slovo | definícia |
Cosen (gcide) | Cosen \Cos"en\ (k?z"'n), v. t.
See Cozen.
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| podobné slovo | definícia |
jocoseness (encz) | jocoseness,hravost n: Zdeněk Brož |
Cosenage (gcide) | Cosenage \Cos"en*age\ (k?z"'n-?j), n.
See Cozenage.
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Cosening (gcide) | Cosening \Cos"en*ing\, n. (O. Eng. Law)
Anything done deceitfully, and which could not be properly
designated by any special name, whether belonging to
contracts or not. --Burrill.
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Cosentient (gcide) | Cosentient \Co*sen"tient\ (k?-s?n"shent), a.
Perceiving together.
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jocoseness (gcide) | jocose \jo*cose"\ (j[-o]*k[=o]s"), a. [L jocosus, fr. jocus
joke. See Joke.]
Given to jokes and jesting; containing a joke, or abounding
in jokes; merry; sportive; humorous.
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To quit their austerity and be jocose and pleasant with
an adversary. --Shaftesbury.
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All . . . jocose or comical airs should be excluded.
--I. Watts.
Syn: Jocular; facetious; witty; merry; pleasant; waggish;
sportive; funny; comical. -- jo*cose"ly, adv. --
jo*cose"ness, n.
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Spondanus imagines that Ulysses may possibly speak
jocosely, but in truth Ulysses never behaves with
levity. --Broome.
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He must beware lest his letter should contain
anything like jocoseness; since jesting is
incompatible with a holy and serious life.
--Buckle.
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bellicoseness (wn) | bellicoseness
n 1: a natural disposition to fight [syn: bellicosity,
bellicoseness] |
jocoseness (wn) | jocoseness
n 1: the trait of merry joking [syn: jocoseness, jocosity,
merriness, humorousness] |
COSENAGE (bouvier) | COSENAGE, torts. Deceit, fraud: that kind of circumvention and wrong, which
has no other specific name. Vide Ayl. Pand. 103 Dane's Ab. Index, h.t.
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