INTEGRALITY
INTEGRAL'ITY, noun Entireness. [Not used.]
American Dictionary of the English Language, Noah Webster, 1828.
3.400 entries
INTEGRAL'ITY, noun Entireness. [Not used.]
IN'TEGRALLY, adverb Wholly; completely.
IN'TEGRANT, adjective Making part of a whole; necessary to constitute an entire thing.Integrant particles of bodies, are those into which bodies are reduced by solution or mecha...
IN'TEGRATE, verb transitive [Latin integro.] To renew; to restore; to perfect; to make a thing entire.
IN'TEGRATED, participle passive Made entire.
INTEGRA'TION, noun The act of making entire.
INTEG'RITY, noun [Latin integritas, from integer.]1. Wholeness; entireness; unbroken state. The constitution of the U.States guaranties to each state the integrity of its territ...
INTEGUMA'TION, noun [Latin intego, to cover.]That part of physiology, which treats of the integuments of animals and plants.
INTEG'UMENT, noun [Latin integumentum, intego, to cover; in and tego. See Deck.] That which naturally invests or covers another thing; but appropriately and chiefly, in anatomy,...
IN'TELLECT, noun [Latin intellectus, from intelligo, to understand. See Intelligence.] That faculty of the human soul or mind, which receives or comprehends the ideas communicat...
INTELLEC'TION, noun [Latin intellectio, from intelligo.]The act of understanding; simple apprehension of ideas.
INTELLECT'IVE, adjective Having power to understand.1. Produced by the understanding.2. To be perceived by the understanding, not by the senses.
INTELLECT'UAL, adjective1. Relating to the intellect or understanding; belonging to the mind; performed by the understanding; mental; as intellectual power or operations.2. Idea...
INTELLECT'UALIST, noun One who overrates the understanding.
INTELLECTUAL'ITY, noun The state of intellectual power. [Not used.]
INTELLECT'UALLY, adverb By means of the understanding.
INTEL'LIGENCE, noun [Latin intelligentia, from intelligo, to understand. This verb is probably composed of in, inter, or intus, within, and lego to collect. The primary sense of...
INTEL'LIGENCE-OFFICE, n. An office or place where information may be obtained, particularly respecting servants to be hired.
INTEL'LIGENCED, participle passive Informed; instructed. [Little used.]
INTEL'LIGENCER, noun One who sends or conveys intelligence; one who gives notice of private or distant transactions; a messenger.1. A public paper; a newspaper.
INTEL'LIGENCING, participle present tense or adjective Giving or conveying notice to from a distance.
INTEL'LIGENT, adjective [Latin intelligens.]1. Endowed with the faculty of understanding or reason. Man is an intelligent being.2. Knowing; understanding; well informed; skilled...
INTELLIGEN'TIAL, adjective Consisting of unbodied mind.Food alike those pureIntelligential substances require.1. Intellectual; exercising understanding.
INTELLIGIBIL'ITYINTEL'LIGIBLE, adjective [Latin intelligibilis.] That may be understood or comprehended; as an intelligible account. The rules of human duty are intelligible to ...
INTEL'LIGIBLE, a. [L. intelligibilis.] That may be understood or comprehended; as an intelligible account. The rules of human duty are intelligible to minds of the smallest capa...
INTEL'LIGIBLENESS, noun [from intelligible.] The quality of state of being intelligible; the possibility of being understood.
INTEL'LIGIBLY, adverb In a manner to be understood; clearly; plainly; as, to write or speak intelligibly