A looking down; a despising.
To send hastily.
To spend; to squander. See Dispend.
A reckless, furious man; a person urged by furious passions, and regardless of consequence; a wild ruffian.
One desperate or hopeless.
In a desperate manner; without regard to danger or safety; recklessly; extremely; as, the troops fought desperately.
Desperation; virulence.
The act of despairing or becoming desperate; a giving up of hope.
Despicableness.
Fit or deserving to be despised; contemptible; mean; vile; worthless; as, a despicable man; despicable company; a despicable gift.
The quality of being despicable; meanness; vileness; worthlessness.
In a despicable or mean manner; contemptibly; as, despicably stingy.
A looking down; despection.
Despicable; contemptible.
A despising; contempt.
To look down upon with disfavor or contempt; to contemn; to scorn; to disdain; to have a low opinion or contemptuous dislike of.
The state of being despised.
A despising.
One who despises; a contemner; a scorner.
Contemptuously.
In spite of; against, or in defiance of; notwithstanding; as, despite his prejudices.
Full of despite; expressing malice or contemptuous hate; malicious.
Feeling or showing despite; malicious; angry to excess; cruel; contemptuous.
Despitefully.
Despiteous; very angry; cruel.
To strip, as of clothing; to divest or unclothe.
Spoil.
having been robbed and destroyed by force and violence.
One who despoils.
Despoliation.
the daughter of Zeus and Demeter; made queen of the underworld by Pluto in ancient mythology; identified with Roman Proserpina.
A stripping or plundering; spoliation.
To give up the will, courage, or spirit; to be thoroughly disheartened; to lose all courage; to become dispirited or depressed; to take an unhopeful view.
Despondency.
Despondency.
The state of desponding; loss of hope and cessation of effort; discouragement; depression or dejection of the mind.
Marked by despondence; given to despondence; low-spirited; as, a despondent manner; a despondent prisoner.
One who desponds.
In a desponding manner.
Betrothal.
To betroth.
A betrothing; betrothal.
A written pledge of marriage.
See Disport.
A master; a lord; especially, an absolute or irresponsible ruler or sovereign.
The station or government of a despot; also, the domain of a despot.
Having the character of, or pertaining to, a despot; absolute in power; possessing and abusing unlimited power; evincing despotism; tyrannical; arbitrary.
The power, spirit, or principles of a despot; absolute control over others; tyrannical sway; tyranny.
A supporter of despotism.
To act the despot.
See Dispread.
To throw off impurities in spume; to work off in foam or scum; to foam.
The act of throwing up froth or scum; separation of the scum or impurities from liquids; scumming; clarification.
To free from spume or scum.
To peel off in the form of scales; to scale off, as the skin in certain diseases.
The separation or shedding of the cuticle or epidermis in the form of flakes or scales; exfoliation, as of bones.
An instrument formerly used in removing the lamin/ of exfoliated bones.
Of, pertaining to, or attended with, desquamation.
Dais.
A service of pastry, fruits, or sweetmeats, at the close of a feast or entertainment; pastry, fruits, etc., forming the last course at dinner.
variant spelling of desiccate.
A kind of painting. See Distemper.
Destiny.
Determined by destiny; fated.
In a destinable manner.
Determined by destiny; fated.
To destine, design, or choose.
The act of destining or appointing.
To determine the future condition or application of; to set apart by design for a future use or purpose; to fix, as by destiny or by an authoritative decree; to doom; to ordain or preordain; to appoint; -- often with the remoter object preceded by to or for.
A believer in destiny; a fatalist.
That to which any person or thing is destined; predetermined state; condition foreordained by the Divine or by human will; fate; lot; doom.
Deficient; wanting; as, a destituent condition.
To leave destitute; to forsake; to abandon.
In destitution.
Destitution.
The state of being deprived of anything; the state or condition of being destitute, needy, or without resources; deficiency; lack; extreme poverty; utter want; as, the inundation caused general destitution.
To destroy.
To unbuild; to pull or tear down; to separate virulently into its constituent parts; to break up the structure and organic existence of; to demolish.
Destructible.
p. p. of destroy. Also See: damaged.
One who destroys, ruins, kills, or desolates.
To destroy.
The quality of being capable of destruction; destructibleness.
Liable to destruction; capable of being destroyed.
The quality of being destructible.
The act of destroying; a tearing down; a bringing to naught; subversion; demolition; ruin; slaying; devastation.
One who delights in destroying that which is valuable; one whose principles and influence tend to destroy existing institutions; a destructive.
One who destroys; a radical reformer; a destructionist.
energy-releasing (prenominal); same as catabolic.
In a destructive manner.
The quality of destroying or ruining.
A destroyer.
To destroy.
A sweating; a profuse or morbid sweating, often succeeded by an eruption of small pimples.
Disused; out of use.
The cessation of use; disuse; discontinuance of practice, custom, or fashion.
To deprive of sulphur.
The act or process of depriving of sulphur.
To desulphurate; to deprive of sulphur.
In a desultory manner; without method; loosely; immethodically.
The quality of being desultory or without order or method; unconnectedness.
Desultory.
Leaping or skipping about.
To select; to borrow.
to cause a process to occur at times or in cycles independent of another process.
a process causing an absence of synchronization; the relation that exists when things occur at unrelated times; as, the stimulus produced a desynchronizing of the brain waves.
The act of desynonymizing.
To deprive of synonymous character; to discriminate in use; -- applied to words which have been employed as synonyms.
To push asunder; to come off or separate from anything; to disengage.
That can be detached.
Separate; unconnected, or imperfectly connected; as, detached parcels.
The act of detaching or separating, or the state of being detached.
To relate in particulars; to particularize; to report minutely and distinctly; to enumerate; to specify; as, he detailed all the facts in due order.
Developed or executed with care and in minute detail; as, a detailed plan.
One who details.
description of something in detail.
confidential information.
Detention.
A writ. See Detinue.
One who detains.
Detention.