- myxopod
- matanza
- matched
- matcher
- matinal
- matinee
- matrass
- matrice
- matross
- mettled
- mewling
- mexical
- macaque
- macauco
- mattery
- matting
- miasmal
- miauled
- micella
- michery
- miching
- myotome
- mystery
- mystify
- moulder
- mystify
- myronic
- myrosin
- myrrhic
- myriare
- myricin
- myricyl
- myotome
- myotomy
- myogram
- myology
- myophan
- machete
- matting
- mattock
- matured
- maturer
- microbe
- microhm
- matweed
- matzoth
- maucaco
- maudlin
- mauling
- maunder
- mauther
- mauvine
- middest
- middler
- middies
- mawkish
- mawmish
- mawseed
- maxilla
- maximum
- mayduke
- mayfish
- mayoral
- mayweed
- mazeful
- mazurka
- meacock
- meadowy
- meaking
- mealies
- meaning
- meander
- meaning
- measled
- measles
- measure
- machine
- midmain
- midmost
- myeloid
- monodic
- monocle
- monadic
- monarch
- mutuary
- muzarab
- muzzled
- mongrel
- monitor
- monkery
- monkeys
- monkish
- moneral
- moneran
- moneron
- monesia
- moneyed
- moneyer
- mongols
- mongrel
- mollify
- mollusc
- momenta
- monacid
- myalgia
- molding
- muttony
- molebut
- mollify
- mollusk
- molosse
- moulted
- molting
- mustily
- mutable
- mutably
- moither
- moulded
- molding
- moidore
- moiling
- moineau
- moisten
- mussing
- mustang
- modicum
- modiste
- modular
- modulus
- moellon
- meconic
- meconin
- medaled
- medalet
- meddled
- meddler
- mediacy
- mediant
- mediate
- medical
- mediety
- maculae
- medleys
- medrick
- medulla
- medusae
- madding
- maddish
- meedful
- meerkat
- meeting
- megalo-
- madness
- madoqua
- madrier
- madwort
- magbote
- maestro
- maffler
- magbote
- maggoty
- magical
- magnate
- magnify
- maguari
- mailing
- maiming
- megasse
- megilph
- meiosis
- melaena
- melange
- melanic
- melanin
- melasma
- meletin
- melilot
- melisma
- mellate
- mellite
- mellone
- mellowy
- melodic
- melting
- membral
- memento
- meminna
- memoirs
- memoria
- menaced
- menacer
- mending
- mendole
- menisci
- monsoon
- monster
- montant
- montero
- monthly
- moodily
- moodish
- mooning
- moonery
- moonish
- moonlit
- moonset
- mooring
- moorage
- mooress
- mooring
- moorpan
- mooting
- mootmen
- mootman
- mopping
- moraine
- mustard
- musketo
- musquaw
- modeled
- modeler
- musical
- musimon
- modioli
- mochila
- mocking
- mockado
- mockage
- mockery
- mocking
- mockish
- modally
- muscled
- muscoid
- muscule
- museful
- midweek
- milldam
- miscite
- miscopy
- missing
- misstep
- misword
- mudfish
- muskrat
- manhole
- mantrap
- marlpit
- maybush
- mediums
- mammals
- mastery
- mastful
- mastiff
- masting
- mastoid
- matting
- maskery
- masonry
- massing
- massage
- masseur
- massive
- masting
- mastery
- mashing
- mashlin
- masking
- metrify
- metrist
- martlet
- mascled
- metisse
- metonic
- metopic
- martite
- methane
- methene
- methide
- metayer
- marrier
- marrowy
- married
- marplot
- marquee
- metamer
- marking
- marling
- marlite
- marmose
- margosa
- marimba
- marined
- marital
- maplike
- marring
- marabou
- maracan
- marbler
- marcato
- marched
- marcher
- marchet
- merchet
- margent
- mapping
- marbled
- manumit
- manured
- manurer
- metaled
- manuary
- mestino
- mestizo
- mansion
- manteau
- mesquit
- message
- mantled
- mantlet
- manrent
- manrope
- mansion
- mannide
- mannish
- mannite
- mankind
- manless
- manlike
- manling
- meshing
- mesityl
- manikin
- manilio
- manille
- maniple
- mersion
- mesally
- meseems
- meselry
- mangily
- mangled
- mangler
- mangoes
- manhead
- manhood
- merinos
- merited
- merling
- mermaid
- manakin
- mandore
- mandrel
- mercies
- merging
- mammary
- manacle
- managed
- manager
- manakin
- manatee
- manbote
- manchet
- mandate
- mercify
- mammock
- mammose
- mammoth
- mammies
- menthol
- menthyl
- mention
- mercery
- meniver
- malmsey
- malodor
- malonic
- malonyl
- malting
- maltine
- malting
- maltman
- maltose
- mamelon
- malison
- mallard
- malleal
- malleus
- mallows
- malefic
- malicho
- malaria
- maleate
- malaise
- malambo
- moldery
- molding
- mainpin
- maintop
- maister
- maistry
- majorat
- makable
- make-up
- moaning
- murkily
- murrain
- murrion
- murther
- moanful
- mobbing
- mobbish
- moraler
- morally
- morassy
- morbose
- morceau
- mordant
- midrash
- midriff
- mid-sea
- midship
- morelle
- morello
- morendo
- morglay
- midward
- midwife
- morinel
- morling
- migrant
- migrate
- mileage
- milfoil
- morosis
- morphew
- morphia
- morphon
- morpion
- miliary
- militar
- militia
- milking
- morsure
- milkily
- milkmen
- milkman
- milksop
- milling
- mortify
- mortise
- morulae
- millier
- milling
- million
- mossing
- milreis
- milvine
- mimesis
- mimetic
- mimical
- mimicry
- motacil
- minable
- minaret
- mincing
- minding
- mindful
- mothery
- motific
- minding
- mineral
- mottled
- mottoes
- mottoed
- mouflon
- minever
- mingled
- mingler
- miniard
- miniate
- mouille
- moulder
- moulten
- mounded
- mounted
- minibus
- minikin
- minimum
- minimus
- minious
- mounted
- mounter
- mourned
- mourner
- miniver
- minivet
- mousing
- mouthed
- mouther
- movable
- minting
- mintage
- mintman
- minuend
- minutia
- movable
- movably
- mowburn
- mozetta
- mucedin
- mucific
- mucigen
- mirable
- miracle
- mirador
- mirbane
- mirific
- muconic
- mucusin
- muddily
- muddled
- misbear
- misbode
- misbede
- misbode
- misborn
- miscall
- miscast
- misdate
- misdeal
- misdeed
- misdeem
- misdiet
- misdone
- misdoer
- misease
- miserly
- misfall
- misfare
- misform
- misgave
- misgive
- mishear
- misjoin
- miskeep
- misknow
- mislaid
- mislead
- muddler
- muddied
- mudhole
- mudsill
- mudwort
- muezzin
- muffing
- muffish
- muffled
- mislike
- mislive
- misluck
- mistake
- mismark
- mismate
- misname
- muffler
- muggish
- mugient
- mugweed
- mugwort
- mugwump
- mulatto
- mulched
- mulcted
- mulling
- mullein
- mullion
- mullock
- misrate
- misread
- misrule
- misruly
- misseem
- missend
- missile
- mission
- missish
- missive
- misting
- mistook
- mistake
- mistold
- mistell
- misterm
- mistery
- mistful
- mistico
- mistide
- mistily
- mistime
- mistion
- multure
- mumbled
- mistook
- mistrow
- mistune
- misturn
- mumbler
- mumming
- mummery
- mummify
- mummies
- mummied
- mumping
- mumpish
- munched
- misuser
- misween
- miswend
- misyoke
- mitered
- mitring
- muncher
- mundane
- mundify
- mungoos
- mungrel
- munific
- munjeet
- mitosis
- mittent
- mixable
- mixedly
- munnion
- munting
- muntjac
- murices
- murexan
- muriate
- mixtion
- mixture
- mizmaze
- mizzled
(n.) A rhizopod or moneran. Also used adjectively; as, a
myxopod state.
(n.) A place where animals are slaughtered for their hides and
tallow.
(imp. & p. p.) of Match
(n.) One who, or that which, matches; a matching machine. See
under 3d Match.
(a.) Relating to the morning, or to matins; matutinal.
(n.) A reception, or a musical or dramatic entertainment, held
in the daytime. See SoirEe.
(n.) A round-bottomed glass flask having a long neck; a
bolthead.
(n.) See Matrix.
(n.) Formerly, in the British service, a gunner or a gunner's
mate; one of the soldiers in a train of artillery, who assisted the
gunners in loading, firing, and sponging the guns.
(a.) Having mettle; high-spirited; ardent; full of fire.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mewl
(mexcal.) See Mescal.
(n.) Any one of several species of short-tailed monkeys of the
genus Macacus; as, M. maurus, the moor macaque of the East Indies.
(n.) Any one of several species of small lemurs, as Lemur
murinus, which resembles a rat in size.
(a.) Generating or containing pus; purulent.
(a.) Full of substance or matter; important.
(v. t. & i.) The act of interweaving or tangling together so as
to make a mat; the process of becoming matted.
(a.) Containing miasma; miasmatic.
(imp. & p. p.) of Miaul
(n.) A theoretical aggregation of molecules constituting a
structural particle of protoplasm, capable of increase or diminution
without change in chemical nature.
(n.) Theft; cheating.
(a.) Hiding; skulking; cowardly.
(n.) A muscular segment; one of the zones into which the
muscles of the trunk, especially in fishes, are divided; a myocomma.
(n.) One of the embryonic muscular segments arising from the
protovertebrae; also, one of the protovertebrae themselves.
(a.) A profound secret; something wholly unknown, or something
kept cautiously concealed, and therefore exciting curiosity or wonder;
something which has not been or can not be explained; hence,
specifically, that which is beyond human comprehension.
(a.) A kind of secret religious celebration, to which none were
admitted except those who had been initiated by certain preparatory
ceremonies; -- usually plural; as, the Eleusinian mysteries.
(a.) The consecrated elements in the eucharist.
(a.) Anything artfully made difficult; an enigma.
(n.) A trade; a handicraft; hence, any business with which one
is usually occupied.
(n.) A dramatic representation of a Scriptural subject, often
some event in the life of Christ; a dramatic composition of this
character; as, the Chester Mysteries, consisting of dramas acted by
various craft associations in that city in the early part of the 14th
century.
(v. t.) To involve in mystery; to make obscure or difficult to
understand; as, to mystify a passage of Scripture.
(n.) One who, or that which, molds or forms into shape;
specifically (Founding), one skilled in the art of making molds for
castings.
(v. i.) To crumble into small particles; to turn to dust by
natural decay; to lose form, or waste away, by a gradual separation of
the component particles, without the presence of water; to crumble
away.
(v. t.) To turn to dust; to cause to crumble; to cause to waste
away.
(v. t.) To perplex the mind of; to puzzle; to impose upon the
credulity of ; as, to mystify an opponent.
(a.) Pertaining to, or obtained from, mustard; -- used
specifically to designate a glucoside called myronic acid, found in
mustard seed.
(n.) A ferment, resembling diastase, found in mustard seeds.
(a.) Of, pertaining to, or obtained from, myrrh.
(n.) A measure of surface in the metric system containing ten
thousand ares, or one million square meters. It is equal to about 247.1
acres.
(n.) A silky, crystalline, waxy substance, forming the less
soluble part of beeswax, and regarded as a palmitate of a higher
alcohol of the paraffin series; -- called also myricyl alcohol.
(n.) A hypothetical radical regarded as the essential residue
of myricin; -- called also melissyl.
(n.) The muscular system of one metamere of an articulate.
(n.) The dissection, or that part of anatomy which treats of
the dissection, of muscles.
(n.) See Muscle curve, under Muscle.
(n.) That part of anatomy which treats of muscles.
(n.) A contractile striated layer found in the bodies and stems
of certain Infusoria.
(n.) A large heavy knife resembling a broadsword, often two or
three feet in length, -- used by the inhabitants of Spanish America as
a hatchet to cut their way through thickets, and for various other
purposes.
(v. t. & i.) Mats, in general, or collectively; mat work; a
matlike fabric, for use in covering floors, packing articles, and the
like; a kind of carpeting made of straw, etc.
(v. t. & i.) Materials for mats.
(v. t. & i.) An ornamental border. See 3d Mat, 4.
(n.) A dull, lusterless surface in certain of the arts, as
gilding, metal work, glassmaking, etc.
(n.) An implement for digging and grubbing. The head has two
long steel blades, one like an adz and the other like a narrow ax or
the point of a pickax.
(imp. & p. p.) of Mature
(n.) One who brings to maturity.
(n.) Alt. of Microbion
(n.) The millionth part of an ohm.
(n.) A name of several maritime grasses, as the sea sand-reed
(Ammophila arundinacea) which is used in Holland to bind the sand of
the seacoast dikes (see Beach grass, under Beach); also, the Lygeum
Spartum, a Mediterranean grass of similar habit.
(n.) A cake of unleavened bread eaten by the Jews at the feast
of the Passover.
(n.) A lemur; -- applied to several species, as the
White-fronted, the ruffed, and the ring-tailed lemurs.
(a.) Tearful; easily moved to tears; exciting to tears;
excessively sentimental; weak and silly.
(a.) Drunk, or somewhat drunk; fuddled; given to drunkenness.
(n.) Alt. of Maudeline
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Maul
(n.) A severe beating with a stick, cudgel, or the fist.
(v. i.) To beg.
(v. i.) To mutter; to mumble; to grumble; to speak indistinctly
or disconnectedly; to talk incoherently.
(v. t.) To utter in a grumbling manner; to mutter.
(n.) A beggar.
(n.) A girl; esp., a great, awkward girl; a wench.
(a.) Mauve-colored.
(superl.) Situated most nearly in the middle; middlemost;
midmost.
(n.) Midst; middle.
(n.) One of a middle or intermediate class in some schools and
seminaries.
(pl. ) of Middy
(a.) Apt to cause satiety or loathing; nauseous; disgusting.
(a.) Easily disgusted; squeamish; sentimentally fastidious.
(a.) Nauseous.
(n.) The seed of the opium poppy.
(n.) The bone of either the upper or the under jaw.
(n.) The bone, or principal bone, of the upper jaw, the bone of
the lower jaw being the mandible.
(n.) One of the lower or outer jaws of arthropods.
(n.) The greatest quantity or value attainable in a given case;
or, the greatest value attained by a quantity which first increases and
then begins to decrease; the highest point or degree; -- opposed to
minimum.
(a.) Greatest in quantity or highest in degree attainable or
attained; as, a maximum consumption of fuel; maximum pressure; maximum
heat.
(n.) A large dark-red cherry of excellent quality.
(n.) A common American minnow (Fundulus majalis). See Minnow.
(n.) The conductir of a mule team; also, a head shepherd.
(n.) A composite plant (Anthemis Cotula), having a strong odor;
dog's fennel. It is a native of Europe, now common by the roadsides in
the United States.
(n.) The feverfew.
(a.) Mazy.
(n.) A Polish dance, or the music which accompanies it, usually
in 3-4 or 3-8 measure, with a strong accent on the second beat.
(n.) An uxorious, effeminate, or spiritless man.
(a.) Of or pertaining to meadows; resembling, or consisting of,
meadow.
(n.) The process of picking out the oakum from the seams of a
vessel which is to be recalked.
(n. pl.) Maize or Indian corn; -- the common name in South
Africa.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mean
(n.) A winding, crooked, or involved course; as, the meanders
of the veins and arteries.
(n.) A tortuous or intricate movement.
(n.) Fretwork. See Fret.
(v. t.) To wind, turn, or twist; to make flexuous.
(v. i.) To wind or turn in a course or passage; to be
intricate.
(n.) That which is meant or intended; intent; purpose; aim;
object; as, a mischievous meaning was apparent.
(n.) That which is signified, whether by act lanquage;
signification; sence; import; as, the meaning of a hint.
(n.) Sense; power of thinking.
(a.) Infected or spotted with measles, as pork.
(n.) Leprosy; also, a leper.
(n.) A contagious febrile disorder commencing with catarrhal
symptoms, and marked by the appearance on the third day of an eruption
of distinct red circular spots, which coalesce in a crescentic form,
are slightly raised above the surface, and after the fourth day of the
eruption gradually decline; rubeola.
(n.) A disease of cattle and swine in which the flesh is filled
with the embryos of different varieties of the tapeworm.
(n.) A disease of trees.
(n.) The larvae of any tapeworm (Taenia) in the cysticerus
stage, when contained in meat. Called also bladder worms.
(n.) A standard of dimension; a fixed unit of quantity or
extent; an extent or quantity in the fractions or multiples of which
anything is estimated and stated; hence, a rule by which anything is
adjusted or judged.
(n.) An instrument by means of which size or quantity is
measured, as a graduated line, rod, vessel, or the like.
(n.) The dimensions or capacity of anything, reckoned according
to some standard; size or extent, determined and stated; estimated
extent; as, to take one's measure for a coat.
(n.) The contents of a vessel by which quantity is measured; a
quantity determined by a standard; a stated or limited quantity or
amount.
(n.) Extent or degree not excessive or beyong bounds;
moderation; due restraint; esp. in the phrases, in measure; with
measure; without or beyond measure.
(n.) Determined extent, not to be exceeded; limit; allotted
share, as of action, influence, ability, or the like; due proportion.
(n.) The quantity determined by measuring, especially in buying
and selling; as, to give good or full measure.
(n.) Undefined quantity; extent; degree.
(n.) Regulated division of movement
(n.) A regulated movement corresponding to the time in which
the accompanying music is performed; but, especially, a slow and
stately dance, like the minuet.
(n.) The group or grouping of beats, caused by the regular
recurrence of accented beats.
(n.) The space between two bars.
(a.) The manner of ordering and combining the quantities, or
long and short syllables; meter; rhythm; hence, a foot; as, a poem in
iambic measure.
(a.) A number which is contained in a given number a number of
times without a remainder; as in the phrases, the common measure, the
greatest common measure, etc., of two or more numbers.
(a.) A step or definite part of a progressive course or policy;
a means to an end; an act designed for the accomplishment of an object;
as, political measures; prudent measures; an inefficient measure.
(a.) The act of measuring; measurement.
(a.) Beds or strata; as, coal measures; lead measures.
(n.) To ascertain by use of a measuring instrument; to compute
or ascertain the extent, quantity, dimensions, or capacity of, by a
certain rule or standard; to take the dimensions of; hence, to
estimate; to judge of; to value; to appraise.
(n.) To serve as the measure of; as, the thermometer measures
changes of temperature.
(n.) To pass throught or over in journeying, as if laying off
and determining the distance.
(n.) To adjust by a rule or standard.
(n.) To allot or distribute by measure; to set off or apart by
measure; -- often with out or off.
(v. i.) To make a measurement or measurements.
(v. i.) To result, or turn out, on measuring; as, the grain
measures well; the pieces measure unequally.
(v. i.) To be of a certain size or quantity, or to have a
certain length, breadth, or thickness, or a certain capacity according
to a standard measure; as, cloth measures three fourths of a yard; a
tree measures three feet in diameter.
(n.) In general, any combination of bodies so connected that
their relative motions are constrained, and by means of which force and
motion may be transmitted and modified, as a screw and its nut, or a
lever arranged to turn about a fulcrum or a pulley about its pivot,
etc.; especially, a construction, more or less complex, consisting of a
combination of moving parts, or simple mechanical elements, as wheels,
levers, cams, etc., with their supports and connecting framework,
calculated to constitute a prime mover, or to receive force and motion
from a prime mover or from another machine, and transmit, modify, and
apply them to the production of some desired mechanical effect or work,
as weaving by a loom, or the excitation of electricity by an electrical
machine.
(n.) Any mechanical contrivance, as the wooden horse with which
the Greeks entered Troy; a coach; a bicycle.
(n.) A person who acts mechanically or at will of another.
(n.) A combination of persons acting together for a common
purpose, with the agencies which they use; as, the social machine.
(n.) A political organization arranged and controlled by one or
more leaders for selfish, private or partisan ends.
(n.) Supernatural agency in a poem, or a superhuman being
introduced to perform some exploit.
(v. t.) To subject to the action of machinery; to effect by aid
of machinery; to print with a printing machine.
(n.) The middle part of the main or sea.
(a.) Middle; middlemost.
(a.) Resembling marrow in appearance or consistency; as, a
myeloid tumor.
(a.) Alt. of Monodical
(n.) An eyeglass for one eye.
(a.) Alt. of Monadical
(n.) A sole or supreme ruler; a sovereign; the highest ruler;
an emperor, king, queen, prince, or chief.
(n.) One superior to all others of the same kind; as, an oak is
called the monarch of the forest.
(n.) A patron deity or presiding genius.
(n.) A very large red and black butterfly (Danais Plexippus);
-- called also milkweed butterfly.
(a.) Superior to others; preeminent; supreme; ruling.
(n.) One who borrows personal chattels which are to be consumed
by him, and which he is to return or repay in kind.
(n.) One of a denomination of Christians formerly living under
the government of the Moors in Spain, and having a liturgy and ritual
of their own.
(imp. & p. p.) of Muzzle
(a.) Of mixed kinds; as, mongrel language.
(n.) One who admonishes; one who warns of faults, informs of
duty, or gives advice and instruction by way of reproof or caution.
(n.) Hence, specifically, a pupil selected to look to the
school in the absence of the instructor, to notice the absence or
faults of the scholars, or to instruct a division or class.
(n.) Any large Old World lizard of the genus Varanus; esp., the
Egyptian species (V. Niloticus), which is useful because it devours the
eggs and young of the crocodile. It is sometimes five or six feet long.
(n.) An ironclad war vessel, very low in the water, and having
one or more heavily-armored revolving turrets, carrying heavy guns.
(n.) A tool holder, as for a lathe, shaped like a low turret,
and capable of being revolved on a vertical pivot so as to bring
successively the several tools in holds into proper position for
cutting.
(n.) The life of monks; monastic life; monastic usage or
customs; -- now usually applied by way of reproach.
(n.) A collective body of monks.
(pl. ) of Monkey
(a.) Like a monk, or pertaining to monks; monastic; as, monkish
manners; monkish dress; monkish solitude.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the Monera.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the Monera.
(n.) One of the Monera.
(n.) One of the Monera.
(n.) The bark, or a vegetable extract brought in solid cakes
from South America and believed to be derived from the bark, of the
tree Chrysophyllum glycyphloeum. It is used as an alterative and
astringent.
(adv.) Supplied with money; having money; wealthy; as, moneyey
men.
(adv.) Converted into money; coined.
(adv.) Consisting in, or composed of, money.
(n.) A person who deals in money; banker or broker.
(n.) An authorized coiner of money.
(n. pl.) Alt. of Mongolians
(n.) The progeny resulting from a cross between two breeds, as
of domestic animals; anything of mixed breed.
(a.) Not of a pure breed.
(v. t.) To assuage, as pain or irritation, to appease, as
excited feeling or passion; to pacify; to calm.
(n.) Same as Mollusk.
(pl. ) of Momentum
(a.) Having one hydrogen atom replaceable by a negative or acid
atom or radical; capable of neutralizing a monobasic acid; -- said of
bases, and of certain metals.
(n.) Pain in the muscles; muscular rheumatism or neuralgia.
(p.a.) Alt. of Moulding
(a.) Like mutton; having a flavor of mutton.
(n.) The sunfish (Orthagoriscus, or Mola).
(v. t.) To soften; to make tender; to reduce the hardness,
harshness, or asperity of; to qualify; as, to mollify the ground.
(n.) One of the Mollusca.
(n.) See Molossus.
() of Moult
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Moult
(a.) In a musty state.
(a.) Capable of alteration; subject to change; changeable in
form, qualities, or nature.
(a.) Changeable; inconstant; unsettled; unstable; fickle.
(adv.) Changeably.
(v. t.) To perplex; to confuse.
(v. i.) To toil; to labor.
() of Mould
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mould
(n.) A gold coin of Portugal, valued at about 27s. sterling.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Moil
(n.) A small flat bastion, raised in the middle of an overlong
curtain.
(v. t.) To make damp; to wet in a small degree.
(v. t.) To soften by making moist; to make tender.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Muss
(n.) The half-wild horse of the plains in Mexico, California,
etc. It is small, hardy, and easily sustained.
(n.) A little; a small quantity; a measured simply.
(n.) A female maker of, or dealer in, articles of fashion,
especially of the fashionable dress of ladies; a woman who gives
direction to the style or mode of dress.
(a.) Of or pertaining to mode, modulation, module, or modius;
as, modular arrangement; modular accent; modular measure.
(n.) A quantity or coefficient, or constant, which expresses
the measure of some specified force, property, or quality, as of
elasticity, strength, efficiency, etc.; a parameter.
(n.) Rubble masonry.
(a.) Pertaining to, or obtained from, the poppy or opium;
specif. (Chem.), designating an acid related to aconitic acid, found in
opium and extracted as a white crystalline substance.
(n.) A substance regarded as an anhydride of meconinic acid,
existing in opium and extracted as a white crystalline substance. Also
erroneously called meconina, meconia, etc., as though it were an
alkaloid.
(imp. & p. p.) of Medal
(n.) A small medal.
(imp. & p. p.) of Meddle
(n.) One who meddles; one who interferes or busies himself with
things in which he has no concern; an officious person; a busybody.
(n.) The state or quality of being mediate.
(n.) The third above the keynote; -- so called because it
divides the interval between the tonic and dominant into two thirds.
(a.) Being between the two extremes; middle; interposed;
intervening; intermediate.
(a.) Acting by means, or by an intervening cause or instrument;
not direct or immediate; acting or suffering through an intervening
agent or condition.
(a.) Gained or effected by a medium or condition.
(a.) To be in the middle, or between two; to intervene.
(a.) To interpose between parties, as the equal friend of each,
esp. for the purpose of effecting a reconciliation or agreement; as, to
mediate between nations.
(v. t.) To effect by mediation or interposition; to bring about
as a mediator, instrument, or means; as, to mediate a peace.
(v. t.) To divide into two equal parts.
(a.) Of, pertaining to, or having to do with, the art of
healing disease, or the science of medicine; as, the medical
profession; medical services; a medical dictionary; medical
jurisprudence.
(a.) Containing medicine; used in medicine; medicinal; as, the
medical properties of a plant.
(n.) The middle part; half; moiety.
(pl. ) of Macula
(pl. ) of Medley
(n.) A species of gull or tern.
(n.) Marrow; pith; hence, essence.
(n.) The marrow of bones; the deep or inner portion of an organ
or part; as, the medulla, or medullary substance, of the kidney;
specifically, the medula oblongata.
(n.) A soft tissue, occupying the center of the stem or branch
of a plant; pith.
(pl. ) of Medusa
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mad
(a.) Affected with madness; raging; furious.
(a.) Somewhat mad.
(a.) Worthy of meed, reward, or recompense; meritorious.
(n.) A South African carnivore (Cynictis penicillata), allied
to the ichneumons.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Meet
(n.) A coming together; an assembling; as, the meeting of
Congress.
(n.) A junction, crossing, or union; as, the meeting of the
roads or of two rivers.
(n.) A congregation; a collection of people; a convention; as,
a large meeting; an harmonius meeting.
(n.) An assembly for worship; as, to attend meeting on Sunday;
-- in England, applied distinctively and disparagingly to the
worshiping assemblies of Dissenters.
() Combining forms signifying: (a) Great, extended, powerful;
as, megascope, megacosm.
() A million times, a million of; as, megameter, a million
meters; megafarad, a million farads; megohm, a million ohms.
() See Meg-.
(a.) The condition of being mad; insanity; lunacy.
(a.) Frenzy; ungovernable rage; extreme folly.
(n.) A small Abyssinian antelope (Neotragus Saltiana), about
the size of a hare.
(n.) A thick plank, used for several mechanical purposes
(n.) A plank to receive the mouth of a petard, with which it is
applied to anything intended to be broken down.
(n.) A plank or beam used for supporting the earth in mines or
fortifications.
(n.) A genus of cruciferous plants (Alyssum) with white or
yellow flowers and rounded pods. A. maritimum is the commonly
cultivated sweet alyssum, a fragrant white-flowered annual.
(n.) Compensation for the injury done by slaying a kinsman.
(n.) A master in any art, especially in music; a composer.
(n.) A stammerer.
(n.) See Maegbote.
(a.) Infested with maggots.
(a.) Full of whims; capricious.
(a.) Pertaining to the hidden wisdom supposed to be possessed
by the Magi; relating to the occult powers of nature, and the producing
of effects by their agency.
(a.) Performed by, or proceeding from, occult and superhuman
agencies; done by, or seemingly done by, enchantment or sorcery. Hence:
Seemingly requiring more than human power; imposing or startling in
performance; producing effects which seem supernatural or very
extraordinary; having extraordinary properties; as, a magic lantern; a
magic square or circle.
() A person of rank; a noble or grandee; a person of influence
or distinction in any sphere.
() One of the nobility, or certain high officers of state
belonging to the noble estate in the national representation of
Hungary, and formerly of Poland.
(v. t.) To make great, or greater; to increase the dimensions
of; to amplify; to enlarge, either in fact or in appearance; as, the
microscope magnifies the object by a thousand diameters.
(v. t.) To increase the importance of; to augment the esteem or
respect in which one is held.
(v. t.) To praise highly; to land; to extol.
(v. t.) To exaggerate; as, to magnify a loss or a difficulty.
(v. i.) To have the power of causing objects to appear larger
than they really are; to increase the apparent dimensions of objects;
as, some lenses magnify but little.
(v. i.) To have effect; to be of importance or significance.
(n.) A South American stork (Euxenara maguari), having a forked
tail.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mail
(n.) A farm.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Maim
(n.) See Bagasse.
(n.) A gelatinous compound of linseed oil and mastic varnish,
used by artists as a vehicle for colors.
(n.) Diminution; a species of hyperbole, representing a thing
as being less than it really is.
(n.) A discharge from the bowels of black matter, consisting of
altered blood.
(n.) A mixture; a medley.
(a.) Melanotic.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the black-haired races.
(n.) A black pigment found in the pigment-bearing cells of the
skin (particularly in the skin of the negro), in the epithelial cells
of the external layer of the retina (then called fuscin), in the outer
layer of the choroid, and elsewhere. It is supposed to be derived from
the decomposition of hemoglobin.
(n.) A dark discoloration of the skin, usually local; as,
Addison's melasma, or Addison's disease.
(n.) See Quercitin.
(n.) Any species of Melilotus, a genus of leguminous herbs
having a vanillalike odor; sweet clover; hart's clover. The blue
melilot (Melilotus caerulea) is used in Switzerland to give color and
flavor to sapsago cheese.
(n.) A piece of melody; a song or tune, -- as opposed to
recitative or musical declamation.
(n.) A grace or embellishment.
(n.) A mellitate.
(n.) A mineral of a honey color, found in brown coal, and
partly the result of vegetable decomposition; honeystone. It is a
mellitate of alumina.
(n.) A yellow powder, C6H3N9, obtained from certain
sulphocyanates. It has acid properties and forms compounds called
mellonides.
(a.) Soft; unctuous.
(a.) Of the nature of melody; relating to, containing, or made
up of, melody; melodious.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Melt
(n.) Liquefaction; the act of causing (something) to melt, or
the process of becoming melted.
(a.) Causing to melt; becoming melted; -- used literally or
figuratively; as, a melting heat; a melting appeal; a melting mood.
(a.) Relating to a member.
(n.) A hint, suggestion, token, or memorial, to awaken memory;
that which reminds or recalls to memory; a souvenir.
(n.) A small deerlet, or chevrotain, of India.
(n.) A memorial account; a history composed from personal
experience and memory; an account of transactions or events (usually
written in familiar style) as they are remembered by the writer. See
History, 2.
(n.) A memorial of any individual; a biography; often, a
biography written without special regard to method and completeness.
(n.) An account of something deemed noteworthy; an essay; a
record of investigations of any subject; the journals and proceedings
of a society.
(n.) Memory.
(imp. & p. p.) of Menace
(n.) One who menaces.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mend
(n.) The cackerel.
(pl. ) of Meniscus
(n.) A wind blowing part of the year from one direction,
alternating with a wind from the opposite direction; -- a term applied
particularly to periodical winds of the Indian Ocean, which blow from
the southwest from the latter part of May to the middle of September,
and from the northeast from about the middle of October to the middle
of December.
(n.) Something of unnatural size, shape, or quality; a prodigy;
an enormity; a marvel.
(n.) Specifically , an animal or plant departing greatly from
the usual type, as by having too many limbs.
(n.) Any thing or person of unnatural or excessive ugliness,
deformity, wickedness, or cruelty.
(a.) Monstrous in size.
(v. t.) To make monstrous.
(n.) An upward thrust or blow.
(n.) An upright piece in any framework; a mullion or muntin; a
stile.
(n.) An ancient kind of cap worn by horsemen or huntsmen.
(a.) Continued a month, or a performed in a month; as, the
monthly revolution of the moon.
(a.) Done, happening, payable, published, etc., once a month,
or every month; as, a monthly visit; monthly charges; a monthly
installment; a monthly magazine.
(n.) A publication which appears regularly once a month.
(adv.) Once a month; in every month; as, the moon changes
monthly.
(adv.) As if under the influence of the moon; in the manner of
a lunatic.
(adv.) In a moody manner.
(a.) Moody.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Moon
(n.) Conduct of one who moons.
(a.) Like the moon; variable.
(a.) Illumined by the moon.
(n.) The descent of the moon below the horizon; also, the time
when the moon sets.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Moor
(n.) A place for mooring.
(n.) A female Moor; a Moorish woman.
(n.) The act of confining a ship to a particular place, by
means of anchors or fastenings.
(n.) That which serves to confine a ship to a place, as
anchors, cables, bridles, etc.
(n.) The place or condition of a ship thus confined.
(n.) A clayey layer or pan underlying some moors, etc.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Moot
(pl. ) of Mootman
(n.) One who argued moot cases in the inns of court.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mop
(n.) An accumulation of earth and stones carried forward and
deposited by a glacier.
(n.) The name of several cruciferous plants of the genus
Brassica (formerly Sinapis), as white mustard (B. alba), black mustard
(B. Nigra), wild mustard or charlock (B. Sinapistrum).
(n.) A powder or a paste made from the seeds of black or white
mustard, used as a condiment and a rubefacient. Taken internally it is
stimulant and diuretic, and in large doses is emetic.
(n.) See Mosquito.
(n.) The American black bear. See Bear.
(imp. & p. p.) of Model
(n.) One who models; hence, a worker in plastic art.
(a.) Of or pertaining to music; having the qualities of music;
or the power of producing music; devoted to music; melodious;
harmonious; as, musical proportion; a musical voice; musical
instruments; a musical sentence; musical persons.
(n.) Music.
(n.) A social entertainment of which music is the leading
feature; a musical party.
(n.) See Mouflon.
(pl. ) of Modiolus
(n.) A large leather flap which covers the saddletree.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mock
(n.) A stuff made in imitation of velvet; -- probably the same
as mock velvet.
(n.) Mockery.
(n.) The act of mocking, deriding, and exposing to contempt, by
mimicry, by insincere imitation, or by a false show of earnestness; a
counterfeit appearance.
(n.) Insulting or contemptuous action or speech; contemptuous
merriment; derision; ridicule.
(n.) Subject of laughter, derision, or sport.
(a.) Imitating, esp. in derision, or so as to cause derision;
mimicking; derisive.
(a.) Mock; counterfeit; sham.
(adv.) In a modal manner.
(a.) Furnished with muscles; having muscles; as, things well
muscled.
(a.) Mosslike; resembling moss.
(n.) A term formerly applied to any mosslike flowerless plant,
with a distinct stem, and often with leaves, but without any vascular
system.
(n.) A long movable shed used by besiegers in ancient times in
attacking the walls of a fortified town.
(a.) Meditative; thoughtfully silent.
(n.) The middle of the week. Also used adjectively.
(n.) A dam or mound to obstruct a water course, and raise the
water to a height sufficient to turn a mill wheel.
(v. t.) To cite erroneously.
(v. t.) To copy amiss.
(n.) A mistake in copying.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Miss
(v. i.) Absent from the place where it was expected to be
found; lost; wanting; not present when called or looked for.
(n.) A wrong step; an error of conduct.
(v. i.) To take a wrong step; to go astray.
(v. t.) To word wrongly; as, to misword a message, or a
sentence.
(n.) A word wrongly spoken; a cross word.
(n.) The European loach.
(n.) The bowfin.
(n.) The South American lipedosiren, and the allied African
species (Protopterus annectens). See Lipedosiren.
(n.) The mud minnow.
(n.) A North American aquatic fur-bearing rodent (Fiber
zibethicus). It resembles a rat in color and having a long scaly tail,
but the tail is compressed, the bind feet are webbed, and the ears are
concealed in the fur. It has scent glands which secrete a substance
having a strong odor of musk. Called also musquash, musk beaver, and
ondatra.
(n.) The musk shrew.
(n.) The desman.
(n.) A hole through which a man may descend or creep into a
drain, sewer, steam boiler, parts of machinery, etc., for cleaning or
repairing.
(n.) A trap for catching trespassers.
(n.) A dangerous place, as an open hatch, into which one may
fall.
(n.) Apit where marl is dug.
(n.) The hawthorn.
(pl. ) of Medium
(pl. ) of Mammal
(n.) Specifically, the philosopher's stone.
(n.) The act process of mastering; the state of having
mastered.
(a.) Abounding in mast; producing mast in abundance; as, the
mastful forest; a mastful chestnut.
(n.) A breed of large dogs noted for strength and courage.
There are various strains, differing in form and color, and
characteristic of different countries.
(n.) The act or process of putting a mast or masts into a
vessel; also, the scientific principles which determine the position of
masts, and the mechanical methods of placing them.
(a.) Resembling the nipple or the breast; -- applied
specifically to a process of the temporal bone behind the ear.
(a.) Pertaining to, or in the region of, the mastoid process;
mastoidal.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mat
(n.) The dress or disguise of a maske/; masquerade.
(n.) The art or occupation of a mason.
(n.) The work or performance of a mason; as, good or bad
masonry; skillful masonry.
(n.) That which is built by a mason; anything constructed of
the materials used by masons, such as stone, brick, tiles, or the like.
Dry masonry is applied to structures made without mortar.
(n.) The craft, institution, or mysteries of Freemasons;
freemasonry.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mass
(n.) A rubbing or kneading of the body, especially when
performed as a hygienic or remedial measure.
(n. f.) Alt. of Masseuse
(a.) Forming, or consisting of, a large mass; compacted;
weighty; heavy; massy.
(a.) In mass; not necessarily without a crystalline structure,
but having no regular form; as, a mineral occurs massive.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mast
(n.) The position or authority of a master; dominion; command;
supremacy; superiority.
(n.) Superiority in war or competition; victory; triumph;
preeminence.
(n.) Contest for superiority.
(n.) A masterly operation; a feat.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mash
(n.) See Maslin.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mask
(v. i.) To make verse.
(n.) A maker of verses.
(n.) The European house martin.
(n.) A bird without beak or feet; -- generally assumed to
represent a martin. As a mark of cadency it denotes the fourth son.
(a.) Composed of, or covered with, lozenge-shaped scales;
having lozenge-shaped divisions.
(n. f.) The offspring of a white person and an American Indian.
(n. f.) The offspring of a white person and a quadroon; an
octoroon.
(a.) Pertaining to, or discovered by, Meton, the Athenian.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the forehead or frontal bones;
frontal; as, the metopic suture.
(n.) Iron sesquioxide in isometric form, probably a pseudomorph
after magnetite.
(n.) A light, colorless, gaseous, inflammable hydrocarbon, CH4;
marsh gas. See Marsh gas, under Gas.
(n.) See Methylene.
(n.) A binary compound of methyl with some element; as,
aluminium methide, Al2(CH3)6.
(a.) One who cultivates land for a share (usually one half) of
its yield, receiving stock, tools, and seed from the landlord.
(n.) One who marries.
(a.) Full of marrow; pithy.
(imp. & p. p.) of Marry
(n.) One who, by his officious /nterference, mars or frustrates
a design or plot.
(n.) A large field tent; esp., one adapted to the use of an
officer of high rank.
(n.) Any one of several metameric forms of the same substance,
or of different substances having the same composition; as, xylene has
three metamers, viz., orthoxylene, metaxylene, and paraxylene.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mark
(n.) The act of one who, or that which, marks; the mark or
marks made; arrangement or disposition of marks or coloring; as, the
marking of a bird's plumage.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Marl
(n.) A variety of marl.
(n.) A species of small opossum (Didelphus murina) ranging from
Mexico to Brazil.
(n.) A large tree of genus Melia (M. Azadirachta) found in
India. Its bark is bitter, and used as a tonic. A valuable oil is
expressed from its seeds, and a tenacious gum exudes from its trunk.
The M. Azedarach is a much more showy tree, and is cultivated in the
Southern United States, where it is known as Pride of India, Pride of
China, or bead tree. Various parts of the tree are considered
anthelmintic.
(n.) A musical istrument of percussion, consisting of bars
yielding musical tones when struck.
(a.) Having the lower part of the body like a fish.
(v.) Of or pertaining to a husband; as, marital rights, duties,
authority.
(a.) Having or consisting of lines resembling a map; as, the
maplike figures in which certain lichens grow.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mar
(n.) A large stork of the genus Leptoptilos (formerly Ciconia),
esp. the African species (L. crumenifer), which furnishes plumes worn
as ornaments. The Asiatic species (L. dubius, or L. argala) is the
adjutant. See Adjutant.
(n.) One having five eighths negro blood; the offspring of a
mulatto and a griffe.
(n.) A macaw.
(n.) One who works upon marble or other stone.
(n.) One who colors or stains in imitation of marble.
(a.) In a marked emphatic manner; -- used adverbially as a
direction.
(imp. & p. p.) of March
(n.) The lord or officer who defended the marches or borders of
a territory.
(n.) Alt. of Merchet
(n.) In old English and in Scots law, a fine paid to the lord
of the soil by a tenant upon the marriage of one the tenant's
daughters.
(n.) A margin; border; brink; edge.
(v. t.) To enter or note down upon the margin of a page; to
margin.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Map
(imp. & p. p.) of Marble
(a.) Made of, or faced with, marble.
(a.) Made to resemble marble; veined or spotted like marble.
(a.) Varied with irregular markings, or witch a confused
blending of irregular spots and streaks.
(v. t.) To release from slavery; to liberate from personal
bondage or servitude; to free, as a slave.
(imp. & p. p.) of Manure
(n.) One who manures land.
(imp. & p. p.) of Metal
(a.) Manual.
(n.) An artificer.
(n.) See Mestizo.
(n.) The offspring of an Indian or a negro and a European or
person of European stock.
(n.) A twelfth part of the heavens; a house. See 1st House, 8.
(n.) The place in the heavens occupied each day by the moon in
its monthly revolution.
(v. i.) To dwell; to reside.
(n.) A woman's cloak or mantle.
(n.) A gown worn by women.
(n.) A name for two trees of the southwestern part of North
America, the honey mesquite, and screw-pod mesquite.
(n.) Any notice, word, or communication, written or verbal,
sent from one person to another.
(n.) Hence, specifically, an official communication, not made
in person, but delivered by a messenger; as, the President's message.
(v. t.) To bear as a message.
(n.) A messenger.
(imp. & p. p.) of Mantle
(n.) See Mantelet.
(n.) Homage or service rendered to a superior, as to a lord;
vassalage.
(n.) One of the side ropes to the gangway of a ship.
(n.) A dwelling place, -- whether a part or whole of a house or
other shelter.
(n.) The house of the lord of a manor; a manor house; hence:
Any house of considerable size or pretension.
(n.) A white amorphous or crystalline substance, obtained by
dehydration of mannite, and distinct from, but convertible into,
mannitan.
(a.) Resembling a human being in form or nature; human.
(a.) Resembling, suitable to, or characteristic of, a man,
manlike, masculine.
(a.) Fond of men; -- said of a woman.
(n.) A white crystalline substance of a sweet taste obtained
from a so-called manna, the dried sap of the flowering ash (Fraxinus
ornus); -- called also mannitol, and hydroxy hexane. Cf. Dulcite.
(n.) A sweet white efflorescence from dried fronds of kelp,
especially from those of the Laminaria saccharina, or devil's apron.
(n.) The human race; man, taken collectively.
(n.) Men, as distinguished from women; the male portion of
human race.
(n.) Human feelings; humanity.
(a.) Manlike; not womanly; masculine; bold; cruel.
(a.) Destitute of men.
(a.) Unmanly; inhuman.
(a.) Like man, or like a man, in form or nature; having the
qualities of a man, esp. the nobler qualities; manly.
(n.) A little man.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mesh
(n.) A hypothetical radical formerly supposed to exist in
mesityl oxide.
(n.) A little man; a dwarf; a pygmy; a manakin.
(n.) A model of the human body, made of papier-mache or other
material, commonly in detachable pieces, for exhibiting the different
parts and organs, their relative position, etc.
(n.) See Manilla, 1.
(n.) See 1st Manilla, 1.
(a.) A handful.
(a.) A division of the Roman army numbering sixty men exclusive
of officers, any small body of soldiers; a company.
(a.) Originally, a napkin; later, an ornamental band or scarf
worn upon the left arm as a part of the vestments of a priest in the
Roman Catholic Church. It is sometimes worn in the English Church
service.
(n.) Immersion.
(adv.) Same as Mesially.
(v. impers.) It seems to me.
(n.) Leprosy.
(adv.) In a mangy manner; scabbily.
(imp. & p. p.) of Mangle
(n.) One who mangles or tears in cutting; one who mutilates any
work in doing it.
(n.) One who smooths with a mangle.
(pl. ) of Mango
(n.) Manhood.
(n.) The state of being man as a human being, or man as
distinguished from a child or a woman.
(n.) Manly quality; courage; bravery; resolution.
(pl. ) of Merino
(imp. & p. p.) of Merit
(n.) The European whiting.
(n.) A fabled marine creature, typically represented as having
the upper part like that of a woman, and the lower like a fish; a sea
nymph, sea woman, or woman fish.
(n.) Any one of numerous small birds belonging to Pipra,
Manacus, and other genera of the family Pipridae. They are mostly
natives of Central and South America. some are bright-colored, and
others have the wings and tail curiously ornamented. The name is
sometimes applied to related birds of other families.
(n.) A kind of four-stringed lute.
(n.) A bar of metal inserted in the work to shape it, or to
hold it, as in a lathe, during the process of manufacture; an arbor.
(n.) The live spindle of a turning lathe; the revolving arbor
of a circular saw. It is usually driven by a pulley.
(pl. ) of Mercy
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Merge
(a.) Of or pertaining to the mammae or breasts; as, the mammary
arteries and veins.
(n.) A handcuff; a shackle for the hand or wrist; -- usually in
the plural.
(v. t.) To put handcuffs or other fastening upon, for confining
the hands; to shackle; to confine; to restrain from the use of the
limbs or natural powers.
(imp. & p. p.) of Manage
(n.) One who manages; a conductor or director; as, the manager
of a theater.
(n.) A person who conducts business or household affairs with
economy and frugality; a good economist.
(n.) A contriver; an intriguer.
(n.) A dwarf. See Manikin.
(n.) Any species of Trichechus, a genus of sirenians; -- called
alsosea cow.
(n.) A sum paid to a lord as a pecuniary compensation for
killing his man (that is, his vassal, servant, or tenant).
(n.) Fine white bread; a loaf of fine bread.
(n.) An official or authoritative command; an order or
injunction; a commission; a judicial precept.
(n.) A rescript of the pope, commanding an ordinary collator to
put the person therein named in possession of the first vacant benefice
in his collation.
(n.) A contract by which one employs another to manage any
business for him. By the Roman law, it must have been gratuitous.
(v. t.) To pity.
(n.) A shapeless piece; a fragment.
(v. t.) To tear to pieces.
(a.) Having the form of the breast; breast-shaped.
(n.) An extinct, hairy, maned elephant (Elephas primigenius),
of enormous size, remains of which are found in the northern parts of
both continents. The last of the race, in Europe, were coeval with
prehistoric man.
(a.) Resembling the mammoth in size; very large; gigantic; as,
a mammoth ox.
(pl. ) of Mammy
(n.) A white, crystalline, aromatic substance resembling
camphor, extracted from oil of peppermint (Mentha); -- called also mint
camphor or peppermint camphor.
(n.) A compound radical forming the base of menthol.
(n.) A speaking or notice of anything, -- usually in a brief or
cursory manner. Used especially in the phrase to make mention of.
(v. t.) To make mention of; to speak briefly of; to name.
(n.) The trade of mercers; the goods in which a mercer deals.
(a.) Same as Miniver.
(n.) A kind of sweet wine from Crete, the Canary Islands, etc.
(n.) An Offensive to the sense of smell; ill-smelling.
(a.) Pertaining to, or designating, an acid produced
artifically as a white crystalline substance, CH2.(CO2H)2, and so
called because obtained by the oxidation of malic acid.
(n.) A hydrocarbon radical, CH2.(CO)2, from malonic acid.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Malt
(n.) The fermentative principle of malt; malt diastase; also, a
name given to various medicinal preparations made from or containing
malt.
(n.) The process of making, or of becoming malt.
(n.) A man whose occupation is to make malt.
(n.) A crystalline sugar formed from starch by the action of
distance of malt, and the amylolytic ferment of saliva and pancreatic
juice. It resembles dextrose, but rotates the plane of polarized light
further to the right and possesses a lower cupric oxide reducing power.
(n.) A rounded hillock; a rounded elevation or protuberance.
(n.) Malediction; curse; execration.
(a.) A drake; the male of Anas boschas.
(a.) A large wild duck (Anas boschas) inhabiting both America
and Europe. The domestic duck has descended from this species. Called
also greenhead.
(a.) Pertaining to the malleus.
(n.) The outermost of the three small auditory bones, ossicles;
the hammer. It is attached to the tympanic membrane by a long process,
the handle or manubrium. See Illust. of Far.
(n.) One of the hard lateral pieces of the mastax of Rotifera.
See Mastax.
(n.) A genus of bivalve shells; the hammer shell.
(n.) A genus of plants (Malva) having mucilaginous qualities.
See Malvaceous.
(a.) Doing mischief; causing harm or evil; nefarious; hurtful.
(n.) Mischief.
(n.) Air infected with some noxious substance capable of
engendering disease; esp., an unhealthy exhalation from certain soils,
as marshy or wet lands, producing fevers; miasma.
(n.) A morbid condition produced by exhalations from decaying
vegetable matter in contact with moisture, giving rise to fever and
ague and many other symptoms characterized by their tendency to recur
at definite and usually uniform intervals.
(n.) A salt of maleic acid.
(n.) An indefinite feeling of uneasiness, or of being sick or
ill at ease.
(n.) A yellowish aromatic bark, used in medicine and perfumery,
said to be from the South American shrub Croton Malambo.
(a.) Alt. of Mouldery
(n.) Alt. of Moulding
(n.) A kingbolt.
(n.) The platform about the head of the mainmast in
square-rigged vessels.
(n.) Master.
(a.) Principal; chief.
(n.) Mastery; superiority; art. See Mastery.
(a.) The right of succession to property according to age; --
so termed in some of the countries of continental Europe.
(a.) Property, landed or funded, so attached to a title of
honor as to descend with it.
(a.) Capable of being made.
(n.) The way in which the parts of anything are put together;
often, the way in which an actor is dressed, painted, etc., in
personating a character.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Moan
(adv.) Darkly; gloomily.
(n.) An infectious and fatal disease among cattle.
(a.) Having, or afflicted with, murrain.
(a.) Infected with or killed by murrain.
(n.) A morion. See Morion.
(n. & v.) Murder, n. & v.
(a.) Full of moaning; expressing sorrow.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mob
(a.) Like a mob; tumultuous; lawless; as, a mobbish act.
(n.) A moralizer.
(adv.) In a moral or ethical sense; according to the rules of
morality.
(adv.) According to moral rules; virtuously.
(adv.) In moral qualities; in disposition and character; as,
one who physically and morally endures hardships.
(adv.) In a manner calculated to serve as the basis of action;
according to the usual course of things and human judgment; according
to reason and probability.
(a.) Marshy; fenny.
(a.) Proceeding from disease; morbid; unhealthy.
(n.) A bit; a morsel.
(a.) Biting; caustic; sarcastic; keen; severe.
(a.) Serving to fix colors.
(n.) Any corroding substance used in etching.
(n.) Any substance, as alum or copperas, which, having a
twofold attraction for organic fibers and coloring matter, serves as a
bond of union, and thus gives fixity to, or bites in, the dyes.
(n.) Any sticky matter by which the gold leaf is made to
adhere.
(v. t.) To subject to the action of, or imbue with, a mordant;
as, to mordant goods for dyeing.
(n.) A talmudic exposition of the Hebrew law, or of some part
of it.
(n.) See Diaphragm, n., 2.
() The middle part of the sea or ocean.
(a.) Of or pertaining to, or being in, the middle of a ship.
(n.) Nightshade. See 2d Morel.
(n.) A kind of nearly black cherry with dark red flesh and
juice, -- used chiefly for preserving.
(a. & n.) Dying; a gradual decrescendo at the end of a strain
or cadence.
(n.) A sword.
(a.) Situated in the middle.
(adv.) In or toward the midst.
(n.) A woman who assists other women in childbirth; a female
practitioner of the obstetric art.
(v. t.) To assist in childbirth.
(v. i.) To perform the office of midwife.
(n.) The dotterel.
(n.) Mortling.
(a.) Migratory.
(n.) A migratory bird or other animal.
(v. i.) To remove from one country or region to another, with a
view to residence; to change one's place of residence; to remove; as,
the Moors who migrated from Africa into Spain; to migrate to the West.
(v. i.) To pass periodically from one region or climate to
another for feeding or breeding; -- said of certain birds, fishes, and
quadrupeds.
(n.) An allowance for traveling expenses at a certain rate per
mile.
(n.) Aggregate length or distance in miles; esp., the sum of
lengths of tracks or wires of a railroad company, telegraph company,
etc.
(n.) A common composite herb (Achillea Millefolium) with white
flowers and finely dissected leaves; yarrow.
(n.) Idiocy; fatuity; stupidity.
(n.) A scurfy eruption.
(v. t.) To cover with a morphew.
(n.) Morphine.
(n.) A morphological individual, characterized by definiteness
of form bion, a physiological individual. See Tectology.
(n.) A louse.
(a.) Like millet seeds; as, a miliary eruption.
(a.) Accompanied with an eruption like millet seeds; as, a
miliary fever.
(a.) Small and numerous; as, the miliary tubercles of Echini.
(n.) One of the small tubercles of Echini.
(a.) Military.
(n.) In the widest sense, the whole military force of a nation,
including both those engaged in military service as a business, and
those competent and available for such service; specifically, the body
of citizens enrolled for military instruction and discipline, but not
subject to be called into actual service except in emergencies.
(n.) Military service; warfare.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Milk
(n.) The act of biting.
(adv.) In a milky manner.
(pl. ) of Milkman
(n.) A man who sells milk or delivers is to customers.
(n.) A piece of bread sopped in milk; figuratively, an
effeminate or weak-minded person.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mill
(v. t.) To destroy the organic texture and vital functions of;
to produce gangrene in.
(v. t.) To destroy the active powers or essential qualities of;
to change by chemical action.
(v. t.) To deaden by religious or other discipline, as the
carnal affections, bodily appetites, or worldly desires; to bring into
subjection; to abase; to humble.
(v. t.) To affect with vexation, chagrin, or humiliation; to
humble; to depress.
(v. i.) To lose vitality and organic structure, as flesh of a
living body; to gangrene.
(v. i.) To practice penance from religious motives; to deaden
desires by religious discipline.
(v. i.) To be subdued; to decay, as appetites, desires, etc.
(n.) A cavity cut into a piece of timber, or other material, to
receive something (as the end of another piece) made to fit it, and
called a tenon.
(v. t.) To cut or make a mortisein.
(v. t.) To join or fasten by a tenon and mortise; as, to
mortise a beam into a post, or a joist into a girder.
(pl. ) of Morula
(n.) A weight of the metric system, being one million grams; a
metric ton.
(n.) The act or employment of grinding or passing through a
mill; the process of fulling; the process of making a raised or
intented edge upon coin, etc.; the process of dressing surfaces of
various shapes with rotary cutters. See Mill.
(n.) The number of ten hundred thousand, or a thousand
thousand, -- written 1,000, 000. See the Note under Hundred.
(n.) A very great number; an indefinitely large number.
(n.) The mass of common people; -- with the article the.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Moss
(n.) A Portuguese money of account rated in the treasury
department of the United States at one dollar and eight cents; also, a
Brazilian money of account rated at fifty-four cents and six mills.
(a.) Of or resembling birds of the kite kind.
(n.) A bird related to the kite.
(n.) Imitation; mimicry.
() Alt. of Mimetical
(a.) Imitative; mimetic.
(a.) Consisting of, or formed by, imitation; imitated; as,
mimic gestures.
(a.) Imitative; characterized by resemblance to other forms; --
applied to crystals which by twinning resemble simple forms of a higher
grade of symmetry.
(n.) The act or practice of one who mimics; ludicrous imitation
for sport or ridicule.
(n.) Protective resemblance; the resemblance which certain
animals and plants exhibit to other animals and plants or to the
natural objects among which they live, -- a characteristic which serves
as their chief means of protection against enemies; imitation; mimesis;
mimetism.
(n.) Any singing bird of the genus Motacilla; a wagtail.
(a.) Such as can be mined; as, minable earth.
(n.) A slender, lofty tower attached to a mosque and surrounded
by one or more projecting balconies, from which the summon to prayer is
cried by the muezzin.
(a.) That minces; characterized by primness or affected nicety.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mind
(a.) Bearing in mind; regardful; attentive; heedful; observant.
(a.) Consisting of, containing, or resembling, mother (in
vinegar).
(a.) Producing motion.
(n.) Regard; mindfulness.
(v. i.) An inorganic species or substance occurring in nature,
having a definite chemical composition and usually a distinct
crystalline form. Rocks, except certain glassy igneous forms, are
either simple minerals or aggregates of minerals.
(v. i.) A mine.
(v. i.) Anything which is neither animal nor vegetable, as in
the most general classification of things into three kingdoms (animal,
vegetable, and mineral).
(a.) Of or pertaining to minerals; consisting of a mineral or
of minerals; as, a mineral substance.
(a.) Impregnated with minerals; as, mineral waters.
(imp. & p. p.) of Mottle
(a.) Marked with spots of different colors; variegated;
spotted; as, mottled wood.
(pl. ) of Motto
(a.) Bearing or having a motto; as, a mottoed coat or device.
(n.) A wild sheep (Ovis musimon), inhabiting the mountains of
Sardinia, Corsica, etc. Its horns are very large, with a triangular
base and rounded angles. It is supposed by some to be the original of
the domestic sheep. Called also musimon or musmon.
(n.) Same as Miniver.
(imp. & p. p.) of Mingle
(n.) One who mingles.
(a.) Migniard.
(v. t.) To paint or tinge with red lead or vermilion; also, to
decorate with letters, or the like, painted red, as the page of a
manuscript.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the color of red lead or vermilion;
painted with vermilion.
(a.) Applied to certain consonants having a "liquid" or
softened sound; e.g., in French, l or ll and gn (like the lli in
million and ni in minion); in Italian, gl and gn; in Spanish, ll and ;
in Portuguese, lh and nh.
() Alt. of Mouldy
(a.) Having molted.
(imp. & p. p.) of Mound
(imp. & p. p.) of Mount
(n.) A kind of light passenger vehicle, carrying four persons.
(n.) A little darling; a favorite; a minion.
(n.) A little pin.
(a.) Small; diminutive.
(n.) The least quantity assignable, admissible, or possible, in
a given case; hence, a thing of small consequence; -- opposed to
maximum.
(n.) A being of the smallest size.
(n.) The little finger; the fifth digit, or that corresponding
to it, in either the manus or pes.
(a.) Of the color of red or vermilion.
(a.) Seated or serving on horseback or similarly; as, mounted
police; mounted infantry.
(a.) Placed on a suitable support, or fixed in a setting; as, a
mounted gun; a mounted map; a mounted gem.
(n.) One who mounts.
(n.) An animal mounted; a monture.
(imp. & p. p.) of Mourn
(n.) One who mourns or is grieved at any misfortune, as the
death of a friend.
(n.) One who attends a funeral as a hired mourner.
(n.) A fur esteemed in the Middle Ages as a part of costume. It
is uncertain whether it was the fur of one animal only or of different
animals.
(n.) A singing bird of India of the family Campephagidae.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mouse
(a.) Impertinently inquisitive; prying; meddlesome.
(n.) The act of hunting mice.
(n.) A turn or lashing of spun yarn or small stuff, or a
metallic clasp or fastening, uniting the point and shank of a hook to
prevent its unhooking or straighening out.
(n.) A ratchet movement in a loom.
(imp. & p. p.) of Mouth
(a.) Furnished with a mouth.
(a.) Having a mouth of a particular kind; using the mouth,
speech, or voice in a particular way; -- used only in composition; as,
wide-mouthed; hard-mouthed; foul-mouthed; mealy-mouthed.
(n.) One who mouths; an affected speaker.
(a.) Capable of being moved, lifted, carried, drawn, turned, or
conveyed, or in any way made to change place or posture; susceptible of
motion; not fixed or stationary; as, a movable steam engine.
(a.) Changing from one time to another; as, movable feasts, i.
e., church festivals, the date of which varies from year to year.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mint
(n.) The coin, or other production, made in a mint.
(n.) The duty paid to the mint for coining.
(n.) One skilled in coining, or in coins; a coiner.
(n.) The number from which another number is to be subtracted.
(n.) A minute particular; a small or minor detail; -- used
chiefly in the plural.
(n.) An article of wares or goods; a commodity; a piece of
property not fixed, or not a part of real estate; generally, in the
plural, goods; wares; furniture.
(n.) Property not attached to the soil.
(adv.) In a movable manner or condition.
(v. i.) To heat and ferment in the mow, as hay when housed too
green.
(n.) Alt. of Mozzetta
(n.) A yellowish white, amorphous, nitrogenous substance found
in wheat, rye, etc., and resembling gluten; -- formerly called also
mucin.
(a.) Inducing or stimulating the secretion of mucus;
blennogenous.
(a.) Secreting mucus.
(n.) A substance which is formed in mucous epithelial cells,
and gives rise to mucin.
(a.) Wonderful; admirable.
(n.) A wonder or wonderful thing.
(n.) Specifically: An event or effect contrary to the
established constitution and course of things, or a deviation from the
known laws of nature; a supernatural event, or one transcending the
ordinary laws by which the universe is governed.
(n.) A miracle play.
(n.) A story or legend abounding in miracles.
(v. t.) To make wonderful.
(n.) Same as Belvedere.
(n.) See Nitrobenzene.
(a.) Alt. of Mirifical
(a.) Of, pertaining to, or designating, an organic acid,
obtained indirectly from mucic acid, and somewhat resembling itaconic
acid.
(n.) Mucin.
(adv.) In a muddy manner; turbidly; without mixture; cloudily;
obscurely; confusedly.
(imp. & p. p.) of Muddle
(v. t.) To carry improperly; to carry (one's self) wrongly; to
misbehave.
(imp.) of Misbede
(v. t.) To wrong; to do injury to.
() imp. of Misbede.
(a.) Born to misfortune.
(v. t.) To call by a wrong name; to name improperly.
(v. t.) To call by a bad name; to abuse.
(v. t.) To cast or reckon wrongly.
(n.) An erroneous cast or reckoning.
(v. t.) To date erroneously.
(v. t. & i.) To deal or distribute wrongly, as cards; to make a
wrong distribution.
(n.) The act of misdealing; a wrong distribution of cards to
the players.
(n.) An evil deed; a wicked action.
(v. t.) To misjudge.
(n.) Improper.
(v. t.) To diet improperly.
(p. p.) of Misdo
(n.) A wrongdoer.
(n.) Want of ease; discomfort; misery.
(a.) Like a miser; very covetous; sordid; niggardly.
(v. t.) To befall, as ill luck; to happen to unluckily.
(v. i.) To fare ill.
(n.) Misfortune.
(v. t.) To make in an ill form.
(imp.) of Misgive
(v. t.) To give or grant amiss.
(v. t.) Specifically: To give doubt and apprehension to,
instead of confidence and courage; to impart fear to; to make
irresolute; -- usually said of the mind or heart, and followed by the
objective personal pronoun.
(v. t.) To suspect; to dread.
(v. i.) To give out doubt and apprehension; to be fearful or
irresolute.
(v. t. & i.) To hear incorrectly.
(v. t.) To join unfitly or improperly.
(v. t.) To keep wrongly.
(v. t.) To have a mistaken notion of or about.
(imp. & p. p.) of Mislay
(v. t.) To lead into a wrong way or path; to lead astray; to
guide into error; to cause to mistake; to deceive.
(n.) One who, or that which, muddles.
(imp. & p. p.) of Muddy
(n.) A hole, or hollow place, containing mud, as in a road.
(n.) A hole near the bottom, through which the sediment is
withdrawn.
(n.) The lowest sill of a structure, usually embedded in the
soil; the lowest timber of a house; also, that sill or timber of a
bridge which is laid at the bottom of the water. See Sill.
(n.) A small herbaceous plant growing on muddy shores
(Limosella aquatica).
(n.) A Mohammedan crier of the hour of prayer.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Muff
(a.) Stupid; awkward.
(imp. & p. p.) of Muffle
(v.) To dislike; to disapprove of; to have aversion to; as, to
mislike a man.
(n.) Dislike; disapprobation; aversion.
(v. i.) To live amiss.
(n.) Ill luck; misfortune.
(v. t.) To make or form amiss; to spoil in making.
(v. t.) To mark wrongly.
(v. t.) To mate wrongly or unsuitably; as, to mismate gloves or
shoes; a mismated couple.
(v. t.) To call by the wrong name; to give a wrong or
inappropriate name to.
(n.) Anything used in muffling; esp., a scarf for protecting
the head and neck in cold weather; a tippet.
(n.) A cushion for terminating or softening a note made by a
stringed instrument with a keyboard.
(n.) A kind of mitten or boxing glove, esp. when stuffed.
(n.) One who muffles.
(a.) See Muggy.
(a.) Lowing; bellowing.
(n.) A slender European weed (Galium Cruciata); -- called also
crossweed.
(n.) A somewhat aromatic composite weed (Artemisia vulgaris),
at one time used medicinally; -- called also motherwort.
(n.) A bolter from the Republican party in the national
election of 1884; an Independent.
(n.) The offspring of a negress by a white man, or of a white
woman by a negro, -- usually of a brownish yellow complexion.
(imp. & p. p.) of Mulch
(imp. & p. p.) of Mulct
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mull
(n.) Any plant of the genus Verbascum. They are tall herbs
having coarse leaves, and large flowers in dense spikes. The common
species, with densely woolly leaves, is Verbascum Thapsus.
(n.) A slender bar or pier which forms the division between the
lights of windows, screens, etc.
(n.) An upright member of a framing. See Stile.
(v. t.) To furnish with mullions; to divide by mullions.
(n.) Rubbish; refuse; dirt.
(v. t.) To rate erroneously.
(imp. & p. p.) of Misread
(v. t.) To read amiss; to misunderstand in reading.
(v. t. & i.) To rule badly; to misgovern.
(n.) The act, or the result, of misruling.
(n.) Disorder; confusion; tumult from insubordination.
(a.) Unruly.
(v. i.) To make a false appearance.
(v. i.) To misbecome; to be misbecoming.
(v. t.) To send amiss or incorrectly.
(a.) Capable of being thrown; adapted for hurling or to be
projected from the hand, or from any instrument or rngine, so as to
strike an object at a distance.
(n.) A weapon thrown or projected or intended to be projcted,
as a lance, an arrow, or a bullet.
(n.) The act of sending, or the state of being sent; a being
sent or delegated by authority, with certain powers for transacting
business; comission.
(n.) That with which a messenger or agent is charged; an
errand; business or duty on which one is sent; a commission.
(n.) Persons sent; any number of persons appointed to perform
any service; a delegation; an embassy.
(n.) An assotiation or organization of missionaries; a station
or residence of missionaries.
(n.) An organization for worship and work, dependent on one or
more churches.
(n.) A course of extraordinary sermons and services at a
particular place and time for the special purpose of quickening the
faith and zeal participants, and of converting unbelievers.
(n.) Dismission; discharge from service.
(v. t.) To send on a mission.
(a.) Like a miss; prim; affected; sentimental.
(n.) Specially sent; intended or prepared to be sent; as, a
letter missive.
(n.) Missile.
(n.) That which is sent; a writing containing a message.
(n.) One who is sent; a messenger.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mist
(imp. & obs. p. p.) of Mistake
(v. t.) To take or choose wrongly.
(v. t.) To take in a wrong sense; to misunderstand
misapprehend, or misconceive; as, to mistake a remark; to mistake one's
meaning.
(v. t.) To substitute in thought or perception; as, to mistake
one person for another.
(v. t.) To have a wrong idea of in respect of character,
qualities, etc.; to misjudge.
(v. i.) To err in knowledge, perception, opinion, or judgment;
to commit an unintentional error.
(n.) An apprehending wrongly; a misconception; a
misunderstanding; a fault in opinion or judgment; an unintentional
error of conduct.
(n.) Misconception, error, which when non-negligent may be
ground for rescinding a contract, or for refusing to perform it.
(imp. & p. p.) of Mistell
(v. t.) To tell erroneously.
(v. t.) To call by a wrong name; to miscall.
(n.) See Mystery, a trade.
(a.) Clouded with, or as with, mist.
(n.) A kind of small sailing vessel used in the Mediterranean.
It is rigged partly like a xebec, and partly like a felucca.
(v. i.) To happen or come to pass unfortunately; also, to
suffer evil fortune.
(adv.) With mist; darkly; obscurely.
(v. t.) To time wrongly; not to adapt to the time.
(n.) Mixture.
(n.) The toll for grinding grain.
(n.) A grist or grinding; the grain ground.
(imp. & p. p.) of Mumble
() imp. & obs. p. p. of Mistake.
(v. i.) To think wrongly.
(v. t.) To tune wrongly.
(v. t.) To turn amiss; to pervert.
(n.) One who mumbles.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mumm
(n.) Masking; frolic in disguise; buffoonery.
(n.) Farcical show; hypocritical disguise and parade or
ceremonies.
(v. t.) To embalm and dry as a mummy; to make into, or like, a
mummy.
(pl. ) of Mummy
(imp. & p. p.) of Mummy
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mump
(a.) Sullen, sulky.
(imp. & p. p.) of Munch
(n.) One who misuses.
(n.) Unlawful use of a right; use in excess of, or varying
from, one's right.
(v. i.) To ween amiss; to misjudge; to distrust; to be
mistaken.
(v. i.) To go wrong; to go astray.
(v. t.) To yoke improperly.
(imp. & p. p.) of Mitre
() of Mitre
(n.) One who munches.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the world; worldly; earthly;
terrestrial; as, the mundane sphere.
(v. t.) To cleanse.
(n.) See Mongoose.
(n. & a.) See Mongrel.
(a.) Munificent; liberal.
(n.) See Indian madder, under Madder.
(n.) See Karyokinesis.
(a.) Sending forth; emitting.
(a.) Capable of being mixed.
(adv.) In a mixed or mingled manner.
(n.) See Mullion.
(n.) Same as Mullion; -- especially used in joiner's work.
(n.) Any one of several species of small Asiatic deer of the
genus Cervulus, esp. C. muntjac, which occurs both in India and on the
East Indian Islands.
(pl. ) of Murex
(n.) A complex nitrogenous substance obtained from murexide,
alloxantin, and other ureids, as a white, or yellowish, crystalline
which turns red on exposure to the air; -- called also uramil,
dialuramide, and formerly purpuric acid.
(n.) A salt of muriatic hydrochloric acid; a chloride; as,
muriate of ammonia.
(n.) Mixture.
(n.) A kind of cement made of mastic, amber, etc., used as a
mordant for gold leaf.
(n.) The act of mixing, or the state of being mixed; as, made
by a mixture of ingredients.
(n.) That which results from mixing different ingredients
together; a compound; as, to drink a mixture of molasses and water; --
also, a medley.
(n.) An ingredient entering into a mixed mass; an additional
ingredient.
(n.) A kind of liquid medicine made up of many ingredients;
esp., as opposed to solution, a liquid preparation in which the solid
ingredients are not completely dissolved.
(n.) A mass of two or more ingredients, the particles of which
are separable, independent, and uncompounded with each other, no matter
how thoroughly and finely commingled; -- contrasted with a compound;
thus, gunpowder is a mechanical mixture of carbon, sulphur, and niter.
(n.) An organ stop, comprising from two to five ranges of
pipes, used only in combination with the foundation and compound stops;
-- called also furniture stop. It consists of high harmonics, or
overtones, of the ground tone.
(n.) A maze or labyrinth.
(imp. & p. p.) of Mizzle