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15320 tremble [[English]] ipa :/ˈtɹɛmbl̩/[Etymology] From Old French trambler and its variants, from Vulgar Latin tremulare, a derivate of Classical Latin tremere, present active infinitive of tremō. [Noun] tremble (plural trembles) 1.A shake, quiver, or vibration. [Related terms] - tremor - tremulous - tremblor [Verb] tremble (third-person singular simple present trembles, present participle trembling, simple past and past participle trembled) 1.(intransitive) To shake, quiver, or vibrate. Her lip started to tremble as she burst into tears. The dog was trembling from being in the cold weather all day. [[French]] [Noun] tremble m. (plural trembles) 1.aspen [Verb] tremble 1.first-person singular present indicative of trembler 2.third-person singular present indicative of trembler 3.first-person singular present subjunctive of trembler 4.first-person singular present subjunctive of trembler 5.second-person singular imperative of trembler 0 0 2009/04/28 10:30 2012/06/24 20:13 TaN
15322 aggrieved [[English]] [Adjective] aggrieved (comparative more aggrieved, superlative most aggrieved) 1.Angry or resentful due to unjust treatment. I am aggrieved at the conditions which have been forced upon me. 2.2011 October 1, Saj Chowdhury, “Wolverhampton 1 - 2 Newcastle”, BBC Sport: Steven Fletcher headed in for Wolves late on, who were denied a penalty and what appeared to be a legitimate equaliser in stoppage time. Wolves boss Mick McCarthy will rightly be aggrieved by those two decisions. 3.(law) Having one's rights denied or curtailed. The aggrieved person may present their petition to the court for review. [Verb] aggrieved 1.Simple past tense and past participle of aggrieve. 0 0 2012/06/24 20:18
15323 aggrieve [[English]] ipa :/ʌˈɡɹiv/[Etymology] From Middle English agreven, Old French agrever; a (Latin ad) + grever (“to burden, injure”), Latin gravare (“to weigh down”), from gravis (“heavy”). See grieve, and compare with aggravate. [References] - aggrieve in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913 [Verb] aggrieve (third-person singular simple present aggrieves, present participle aggrieving, simple past and past participle aggrieved) 1.(transitive) To give pain or sorrow to; to afflict; hence, to oppress or injure in one's rights; to bear heavily upon;—now commonly used in the passive, to be aggrieved. 2.(intransitive, obsolete) To grieve; to lament. 0 0 2012/06/24 20:18
15328 frolicking [[English]] [Verb] frolicking 1.Present participle of frolic. 0 0 2012/06/24 20:23
15333 disinherited [[English]] [Verb] disinherited 1.Simple past tense and past participle of disinherit. 0 0 2012/06/24 20:54
15334 disinherit [[English]] ipa :-ɛrɪt[Anagrams] - rhinitides [Etymology] Middle English [Verb] disinherit (third-person singular simple present disinherits, present participle disinheriting, simple past and past participle disinherited) 1.(transitive) To exclude from inheritance; to disown. 0 0 2012/06/24 20:54
15336 handler [[English]] [Etymology] handle + -er [Noun] handler (plural handlers) 1.(literally) One who handles something (especially manually) or someone. The handler of a weapon gets a symbolic sensation of deadly power. 2.(in combination) A controller, trainer, someone who handles a specified thing, animal or person (especially a prizefighter), which can be specified in a combination The spy's handler told him to approach the subject by posing as a dog handler. 3.(computing) A subroutine that handles a particular situation such as an event or exception. [References] - Webster's Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary, Springfield, Massachusetts, G.&C. Merriam Co., 1967 [[Danish]] [Noun] handler c. (singular definite handleren, plural indefinite handlere) 1.A (financial) trader handler c. 1.plural indefinite of handel [Verb] handler 1.present of handle 0 0 2012/06/24 21:39
15340 quartermaster [[English]] [Alternative forms] - quarter-master [Noun] quartermaster (plural quartermasters) 1.(military) An officer whose duty is to provide quarters, provisions, storage, clothing, fuel, stationery, and transportation for a regiment or other body of troops, and superintend the supplies. 2.(nautical) A petty officer who attends to the helm, binnacle, signals, and the like, under the direction of the master. 0 0 2012/06/24 21:46
15341 embezzlement [[English]] [Etymology] embezzle +‎ -ment [Noun] embezzlement (plural embezzlements) 1.(law, business) The fraudulent conversion of property from a property owner. 0 0 2012/06/24 21:47
15342 braggadocio [[English]] ipa :/braɡːaˈdoːʧio/[Etymology] After Braggadocchio, boastful character in Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene (1590), apparently a pseudo-Italian coinage. [Noun] braggadocio (plural braggadocios or braggadocii) 1.A braggart. 2.Empty boasting. [See also] - machismo 0 0 2012/06/24 21:48
15343 entourage [[English]] ipa :/ˈɒn.tʊ.ɹɑːʒ/[Etymology] From French entourage, from entourer (“to surround”). [Noun] entourage (plural entourages) 1.A retinue of attendants, associates or followers. [[French]] ipa :/ɑ̃.tu.ʁaʒ/[Etymology] From entourer +‎ -age [Noun] entourage m. (plural entourages) 1.ornament, decoration surrounding something Entourage de fleurs, de perles. 2.group of acquaintances Cet homme a un mauvais entourage. [References] - "entourage" in le Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language). [[Italian]] [Etymology] French [Noun] entourage m. inv. 1.entourage, retinue 0 0 2012/06/24 21:58
15344 sop [[English]] ipa :-ɒp[Anagrams] - ops , OPS, pos, POS, PSO [Etymology] Middle English soppe, from Old English sopp 'sopped bread', from Proto-Germanic *sauppa (compare Dutch sop, Old High German sopfa), deverbative of *sūpanan 'to sup'. More at sup; compare soup. [Noun] sop (plural sops) 1.Something entirely soaked. 2.A piece of solid food to be soaked in liquid food. 3.Something given or done to pacify or bribe. 4.A weak, easily frightened or ineffectual person; a milksop 5.Gravy. (Appalachian) [Verb] sop (third-person singular simple present sops, present participle sopping, simple past and past participle sopped) 1.To steep or dip in any liquid. [[Dutch]] [Noun] sop n. (??? please provide the plural and diminutive!) 1.water with soap, usually to wash clothes 2.the sea in terms of somebody who will sail on it [Verb] sop 1.First-person singular of soppen 2.Singular imperative of soppen [[Indonesian]] [Noun] sop 1.soup [[Lojban]] [Rafsi] sop 1.Rafsi of so'e. [[Tok Pisin]] [Etymology] From English soap. [Noun] sop 1.cleaner sop bilong tit = toothpaste 0 0 2010/04/01 19:15 2012/06/24 22:01 TaN
15345 SOP [[English]] [Anagrams] - ops , OPS - pos, POS - PSO [Initialism] SOP 1.Sex On [or Over] the Phone 2.Standard Operating Procedure 3.(manufacturing) Start of Production 0 0 2010/04/01 19:15 2012/06/24 22:01 TaN
15346 applause [[English]] ipa :/əˈplɔːz/[Etymology] From the Latin applausus, from applaudō (“I strike against”, “I applaud”) (whence the English verb applaud). [Noun] applause (plural applauses) 1.The act of applauding; approbation and praise publicly expressed by the clapping of hands, stamping or tapping of the feet, acclamation, huzzas, or other means; marked commendation. 2.1904, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, “The Adventure of the Six Napoleons”, in The Return of Sherlock Holmes[1]: Lestrade and I sat silent for a moment, and then, with a spontaneous impulse, we both broke at clapping, as at the well-wrought crisis of a play. A flush of colour sprang to Holmes's pale cheeks, and he bowed to us like the master dramatist who receives the homage of his audience. It was at such moments that for an instant he ceased to be a reasoning machine, and betrayed his human love for admiration and applause. The same singularly proud and reserved nature which turned away with disdain from popular notoriety was capable of being moved to its depths by spontaneous wonder and praise from a friend. [Synonyms] - acclaim, acclamation, approbation, approval, commendation, plaudit 0 0 2012/06/24 22:02
15347 sculpture [[English]] [Etymology] From Middle English, from Old French, from Latin sculptura (“sculpture”), from sculpere (“to cut out, carve in stone”). [External links] - sculpture in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913 - sculpture in The Century Dictionary, The Century Co., New York, 1911 - sculpture at OneLook Dictionary Search [Noun] sculpture (usually uncountable; plural sculptures)Wikipedia has an article on:SculptureWikipedia 1.(uncountable) The art of shaping figures or designs in the round or in relief, professionally performed by a sculptor 2.(countable) A work of art created by sculpting. 3.Works of art created by sculpting, as a group. [Related terms] - sculpt - sculptor - sculptureless - sculpturelike [Verb] sculpture (third-person singular simple present sculptures, present participle sculpturing, simple past and past participle sculptured) 1.To fashion something into a three-dimensional figure. 2.To represent something in sculpture. 3.To change the shape of a land feature by erosion etc. [[French]] ipa :/skyl.tyʁ/[Anagrams] - sculpteur [Noun] sculpture f. (plural sculptures) 1.sculpture [[Latin]] [Participle] sculptūre 1.vocative masculine singular of sculptūrus 0 0 2011/03/08 18:40 2012/06/24 22:06
15348 radiant [[English]] [Adjective] radiant (comparative more radiant, superlative most radiant) 1.Radiating light and/or heat. 2.Emitted as radiation. 3.Bright, glowing or filled with light. [Anagrams] - anti-rad, antirad, intrada [Noun] radiant (plural radiants) 1.A point source from which radiation is emitted. 2.(astronomy) The apparent origin, in the night sky, of a meteor shower. [[French]] [Verb] radiant 1.Present participle of radier. [[Latin]] [Verb] radiant 1.third-person plural present active indicative of radiō 0 0 2012/06/24 22:09
15352 englis [[Middle English]] [Noun] englis 1.English language 0 0 2012/06/27 00:02
15354 日本 [[Cantonese]] [Proper noun] 日本 (jyutping jat6 bun2, Yale yat6 bun2) 1.Japan [[Japanese]] ipa :/nihoɴ/[Derived terms] - 日本人 (にほんじん, nihonjin): Japanese person, Japanese people - 日本語 (にほんご, nihongo): Japanese language - 日本国 (nihon-koku, nippon-koku): The nation of Japan. [Etymology 1] - nitpon > nipon > niɸon > nihon [Etymology 2] - nitpon > nippon [Etymology 3] /zithon/: zitpon > zippon > jippon. /ziti, zitu/ are readings of 日, just like /niti/. The quoted iippon is the 16th century Portuguese romanization representing [ji]. [References] - 1980 June 15 [1603–1604], Doi, Tadao, Hōyaku Nippo Jisho (in Japanese), Tōkyō: Iwanami Shoten, ISBN 4-0008-0021-3: [See also] - (prefectures of Japan) 日本; 北海道,‎ 青森県,‎ 岩手県,‎ 宮城県,‎ 秋田県,‎ 山形県,‎ 福島県,‎ 茨城県,‎ 栃木県,‎ 群馬県,‎ 埼玉県,‎ 千葉県,‎ 東京都,‎ 神奈川県,‎ 新潟県,‎ 富山県,‎ 石川県,‎ 福井県,‎ 山梨県,‎ 長野県,‎ 岐阜県,‎ 静岡県,‎ 愛知県,‎ 三重県,‎ 滋賀県,‎ 京都府,‎ 大阪府,‎ 兵庫県,‎ 奈良県,‎ 和歌山県,‎ 鳥取県,‎ 島根県,‎ 岡山県,‎ 広島県,‎ 山口県,‎ 徳島県,‎ 香川県,‎ 愛媛県,‎ 高知県,‎ 福岡県,‎ 佐賀県,‎ 長崎県,‎ 熊本県,‎ 大分県,‎ 宮崎県,‎ 鹿児島県,‎ 沖縄県 (Category: ja:Japanese prefectures) [edit] [[Korean]] [Proper noun] 日本 (hangeul 일본, Ilbon) 1.JapanMandarin Wikipedia has an article on:日本Wikipedia zh [[Mandarin]] ipa :[ ʐɚ˥˩pən˨˩ ][Proper noun] 日本 (traditional and simplified, Pinyin Rìběn) 1.Japan [[Min Nan]] [Proper noun] 日本 (traditional and simplified, POJ Ji̍t-pún) 1.Japan 0 0 2009/06/14 19:46 2012/06/27 00:04
15355 CO2 [[Translingual]] [Alternative forms] - CO2 (nonstandard; acceptable when subscripts are not available or cannot be displayed) [Symbol] CO₂ 1.Carbon dioxide. [[English]] [Anagrams] - OC, Oc [Noun] CO₂ (uncountable) 1.Carbon dioxide. 2.President Obama Announces Accelerated Purchase of 17,600 New American Vehicles for Government Fleet, 2009-04-09: By swapping out less efficient federal vehicles for new hybrid and fuel efficient ones, this strategy will reduce gasoline consumption by 1.3 million gallons per year and prevent 26 million pounds of CO₂ from entering the atmosphere. [Synonyms] - carbon dioxide - carbonic acid gas 0 0 2012/06/27 11:53
15357 hooted [[English]] [Verb] hooted 1.Past participle of hoot 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15358 hoot [[English]] ipa :-uːt[Anagrams] - otoh, OTOH [Noun] hoot (plural hoots) 1.A derisive cry or shout. 2.The cry of an owl. 3.(US, slang) A fun event or person. (See hootenanny) [Verb] hoot (third-person singular simple present hoots, present participle hooting, simple past and past participle hooted) 1.To cry out or shout in contempt. 2.To make the cry of an owl. 3.To assail with contemptuous cries or shouts; to follow with derisive shouts. [[Middle English]] [Adjective] hoot 1.hot 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15361 purveyed [[English]] [Verb] purveyed 1.Simple past tense and past participle of purvey. 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15362 purvey [[English]] ipa :/pəˈveɪ/[Alternative forms] - puruey (14th-15th centuries) [Etymology] From Anglo-Norman purveer, purveir et al., Old French porveeir, porveoir, from Latin prōvidēre (“to provide”). Compare provide. [Verb] purvey (third-person singular simple present purveys, present participle purveying, simple past and past participle purveyed) 1.(intransitive, obsolete) To prepare in advance (for or to do something); to plan, make provision. 2.1485, Sir Thomas Malory, Le Morte Darthur, Book IV: A sayd the kynge, syn ye knowe of your aduenture puruey for hit, and put awey by your craftes that mysauenture. 3.(transitive) To furnish or provide. 4.2005, Lesley Brown, trans. Plato, Sophist, 223d: Those who sell their own products are distinguished from purveyors, who purvey what others produce. 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15363 Purvey [[English]] [Proper noun] Purvey 1.A surname. 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15364 ploy [[English]] ipa :-ɔɪ[Anagrams] - poly [Noun] ploy (plural ploys) 1.A tactic, strategy, or gimmick. The free t-shirt is really a ploy to get you in the door to see their sales pitch. [[Sranan Tongo]] [Verb] ploy 1.To flex. 2.To curve. 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15365 ambiguities [[English]] [Noun] ambiguities 1.Plural form of ambiguity. 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15367 jovially [[English]] [Adverb] jovially (comparative more jovially, superlative most jovially) 1.In a jovial manner 2.1955 - Joseph Heller, Catch-22, Chapter 13, page 133 He greeted Milo jovially each time they met and, in an excess of contrite generosity, impulsively recommended Major Major for promotion. The recommendation was rejected at once at Twenty-seventh Air Force Headquarters by ex-P.F.C. Wintergreen, who scribbled a brusque, unsigned reminder that the Army had only one Major Major Major Major and did not intend to lose him by promotion just to please Colonel Cathcart. [Etymology] jovial +‎ -ly 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15369 trammeled [[English]] [Verb] trammeled 1.Simple past tense and past participle of trammel. 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15370 trammel [[English]] ipa :-æməl[Etymology] From French tramail (“net for catching fishes”), from Late Latin tremaculum. [Noun] trammel (plural trammels) 1.Something that impedes activity, freedom, or progress. 2.1898, William Graham Sumner, “The Conquest of the United States by Spain”, in War and Other Essays, Yale, published 1911, page 332: The men who came here were able to throw off all the trammels of tradition and established doctrine. 3.A fishing net that has large mesh at the edges and smaller mesh in the middle 4.A set of rings or other hanging devices, attached to a transverse bar suspended over a fire, used to hang cooking pots etc.[edit] TranslationsSomething that impedes activity, freedom, or progressdevice to suspend cooking pots over a fire [Verb] trammel (third-person singular simple present trammels, present participle trammelling, simple past and past participle trammelled) (UK) trammel (third-person singular simple present trammels, present participle trammeling, simple past and past participle trammeled) (US) 1.To entangle, as in a net. 2.1880 Dante Gabriel Rosetti, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, lines 9-10 the scarce-snatched hours Which deepening pain left to his lordliest powers: — Heaven lost through spider-trammelled prison-bars. 3.(transitive) To hamper.[edit] TranslationsTo entangle, as in a netTo hamper 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15374 delegation [[English]] ipa :-eɪʃən[Etymology] Latin delegatio: confer French délégation. [Noun] delegation (plural delegations) 1.An act of delegating. 2.A group of delegates used to discuss issues with an opponent. 3.(computing): A method dispatching technique describing the lookup and inheritance rules for self-referential calls. 4.(law): A contract whereby the original debtor substitutes a new debtor in his stead, with the creditor’s permission. [See also] - consultation link [[Swedish]] [Etymology] delegera +‎ -ation [Noun] delegation c. 1.a delegation 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15375 scabrous [[English]] [Adjective] scabrous (comparative more scabrous, superlative most scabrous) 1.covered with scales or scabs, or otherwise extremely rough After the incident with the gasoline, Noel's burnt arm remained scabrous, and was susceptible to infections. 2.having indecent sexual content or connotation, rough The novel was a flagrantly scabrous bodice-ripper, and Rachael was ashamed to read it in public. 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15376 exude [[English]] ipa :/ɪɡˈzud/[Verb] exude (third-person singular simple present exudes, present participle exuding, simple past and past participle exuded) 1.To discharge through pores or incisions, as moisture or other liquid matter; to give out. [[Spanish]] [Verb] exude (infinitive exudar) 1.Formal second-person singular (usted) imperative form of exudar. 2.First-person singular (yo) present subjunctive form of exudar. 3.Formal second-person singular (usted) present subjunctive form of exudar. 4.Third-person singular (él, ella, also used with usted?) present subjunctive form of exudar. 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15377 perfunctory [[English]] ipa :/pəˈfʌŋk.tɹɪ/[Adjective] perfunctory (comparative more perfunctory, superlative most perfunctory) 1.Done merely to discharge a duty; performed mechanically and as a thing of rote; done in a careless and superficial manner; characterized by indifference; as, perfunctory admonitions; aspiring only to minimum standards. He did a perfunctory job cleaning his dad's car, finishing quickly but leaving a few spots still dirty. 2.1918, Edgar Rice Burroughs, The Land That Time Forgot Chapter VIII I caught the gist of what he was saying--which in effect was that he had found and captured this Galu, that she was his and that he defied anyone to question his right of possession. It appeared to me, as I afterward learned was the fact, that I was witnessing the most primitive of marriage ceremonies. The assembled members of the tribe looked on and listened in a sort of dull and perfunctory apathy, for the speaker was by far the mightiest of the clan. 3.1992, Peter Bowbrick, The Economics of Quality, Grades, and Brands, p. 55, Alternatively it may mean that a perfunctory search is enough to ensure that a purchase is acceptable, so less search is carried out. [Antonyms] - thoughtful [Etymology] Late Latin perfunctorius, from the past participial stem of perfungor, perfunct- (“perform, carry through”), from per- + fungor [See also] - pro forma [Synonyms] - (performed out of routine): automatic, cursory, dutiful, mechanical, obligatory, slipshod, token, unthinking 0 0 2012/04/20 17:57 2012/06/30 22:34
15378 chivalrous [[English]] ipa :/ˈʃɪv.əl.ɹʌs/[Adjective] chivalrous (comparative more chivalrous, superlative most chivalrous) 1.(of a man) honourable, especially to women. 2.1960, P. G. Wodehouse, Jeeves in the Offing, chapter VII and XXI: It was a lovely afternoon, replete with blue sky, beaming sun, buzzing insects and what not, an afternoon that seemed to call to one to be out in the open with God's air playing on one's face and something cool in a glass at one's side, and here was I, just to oblige Bobbie Wickham, tooling along a corridor indoors on my way to search a comparative stranger's bedroom, this involving crawling on floors and routing under beds and probably getting covered with dust and fluff. The thought was a bitter one, and I don't suppose I have ever come closer to saying “Faugh!” It amazed me that I could have allowed myself to be let in for a binge of this description simply because a woman wished it. Too bally chivalrous for our own good, we Woosters, and always have been. [...] Whether I would or would not at this juncture have taken her in an iron grasp and shaken her till she frothed is a point on which I can make no definite announcement. The chivalrous spirit of the Woosters would probably have restrained me, much as I resented that merry laughter, but as it happened the matter was not put to the test, for at this moment Jeeves entered [...] 3.involving chivalry [Etymology] From Middle English from the Old French chevalerous; see chivalry 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15379 batman [[English]] ipa :/ˈbatmən/[Anagrams] - bantam, Bantam [Etymology 1] bat (“packsaddle”) +‎ man bat from French bât, from Old French bast, from Vulgar Latin *bastum, form of bastāre (“to carry”), from Late Greek *bastân, from Ancient Greek bastázein (“to lift, carry”).[1] [Etymology 2] From Turkish batman.[2] [References] 1.^ "batman." Dictionary.com. Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1). Random House, Inc. 2009. 2.^ "batman." Dictionary.com. Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary. MICRA, Inc. 2009. [[Tatar]] [Noun] batman 1.A unit of volume: 1 batman = 4 pot (archaic) [1] [[Turkish]] ipa :/bɑtmɑn/[Etymology] From Middle Turkic batmān, from Old Turkic batman, from Proto-Turkic. [Noun] batman (definite accusative batmanı) 1.(archaic) A unit of weight formerly used in the Ottoman period. 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15380 Batman [[English]] [Anagrams] - bantam, Bantam [Etymology 1] [Etymology 2] Originally the Bat-Man. [[Swedish]] [Proper noun] Batman 1.Batman [Synonyms] - Läderlappen 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15383 chirped [[English]] [Verb] chirped 1.Simple past tense and past participle of chirp. 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15384 chirp [[English]] ipa :/tʃɜː(ɹ)p/[Noun] chirp (plural chirps) 1.A short, sharp or high note or noise, as of a bird or insect. [Verb] chirp (third-person singular simple present chirps, present participle chirping, simple past and past participle chirped) 1.(intransitive) to make a short, sharp, cheerful note, as of small birds or crickets 2.(intransitive) to speak in a high-pitched staccato 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15385 prancing [[English]] ipa :/ˈpɹæn.sɪŋ/[Adjective] prancing (not comparable) 1.(dated, now rare) that prances at the sign of the prancing pony 2.1860, James Payn, The Bateman household‎, page 301: when great Aunt Ryder was exhausted with carrying her little nephews pick-a-back, Aunt Ellen was always willing to become a 'gee-gee' or riding-horse in her place, although certainly one of no very prancing and fiery temperament. 3.1920, Anthony Hope, Lucinda‎, page 273: But what was the good of saying that to him when he was on his high horse — a very prancing steed? 4.1974, Max Brand, South of Rio Grande‎, page 316: he jammed his second-best sword into the empty scabbard; he ordered out his wildest, tallest, most prancing and dancing parade horse [Verb] prancing 1.Present participle of prance. 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15386 prance [[English]] ipa :/pɹæn(t)s/[Etymology] From Middle English prancen, prauncen (“to prance", literally, "to show off”), variant of Middle English pranken (“to prank”). Cognate with Bavarian prangezen, prangssen (“to put on airs”), Alemannic German pranzen (“to strut”). More at prank. [Noun] prance (plural prances) 1.(rare) The act of prancing. [Verb] prance (third-person singular simple present prances, present participle prancing, simple past and past participle pranced) 1.(of a horse) To spring forward on the hind legs. 2.(colloquial, figuratively) To strut about. 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15387 保健 [[Japanese]] [Noun] 保健 (hiragana ほけん, romaji hoken) 1.(medicine) health care [[Mandarin]] ipa :[ pao˨˩tɕiɛn˥˩ ][Noun] 保健 (traditional and simplified, Pinyin bǎojiàn) 1.(Advanced Mandarin, medicine) health protection; health care [References] - 1985, Wu, Jingrong (ed.), The Pinyin CHINESE-ENGLISH DICTIONARY (in Mandarin/English), Beijing, Hong Kong: The Commercial Press, ISBN 0471867969: - 2000, Shao, Jingmin (ed.), HSK Dictionary (HSK汉语水平考试词典) (in Mandarin/English), Shanghai: Huadong Teachers College Publishers, ISBN 7561720785: 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15388 reminiscence [[English]] [Etymology] From Late Latin reminīscentiae (“remembrances”), from Latin reminīscēns, present active participle of reminīscor (“remember”); see reminiscent. [Noun] reminiscence (plural reminiscences) 1.An act of remembering long-past experiences, often fondly. 0 0 2009/10/02 09:36 2012/06/30 22:34 TaN
15389 hermaphrodite [[English]] [Adjective] hermaphrodite (comparative more hermaphrodite, superlative most hermaphrodite) 1.Having gender-ambiguous sexual organs, typically including both types of gonads, in one individual or organism. 2.Combining two opposing qualities. [Etymology] From Hermaphroditos, the mythical son of Hermes and Aphrodite, possessing both male and female qualities. [Noun] hermaphrodite (plural hermaphrodites) 1.An individual or organism possessing gender-ambiguous sexual organs, typically including both types of gonads. [from late 14th c.] An earthworm is a hermaphrodite. 2.A person or thing possessing two opposing qualities. 3.(nautical) A hermaphrodite brig. [Synonyms] - androgyne - gynandromorph - morphodite - androgynous - hermaphroditic [[French]] ipa :/ɛʁ.ma.fʁɔ.dit/[Adjective] hermaphrodite (masculine and feminine, plural hermaphrodites) 1.hermaphrodite [Noun] hermaphrodite m. and f. (plural hermaphrodites) 1.hermaphrodite 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15390 boring [[English]] ipa :-ɔːrɪŋ[Adjective] boring (comparative more boring, superlative most boring) 1.That which incites boredom in a person. [Anagrams] - orbing - robing [Noun] boring (plural borings) 1.A pit or hole which has been bored. 2.1992, J. Patrick Powers, Construction dewatering: new methods and applications, p. 191: It is common in urban areas that a great many borings exist from prior construction work. [Synonyms] - dull, mind-numbing (colloquial), tedious - See also Wikisaurus:boring [Verb] boring 1.Present participle of bore. [[Dutch]] [Etymology] From bor (“stem of boren”) +‎ -ing. [Noun] boring f. (??? please provide the plural!, diminutive borinkje) 1.drilling offshoreboring — offshore drilling 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15391 Bor [[Translingual]] [Abbreviation] Bor 1.A botanical plant name author abbreviation for botanist Norman Loftus Bor (1893-1972). [External links] - Author query of the International Plant Names Index [[German]] ipa :/boːɐ̯/[Noun] Bor n. 1.boron [[Luxembourgish]] [Noun] Bor (uncountable) 1.boron 0 0 2012/01/28 15:48 2012/06/30 22:34
15392 flinched [[English]] [Verb] flinched 1.Simple past tense and past participle of flinch. 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15393 flinch [[English]] ipa :-ɪntʃ[Etymology] Compare Gothic 𐍆̷̹̻̰̽ (filhan), Icelandic fela (“to hide”)[1] [Noun] flinch (plural flinches) 1.A reflexive jerking away. My eye doctor hates the flinch I have every time he tries to get near my eyes. [References] 1.^ flinch in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913 [Verb] flinch (third-person singular simple present flinches, present participle flinching, simple past and past participle flinched) 1.To make a sudden, involuntary movement in response to a (usually negative) stimulus. 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15394 habituating [[English]] [Verb] habituating 1.Present participle of habituate. 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15395 habituate [[English]] [Synonyms] - accustom - inure [Verb] habituate (third-person singular simple present habituates, present participle habituating, simple past and past participle habituated) 1.To turn into a habit, to make habitual. He would eventually habituate his use of opiates. 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15397 cerulean [[English]] ipa :/səˈɹuːliən/[Adjective] cerulean (comparative more cerulean, superlative most cerulean) 1.Of a deep blue colour, like the sky on a fine day. [Alternative forms] - cærulean [Anagrams] - Laurence [Etymology] From Latin caeruleus (“dark blue”), from Proto-Indo-European *ḱēy(w)-, *ḱyē(w)- (“grey”). Cognate with Old English hār (“grey”). More at hoar. [Noun] cerulean (uncountable) 1.A deep blue colour, like the sky on a fine day. [See also] - (blues) blue; Alice blue,‎ aqua,‎ aquamarine,‎ azure,‎ baby blue,‎ beryl,‎ bice,‎ bice blue,‎ blue green,‎ blue violet,‎ blueberry,‎ cadet blue,‎ Cambridge blue,‎ cerulean,‎ cobalt blue,‎ Copenhagen blue,‎ cornflower,‎ cornflower blue,‎ cyan,‎ duck-egg blue,‎ eggshell blue,‎ electric-blue,‎ gentian blue,‎ ice blue,‎ lapis lazuli,‎ lovat,‎ mazarine,‎ midnight blue,‎ navy,‎ Nile blue,‎ Oxford blue,‎ peacock blue,‎ petrol blue,‎ powder blue,‎ Prussian blue,‎ robin's-egg blue,‎ royal blue,‎ sapphire,‎ saxe blue,‎ slate blue,‎ sky blue,‎ teal,‎ turquoise,‎ ultramarine,‎ Wedgwood blue,‎ zaffre (Category: en:Blues) [edit] 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34
15398 [[Translingual]] [Alternative forms] - 冫 (when used as a left Chinese radical) [Han character] 氷 (radical 85 水+1, 5 strokes, cangjie input 戈水 (IE)) 1.ice, frost, icicles 2.cold [[Japanese]] ipa :/koːri/[Etymology 1] kopori > koɸori > kowori > koori > koːri. [Etymology 2] pi > ɸi > hi. [References] 1.Source: EDICT and KANJIDIC files licensed by the Electronic Dictionaries Research Group. - 1968 June 10 [931-938], Minamoto, Shitagō; Kyōto Daigaku Bungakubu Kokugogaku Kokubungaku Kenkyūshitu, Shohon Shūsei Wamyō Ruijushō: Honbunhen (in Japanese), Kyōto: Rinsen, ISBN 4-653-00507-9: [[Korean]] [Hanja] 氷 (hangeul 빙, revised bing, McCune-Reischauer ping, Yale ping) [[Mandarin]] [Hanzi] 氷 (pinyin bīng (bing1), Wade-Giles ping1) [[Vietnamese]] [Han character] 氷 (băn, băng, phăng) 0 0 2012/06/30 22:34

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