REPLACED
REPLA'CED, participle passive Put again in a former place; supplied by a substitute. Thus in petrification, the animal or vegetable substance gradually wastes away, and is repla...
American Dictionary of the English Language, Noah Webster, 1828.
3.173 entries
REPLA'CED, participle passive Put again in a former place; supplied by a substitute. Thus in petrification, the animal or vegetable substance gradually wastes away, and is repla...
REPLA'CEMENT, noun The act of replacing.
REPLA'CING, participle present tense Putting again in a former place; supplying the place of with a substitute.
REPLA'IT, verb transitive [re and plait.] To plait or fold again; to fold one part over another again and again.
REPLA'ITED, participle passive Folded again or often.
REPLA'ITING, participle present tense Folding again or often.
REPLANT', verb transitive To plant again.
REPLANT'ABLE, adjective That may be planted again.
REPLANTA'TION, noun The act of planting again.
REPLANT'ED, participle passive Planted anew.
REPLANT'ING, participle present tense Planting again.
REPLE'AD, verb transitive [re and plead.] To plead again.
REPLE'ADER, noun In law, a second pleading or course of pleadings; or the power of pleading again.Whenever a repleader is granted, the pleadings must begin de novo.
REPLEN'ISH, verb transitive [Latin re and plenus, full.]1. To fill; to stock with numbers or abundance. The magazines are replenished with corn. The springs are replenished with...
REPLEN'ISHED, participle passive Filled; abundantly supplied.
REPLEN'ISHING, participle present tense Filling; supplying with abundance.
REPLE'TE, adjective [Latin repletus; re and pleo, to fill.] Completely filled; full.His words replete with guile.
REPLE'TION, noun [Latin repletio.]1. The state of being completely filled; or superabundant fullness.2. In medicine, fullness of blood; plethorn.
REPLE'TIVE, adjective Filling; replenishing.
REPLEV'IABLE, adjective [See Replevy.] In law, that may be replevied.
REPLEV'IED, participle passive Taken by a writ of replevin.
REPLEV'IN, noun [See Replevy.]1. An action or remedy granted on a distress, by which a person whose cattle or goods are distrained, has them returned to his own possession upon ...
REPLEV'ISABLE, adjective That may be replevied; but little used, being superseded by repleviable.
REPLEV'Y, verb transitive [re and pledge. Law Latin replegiabilis and replegiare.]1. To take back, by a writ for that purpose cattle or goods that have been distrained, upon giv...
REPLEV'YING, participle present tense Retaking a distress. [See Replevy.]
REPLICA'TION, noun [Latin replicatio. See Reply.]1. An answer; a reply. Particularly,2. In law pleadings, the reply of the plaintiff to the defendant's plea.3. Return or repercu...
REPLI'ER, noun One who answers; he that speaks or writes in return to something spoken or written.