- redback
- redbird
- rubbing
- rubbish
- rubelet
- rubella
- rubelle
- rubeola
- rubican
- rubidic
- rubific
- rubious
- rubying
- ruching
- rucking
- reddish
- redfish
- redhoop
- red-hot
- redient
- redness
- redoubt
- redound
- redpoll
- redraft
- redrawn
- redroot
- redsear
- redskin
- redtail
- reduced
- reducer
- racemed
- racemic
- racking
- rackett
- rackety
- racking
- racquet
- radiale
- radiant
- radiary
- radiate
- radical
- radicel
- radicle
- radious
- radices
- radixes
- radulae
- raffing
- raffish
- raffled
- raffler
- rafting
- ragging
- rageful
- ragweed
- ragwork
- ragwort
- raiding
- railing
- railway
- raiment
- raining
- rainbow
- raising
- rajpoot
- rabbies
- rallier
- ralline
- rallied
- rallies
- ramming
- rabbled
- rabbler
- rabidly
- rabinet
- rabious
- raccoon
- rambled
- rambler
- ramekin
- ramenta
- rameous
- ramline
- redweed
- redwood
- reeding
- reefing
- reeking
- reeling
- reenact
- reendow
- reenjoy
- reenter
- reentry
- reeving
- reexpel
- referee
- ruction
- ruddied
- ruddily
- ruddock
- refined
- refiner
- reflame
- reflect
- refloat
- reforge
- re-form
- refound
- refract
- rudesby
- refrain
- reframe
- reshape
- resiant
- resided
- resider
- residue
- re-sign
- resiled
- resinic
- resolve
- respeak
- respect
- respell
- respire
- respite
- resplit
- respond
- resting
- restant
- restate
- restful
- restiff
- resting
- restive
- ruffing
- ruffian
- ruffled
- ruffler
- rugging
- resumed
- ruining
- ruinate
- ruinous
- rulable
- retable
- rumbler
- rumicin
- ruminal
- rummage
- retaker
- retched
- rummies
- rumored
- rumorer
- rumpled
- running
- retiary
- reticle
- retinal
- retinic
- retinol
- retinue
- retired
- runaway
- retired
- retirer
- retouch
- retrace
- runaway
- rundlet
- retrace
- retract
- retrait
- retread
- retreat
- running
- runnion
- ruption
- rupture
- retreat
- retrial
- rupture
- rurally
- russety
- rusting
- rustful
- rustily
- rustled
- rustler
- rutting
- ruthful
- ruttier
- ruttish
- retrude
- retruse
- rettery
- retting
- re-turn
- reunite
- reveled
- reveler
- revelry
- revenge
- revenue
- revered
- reverer
- reverie
- reverse
- reviled
- reviler
- revince
- revisal
- revised
- reviser
- revisit
- revival
- revived
- reviver
- revivor
- revoice
- revoked
- refresh
- revoker
- refugee
- refusal
- refused
- revolve
- revulse
- refuser
- refutal
- refuted
- refuter
- regaled
- regaler
- regalia
- regally
- rewrite
- rhabdom
- rhachis
- rammish
- ramping
- regatta
- rhatany
- rheeboc
- rampage
- rampant
- rampart
- rampier
- rampion
- rampire
- rampler
- ramulus
- rheumic
- ranchos
- randing
- regimen
- rhizine
- ranging
- rhizoid
- rhizoma
- rhizome
- rhodium
- rhombic
- ranking
- rankled
- regnant
- regorge
- regrade
- regraft
- regrant
- regrate
- regrede
- regreet
- regress
- rhombus
- rhonchi
- rhubarb
- rhyming
- ransack
- ranting
- rantism
- regular
- reigned
- reigner
- rapping
- rhymery
- rhymist
- ribbing
- ribband
- ribbing
- ribless
- ribwort
- ricinic
- rickets
- rickety
- ridding
- ridable
- riddled
- riddler
- rapeful
- raphany
- rapidly
- rapilli
- rappage
- rapport
- reining
- reincur
- ridging
- rapture
- rarebit
- reinter
- reissue
- rejoice
- ridotto
- riffler
- rifling
- rifting
- rigging
- rashful
- rasping
- rejoice
- rejourn
- rejudge
- relapse
- rigging
- riggish
- ratting
- ratable
- ratafia
- ratchel
- ratchet
- relapse
- related
- relater
- righted
- righten
- righter
- rightly
- rigidly
- ratfish
- relator
- relaxed
- rilievo
- rimming
- rimbase
- rimpled
- ringman
- rosebay
- rotundo
- rowport
- reliant
- ringing
- ratlins
- ratteen
- ratting
- rattled
- relieve
- relievo
- relight
- relique
- ringent
- ringing
- ringlet
- rinsing
- rattler
- rattoon
- raucity
- raucous
- ravaged
- ravager
- relodge
- relumed
- relying
- rioting
- riotise
- riotous
- ripping
- ripened
- ripieno
- rippled
- ripplet
- raveled
- raveler
- ravelin
- ravened
- ravener
- remanet
- re-mark
- remarry
- remblai
- remeant
- rawhide
- rawness
- risible
- risking
- riskful
- risotto
- rissoid
- rissole
- rivaled
- rivalry
- riveled
- rivered
- riveret
- riveted
- riveter
- rivulet
- roadbed
- roadway
- roaming
- roaring
- rayless
- reached
- roaring
- roasted
- roaster
- robbing
- robbery
- reacher
- remercy
- remerge
- remiges
- remiped
- remised
- readept
- readily
- remnant
- remodel
- remould
- rocking
- rocklay
- rockery
- readmit
- readopt
- readorn
- rocking
- rodsmen
- rodsman
- reagent
- reagree
- realgar
- realism
- realist
- reality
- realize
- re-ally
- reaming
- reannex
- remorse
- reaping
- reapply
- rearing
- reargue
- roebuck
- roguery
- roguish
- roiling
- roinish
- roister
- rokeage
- remould
- remount
- removal
- removed
- remover
- renable
- rokelay
- rolling
- rending
- rolling
- rollway
- reaving
- reawake
- renerve
- romancy
- rebloom
- reboant
- rebound
- rebrace
- rebuild
- rebuked
- rebuker
- rebuses
- recarry
- receded
- receipt
- receive
- renewal
- renewer
- renomee
- renovel
- receive
- recency
- recense
- renting
- rentage
- rentier
- romanza
- romaunt
- romeine
- romeite
- romping
- rompish
- reorder
- repaint
- rondeau
- rondure
- rongeur
- roofing
- rechase
- recheat
- roofing
- rooflet
- rooking
- rookery
- rooming
- roomage
- roomful
- roomily
- reparel
- recital
- recited
- reciter
- recking
- roomthy
- roosted
- rooster
- rooting
- reclasp
- rootcap
- rootery
- rootlet
- repiner
- replace
- recline
- reclose
- reclude
- recluse
- rorqual
- roseate
- replait
- replant
- replead
- replete
- replevy
- replica
- roseate
- roseine
- roseola
- replier
- replied
- replies
- rosland
- rosolic
- reposal
- reposed
- reposer
- reposit
- rostral
- rostrum
- rotting
- rotated
- rotator
- rotella
- rotifer
- rotular
- rotunda
- rouging
- reprint
- reprise
- roughen
- roughly
- roulade
- rouleau
- recoupe
- reprune
- reptant
- reptile
- rounded
- roundel
- rounder
- roundly
- repulse
- reputed
- request
- rousant
- rousing
- recross
- recruit
- request
- require
- routing
- routine
- rectify
- rection
- rowable
- rowboat
- rowdies
- roweled
- rowlock
- requite
- reredos
- rereign
- rescind
- rescous
- rescued
- rectory
- rectrix
- royalet
- royally
- royalty
- royster
- rubbing
- rescuer
- reseize
- recurve
- rawbone
- rawhead
- recipes
- reclaim
- recount
- recover
- redcoat
- redhead
- redlegs
- redress
- reedify
- reelect
- reerect
- release
- repress
- reproof
- reprove
- reserve
- resound
- restore
(n.) The dunlin.
(n.) The cardinal bird.
(n.) The summer redbird (Piranga rubra).
(n.) The scarlet tanager. See Tanager.
() a. & n. from Rub, v.
(n.) Waste or rejected matter; anything worthless; valueless
stuff; trash; especially, fragments of building materials or fallen
buildings; ruins; debris.
(a.) Of or pertaining to rubbish; of the quality of rubbish;
trashy.
(n.) A little ruby.
(n.) An acute specific disease with a dusky red cutaneous
eruption resembling that of measles, but unattended by catarrhal
symptoms; -- called also German measles.
(n.) A red color used in enameling.
(n.) the measles.
(n.) Rubella.
(a.) Colored a prevailing red, bay, or black, with flecks of
white or gray especially on the flanks; -- said of horses.
(a.) Of or pertaining to rubidium; containing rubidium.
(a.) Making red; as, rubific rays.
(a.) Red; ruddy.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Ruby
(n.) A ruche, or ruches collectively.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Ruck
(a.) Somewhat red; moderately red.
(n.) The blueback salmon of the North Pacific; -- called also
nerka. See Blueback (b).
(n.) The rosefish.
(n.) A large California labroid food fish (Trochocopus
pulcher); -- called also fathead.
(n.) The red bass, red drum, or drumfish. See the Note under
Drumfish.
(n.) The male of the European bullfinch.
(a.) Red with heat; heated to redness; as, red-hot iron;
red-hot balls. Hence, figuratively, excited; violent; as, a red-hot
radical.
(a.) Returning.
(n.) The quality or state of being red; red color.
(n.) A small, and usually a roughly constructed, fort or
outwork of varying shape, commonly erected for a temporary purpose, and
without flanking defenses, -- used esp. in fortifying tops of hills and
passes, and positions in hostile territory.
(n.) In permanent works, an outwork placed within another
outwork. See F and i in Illust. of Ravelin.
(v. t.) To stand in dread of; to regard with fear; to dread.
(v. i.) To roll back, as a wave or flood; to be sent or driven
back; to flow back, as a consequence or effect; to conduce; to
contribute; to result.
(v. i.) To be in excess; to remain over and above; to be
redundant; to overflow.
(n.) The coming back, as of consequence or effect; result;
return; requital.
(n.) Rebound; reverberation.
(n.) Any one of several species of small northern finches of
the genus Acanthis (formerly Aegiothus), native of Europe and America.
The adults have the crown red or rosy. The male of the most common
species (A. linarius) has also the breast and rump rosy. Called also
redpoll linnet. See Illust. under Linnet.
(n.) The common European linnet.
(n.) The American redpoll warbler (Dendroica palmarum).
(v. t.) To draft or draw anew.
(n.) A second draft or copy.
(n.) A new bill of exchange which the holder of a protected
bill draws on the drawer or indorsers, in order to recover the amount
of the protested bill with costs and charges.
(p. p.) of Redraw
(n.) A name of several plants having red roots, as the New
Jersey tea (see under Tea), the gromwell, the bloodroot, and the
Lachnanthes tinctoria, an endogenous plant found in sandy swamps from
Rhode Island to Florida.
(v. i.) To be brittle when red-hot; to be red-short.
(n.) A common appellation for a North American Indian; -- so
called from the color of the skin.
(n.) The red-tailed hawk.
(n.) The European redstart.
(imp. & p. p.) of Reduce
(n.) One who, or that which, reduces.
(a.) Arranged in a raceme, or in racemes.
(a.) Pertaining to, or designating, an acid found in many kinds
of grapes. It is also obtained from tartaric acid, with which it is
isomeric, and from sugar, gum, etc., by oxidation. It is a sour white
crystalline substance, consisting of a combination of dextrorotatory
and levorotatory tartaric acids.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rack
(n.) An old wind instrument of the double bassoon kind, having
ventages but not keys.
(a.) Making a tumultuous noise.
(n.) Spun yarn used in racking ropes.
(n.) See Racket.
(n.) The bone or cartilage of the carpus which articulates with
the radius and corresponds to the scaphoid bone in man.
(n.) Radial plates in the calyx of a crinoid.
(a.) Emitting or proceeding as from a center; resembling rays;
radiating; radiate.
(a.) Especially, emitting or darting rays of light or heat;
issuing in beams or rays; beaming with brightness; emitting a vivid
light or splendor; as, the radiant sun.
(a.) Beaming with vivacity and happiness; as, a radiant face.
(a.) Giving off rays; -- said of a bearing; as, the sun
radiant; a crown radiant.
(a.) Having a raylike appearance, as the large marginal flowers
of certain umbelliferous plants; -- said also of the cluster which has
such marginal flowers.
(n.) The luminous point or object from which light emanates;
also, a body radiating light brightly.
(n.) A straight line proceeding from a given point, or fixed
pole, about which it is conceived to revolve.
(n.) The point in the heavens at which the apparent paths of
shooting stars meet, when traced backward, or whence they appear to
radiate.
(n.) A radiate.
(v. i.) To emit rays; to be radiant; to shine.
(v. i.) To proceed in direct lines from a point or surface; to
issue in rays, as light or heat.
(v. t.) To emit or send out in direct lines from a point or
points; as, to radiate heat.
(v. t.) To enlighten; to illuminate; to shed light or
brightness on; to irradiate.
(a.) Having rays or parts diverging from a center; radiated;
as, a radiate crystal.
(a.) Having in a capitulum large ray florets which are unlike
the disk florets, as in the aster, daisy, etc.
(a.) Belonging to the Radiata.
(n.) One of the Radiata.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the root; proceeding directly from the
root.
(a.) Hence: Of or pertaining to the root or origin; reaching to
the center, to the foundation, to the ultimate sources, to the
principles, or the like; original; fundamental; thorough-going;
unsparing; extreme; as, radical evils; radical reform; a radical party.
(a.) Belonging to, or proceeding from, the root of a plant; as,
radical tubers or hairs.
(a.) Proceeding from a rootlike stem, or one which does not
rise above the ground; as, the radical leaves of the dandelion and the
sidesaddle flower.
(a.) Relating, or belonging, to the root, or ultimate source of
derivation; as, a radical verbal form.
(a.) Of or pertaining to a radix or root; as, a radical
quantity; a radical sign. See below.
(n.) A primitive word; a radix, root, or simple, underived,
uncompounded word; an etymon.
(n.) A primitive letter; a letter that belongs to the radix.
(n.) One who advocates radical changes in government or social
institutions, especially such changes as are intended to level class
inequalities; -- opposed to conservative.
(n.) A characteristic, essential, and fundamental constituent
of any compound; hence, sometimes, an atom.
(n.) Specifically, a group of two or more atoms, not completely
saturated, which are so linked that their union implies certain
properties, and are conveniently regarded as playing the part of a
single atom; a residue; -- called also a compound radical. Cf. Residue.
(n.) A radical quantity. See under Radical, a.
(a.) A radical vessel. See under Radical, a.
(n.) A small branch of a root; a rootlet.
(n.) The rudimentary stem of a plant which supports the
cotyledons in the seed, and from which the root is developed downward;
the stem of the embryo; the caulicle.
(n.) A rootlet; a radicel.
(a.) Consisting of rays, as light.
(a.) Radiating; radiant.
(pl. ) of Radix
(pl. ) of Radix
(pl. ) of Radula
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Raff
(a.) Resembling, or having the character of, raff, or a raff;
worthless; low.
(imp. & p. p.) of Raffle
(n.) One who raffles.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Raft
(n.) The business of making or managing rafts.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rag
(a.) Full of rage; expressing rage.
(n.) A common American composite weed (Ambrosia
artemisiaefolia) with finely divided leaves; hogweed.
(n.) A kind of rubblework. In the United States, any rubblework
of thin and small stones.
(n.) A name given to several species of the composite genus
Senecio.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Raid
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rail
(a.) Expressing reproach; insulting.
(n.) A barrier made of a rail or of rails.
(n.) Rails in general; also, material for making rails.
(n.) A road or way consisting of one or more parallel series of
iron or steel rails, patterned and adjusted to be tracks for the wheels
of vehicles, and suitably supported on a bed or substructure.
(n.) The road, track, etc., with all the lands, buildings,
rolling stock, franchises, etc., pertaining to them and constituting
one property; as, a certain railroad has been put into the hands of a
receiver.
(n.) Clothing in general; vesture; garments; -- usually
singular in form, with a collective sense.
(n.) An article of dress.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rain
(n.) A bow or arch exhibiting, in concentric bands, the several
colors of the spectrum, and formed in the part of the hemisphere
opposite to the sun by the refraction and reflection of the sun's rays
in drops of falling rain.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Raise
(n.) The act of lifting, setting up, elevating, exalting,
producing, or restoring to life.
(n.) Specifically, the operation or work of setting up the
frame of a building; as, to help at a raising.
(n.) The operation of embossing sheet metal, or of forming it
into cup-shaped or hollow articles, by hammering, stamping, or
spinning.
(n.) Alt. of Rajput
(pl. ) of Rabbi
(n.) One who rallies.
(a.) Pertaining to the rails.
(imp. & p. p.) of Rally
(pl. ) of Rally
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Ram
(imp. & p. p.) of Rabble
(n.) A scraping tool for smoothing metal.
(adv.) In a rabid manner; with extreme violence.
(n.) A kind of small ordnance formerly in use.
(a.) Fierce.
(n.) A North American nocturnal carnivore (Procyon lotor)
allied to the bears, but much smaller, and having a long, full tail,
banded with black and gray. Its body is gray, varied with black and
white. Called also coon, and mapach.
(imp. & p. p.) of Ramble
(n.) One who rambles; a rover; a wanderer.
(n.) See Ramequin.
(n. pl.) Thin brownish chaffy scales upon the leaves or young
shoots of some plants, especially upon the petioles and leaves of
ferns.
(a.) Ramal.
(n.) A line used to get a straight middle line, as on a spar,
or from stem to stern in building a vessel.
(n.) The red poppy (Papaver Rhoeas).
(n.) A gigantic coniferous tree (Sequoia sempervirens) of
California, and its light and durable reddish timber. See Sequoia.
(n.) An East Indian dyewood, obtained from Pterocarpus
santalinus, Caesalpinia Sappan, and several other trees.
(n.) A small convex molding; a reed (see Illust. (i) of
Molding); one of several set close together to decorate a surface;
also, decoration by means of reedings; -- the reverse of fluting.
(n.) The nurling on the edge of a coin; -- commonly called
milling.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Reef
(n.) The process of taking in a reef.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Reek
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Reel
(v. t.) To enact again.
(v. t.) To endow again.
(v. i.) To enjoy anew.
(v. t.) To enter again.
(v. t.) To cut deeper, as engraved lines on a plate of metal,
when the engraving has not been deep enough, or the plate has become
worn in printing.
(v. i.) To enter anew or again.
(n.) A second or new entry; as, a reentry into public life.
(n.) A resuming or retaking possession of what one has lately
foregone; -- applied especially to land; the entry by a lessor upon the
premises leased, on failure of the tenant to pay rent or perform the
covenants in the lease.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Reeve
(v. t.) To expel again.
(n.) One to whom a thing is referred; a person to whom a matter
in dispute has been referred, in order that he may settle it.
(n.) An uproar; a quarrel; a noisy outbreak.
(a.) Made ruddy or red.
(adv.) In a ruddy manner.
(n.) The European robin.
(n.) A piece of gold money; -- probably because the gold of
coins was often reddened by copper alloy. Called also red ruddock, and
golden ruddock.
(imp. & p. p.) of Refine
(a.) Freed from impurities or alloy; purifed; polished;
cultured; delicate; as; refined gold; refined language; refined
sentiments.
(n.) One who, or that which, refines.
(v. i.) To kindle again into flame.
(v.) To bend back; to give a backwa/d turn to; to throw back;
especially, to cause to return after striking upon any surface; as, a
mirror reflects rays of light; polished metals reflect heat.
(v.) To give back an image or likeness of; to mirror.
(v. i.) To throw back light, heat, or the like; to return rays
or beams.
(v. i.) To be sent back; to rebound as from a surface; to
revert; to return.
(v. i.) To throw or turn back the thoughts upon anything; to
contemplate. Specifically: To attend earnestly to what passes within
the mind; to attend to the facts or phenomena of consciousness; to use
attention or earnest thought; to meditate; especially, to think in
relation to moral truth or rules.
(v. i.) To cast reproach; to cause censure or dishonor.
(n.) Reflux; ebb.
(v. t.) To forge again or anew; hence, to fashion or fabricate
anew; to make over.
(v. t. & i.) To give a new form to; to form anew; to take form
again, or to take a new form; as, to re-form the line after a charge.
(v. t.) To found or cast anew.
(v. t.) To found or establish again; to re/stablish.
() imp. & p. p. of Refind, v. t.
(n.) To bend sharply and abruptly back; to break off.
(n.) To break the natural course of, as rays of light orr heat,
when passing from one transparent medium to another of different
density; to cause to deviate from a direct course by an action distinct
from reflection; as, a dense medium refrcts the rays of light as they
pass into it from a rare medium.
(n.) An uncivil, turbulent fellow.
(v. t.) To hold back; to restrain; to keep within prescribed
bounds; to curb; to govern.
(v. t.) To abstain from
(v. i.) To keep one's self from action or interference; to hold
aloof; to forbear; to abstain.
(v.) The burden of a song; a phrase or verse which recurs at
the end of each of the separate stanzas or divisions of a poetic
composition.
(v. t.) To frame again or anew.
(v. t.) To shape again.
(a.) Resident; present in a place.
(n.) A resident.
(imp. & p. p.) of Reside
(n.) One who resides in a place.
(n.) That which remains after a part is taken, separated,
removed, or designated; remnant; remainder.
(n.) That part of a testeator's estate wwhich is not disposed
of in his will by particular and special legacies and devises, and
which remains after payment of debts and legacies.
(n.) That which remains of a molecule after the removal of a
portion of its constituents; hence, an atom or group regarded as a
portion of a molecule; -- used as nearly equivalent to radical, but in
a more general sense.
(n.) Any positive or negative number that differs from a given
number by a multiple of a given modulus; thus, if 7 is the modulus, and
9 the given number, the numbers -5, 2, 16, 23, etc., are residues.
(v. t.) To affix one's signature to, a second time; to sign
again.
(imp. & p. p.) of Resile
(a.) Pertaining to, or obtained from, resin; as, the resinic
acids.
(v. i.) To separate the component parts of; to reduce to the
constituent elements; -- said of compound substances; hence, sometimes,
to melt, or dissolve.
(v. i.) To reduce to simple or intelligible notions; -- said of
complex ideas or obscure questions; to make clear or certain; to free
from doubt; to disentangle; to unravel; to explain; hence, to clear up,
or dispel, as doubt; as, to resolve a riddle.
(v. i.) To cause to perceive or understand; to acquaint; to
inform; to convince; to assure; to make certain.
(v. i.) To determine or decide in purpose; to make ready in
mind; to fix; to settle; as, he was resolved by an unexpected event.
(v. i.) To express, as an opinion or determination, by
resolution and vote; to declare or decide by a formal vote; -- followed
by a clause; as, the house resolved (or, it was resolved by the house)
that no money should be apropriated (or, to appropriate no money).
(v. i.) To change or convert by resolution or formal vote; --
used only reflexively; as, the house resolved itself into a committee
of the whole.
(v. i.) To solve, as a problem, by enumerating the several
things to be done, in order to obtain what is required; to find the
answer to, or the result of.
(v. i.) To dispere or scatter; to discuss, as an inflammation
or a tumor.
(v. i.) To let the tones (as of a discord) follow their several
tendencies, resulting in a concord.
(v. i.) To relax; to lay at ease.
(v. i.) To be separated into its component parts or distinct
principles; to undergo resolution.
(v. i.) To melt; to dissolve; to become fluid.
(v. i.) To be settled in opinion; to be convinced.
(v. i.) To form a purpose; to make a decision; especially, to
determine after reflection; as, to resolve on a better course of life.
(n.) The act of resolving or making clear; resolution;
solution.
(n.) That which has been resolved on or determined; decisive
conclusion; fixed purpose; determination; also, legal or official
determination; a legislative declaration; a resolution.
(v. t.) To speak or utter again.
(v. t.) To answer; to echo.
(v. t.) To take notice of; to regard with special attention; to
regard as worthy of special consideration; hence, to care for; to heed.
(v. t.) To consider worthy of esteem; to regard with honor.
(v. t.) To look toward; to front upon or toward.
(v. t.) To regard; to consider; to deem.
(v. t.) To have regard to; to have reference to; to relate to;
as, the treaty particularly respects our commerce.
(v.) The act of noticing with attention; the giving particular
consideration to; hence, care; caution.
(v.) Esteem; regard; consideration; honor.
(v.) An expression of respect of deference; regards; as, to
send one's respects to another.
(v.) Reputation; repute.
(v.) Relation; reference; regard.
(v.) Particular; point regarded; point of view; as, in this
respect; in any respect; in all respects.
(v.) Consideration; motive; interest.
(v. t.) To spell again.
(v. i.) To take breath again; hence, to take rest or
refreshment.
(v. i.) To breathe; to inhale air into the lungs, and exhale it
from them, successively, for the purpose of maintaining the vitality of
the blood.
(v. t.) To breathe in and out; to inspire and expire,, as air;
to breathe.
(v. t.) To breathe out; to exhale.
(n.) A putting off of that which was appointed; a postponement
or delay.
(n.) Temporary intermission of labor, or of any process or
operation; interval of rest; pause; delay.
(n.) Temporary suspension of the execution of a capital
offender; reprieve.
(n.) The delay of appearance at court granted to a jury beyond
the proper term.
(n.) To give or grant a respite to.
(n.) To delay or postpone; to put off.
(n.) To keep back from execution; to reprieve.
(n.) To relieve by a pause or interval of rest.
(v. t. & i.) To split again.
(v. i.) To say somethin in return; to answer; to reply; as, to
respond to a question or an argument.
(v. i.) To show some effect in return to a force; to act in
response; to accord; to correspond; to suit.
(v. i.) To render satisfaction; to be answerable; as, the
defendant is held to respond in damages.
(v. t.) To answer; to reply.
(v. t.) To suit or accord with; to correspond to.
(n.) An answer; a response.
(n.) A short anthem sung at intervals during the reading of a
chapter.
(n.) A half pier or pillar attached to a wall to support an
arch.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rest
(a.) Persistent.
(v. t.) To state anew.
(a.) Being at rest; quiet.
(a.) Giving rest; freeing from toil, trouble, etc.
(a.) Restive.
(n.) A restive or stubborn horse.
() a. & n. from Rest, v. t. & i.
(a.) Unwilling to go on; obstinate in refusing to move forward;
stubborn; drawing back.
(a.) Inactive; sluggish.
(a.) Impatient under coercion, chastisement, or opposition;
refractory.
(a.) Uneasy; restless; averse to standing still; fidgeting
about; -- applied especially to horses.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Ruff
(n.) A pimp; a pander; also, a paramour.
(n.) A boisterous, cruel, brutal fellow; a desperate fellow
ready for murderous or cruel deeds; a cutthroat.
(a.) brutal; cruel; savagely boisterous; murderous; as, ruffian
rage.
(v. i.) To play the ruffian; to rage; to raise tumult.
(imp. & p. p.) of Ruffle
(n.) One who ruffles; a swaggerer; a bully; a ruffian.
(n.) That which ruffles; specifically, a sewing machine
attachment for making ruffles.
(n.) A coarse kind of woolen cloth, used for wrapping,
blanketing, etc.
(imp. & p. p.) of Resume
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Ruin
(v. t.) To demolish; to subvert; to destroy; to reduce to
poverty; to ruin.
(v. t.) To cause to fall; to cast down.
(v. i.) To fall; to tumble.
(a.) Involved in ruin; ruined.
(a.) Causing, or tending to cause, ruin; destructive; baneful;
pernicious; as, a ruinous project.
(a.) Characterized by ruin; ruined; dilapidated; as, an
edifice, bridge, or wall in a ruinous state.
(a.) Composed of, or consisting in, ruins.
(a.) That may be ruled; subject to rule; accordant or
conformable to rule.
(n.) A shelf behind the altar, for display of lights, vases of
wlowers, etc.
(n.) One who, or that which, rumbles.
(n.) A yellow crystalline substance found in the root of yellow
dock (Rumex crispus) and identical with chrysophanic acid.
(a.) Ruminant; ruminating.
(n.) A place or room for the stowage of cargo in a ship; also,
the act of stowing cargo; the pulling and moving about of packages
incident to close stowage; -- formerly written romage.
(n.) A searching carefully by looking into every corner, and by
turning things over.
(v. t.) To make room in, as a ship, for the cargo; to move
about, as packages, ballast, so as to permit close stowage; to stow
closely; to pack; -- formerly written roomage, and romage.
(v. t.) To search or examine thoroughly by looking into every
corner, and turning over or removing goods or other things; to examine,
as a book, carefully, turning over leaf after leaf.
(v. i.) To search a place narrowly.
(n.) One who takes again what has been taken; a recaptor.
(imp. & p. p.) of Retch
(pl. ) of Rummy
(imp. & p. p.) of Rumor
(n.) A teller of news; especially, one who spreads false
reports.
(imp. & p. p.) of Rumple
(a.) Wrinkled; crumpled.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Run
(n.) Any spider which spins webs to catch its prey.
(n.) A retiarius.
(a.) Netlike.
(a.) Constructing or using a web, or net, to catch prey; --
said of certain spiders.
(a.) Armed with a net; hence, skillful to entangle.
(n.) A small net.
(n.) A reticule. See Reticule, 2.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the retina.
(a.) Of or pertaining to resin; derived from resin;
specifically, designating an acid found in certain fossil resins and
hydrocarbons.
(n.) A hydrocarbon oil obtained by the distillation of resin,
-- used in printer's ink.
(n.) The body of retainers who follow a prince or other
distinguished person; a train of attendants; a suite.
(imp. & p. p.) of Retire
(n.) One who, or that which, flees from danger, duty,
restraint, etc.; a fugitive.
(n.) The act of running away, esp. of a horse or teams; as,
there was a runaway yesterday.
(a.) Running away; fleeing from danger, duty, restraint, etc.;
as, runaway soldiers; a runaway horse.
(a.) Private; secluded; quiet; as, a retired life; a person of
retired habits.
(a.) Withdrawn from active duty or business; as, a retired
officer; a retired physician.
(n.) One who retires.
(v. t.) To touch again, or rework, in order to improve; to
revise; as, to retouch a picture or an essay.
(v. t.) To correct or change, as a negative, by handwork.
(n.) A partial reworking,as of a painting, a sculptor's clay
model, or the like.
(v. t.) To trace back, as a line.
(v. t.) To go back, in or over (a previous course); to go over
again in a reverse direction; as, to retrace one's steps; to retrace
one's proceedings.
(a.) Accomplished by running away or elopement, or during
flight; as, a runaway marriage.
(a.) Won by a long lead; as, a runaway victory.
(a.) Very successful; accomplishing success quickly; as, a
runaway bestseller.
(n.) A small barrel of no certain dimensions. It may contain
from 3 to 20 gallons, but it usually holds about 14/ gallons.
(v. t.) To trace over again, or renew the outline of, as a
drawing; to draw again.
(v. t.) To draw back; to draw up or shorten; as, the cat can
retract its claws; to retract a muscle.
(v. t.) To withdraw; to recall; to disavow; to recant; to take
back; as, to retract an accusation or an assertion.
(v. t.) To take back,, as a grant or favor previously bestowed;
to revoke.
(v. i.) To draw back; to draw up; as, muscles retract after
amputation.
(v. i.) To take back what has been said; to withdraw a
concession or a declaration.
(n.) The pricking of a horse's foot in nailing on a shoe.
(n.) A portrait; a likeness.
(v. t. & i.) To tread again.
(n.) The act of retiring or withdrawing one's self, especially
from what is dangerous or disagreeable.
(n.) The place to which anyone retires; a place or privacy or
safety; a refuge; an asylum.
(n.) The retiring of an army or body of men from the face of an
enemy, or from any ground occupied to a greater distance from the
enemy, or from an advanced position.
(n.) The withdrawing of a ship or fleet from an enemy for the
purpose of avoiding an engagement or escaping after defeat.
(n.) A signal given in the army or navy, by the beat of a drum
or the sounding of trumpet or bugle, at sunset (when the roll is
called), or for retiring from action.
(a.) Moving or advancing by running.
(a.) Having a running gait; not a trotter or pacer.
(a.) trained and kept for running races; as, a running horse.
(a.) Successive; one following the other without break or
intervention; -- said of periods of time; as, to be away two days
running; to sow land two years running.
(a.) Flowing; easy; cursive; as, a running hand.
(a.) Continuous; keeping along step by step; as, he stated the
facts with a running explanation.
(a.) Extending by a slender climbing or trailing stem; as, a
running vine.
(a.) Discharging pus; as, a running sore.
(n.) The act of one who, or of that which runs; as, the running
was slow.
(n.) That which runs or flows; the quantity of a liquid which
flows in a certain time or during a certain operation; as, the first
running of a still.
(n.) The discharge from an ulcer or other sore.
(n.) See Ronion.
(n.) A breaking or bursting open; breach; rupture.
(n.) The act of breaking apart, or separating; the state of
being broken asunder; as, the rupture of the skin; the rupture of a
vessel or fiber; the rupture of a lutestring.
(n.) Breach of peace or concord between individuals; open
hostility or war between nations; interruption of friendly relations;
as, the parties came to a rupture.
(n.) Hernia. See Hernia.
(n.) A bursting open, as of a steam boiler, in a less sudden
manner than by explosion. See Explosion.
(n.) A special season of solitude and silence to engage in
religious exercises.
(n.) A period of several days of withdrawal from society to a
religious house for exclusive occupation in the duties of devotion; as,
to appoint or observe a retreat.
(v. i.) To make a retreat; to retire from any position or
place; to withdraw; as, the defeated army retreated from the field.
(n.) A secdond trial, experiment, or test; a second judicial
trial, as of an accused person.
(v. t.) To part by violence; to break; to burst; as, to rupture
a blood vessel.
(v. t.) To produce a hernia in.
(v. i.) To suffer a breach or disruption.
(adv.) In a rural manner; as in the country.
(a.) Of a russet color; russet.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rust
(a.) Full of rust; resembling rust; causing rust; rusty.
(adv.) In a rusty state.
(imp. & p. p.) of Rustle
(n.) One who, or that which, rustles.
(n.) A bovine animal that can care for itself in any
circumstances; also, an alert, energetic, driving person.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rut
(a.) Full of ruth
(a.) Pitiful; tender.
(a.) Full of sorrow; woeful.
(a.) Causing sorrow.
(n.) A chart of a course, esp. at sea.
(a.) Inclined to rut; lustful; libidinous; salacious.
(v. t.) To thrust back.
(a.) Abstruse.
(n.) A place or establishment where flax is retted. See Ret.
(n.) The act or process of preparing flax for use by soaking,
maceration, and kindred processes; -- also called rotting. See Ret.
(n.) A place where flax is retted; a rettery.
(v. t. & i.) To turn again.
(v. t. & i.) To unite again; to join after separation or
variance.
(imp. & p. p.) of Revel
(n.) One who revels.
(n.) The act of engaging in a revel; noisy festivity; reveling.
(v. t.) To inflict harm in return for, as an injury, insult,
etc.; to exact satisfaction for, under a sense of injury; to avenge; --
followed either by the wrong received, or by the person or thing
wronged, as the object, or by the reciprocal pronoun as direct object,
and a preposition before the wrong done or the wrongdoer.
(v. t.) To inflict injury for, in a spiteful, wrong, or
malignant spirit; to wreak vengeance for maliciously.
(v. i.) To take vengeance; -- with
(n.) The act of revenging; vengeance; retaliation; a returning
of evil for evil.
(n.) The disposition to revenge; a malignant wishing of evil to
one who has done us an injury.
(n.) That which returns, or comes back, from an investment; the
annual rents, profits, interest, or issues of any species of property,
real or personal; income.
(n.) Hence, return; reward; as, a revenue of praise.
(n.) The annual yield of taxes, excise, customs, duties, rents,
etc., which a nation, state, or municipality collects and receives into
the treasury for public use.
(imp. & p. p.) of Revere
(n.) One who reveres.
(n.) Alt. of Revery
(a.) Turned backward; having a contrary or opposite direction;
hence; opposite or contrary in kind; as, the reverse order or method.
(a.) Turned upside down; greatly disturbed.
(a.) Reversed; as, a reverse shell.
(a.) That which appears or is presented when anything, as a
lance, a line, a course of conduct, etc., is reverted or turned
contrary to its natural direction.
(a.) That which is directly opposite or contrary to something
else; a contrary; an opposite.
(a.) The act of reversing; complete change; reversal; hence,
total change in circumstances or character; especially, a change from
better to worse; misfortune; a check or defeat; as, the enemy met with
a reverse.
(a.) The back side; as, the reverse of a drum or trench; the
reverse of a medal or coin, that is, the side opposite to the obverse.
See Obverse.
(a.) A thrust in fencing made with a backward turn of the hand;
a backhanded stroke.
(a.) A turn or fold made in bandaging, by which the direction
of the bandage is changed.
(a.) To turn back; to cause to face in a contrary direction; to
cause to depart.
(a.) To cause to return; to recall.
(a.) To change totally; to alter to the opposite.
(a.) To turn upside down; to invert.
(a.) Hence, to overthrow; to subvert.
(a.) To overthrow by a contrary decision; to make void; to
under or annual for error; as, to reverse a judgment, sentence, or
decree.
(v. i.) To return; to revert.
(v. i.) To become or be reversed.
(imp. & p. p.) of Revile
(n.) One who reviles.
(v. t.) To overcome; to refute, as error.
(n.) The act of revising, or reviewing and reexamining for
correction and improvement; revision; as, the revisal of a manuscript;
the revisal of a proof sheet; the revisal of a treaty.
(imp. & p. p.) of Revise
(n.) One who revises.
(v. t.) To visit again.
(v. t.) To revise.
(n.) The act of reviving, or the state of being revived.
(n.) Renewed attention to something, as to letters or
literature.
(n.) Renewed performance of, or interest in, something, as the
drama and literature.
(n.) Renewed interest in religion, after indifference and
decline; a period of religious awakening; special religious interest.
(n.) Reanimation from a state of langour or depression; --
applied to the health, spirits, and the like.
(n.) Renewed pursuit, or cultivation, or flourishing state of
something, as of commerce, arts, agriculture.
(n.) Renewed prevalence of something, as a practice or a
fashion.
(n.) Restoration of force, validity, or effect; renewal; as,
the revival of a debt barred by limitation; the revival of a revoked
will, etc.
(n.) Revivification, as of a metal. See Revivification, 2.
(imp. & p. p.) of Revive
(n.) One who, or that which, revives.
(n.) Revival of a suit which is abated by the death or marriage
of any of the parties, -- done by a bill of revivor.
(v. t.) To refurnish with a voice; to refit, as an organ pipe,
so as to restore its tone.
(imp. & p. p.) of Revoke
(a.) To make fresh again; to restore strength, spirit,
animation, or the like, to; to relieve from fatigue or depression; to
reinvigorate; to enliven anew; to reanimate; as, sleep refreshes the
body and the mind.
(a.) To make as if new; to repair; to restore.
(n.) The act of refreshing.
(n.) One who revokes.
(n.) One who flees to a shelter, or place of safety.
(n.) Especially, one who, in times of persecution or political
commotion, flees to a foreign power or country for safety; as, the
French refugees who left France after the revocation of the edict of
Nantes.
(n.) The act of refusing; denial of anything demanded,
solicited, or offered for acceptance.
(n.) The right of taking in preference to others; the choice of
taking or refusing; option; as, to give one the refusal of a farm; to
have the refusal of an employment.
(imp. & p. p.) of Refuse
(v. i.) To turn or roll round on, or as on, an axis, like a
wheel; to rotate, -- which is the more specific word in this sense.
(v. i.) To move in a curved path round a center; as, the
planets revolve round the sun.
(v. i.) To pass in cycles; as, the centuries revolve.
(v. i.) To return; to pass.
(v. t.) To cause to turn, as on an axis.
(v. t.) Hence, to turn over and over in the mind; to reflect
repeatedly upon; to consider all aspects of.
(v. t.) To pull back with force.
(n.) One who refuses or rejects.
(n.) Act of refuting; refutation.
(imp. & p. p.) of Refute
(n.) One who, or that which, refutes.
(imp. & p. p.) of Regale
(n.) One who regales.
(n. pl.) That which belongs to royalty. Specifically: (a) The
rights and prerogatives of a king. (b) Royal estates and revenues. (c)
Ensings, symbols, or paraphernalia of royalty.
(n. pl.) Hence, decorations or insignia of an office or order,
as of Freemasons, Odd Fellows,etc.
(n. pl.) Sumptuous food; delicacies.
(n.) A kind of cigar of large size and superior quality; also,
the size in which such cigars are classed.
(adv.) In a regal or royal manner.
(v. t.) To write again.
(n.) One of numerous minute rodlike structures formed of two or
more cells situated behind the retinulae in the compound eyes of
insects, etc. See Illust. under Ommatidium.
(n.) The spine.
(n.) The continued stem or midrib of a pinnately compound leaf,
as in a rose leaf or a fern.
(n.) The principal axis in a raceme, spike, panicle, or corymb.
(n.) The shaft of a feather. The rhachis of the after-shaft, or
plumule, is called the hyporhachis.
(n.) The central cord in the stem of a crinoid.
(n.) The median part of the radula of a mollusk.
(n.) A central cord of the ovary of nematodes.
(a.) Like a ram; hence, rank; lascivious.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Ramp
(n.) Originally, a gondola race in Venice; now, a rowing or
sailing race, or a series of such races.
(n.) Alt. of Rhatanhy
(n.) The peele.
(v.) Violent or riotous behavior; a state of excitement,
passion, or debauchery; as, to be on the rampage.
(v. i.) To leap or prance about, as an animal; to be violent;
to rage.
(v.) Ramping; leaping; springing; rearing upon the hind legs;
hence, raging; furious.
(v.) Ascending; climbing; rank in growth; exuberant.
(v.) Rising with fore paws in the air as if attacking; -- said
of a beast of prey, especially a lion. The right fore leg and right
hind leg should be raised higher than the left.
(n.) That which fortifies and defends from assault; that which
secures safety; a defense or bulwark.
(n.) A broad embankment of earth round a place, upon which the
parapet is raised. It forms the substratum of every permanent
fortification.
(v. t.) To surround or protect with, or as with, a rampart or
ramparts.
(n.) See Rampart.
(n.) A plant (Campanula Rapunculus) of the Bellflower family,
with a tuberous esculent root; -- also called ramps.
(n.) A rampart.
(v. t.) To fortify with a rampire; to form into a rampire.
(n.) A rambler.
(a.) Roving; rambling.
(n.) A small branch, or branchlet, of corals, hydroids, and
similar organisms.
(a.) Pertaining to, or characterized by, rheum.
(pl. ) of Rancho
(n.) The act or process of making and applying rands for shoes.
(n.) A kind of basket work used in gabions.
(n.) Orderly government; system of order; adminisration.
(n.) Any regulation or remedy which is intended to produce
beneficial effects by gradual operation
(n.) a systematic course of diet, etc., pursed with a view to
improving or preserving the health, or for the purpose of attaining
some particular effect, as a reduction of flesh; -- sometimes used
synonymously with hygiene.
(n.) A syntactical relation between words, as when one depends
on another and is regulated by it in respect to case or mood;
government.
(n.) The word or words governed.
(n.) A rootlike filament or hair growing from the stems of
mosses or on lichens; a rhizoid.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Range
(n.) A rootlike appendage.
(n.) SAme as Rhizome.
(n.) A rootstock. See Rootstock.
(n.) A rare element of the light platinum group. It is found in
platinum ores, and obtained free as a white inert metal which it is
very difficult to fuse. Symbol Rh. Atomic weight 104.1. Specific
gravity 12.
(a.) Shaped like a rhomb.
(a.) Same as Orthorhombic.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rank
(imp. & p. p.) of Rankle
(a.) Exercising regal authority; reigning; as, a queen regnant.
(a.) Having the chief power; ruling; predominant; prevalent.
(v. t.) To vomit up; to eject from the stomach; to throw back.
(v. t.) To swallow again; to swallow back.
(v. i.) To retire; to go back.
(v. t.) To graft again.
(v. t.) To grant back; to grant again or anew.
(n.) The act of granting back to a former proprietor.
(n.) A renewed of a grant; as, the regrant of a monopoly.
(v. t.) To remove the outer surface of, as of an old hewn
stone, so as to give it a fresh appearance.
(v. t.) To offend; to shock.
(v. t.) To buy in large quantities, as corn, provisions, etc.,
at a market or fair, with the intention of selling the same again, in
or near the same place, at a higher price, -- a practice which was
formerly treated as a public offense.
(v. i.) To go back; to retrograde, as the apsis of a planet's
orbit.
(v. t.) To greet again; to resalute; to return a salutation to;
to greet.
(n.) A return or exchange of salutation.
(n.) The act of passing back; passage back; return;
retrogression. "The progress or regress of man".
(n.) The power or liberty of passing back.
(v. i.) To go back; to return to a former place or state.
(n.) Same as Rhomb, 1.
(pl. ) of Rhonchus
(n.) The name of several large perennial herbs of the genus
Rheum and order Polygonaceae.
(n.) The large and fleshy leafstalks of Rheum Rhaponticum and
other species of the same genus. They are pleasantly acid, and are used
in cookery. Called also pieplant.
(n.) The root of several species of Rheum, used much as a
cathartic medicine.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rhyme
(v. t.) To search thoroughly; to search every place or part of;
as, to ransack a house.
(v. t.) To plunder; to pillage completely.
(v. t.) To violate; to ravish; to defiour.
(v. i.) To make a thorough search.
(n.) The act of ransacking, or state of being ransacked;
pillage.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rant
(n.) Ranterism.
(a.) Conformed to a rule; agreeable to an established rule,
law, principle, or type, or to established customary forms; normal;
symmetrical; as, a regular verse in poetry; a regular piece of music; a
regular verb; regular practice of law or medicine; a regular building.
(a.) Governed by rule or rules; steady or uniform in course,
practice, or occurence; not subject to unexplained or irrational
variation; returning at stated intervals; steadily pursued; orderlly;
methodical; as, the regular succession of day and night; regular
habits.
(a.) Constituted, selected, or conducted in conformity with
established usages, rules, or discipline; duly authorized; permanently
organized; as, a regular meeting; a regular physican; a regular
nomination; regular troops.
(a.) Belonging to a monastic order or community; as, regular
clergy, in distinction dfrom the secular clergy.
(a.) Thorough; complete; unmitigated; as, a regular humbug.
(a.) Having all the parts of the same kind alike in size and
shape; as, a regular flower; a regular sea urchin.
(a.) Same as Isometric.
(a.) A member of any religious order or community who has taken
the vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience, and who has been solemnly
recognized by the church.
(a.) A soldier belonging to a permanent or standing army; --
chiefly used in the plural.
(imp. & p. p.) of Reign
(n.) One who reigns.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rap
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rap
(n.) The art or habit of making rhymes; rhyming; -- in
contempt.
(n.) A rhymer; a rhymester.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rib
(n.) A ribbon.
(n.) A long, narrow strip of timber bent and bolted
longitudinally to the ribs of a vessel, to hold them in position, and
give rigidity to the framework.
(n.) An assemblage or arrangement of ribs, as the timberwork
for the support of an arch or coved ceiling, the veins in the leaves of
some plants, ridges in the fabric of cloth, or the like.
(a.) Having no ribs.
(n.) A species of plantain (Plantago lanceolata) with long,
narrow, ribbed leaves; -- called also rib grass, ripple grass, ribwort
plantain.
(a.) Pertaining to, or derived from, castor oil; formerly,
designating an acid now called ricinoleic acid.
(n. pl.) A disease which affects children, and which is
characterized by a bulky head, crooked spine and limbs, depressed ribs,
enlarged and spongy articular epiphyses, tumid abdomen, and short
stature, together with clear and often premature mental faculties. The
essential cause of the disease appears to be the nondeposition of
earthy salts in the osteoid tissues. Children afflicted with this
malady stand and walk unsteadily. Called also rachitis.
(a.) Affected with rickets.
(a.) Feeble in the joints; imperfect; weak; shaky.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rid
(a.) Suitable for riding; as, a ridable horse; a ridable road.
(imp. & p. p.) of Riddle
(n.) One who riddles (grain, sand, etc.).
(n.) One who speaks in, or propounds, riddles.
(a.) Violent.
(a.) Given to the commission of rape.
(n.) A convulsive disease, attended with ravenous hunger, not
uncommon in Sweden and Germany. It was so called because supposed to be
caused by eating corn with which seeds of jointed charlock (Raphanus
raphanistrum) had been mixed, but the condition is now known to be a
form of ergotism.
(adv.) In a rapid manner.
(n. pl.) Lapilli.
(n.) The enlargement of a mold caused by rapping the pattern.
(n.) Relation; proportion; conformity; correspondence; accord.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rein
(v. t.) To incur again.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Ridge
(n.) A seizing by violence; a hurrying along; rapidity with
violence.
(n.) The state or condition of being rapt, or carried away from
one's self by agreeable excitement; violence of a pleasing passion;
extreme joy or pleasure; ecstasy.
(n.) A spasm; a fit; a syncope; delirium.
(v. t.) To transport with excitement; to enrapture.
(n.) A dainty morsel; a Welsh rabbit. See Welsh rabbit, under
Rabbit.
(v. t.) To inter again.
(v. t. & i.) To issue a second time.
(n.) A second or repeated issue.
(v. i.) To feel joy; to experience gladness in a high degree;
to have pleasurable satisfaction; to be delighted.
(n.) A favorite Italian public entertainment, consisting of
music and dancing, -- held generally on fast eves.
(v. i.) To hold ridottos.
(n.) A curved file used in carving wool and marble.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rifle
(n.) The act or process of making the grooves in a rifled
cannon or gun barrel.
(n.) The system of grooves in a rifled gun barrel or cannon.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rift
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rig
(a.) Rash; hasty; precipitate.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rasp
(v. t.) To enjoy.
(v. t.) To give joy to; to make joyful; to gladden.
(n.) The act of rejoicing.
(v. t.) To adjourn; to put off.
(v. t.) To judge again; to reexamine; to review; to call to a
new trial and decision.
(v. i.) To slip or slide back, in a literal sense; to turn
back.
(v. i.) To slide or turn back into a former state or practice;
to fall back from some condition attained; -- generally in a bad sense,
as from a state of convalescence or amended condition; as, to relapse
into a stupor, into vice, or into barbarism; -- sometimes in a good
sense; as, to relapse into slumber after being disturbed.
(v. i.) To fall from Christian faith into paganism, heresy, or
unbelief; to backslide.
(v.) A sliding or falling back, especially into a former bad
state, either of body or morals; backsliding; the state of having
fallen back.
(n.) DRess; tackle; especially (Naut.), the ropes, chains,
etc., that support the masts and spars of a vessel, and serve as
purchases for adjusting the sails, etc. See Illustr. of Ship and Sails.
(a.) Like a rig or wanton.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rat
(a.) Capable of being rated, or set at a certain value.
(a.) Liable to, or subjected by law to, taxation; as, ratable
estate.
(a.) Made at a proportionate rate; as, ratable payments.
(n.) A spirituous liquor flavored with the kernels of cherries,
apricots, peaches, or other fruit, spiced, and sweetened with sugar; --
a term applied to the liqueurs called noyau, cura/ao, etc.
(n.) Gravelly stone.
(n.) A pawl, click, or detent, for holding or propelling a
ratchet wheel, or ratch, etc.
(n.) A mechanism composed of a ratchet wheel, or ratch, and
pawl. See Ratchet wheel, below, and 2d Ratch.
(v.) One who has relapsed, or fallen back, into error; a
backslider; specifically, one who, after recanting error, returns to it
again.
(imp. & p. p.) of Relate
(p. p. & a.) Allied by kindred; connected by blood or alliance,
particularly by consanguinity; as, persons related in the first or
second degree.
(p. p. & a.) Standing in relation or connection; as, the
electric and magnetic forcec are closely related.
(p. p. & a.) Narrated; told.
(p. p. & a.) Same as Relative, 4.
(n.) One who relates or narrates.
(imp. & p. p.) of Right
(v. t.) To do justice to.
(n.) One who sets right; one who does justice or redresses
wrong.
(adv.) Straightly; directly; in front.
(adv.) According to justice; according to the divine will or
moral rectitude; uprightly; as, duty rightly performed.
(adv.) Properly; fitly; suitably; appropriately.
(adv.) According to truth or fact; correctly; not erroneously;
exactly.
(v.) In a rigid manner; stiffly.
(n.) Same as Rat-tail.
(n.) One who relates; a relater.
(n.) A private person at whose relation, or in whose behalf,
the attorney-general allows an information in the nature of a quo
warranto to be filed.
(imp. & p. p.) of Relax
(n.) Same as Relief, n., 5.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rim
(n.) A short cylinder connecting a trunnion with the body of a
cannon. See Illust. of Cannon.
(imp. & p. p.) of Rimple
(n.) The ring finger.
(n.) the oleander.
(n.) Any shrub of the genus Rhododendron.
(n.) An herb (Epilobium spicatum) with showy purple flowers,
common in Europe and North America; -- called also great willow herb.
(n.) See Rotunda.
(n.) An opening in the side of small vessels of war, near the
surface of the water, to facilitate rowing in calm weather.
(a.) Having, or characterized by, reliance; confident;
trusting.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Ring
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Ring
(n. pl.) The small transverse ropes attached to the shrouds and
forming the steps of a rope ladder.
(n.) A thick woolen stuff quilled or twilled.
(n.) The conduct or practices of one who rats. See Rat, v. i.,
1.
(v. i.) The low sport of setting a dog upon rats confined in a
pit to see how many he will kill in a given time.
(imp. & p. p.) of Rattle
(v. t.) To lift up; to raise again, as one who has fallen; to
cause to rise.
(v. t.) To cause to seem to rise; to put in relief; to give
prominence or conspicuousness to; to set off by contrast.
(v. t.) To raise up something in; to introduce a contrast or
variety into; to remove the monotony or sameness of.
(v. t.) To raise or remove, as anything which depresses, weighs
down, or crushes; to render less burdensome or afflicting; to
alleviate; to abate; to mitigate; to lessen; as, to relieve pain; to
relieve the wants of the poor.
(v. t.) To free, wholly or partly, from any burden, trial,
evil, distress, or the like; to give ease, comfort, or consolation to;
to give aid, help, or succor to; to support, strengthen, or deliver;
as, to relieve a besieged town.
(v. t.) To release from a post, station, or duty; to put
another in place of, or to take the place of, in the bearing of any
burden, or discharge of any duty.
(v. t.) To ease of any imposition, burden, wrong, or
oppression, by judicial or legislative interposition, as by the removal
of a grievance, by indemnification for losses, or the like; to right.
(n.) See Relief, n., 5.
(v. t.) To light or kindle anew.
(n.) See Relic.
(a.) Having the lips widely separated and gaping like an open
mouth; as a ringent bilabiate corolla.
() a & n. from Ring, v.
(n.) A small ring; a small circle; specifically, a fairy ring.
(n.) A curl; especially, a curl of hair.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rinse
(n.) One who, or that which, rattles.
(n.) One of the stems or shoots of sugar cane of the second
year's growth from the root, or later. See Plant-cane.
(v. i.) To sprout or spring up from the root, as sugar cane
from the root of the previous year's planting.
(n.) Harshness of sound; rough utterance; hoarseness; as, the
raucity of a trumpet, or of the human voice.
(a.) Hoarse; harsh; rough; as, a raucous, thick tone.
(imp. & p. p.) of Ravage
(n.) One who, or that which, ravages or lays waste; spoiler.
(v. t.) To lodge again.
(imp. & p. p.) of Relume
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rely
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Riot
(n.) Excess; tumult; revelry.
(a.) Involving, or engaging in, riot; wanton; unrestrained;
luxurious.
(a.) Partaking of the nature of an unlawful assembly or its
acts; seditious.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rip
(imp. & p. p.) of Ripen
(a.) Filling up; supplementary; supernumerary; -- a term
applied to those instruments which only swell the mass or tutti of an
orchestra, but are not obbligato.
(imp. & p. p.) of Ripple
(n.) A small ripple.
(imp. & p. p.) of Ravel
(n.) One who ravels.
(n.) A detached work with two embankments which make a salient
angle. It is raised before the curtain on the counterscarp of the
place. Formerly called demilune, and half-moon.
(imp. & p. p.) of Raven
(n.) One who, or that which, ravens or plunders.
(n.) A bird of prey, as the owl or vulture.
(n.) A case for trial which can not be tried during the term; a
postponed case.
(v. t.) To mark again, or a second time; to mark anew.
(v. t. & i.) To marry again.
(n.) Earth or materials made into a bank after having been
excavated.
(a.) Coming back; returning.
(n.) A cowhide, or coarse riding whip, made of untanned (or
raw) hide twisted.
(n.) The quality or state of being raw.
(a.) Having the faculty or power of laughing; disposed to
laugh.
(a.) Exciting laughter; worthy to be laughed at; amusing.
(a.) Used in, or expressing, laughter; as, risible muscles.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Risk
(a.) Risky.
(n.) A kind of pottage.
(n.) Any one of very numerous species of small spiral
gastropods of the genus Rissoa, or family Rissoidae, found both in
fresh and salt water.
(n.) A small ball of rich minced meat or fish, covered with
pastry and fried.
(imp. & p. p.) of Rival
(n.) The act of rivaling, or the state of being a rival; a
competition.
(imp. & p. p.) of Rivel
(a.) Supplied with rivers; as, a well rivered country.
(n.) A rivulet.
(imp. & p. p.) of Rivet
(n.) One who rivets.
(n.) A small stream or brook; a streamlet.
(n.) In railroads, the bed or foundation on which the
superstructure (ties, rails, etc.) rests; in common roads, the whole
material laid in place and ready for travel.
(n.) A road; especially, the part traveled by carriages.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Roam
(p. pr. & vvb. n.) of Roar
(a.) Destitute of rays; hence, dark; not illuminated; blind;
as, a rayless sky; rayless eyes.
(imp. & p. p.) of Reach
(n.) A loud, deep, prolonged sound, as of a large beast, or of
a person in distress, anger, mirth, etc., or of a noisy congregation.
(n.) An affection of the windpipe of a horse, causing a loud,
peculiar noise in breathing under exertion; the making of the noise so
caused. See Roar, v. i., 5.
(imp. & p. p.) of Roast
(n.) One who roasts meat.
(n.) A contrivance for roasting.
(n.) A pig, or other article of food fit for roasting.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rob
(n.) The act or practice of robbing; theft.
(n.) The crime of robbing. See Rob, v. t., 2.
(n.) One who reaches.
(n.) An exaggeration.
(v. t.) To thank.
(v. i.) To merge again.
(n. pl.) The quill feathers of the wings of a bird.
(a.) Having feet or legs that are used as oars; -- said of
certain crustaceans and insects.
(n.) An animal having limbs like oars, especially one of
certain crustaceans.
(n.) One of a group of aquatic beetles having tarsi adapted for
swimming. See Water beetle.
(imp. & p. p.) of Remise
(v. t.) To regain; to recover.
(adv.) In a ready manner; quickly; promptly.
(adv.) Without delay or objection; without reluctance;
willingly; cheerfully.
(a.) Remaining; yet left.
(a.) That which remains after a part is removed, destroyed,
used up, performed, etc.; residue.
(a.) A small portion; a slight trace; a fragment; a little bit;
a scrap.
(a.) An unsold end of piece goods, as cloth, ribbons, carpets,
etc.
(v. t.) To model or fashion anew; to change the form of.
(v. t.) To mold or shape anew or again; to reshape.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rock
(n.) See Rokelay.
(n.) A mound formed of fragments of rock, earth, etc., and set
with plants.
(v. t.) To admit again; to give entrance or access to again.
(v. t.) To adopt again.
(v. t.) To adorn again or anew.
(a.) Having a swaying, rolling, or back-and-forth movement;
used for rocking.
(pl. ) of Rodsman
(n.) One who carries and holds a leveling staff, or rod, in a
surveying party.
(n.) A substance capable of producing with another a reaction,
especially when employed to detect the presence of other bodies; a
test.
(v. i.) To agree again.
(n.) Arsenic sulphide, a mineral of a brilliant red color; red
orpiment. It is also an artificial product.
(n.) As opposed to nominalism, the doctrine that genera and
species are real things or entities, existing independently of our
conceptions. According to realism the Universal exists ante rem
(Plato), or in re (Aristotle).
(n.) As opposed to idealism, the doctrine that in sense
perception there is an immediate cognition of the external object, and
our knowledge of it is not mediate and representative.
(n.) Fidelity to nature or to real life; representation without
idealization, and making no appeal to the imagination; adherence to the
actual fact.
(n.) One who believes in realism; esp., one who maintains that
generals, or the terms used to denote the genera and species of things,
represent real existences, and are not mere names, as maintained by the
nominalists.
(n.) An artist or writer who aims at realism in his work. See
Realism, 2.
(n.) The state or quality of being real; actual being or
existence of anything, in distinction from mere appearance; fact.
(n.) That which is real; an actual existence; that which is not
imagination, fiction, or pretense; that which has objective existence,
and is not merely an idea.
(n.) Loyalty; devotion.
(n.) See 2d Realty, 2.
(v. t.) To make real; to convert from the imaginary or
fictitious into the actual; to bring into concrete existence; to
effectuate; to accomplish; as, to realize a scheme or project.
(v. t.) To cause to seem real; to impress upon the mind as
actual; to feel vividly or strongly; to make one's own in apprehension
or experience.
(v. t.) To convert into real property; to make real estate of;
as, to realize his fortune.
(v. t.) To acquire as an actual possession; to obtain as the
result of plans and efforts; to gain; to get; as, to realize large
profits from a speculation.
(v. t.) To convert into actual money; as, to realize assets.
(v. i.) To convert any kind of property into money, especially
property representing investments, as shares in stock companies, bonds,
etc.
(v. t.) To bring together again; to compose or form anew.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Ream
(v. t.) To annex again or anew; to reunite.
(n.) The anguish, like gnawing pain, excited by a sense of
guilt; compunction of conscience for a crime committed, or for the sins
of one's past life.
(n.) Sympathetic sorrow; pity; compassion.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Reap
(v. t. & i.) To apply again.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rear
(v. t.) To argue anew or again.
(n.) A small European and Asiatic deer (Capreolus capraea)
having erect, cylindrical, branched antlers, forked at the summit.
This, the smallest European deer, is very nimble and graceful. It
always prefers a mountainous country, or high grounds.
(n.) The life of a vargant.
(n.) The practices of a rogue; knavish tricks; cheating; fraud;
dishonest practices.
(n.) Arch tricks; mischievousness.
(a.) Vagrant.
(a.) Resembling, or characteristic of, a rogue; knavish.
(a.) Pleasantly mischievous; waggish; arch.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Roil
(a.) See Roynish.
(v. i.) To bluster; to swagger; to bully; to be bold, noisy,
vaunting, or turbulent.
(n.) See Roisterer.
(n.) Alt. of Rokee
(v. t.) See Remold.
(v. t. & i.) To mount again.
(n.) The opportunity of, or things necessary for, remounting;
specifically, a fresh horse, with his equipments; as, to give one a
remount.
(n.) The act of removing, or the state of being removed.
(imp. & p. p.) of Remove
(a.) Changed in place.
(a.) Dismissed from office.
(a.) Distant in location; remote.
(a.) Distant by degrees in relationship; as, a cousin once
removed.
(n.) One who removes; as, a remover of landmarks.
(a.) Reasonable; also, loquacious.
(n.) A short cloak.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Roll
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rend
(a.) Rotating on an axis, or moving along a surface by
rotation; turning over and over as if on an axis or a pivot; as, a
rolling wheel or ball.
(a.) Moving on wheels or rollers, or as if on wheels or
rollers; as, a rolling chair.
(a.) Having gradual, rounded undulations of surface; as, a
rolling country; rolling land.
(n.) A place prepared for rolling logs into a stream.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Reave
(v. i.) To awake again.
(v. t.) To nerve again; to give new vigor to; to reinvigorate.
(a.) Romantic.
(v. i.) To bloom again.
(a.) Rebellowing; resounding loudly.
(v. i.) To spring back; to start back; to be sent back or
reverberated by elastic force on collision with another body; as, a
rebounding echo.
(v. i.) To give back an echo.
(v. i.) To bound again or repeatedly, as a horse.
(v. t.) To send back; to reverberate.
(n.) The act of rebounding; resilience.
(v. t.) To brace again.
(v. t.) To build again, as something which has been demolished;
to construct anew; as, to rebuild a house, a wall, a wharf, or a city.
(imp. & p. p.) of Rebuke
(n.) One who rebukes.
(pl. ) of Rebus
(v. t.) To carry back.
(imp. & p. p.) of Recede
(n.) The act of receiving; reception.
(n.) Reception, as an act of hospitality.
(n.) Capability of receiving; capacity.
(n.) Place of receiving.
(n.) Hence, a recess; a retired place.
(n.) A formulary according to the directions of which things
are to be taken or combined; a recipe; as, a receipt for making sponge
cake.
(n.) A writing acknowledging the taking or receiving of goods
delivered; an acknowledgment of money paid.
(n.) That which is received; that which comes in, in
distinction from what is expended, paid out, sent away, and the like;
-- usually in the plural; as, the receipts amounted to a thousand
dollars.
(v. t.) To give a receipt for; as, to receipt goods delivered
by a sheriff.
(v. t.) To put a receipt on, as by writing or stamping; as, to
receipt a bill.
(v. i.) To give a receipt, as for money paid.
(v. t.) To take, as something that is offered, given,
committed, sent, paid, or the like; to accept; as, to receive money
offered in payment of a debt; to receive a gift, a message, or a
letter.
(v. t.) Hence: To gain the knowledge of; to take into the mind
by assent to; to give admission to; to accept, as an opinion, notion,
etc.; to embrace.
(v. t.) To allow, as a custom, tradition, or the like; to give
credence or acceptance to.
(v. t.) To give admittance to; to permit to enter, as into
one's house, presence, company, and the like; as, to receive a lodger,
visitor, ambassador, messenger, etc.
(v. t.) To admit; to take in; to hold; to contain; to have
capacity for; to be able to take in.
(n.) The act of renewing, or the state of being renewed; as,
the renewal of a treaty.
(n.) One who, or that which, renews.
(n.) Renown.
(v. t.) To renew; to renovate.
(v. t.) To be affected by something; to suffer; to be subjected
to; as, to receive pleasure or pain; to receive a wound or a blow; to
receive damage.
(v. t.) To take from a thief, as goods known to be stolen.
(v. t.) To bat back (the ball) when served.
(v. i.) To receive visitors; to be at home to receive calls;
as, she receives on Tuesdays.
(v. i.) To return, or bat back, the ball when served; as, it is
your turn to receive.
(n.) The state or quality of being recent; newness; new state;
late origin; lateness in time; freshness; as, the recency of a
transaction, of a wound, etc.
(v. t.) To review; to revise.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rent
(n.) Rent.
(n.) One who has a fixed income, as from lands, stocks, or the
like.
(n.) See Romance, 5.
(n.) A romantic story in verse; as, the "Romaunt of the Rose."
(n.) Alt. of Romeite
(n.) A mineral of a hyacinth or honey-yellow color, occuring in
square octahedrons. It is an antimonate of calcium.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Romp
(a.) Inclined to romp; indulging in romps.
(a.) Given to rude play; inclined to romp.
(v. t.) To order a second time.
(v. t.) To paint anew or again; as, to repaint a house; to
repaint the ground of a picture.
(n.) A species of lyric poetry so composed as to contain a
refrain or repetition which recurs according to a fixed law, and a
limited number of rhymes recurring also by rule.
(n.) See Rondo, 1.
(n.) A round; a circle.
(n.) Roundness; plumpness.
(n.) An instrument for removing small rough portions of bone.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Roof
(n.) The act of covering with a roof.
(v. t.) To chase again; to chase or drive back.
(n.) A strain given on the horn to call back the hounds when
they have lost track of the game.
(v. i.) To blow the recheat.
(n.) The materials of which a roof is composed; materials for a
roof.
(n.) Hence, the roof itself; figuratively, shelter.
(n.) The wedging, as of a horse or car, against the top of an
underground passage.
(n.) A small roof, covering, or shelter.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rook
(n.) The breeding place of a colony of rooks; also, the birds
themselves.
(n.) A breeding place of other gregarious birds, as of herons,
penguins, etc.
(n.) The breeding ground of seals, esp. of the fur seals.
(n.) A dilapidated building with many rooms and occupants; a
cluster of dilapidated or mean buildings.
(n.) A brothel.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Room
(n.) Space; place; room.
(a.) Abounding with room or rooms; roomy.
(n.) As much or many as a room will hold; as, a roomful of men.
(adv.) Spaciously.
(n.) A change of apparel; a second or different suit.
(n.) The act of reciting; the repetition of the words of
another, or of a document; rehearsal; as, the recital of testimony.
(n.) A telling in detail and due order of the particulars of
anything, as of a law, an adventure, or a series of events; narration.
(n.) That which is recited; a story; a narration.
(n.) A vocal or instrumental performance by one person; --
distinguished from concert; as, a song recital; an organ, piano, or
violin recital.
(n.) The formal statement, or setting forth, of some matter of
fact in any deed or writing in order to explain the reasons on which
the transaction is founded; the statement of matter in pleading
introductory to some positive allegation.
(imp. & p. p.) of Recite
(n.) One who recites; also, a book of extracts for recitation.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Reck
(a.) Roomy; spacious.
(imp. & p. p.) of Roost
(n.) The male of the domestic fowl; a cock.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Root
(v. i.) To clasp or unite again.
(n.) A mass of parenchymatous cells which covers and protects
the growing cells at the end of a root; a pileorhiza.
(n.) A pile of roots, set with plants, mosses, etc., and used
as an ornamental object in gardening.
(n.) A radicle; a little root.
(n.) One who repines.
(v. t.) To place again; to restore to a former place, position,
condition, or the like.
(v. t.) To refund; to repay; to restore; as, to replace a sum
of money borrowed.
(v. t.) To supply or substitute an equivalent for; as, to
replace a lost document.
(v. t.) To take the place of; to supply the want of; to fulfull
the end or office of.
(v. t.) To put in a new or different place.
(v. t.) To cause or permit to lean, incline, rest, etc.; to
place in a recumbent position; as, to recline the head on the hand.
(v. i.) To lean or incline; as, to recline against a wall.
(v. i.) To assume, or to be in, a recumbent position; as, to
recline on a couch.
(v. t.) Having a reclining posture; leaning; reclining.
(v. t.) To close again.
(v. t.) To open; to unclose.
(a.) Shut up; sequestered; retired from the world or from
public notice; solitary; living apart; as, a recluse monk or hermit; a
recluse life.
(a.) A person who lives in seclusion from intercourse with the
world, as a hermit or monk; specifically, one of a class of secluded
devotees who live in single cells, usually attached to monasteries.
(a.) The place where a recluse dwells.
(v. t.) To shut up; to seclude.
(n.) A very large North Atlantic whalebone whale (Physalus
antiquorum, or Balaenoptera physalus). It has a dorsal fin, and strong
longitudinal folds on the throat and belly. Called also razorback.
(a.) Full of roses; rosy; as, roseate bowers.
(v. t.) To plait or fold again; to fold, as one part over
another, again and again.
(v. t.) To plant again.
(v. t. & i.) To plead again.
(a.) Filled again; completely filled; full; charged; abounding.
(v. t.) To fill completely, or to satiety.
(v. t.) To take or get back, by a writ for that purpose (goods
and chattels wrongfully taken or detained), upon giving security to try
the right to them in a suit at law, and, if that should be determined
against the plaintiff, to return the property replevied.
(v. t.) To bail.
(n.) Replevin.
(v. & n.) A copy of a work of art, as of a picture or statue,
made by the maker of the original.
(v. & n.) Repetition.
(a.) resembling a rose in color or fragrance; esp., tinged with
rose color; blooming; as, roseate beauty; her roseate lips.
(n.) See Magenta.
(n.) A rose-colored efflorescence upon the skin, occurring in
circumscribed patches of little or no elevation and often alternately
fading and reviving; also, an acute specific disease which is
characterized by an eruption of this character; -- called also rose
rash.
(n.) One who replies.
(imp. & p. p.) of Reply
(pl. ) of Reply
(n.) heathy land; land full of heather; moorish or watery land.
(a.) Pertaining to, or designating, a complex red dyestuff
(called rosolic acid) which is analogous to rosaniline and aurin. It is
produced by oxidizing a mixture of phenol and cresol, as a dark red
amorphous mass, C20H16O3, which forms weak salts with bases, and stable
ones with acids. Called also methyl aurin, and, formerly, corallin.
(n.) The act or state of reposing; as, the reposal of a trust.
(n.) That on which one reposes.
(imp. & p. p.) of Repose
(a.) Composed; calm; tranquil; at rest.
(n.) One who reposes.
(v. t.) To cause to rest or stay; to lay away; to lodge, as for
safety or preservation; to place; to store.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the beak or snout of an animal, or the
beak of a ship; resembling a rostrum, esp., the rostra at Rome, or
their decorations.
(n.) The beak or head of a ship.
(n.) The Beaks; the stage or platform in the forum where
orations, pleadings, funeral harangues, etc., were delivered; -- so
called because after the Latin war, it was adorned with the beaks of
captured vessels; later, applied also to other platforms erected in
Rome for the use of public orators.
(n.) Hence, a stage for public speaking; the pulpit or platform
occupied by an orator or public speaker.
(n.) Any beaklike prolongation, esp. of the head of an animal,
as the beak of birds.
(n.) The beak, or sucking mouth parts, of Hemiptera.
(n.) The snout of a gastropod mollusk. See Illust. of
Littorina.
(n.) The anterior, often spinelike, prolongation of the
carapace of a crustacean, as in the lobster and the prawn.
(n.) Same as Rostellum.
(n.) The pipe to convey the distilling liquor into its receiver
in the common alembic.
(n.) A pair of forceps of various kinds, having a beaklike
form.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rot
(imp. & p. p.) of Rotate
(a.) Turned round, as a wheel; also, wheel-shaped; rotate.
(n.) that which gives a rotary or rolling motion, as a muscle
which partially rotates or turns some part on its axis.
(n.) A revolving reverberatory furnace.
(n.) Any one of numerous species of small, polished,
brightcolored gastropods of the genus Rotella, native of tropical seas.
(n.) One of the Rotifera. See Illust. in Appendix.
(a.) Of or pertaining to the rotula, or kneepan.
(a.) A round building; especially, one that is round both on
the outside and inside, like the Pantheon at Rome. Less properly, but
very commonly, used for a large round room; as, the rotunda of the
Capitol at Washington.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rouge
(v. t.) To print again; to print a second or a new edition of.
(v. t.) To renew the impression of.
(n.) A second or a new impression or edition of any printed
work; specifically, the publication in one country of a work previously
published in another.
(n.) A taking by way of retaliation.
(n.) Deductions and duties paid yearly out of a manor and
lands, as rent charge, rent seck, pensions, annuities, and the like.
(n.) A ship recaptured from an enemy or from a pirate.
(v. t.) To take again; to retake.
(v. t.) To recompense; to pay.
(v. t.) To make rough.
(v. i.) To grow or become rough.
(adv.) In a rough manner; unevenly; harshly; rudely; severely;
austerely.
(n.) A smoothly running passage of short notes (as semiquavers,
or sixteenths) uniformly grouped, sung upon one long syllable, as in
Handel's oratorios.
(n.) A little roll; a roll of coins put up in paper, or
something resembling such a roll.
(v. t.) To keep back rightfully (a part), as if by cutting off,
so as to diminish a sum due; to take off (a part) from damages; to
deduct; as, where a landlord recouped the rent of premises from damages
awarded to the plaintiff for eviction.
(v. t.) To get an equivalent or compensation for; as, to recoup
money lost at the gaming table; to recoup one's losses in the share
market.
(v. t.) To reimburse; to indemnify; -- often used reflexively
and in the passive.
(v. t.) To prune again or anew.
(a.) Same as Repent.
(a.) Creeping; crawling; -- said of reptiles, worms, etc.
(a.) Creeping; moving on the belly, or by means of small and
short legs.
(a.) Hence: Groveling; low; vulgar; as, a reptile race or crew;
reptile vices.
(n.) An animal that crawls, or moves on its belly, as snakes,,
or by means of small, short legs, as lizards, and the like.
(n.) One of the Reptilia, or one of the Amphibia.
(n.) A groveling or very mean person.
(imp. & p. p.) of Round
(a.) Modified by contraction of the lip opening; labialized;
labial. See Guide to Pronunciation, / 11.
(a.) A rondelay.
(a.) Anything having a round form; a round figure; a circle.
(a.) A small circular shield, sometimes not more than a foot in
diameter, used by soldiers in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries.
(a.) A circular spot; a sharge in the form of a small circle.
(a.) A bastion of a circular form.
(n.) One who rounds; one who comes about frequently or
regularly.
(n.) A tool for making an edge or surface round.
(n.) An English game somewhat resembling baseball; also,
another English game resembling the game of fives, but played with a
football.
(adv.) In a round form or manner.
(adv.) Openly; boldly; peremptorily; plumply.
(adv.) Briskly; with speed.
(adv.) Completely; vigorously; in earnest.
(adv.) Without regard to detail; in gross; comprehensively;
generally; as, to give numbers roundly.
(v. t.) To repel; to beat or drive back; as, to repulse an
assault; to repulse the enemy.
(v. t.) To repel by discourtesy, coldness, or denial; to
reject; to send away; as, to repulse a suitor or a proffer.
(n.) The act of repelling or driving back; also, the state of
being repelled or driven back.
(n.) Figuratively: Refusal; denial; rejection; failure.
(imp. & p. p.) of Repute
(n.) The act of asking for anything desired; expression of
desire or demand; solicitation; prayer; petition; entreaty.
(n.) That which is asked for or requested.
(a.) Rising; -- applied to a bird in the attitude of rising;
also, sometmes, to a bird in profile with wings addorsed.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rouse
(a.) Having power to awaken or excite; exciting.
(a.) Very great; violent; astounding; as, a rousing fire; a
rousing lie.
(v. t.) To cross a second time.
(v. t.) To repair by fresh supplies, as anything wasted; to
remedy lack or deficiency in; as, food recruits the flesh; fresh air
and exercise recruit the spirits.
(v. t.) Hence, to restore the wasted vigor of; to renew in
strength or health; to reinvigorate.
(v. t.) To supply with new men, as an army; to fill up or make
up by enlistment; as, he recruited two regiments; the army was
recruited for a campaign; also, to muster; to enlist; as, he recruited
fifty men.
(v. i.) To gain new supplies of anything wasted; to gain
health, flesh, spirits, or the like; to recuperate; as, lean cattle
recruit in fresh pastures.
(v. i.) To gain new supplies of men for military or other
service; to raise or enlist new soldiers; to enlist troops.
(n.) A supply of anything wasted or exhausted; a reenforcement.
(n.) Specifically, a man enlisted for service in the army; a
newly enlisted soldier.
(n.) A state of being desired or held in such estimation as to
be sought after or asked for; demand.
(v. t.) To ask for (something); to express desire ffor; to
solicit; as, to request his presence, or a favor.
(v. t.) To address with a request; to ask.
(v. t.) To demand; to insist upon having; to claim as by right
and authority; to exact; as, to require the surrender of property.
(v. t.) To demand or exact as indispensable; to need.
(v. t.) To ask as a favor; to request.
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rout
(n.) A round of business, amusement, or pleasure, daily or
frequently pursued; especially, a course of business or offical duties
regularly or frequently returning.
(n.) Any regular course of action or procedure rigidly adhered
to by the mere force of habit.
(v. t.) To make or set right; to correct from a wrong,
erroneous, or false state; to amend; as, to rectify errors, mistakes,
or abuses; to rectify the will, the judgment, opinions; to rectify
disorders.
(v. t.) To refine or purify by repeated distillation or
sublimation, by which the fine parts of a substance are separated from
the grosser; as, to rectify spirit of wine.
(v. t.) To produce ( as factitious gin or brandy) by
redistilling low wines or ardent spirits (whisky, rum, etc.), flavoring
substances, etc., being added.
(n.) See Government, n., 7.
(a.) That may be rowed, or rowed upon.
(n.) A boat designed to be propelled by oars instead of sails.
(pl. ) of Rowdy
(imp. & p. p.) of Rowel
(n.) A contrivance or arrangement serving as a fulcrum for an
oar in rowing. It consists sometimes of a notch in the gunwale of a
boat, sometimes of a pair of pins between which the oar rests on the
edge of the gunwale, sometimes of a single pin passing through the oar,
or of a metal fork or stirrup pivoted in the gunwale and suporting the
oar.
(v. t.) To repay; in a good sense, to recompense; to return (an
equivalent) in good; to reward; in a bad sense, to retaliate; to return
(evil) for evil; to punish.
(n.) A screen or partition wall behind an altar.
(n.) The back of a fireplace.
(n.) The open hearth, upon which fires were lighted,
immediately under the louver, in the center of ancient halls.
(v. i.) To reign again.
(v. t.) To cut off; to abrogate; to annul.
(v. t.) Specifically, to vacate or make void, as an act, by the
enacting authority or by superior authority; to repeal; as, to rescind
a law, a resolution, or a vote; to rescind a decree or a judgment.
(n.) Rescue; deliverance.
(n.) See Rescue, 2.
(imp. & p. p.) of Rescue
(n.) The province of a rector; a parish church, parsonage, or
spiritual living, with all its rights, tithes, and glebes.
(n.) A rector's mansion; a parsonage house.
(n.) A governess; a rectoress.
(n.) One of the quill feathers of the tail of a bird.
(n.) A petty or powerless king.
(adv.) In a royal or kingly manner; like a king; as becomes a
king.
(n.) The state of being royal; the condition or quality of a
royal person; kingship; kingly office; sovereignty.
(n.) The person of a king or sovereign; majesty; as, in the
presence of royalty.
(n.) An emblem of royalty; -- usually in the plural, meaning
regalia.
(n.) Kingliness; spirit of regal authority.
(n.) Domain; province; sphere.
(n.) That which is due to a sovereign, as a seigniorage on gold
and silver coined at the mint, metals taken from mines, etc.; the tax
exacted in lieu of such share; imperiality.
(n.) A share of the product or profit (as of a mine, forest,
etc.), reserved by the owner for permitting another to use the
property.
(n.) Hence (Com.), a duty paid by a manufacturer to the owner
of a patent or a copyright at a certain rate for each article
manufactured; or, a percentage paid to the owner of an article by one
who hires the use of it.
(n.) Alt. of Roysterer
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rub
(n.) One who rescues.
(v. t.) To seize again, or a second time.
(v. t.) To put in possession again; to reinstate.
(v. t.) To take possession of, as lands and tenements which
have been disseized.
(v. t.) To curve in an opposite or unusual direction; to bend
back or down.
(a.) Rawboned.
(n.) A specter mentioned to frighten children; as, rawhead and
bloodybones.
(pl. ) of Recipe
(v. t.) To claim back; to demand the return of as a right; to
attempt to recover possession of.
(v. t.) To call back, as a hawk to the wrist in falconry, by a
certain customary call.
(v. t.) To call back from flight or disorderly action; to call
to, for the purpose of subduing or quieting.
(v. t.) To reduce from a wild to a tamed state; to bring under
discipline; -- said especially of birds trained for the chase, but also
of other animals.
(v. t.) Hence: To reduce to a desired state by discipline,
labor, cultivation, or the like; to rescue from being wild, desert,
waste, submerged, or the like; as, to reclaim wild land, overflowed
land, etc.
(v. t.) To call back to rectitude from moral wandering or
transgression; to draw back to correct deportment or course of life; to
reform.
(v. t.) To correct; to reform; -- said of things.
(v. t.) To exclaim against; to gainsay.
(v. i.) To cry out in opposition or contradiction; to exclaim
against anything; to contradict; to take exceptions.
(v. i.) To bring anyone back from evil courses; to reform.
(v. i.) To draw back; to give way.
(n.) The act of reclaiming, or the state of being reclaimed;
reclamation; recovery.
(v. t.) To count or reckon again.
(n.) A counting again, as of votes.
(v.) To tell over; to relate in detail; to recite; to tell or
narrate the particulars of; to rehearse; to enumerate; as, to recount
one's blessings.
(v. t.) To cover again.
(v. t.) To get or obtain again; to get renewed possession of;
to win back; to regain.
(v. t.) To make good by reparation; to make up for; to
retrieve; to repair the loss or injury of; as, to recover lost time.
(v. t.) To restore from sickness, faintness, or the like; to
bring back to life or health; to cure; to heal.
(v. t.) To overcome; to get the better of, -- as a state of
mind or body.
(v. t.) To rescue; to deliver.
(v. t.) To gain by motion or effort; to obtain; to reach; to
come to.
(v. t.) To gain as a compensation; to obtain in return for
injury or debt; as, to recover damages in trespass; to recover debt and
costs in a suit at law; to obtain title to by judgement in a court of
law; as, to recover lands in ejectment or common recovery; to gain by
legal process; as, to recover judgement against a defendant.
(v. i.) To regain health after sickness; to grow well; to be
restored or cured; hence, to regain a former state or condition after
misfortune, alarm, etc.; -- often followed by of or from; as, to
recover from a state of poverty; to recover from fright.
(v. i.) To make one's way; to come; to arrive.
(v. i.) To obtain a judgement; to succeed in a lawsuit; as, the
plaintiff has recovered in his suit.
(n.) Recovery.
(n.) One who wears a red coat; specifically, a red-coated
British soldier.
(n.) A person having red hair.
(n.) An American duck (Aythya Americana) highly esteemed as a
game bird. It is closely allied to the canvasback, but is smaller and
its head brighter red. Called also red-headed duck. American poachard,
grayback, and fall duck. See Illust. under Poachard.
(n.) The red-headed woodpecker. See Woodpecker.
(n.) A kind of milkweed (Asclepias Curassavica) with red
flowers. It is used in medicine.
(n.) The redshank.
(n.) The turnstone.
(v. t.) To dress again.
(v. t.) To put in order again; to set right; to emend; to
revise.
(v. t.) To set right, as a wrong; to repair, as an injury; to
make amends for; to remedy; to relieve from.
(v. t.) To make amends or compensation to; to relieve of
anything unjust or oppressive; to bestow relief upon.
(n.) The act of redressing; a making right; reformation;
correction; amendment.
(n.) A setting right, as of wrong, injury, or opression; as,
the redress of grievances; hence, relief; remedy; reparation;
indemnification.
(n.) One who, or that which, gives relief; a redresser.
(v. t.) To edify anew; to build again after destruction.
(v. t.) To elect again; as, to reelect the former governor.
(v. t.) To erect again.
(v. t.) To lease again; to grant a new lease of; to let back.
(n.) To let loose again; to set free from restraint,
confinement, or servitude; to give liberty to, or to set at liberty; to
let go.
(n.) To relieve from something that confines, burdens, or
oppresses, as from pain, trouble, obligation, penalty.
(n.) To let go, as a legal claim; to discharge or relinquish a
right to, as lands or tenements, by conveying to another who has some
right or estate in possession, as when the person in remainder releases
his right to the tenant in possession; to quit.
(n.) To loosen; to relax; to remove the obligation of; as, to
release an ordinance.
(n.) The act of letting loose or freeing, or the state of being
let loose or freed; liberation or discharge from restraint of any kind,
as from confinement or bondage.
(n.) Relief from care, pain, or any burden.
(n.) Discharge from obligation or responsibility, as from debt,
penalty, or claim of any kind; acquittance.
(n.) A giving up or relinquishment of some right or claim; a
conveyance of a man's right in lands or tenements to another who has
some estate in possession; a quitclaim.
(n.) The act of opening the exhaust port to allow the steam to
escape.
(v. t.) To press again.
(v. t.) To press back or down effectually; to crush down or
out; to quell; to subdue; to supress; as, to repress sedition or
rebellion; to repress the first risings of discontent.
(v. t.) Hence, to check; to restrain; to keep back.
(n.) The act of repressing.
(n.) Refutation; confutation; contradiction.
(n.) An expression of blame or censure; especially, blame
expressed to the face; censure for a fault; chiding; reproach.
(v. t.) To convince.
(v. t.) To disprove; to refute.
(v. t.) To chide to the face as blameworthy; to accuse as
guilty; to censure.
(v. t.) To express disapprobation of; as, to reprove faults.
(v. t.) To keep back; to retain; not to deliver, make over, or
disclose.
(v. t.) Hence, to keep in store for future or special use; to
withhold from present use for another purpose or time; to keep; to
retain.
(v. t.) To make an exception of; to except.
(n.) The act of reserving, or keeping back; reservation.
(n.) That which is reserved, or kept back, as for future use.
(n.) That which is excepted; exception.
(n.) Restraint of freedom in words or actions; backwardness;
caution in personal behavior.
(n.) A tract of land reserved, or set apart, for a particular
purpose; as, the Connecticut Reserve in Ohio, originally set apart for
the school fund of Connecticut; the Clergy Reserves in Canada, for the
support of the clergy.
(n.) A body of troops in the rear of an army drawn up for
battle, reserved to support the other lines as occasion may require; a
force or body of troops kept for an exigency.
(n.) Funds kept on hand to meet liabilities.
(v. i.) To sound loudly; as, his voice resounded far.
(v. i.) To be filled with sound; to ring; as, the woods resound
with song.
(v. i.) To be echoed; to be sent back, as sound.
(v. i.) To be mentioned much and loudly.
(v. i.) To echo or reverberate; to be resonant; as, the earth
resounded with his praise.
(v. t.) To throw back, or return, the sound of; to echo; to
reverberate.
(v. t.) To praise or celebrate with the voice, or the sound of
instruments; to extol with sounds; to spread the fame of.
(n.) Return of sound; echo.
(v. t.) To bring back to its former state; to bring back from a
state of ruin, decay, disease, or the like; to repair; to renew; to
recover.
(v. t.) To give or bring back, as that which has been lost., or
taken away; to bring back to the owner; to replace.
(v. t.) To renew; to reestablish; as, to restore harmony among
those who are variance.
(v. t.) To give in place of, or as satisfaction for.
(v. t.) To make good; to make amends for.
(v. t.) To bring back from a state of injury or decay, or from
a changed condition; as, to restore a painting, statue, etc.
(v. t.) To form a picture or model of, as of something lost or
mutilated; as, to restore a ruined building, city, or the like.
(n.) Restoration.