid, combustible hydrocarbon, CH3.C6H4.C3H7, of pleasant odor, obtained from oil of cumin, oil of caraway, carvacrol, camphor, etc.; -- called also paracymene, and formerly camphogen.
See Carvacrol.
A liquid organic base, C10H13.NH2, derived from cymene.
Producing cymes.
A highly volatile liquid, condensed by cold and pressure from the first products of the distillation of petroleum; -- used for producing low temperatures.
To trace or copy with a cymograph.
Having the form of a cyme.
An instrument for exhibiting and measuring wave motion an instrument for determining the frequency of electic wave oscillations, esp. in connection with wireless telegraphy.
See Chrysoberyl.
Having a wavy, floating light; opalescent; chatoyant.
Any device for detecting the presence of electric waves. The influence of electric waves on the resistance of a particular kind of electric circuit, on the magnetization of steel, on the polarization of an electrolytic cell, or on the electric condition of a vacuum has been applied in the various cymoscopes.
Having the nature of a cyme, or derived from a cyme; bearing, or pertaining to, a cyme or cymes.
Welsh. The Welsh language.
A collective term for the Welsh race; -- so called by themselves .
A small cyme, or one of very few flowers.
Any disease of the tonsils, throat, or windpipe, attended with inflammation, swelling, and difficulty of breathing and swallowing.
A kind of madness in which men fancy themselves changed into dogs, and imitate the voice and habits of that animal.
Bear baiting with a dog.
A fruit like that of the rose, consisting of a cup formed of the calyx tube and receptacle, and containing achenes.
The art of hunting with dogs.
One of a sect or school of philosophers founded by Antisthenes, and of whom Diogenes was a disciple. The first Cynics were noted for austere lives and their scorn for social customs and current philosophical opinions. Hence the term Cynic symbolized, in the popular judgment, moroseness, and contempt for the views of others.
Having the qualities of a surly dog; snarling; captious; currish.
In a cynical manner.
The quality of being cynical.
The doctrine of the Cynics; the quality of being cynical; the mental state, opinions, or conduct, of a cynic; morose and contemptuous views and opinions.
the type genus of the family Cynocephalidae.
a genus of creeping perennial grasses of tropical and southern Africa.
any member of the Cynodontia, a group of small carnivorous reptiles.
a division of Triassic Therapsida comprising small carnivorous reptiles often with mammallike teeth.
a natural family of fish including the tonguefishes.
A division of Carnivora, including the dogs, wolves, and foxes.
a genus of mammals comprising the prairie dogs.
A voracious appetite, like that of a starved dog.
the battle that ended the second Macedonian War (197 BC); the Romans defeated King Philip of Macedon.