slovo | definícia |
Stive (gcide) | Stive \Stive\, v. i.
To be stifled or suffocated.
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Stive (gcide) | Stive \Stive\, n.
The floating dust in flour mills caused by the operation or
grinding. --De Colange.
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Stive (gcide) | Stive \Stive\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Stived; p. pr. & vb. n.
Stiving.] [Probably fr. F. estiver to compress, stow, L.
stipare: cf. It. stivare, Sp. estivar. Cf. Stevedore,
Stiff.]
To stuff; to crowd; to fill full; hence, to make hot and
close; to render stifling. --Sandys.
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His chamber was commonly stived with friends or suitors
of one kind or other. --Sir H.
Wotton.
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| podobné slovo | definícia |
exhaustive (mass) | exhaustive
- dôkladný |
exhaustively (mass) | exhaustively
- dôkladne, úplne |
festive (mass) | festive
- slávnostný |
navstiveny (msasasci) | navstiveny
- attended, visited |
combustive (encz) | combustive,hořlavý adj: Zdeněk Brož |
congestive (encz) | congestive,městnavý adj: Zdeněk Brož |
congestive heart failure (encz) | congestive heart failure, n: |
contrastive (encz) | contrastive,kontrastivní adj: Zdeněk Brož |
costive (encz) | costive, adj: |
digestive (encz) | digestive,zažívací adj: Zdeněk Brož |
digestive fluid (encz) | digestive fluid, n: |
digestive gland (encz) | digestive gland, n: |
digestive juice (encz) | digestive juice, n: |
digestive system (encz) | digestive system,trávicí soustava n: Jirka Daněkdigestive system,trávicí trakt n: Jirka Daněkdigestive system,zažívací soustava n: Zdeněk Brož |
digestive tract (encz) | digestive tract, n: |
digestive tube (encz) | digestive tube, n: |
exhaustive (encz) | exhaustive,důkladný adj: lukeexhaustive,úplný adj: luke exhaustive,vyčerpávající adj: luke |
exhaustively (encz) | exhaustively,důkladně adv: luke exhaustively,úplně adv: luke |
exhaustiveness (encz) | exhaustiveness,důkladnost n: Zdeněk Brožexhaustiveness,úplnost n: luke |
festive (encz) | festive,slavnostní adj: Zdeněk Brož |
festively (encz) | festively,slavnostně adv: Zdeněk Brož |
festiveness (encz) | festiveness, |
fire-resistive (encz) | fire-resistive, adj: |
ingestive (encz) | ingestive,ingestivní Zdeněk Brož |
maladjustive (encz) | maladjustive, adj: |
resistive (encz) | resistive,odolný adj: Zdeněk Brož |
resistively (encz) | resistively,odolně adv: Zdeněk Brož |
restive (encz) | restive,nedočkavý adj: Zdeněk Brožrestive,netrpělivý adj: Zdeněk Brož |
restively (encz) | restively, |
restiveness (encz) | restiveness,nedočkavost n: Zdeněk Brožrestiveness,netrpělivost n: Zdeněk Brož |
suggestive (encz) | suggestive,podnětný adj: Zdeněk Brožsuggestive,sugestivní adj: Zdeněk Brož |
suggestive of (encz) | suggestive of, adj: |
suggestively (encz) | suggestively,podnětně adv: Zdeněk Brož |
suggestiveness (encz) | suggestiveness,sugestivnost n: Zdeněk Brož |
ctižádostivec (czen) | ctižádostivec,high-fliern: Zdeněk Brožctižádostivec,high-flyern: Zdeněk Brožctižádostivec,highfliern: Zdeněk Brožctižádostivec,highflyern: Zdeněk Brož |
Adjustive (gcide) | Adjustive \Ad*just"ive\, a.
Tending to adjust. [R.]
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Arbustive (gcide) | Arbustive \Ar*bus"tive\, a. [L. arbustivus, fr. arbustum place
where trees are planted.]
Containing copses of trees or shrubs; covered with shrubs.
--Bartram.
[1913 Webster] Arbutus |
Arrestive (gcide) | Arrestive \Ar*rest"ive\ (-[i^]v), a.
Tending to arrest. --McCosh.
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Assistive (gcide) | Assistive \As*sist"ive\, a.
Lending aid, helping.
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Attestive (gcide) | Attestive \At*test"ive\, a.
Attesting; furnishing evidence.
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Boastive (gcide) | Boastive \Boast"ive\, a.
Presumptuous. [R.]
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Congestive (gcide) | Congestive \Con*gest"ive\, a. (Med.)
Pertaining to, indicating, or attended with, congestion in
some part of the body; as, a congestive fever.
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Costive (gcide) | Costive \Cos"tive\ (k?s"t?v), a. [OF. costev['e], p. p. of
costever, F. constiper, L. constipare to press closely
together, to cram; con- + stipare to press together, cram.
See Stipulate, Stiff, and cf. Constipate.]
1. Retaining fecal matter in the bowels; having too slow a
motion of the bowels; constipated.
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2. Reserved; formal; close; cold. [Obs.] "A costive brain."
--Prior. "Costive of laughter." --B. Jonson.
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You must be frank, but without indiscretion; and
close, but without being costive. --Lord
Chesterfield.
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3. Dry and hard; impermeable; unyielding. [Obs.]
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Clay in dry seasons is costive, hardening with the
sun and wind. --Mortimer.
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Costively (gcide) | Costively \Cos"tive*ly\, adv.
In a costive manner.
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Costiveness (gcide) | Costiveness \Cos"tive*ness\, n.
1. An unnatural retention of the fecal matter of the bowels;
constipation.
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2. Inability to express one's self; stiffness. [Obs.]
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A reverend disputant of the same costiveness in
public elocution with myself. --Wakefield.
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Desistive (gcide) | Desistive \De*sist"ive\, a. [See Desist.]
Final; conclusive; ending. [R.]
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Digestive (gcide) | Digestive \Di*gest"ive\, n.
1. That which aids digestion, as a food or medicine.
--Chaucer.
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That digestive [a cigar] had become to me as
necessary as the meal itself. --Blackw. Mag.
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2. (Med.)
(a) A substance which, when applied to a wound or ulcer,
promotes suppuration. --Dunglison.
(b) A tonic. [R.]
[1913 Webster]Digestive \Di*gest"ive\, a. [F. digestif, L. digestivus.]
Pertaining to digestion; having the power to cause or promote
digestion; as, the digestive ferments.
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Digestive cheese and fruit there sure will be. --B.
Jonson.
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Digestive apparatus, the organs of food digestion, esp. the
alimentary canal and glands connected with it.
Digestive salt, the chloride of potassium.
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Digestive apparatus (gcide) | Digestive \Di*gest"ive\, a. [F. digestif, L. digestivus.]
Pertaining to digestion; having the power to cause or promote
digestion; as, the digestive ferments.
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Digestive cheese and fruit there sure will be. --B.
Jonson.
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Digestive apparatus, the organs of food digestion, esp. the
alimentary canal and glands connected with it.
Digestive salt, the chloride of potassium.
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Digestive salt (gcide) | Digestive \Di*gest"ive\, a. [F. digestif, L. digestivus.]
Pertaining to digestion; having the power to cause or promote
digestion; as, the digestive ferments.
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Digestive cheese and fruit there sure will be. --B.
Jonson.
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Digestive apparatus, the organs of food digestion, esp. the
alimentary canal and glands connected with it.
Digestive salt, the chloride of potassium.
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Exhaustive (gcide) | Exhaustive \Ex*haust"ive\, a.
Serving or tending to exhaust; exhibiting all the facts or
arguments; as, an exhaustive method. Ex*haust"ive*ly, adv.
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Exhaustively (gcide) | Exhaustive \Ex*haust"ive\, a.
Serving or tending to exhaust; exhibiting all the facts or
arguments; as, an exhaustive method. Ex*haust"ive*ly, adv.
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Festive (gcide) | Festive \Fes"tive\, a. [L. festivus, fr. festum holiday, feast.
See feast, and cf. Festivous.]
Pertaining to, or becoming, a feast; festal; joyous; gay;
mirthful; sportive. -- Fes"tive*ly, adv.
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The glad circle round them yield their souls
To festive mirth and wit that knows no gall. --Thomson.
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Festively (gcide) | Festive \Fes"tive\, a. [L. festivus, fr. festum holiday, feast.
See feast, and cf. Festivous.]
Pertaining to, or becoming, a feast; festal; joyous; gay;
mirthful; sportive. -- Fes"tive*ly, adv.
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The glad circle round them yield their souls
To festive mirth and wit that knows no gall. --Thomson.
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fire-resistive (gcide) | fire-resistant \fire-resistant\ fire-resisting \fire-resisting\
fire-resistive \fire-resistive\adj.
Not able to burn or able to burn only with difficulty.
[Narrower terms: {noncombustible (vs. combustible),
incombustible}]
Syn: fireproof.
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Hastive (gcide) | Hastive \Has"tive\ (-t[i^]v), a. [OF. hastif. See Haste, n.,
and cf. Hastif.]
Forward; early; -- said of fruits. [Obs.]
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indicative significative suggestive (gcide) | meaningful \meaningful\ adj.
Having a meaning or purpose; having significance; as, a
meaningful explanation; a meaningful discussion; a meaningful
pause; to live a meaningful life. Opposite of meaningless.
[Narrower terms: comprehensible, understandable;
{indicative, significative, suggestive ; {meaty, substantive
; purposeful] Also See: purposeful, significant,
important.
[WordNet 1.5] |
Inexhaustive (gcide) | Inexhaustive \In`ex*haust"ive\, a.
Inexhaustible. --Thomson.
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Infestive (gcide) | Infestive \In*fest"ive\, a. [L. infestivus. See In- not, and
Festive.]
Having no mirth; not festive or merry; dull; cheerless;
gloomy; forlorn. [R.]
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Intempestive (gcide) | Intempestive \In`tem*pes"tive\, a. [L. intempestivus: cf. F.
intempestif. See In- not, and Tempestive.]
Out of season; untimely. [Obs.] --Burton.
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Intempestive bashfulness gets nothing. --Hales.
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Intempestively (gcide) | Intempestively \In`tem*pes"tive*ly\, adv.
Unseasonably. [Obs.]
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Investive (gcide) | Investive \In*vest"ive\, a.
Investing. [R.] --Mir. for Mag.
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Mastives (gcide) | Mastiff \Mas"tiff\, n.; pl. Mastiffs. [Mastives is irregular
and unusual.] [Prob. fr. Prov. E. masty, adj., large, n., a
great dog, prob. fr. mast fruit, and hence, lit., fattened
with mast. There is perh. confusion with OF. mestif mongrel;
cf. also F. m[^a]tin mastiff, OF. mastin.] (Zool.)
A breed of large dogs noted for strength and courage. There
are various strains, differing in form and color, and
characteristic of different countries.
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Mastiff bat (Zool.), any bat of the genus Molossus; so
called because the face somewhat resembles that of a
mastiff.
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Persistive (gcide) | Persistive \Per*sist"ive\, a.
See Persistent. --Shak.
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Resistive (gcide) | Resistive \Re*sist"ive\ (-?v), a.
Serving to resist. --B. Jonsosn.
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Restive (gcide) | Restive \Rest"ive\ (r?st"?v), a. [OF. restif, F. r['e]tif, fr.
L. restare to stay back, withstand, resist. See Rest
remainder, and cf. Restiff.] .
Unwilling to go on; obstinate in refusing to move forward;
stubborn; drawing back.
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Restive or resty, drawing back, instead of going
forward, as some horses do. --E. Philips
(1658).
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The people remarked with awe and wonder that the beasts
which were to drag him [Abraham Holmes] to the gallows
became restive, and went back. --Macaulay.
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2. Inactive; sluggish. [Obs.] --Sir T. Browne.
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3. Impatient under coercion, chastisement, or opposition;
refractory.
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4. Uneasy; restless; averse to standing still; fidgeting
about; -- applied especially to horses. --Trench.
[1913 Webster] -- Rest"ive, adv. -- Rest"ive*ness, n.
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Restiveness (gcide) | Restive \Rest"ive\ (r?st"?v), a. [OF. restif, F. r['e]tif, fr.
L. restare to stay back, withstand, resist. See Rest
remainder, and cf. Restiff.] .
Unwilling to go on; obstinate in refusing to move forward;
stubborn; drawing back.
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Restive or resty, drawing back, instead of going
forward, as some horses do. --E. Philips
(1658).
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The people remarked with awe and wonder that the beasts
which were to drag him [Abraham Holmes] to the gallows
became restive, and went back. --Macaulay.
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2. Inactive; sluggish. [Obs.] --Sir T. Browne.
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3. Impatient under coercion, chastisement, or opposition;
refractory.
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4. Uneasy; restless; averse to standing still; fidgeting
about; -- applied especially to horses. --Trench.
[1913 Webster] -- Rest"ive, adv. -- Rest"ive*ness, n.
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Stived (gcide) | Stive \Stive\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Stived; p. pr. & vb. n.
Stiving.] [Probably fr. F. estiver to compress, stow, L.
stipare: cf. It. stivare, Sp. estivar. Cf. Stevedore,
Stiff.]
To stuff; to crowd; to fill full; hence, to make hot and
close; to render stifling. --Sandys.
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His chamber was commonly stived with friends or suitors
of one kind or other. --Sir H.
Wotton.
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Stiver (gcide) | Stiver \Sti"ver\, n. [D. stuiver; akin to G. st["u]ber, Dan.
styver, Sw. styfver.]
A Dutch coin, and money of account, of the value of two
cents, or about one penny sterling; hence, figuratively,
anything of little worth.
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