List Words
Genre
A style of painting, sculpture, or other imitative art, which illustrates everyday life and manners.
Doctor
A teacher; one skilled in a profession, or branch of knowledge learned man.
Collaboration
The act of working together; united labor.
Accommodation
The act of fitting or adapting, or the state of being fitted or adapted; adaptation; adjustment; -- followed by to.
Vernacular
Belonging to the country of one's birth; one's own by birth or nature; native; indigenous; -- now used chiefly of language; as, English is our vernacular language.
Articulation
A joint or juncture between bones in the skeleton.
Subkingdom
One of the several primary divisions of either the animal, or vegetable kingdom, as, in zoology, the Vertebrata, Tunicata, Mollusca, Articulata, Molluscoidea, Echinodermata, Coelentera, and the ..
Unassuming
Not assuming; not bold or forward; not arrogant or presuming; humble; modest; retiring; as, an unassuming youth; unassuming manners.
Both
The one and the other; the two; the pair, without exception of either.
Quatrain
A stanza of four lines rhyming alternately.
Agglutination
The act of uniting by glue or other tenacious substance; the state of being thus united; adhesion of parts.
Phylum
One of the larger divisions of the animal kingdom; a branch; a grand division.
Onomatology
The science of names or of their classification.
Communalism
A French theory of government which holds that commune should be a kind of independent state, and the national government a confederation of such states, having only limited powers. It is adv..
Stave
One of a number of narrow strips of wood, or narrow iron plates, placed edge to edge to form the sides, covering, or lining of a vessel or structure; esp., one of the strips which form the sides..
Blue book
A parliamentary publication, so called from its blue paper covers.
Upend
To end up; to set on end, as a cask.
Seven
One more than six; six and one added; as, seven days make one week.
Condemn
To pronounce to be wrong; to disapprove of; to censure.
Duumvirate
The union of two men in the same office; or the office, dignity, or government of two men thus associated, as in ancient Rome.
Devastate
To lay waste; to ravage; to desolate.
Access
A coming to, or near approach; admittance; admission; accessibility; as, to gain access to a prince.
Proliferation
The continuous development of cells in tissue formation; cell formation.
Commissariat
The organized system by which armies and military posts are supplied with food and daily necessaries.
Constipated
of Constipate
Expostulatory
Containing expostulation or remonstrance; as, an expostulatory discourse or letter.
Consume
To destroy, as by decomposition, dissipation, waste, or fire; to use up; to expend; to waste; to burn up; to eat up; to devour.
Gleaning
of Glean
Conduction
The act of leading or guiding.
Depredate
To subject to plunder and pillage; to despoil; to lay waste; to prey upon.
Glomeration
The act of forming or gathering into a ball or round mass; the state of being gathered into a ball; conglomeration.
Aisle
A lateral division of a building, separated from the middle part, called the nave, by a row of columns or piers, which support the roof or an upper wall containing windows, called the clearstory..
Heptahedron
A solid figure with seven sides.
Perfusion
The act of perfusing.
Midge
Any one of many small, delicate, long-legged flies of the Chironomus, and allied genera, which do not bite. Their larvae are usually aquatic.
Heptad
An atom which has a valence of seven, and which can be theoretically combined with, substituted for, or replaced by, seven monad atoms or radicals; as, iodine is a heptad in iodic acid. Also ..
Synergy
Combined action
Stuffing
of Stuff
Antonomasia
The use of some epithet or the name of some office, dignity, or the like, instead of the proper name of the person; as when his majesty is used for a king, or when, instead of Aristotle, we say,..
Mount
A mass of earth, or earth and rock, rising considerably above the common surface of the surrounding land; a mountain; a high hill; -- used always instead of mountain, when put before a proper ..
Heptarchy
A government by seven persons; also, a country under seven rulers.
Telegram
A message sent by telegraph; a telegraphic dispatch.
Publicity
The quality or state of being public, or open to the knowledge of a community; notoriety; publicness.
Dissociated
of Dissociate
Distal
Remote from the point of attachment or origin; as, the distal end of a bone or muscle
Companionless
Without a companion.
Quarantined
of Quarantine
Estranged
of Estrange
Truckler
One who truckles, or yields servilely to the will of another.
Vacate
To make vacant; to leave empty; to cease from filling or occupying; as, it was resolved by Parliament that James had vacated the throne of England; the tenant vacated the house.