ENTIRE
ENTI'RE, adjective [Latin integer, said to be in neg. and tango, to touch.]1. Whole; undivided; unbroken; complete in its parts.2. Whole; complete; not participated with others....
American Dictionary of the English Language, Noah Webster, 1828.
2.893 entradas
ENTI'RE, adjective [Latin integer, said to be in neg. and tango, to touch.]1. Whole; undivided; unbroken; complete in its parts.2. Whole; complete; not participated with others....
ENTI'RELY, adverb Wholly; completely; fully; as, the money is entirely lost.1. In the whole; without division.Euphrates--falls not entirely into the Persian sea.2. With firm adh...
ENTI'RENESS, noun Completeness; fullness; totality; unbroken form or state; as the entireness of an arch or a bridge.1. Integrity; wholeness of heart; honesty.
ENTI'RETY, noun Wholeness; completeness; as entirety of interest.1. The whole.
EN'TITATIVE, adjective [from entity.] considered by itself. [This word, and entitatively, rarely or never used.]
ENTI'TLE, verb transitive [Latin titulus, a title.]1. To give a title to; to give or prefix a name or appellation; as, to entitle a book, Commentaries on the laws of England.2. ...
ENTI'TLED, participle passive Dignified or distinguished by a title; having a claim as, every good man is entitled to respect.
ENTI'TLING, participle present tense Dignifying or distinguishing by a title; giving a title; giving a claim.
EN'TITY, noun [Low Latin entitas.] Being; existence.Fortune is no real entity1. A real being, or species of being.
ENTOIL', verb transitive [See Toil.] To take with toils; to ensnare; to entangle.
ENTOMB, verb transitive entoom'. [from tomb.] To deposit in a tomb, as a dead body.1. To bury in a grave; to inter.
ENTOMBED, participle passive Deposited in a tomb; buried; interred.
ENTOMBING, participle present tense Depositing in a tomb; burying; interring.
ENTOMBMENT, noun Burial.
EN'TOMOLITE, noun [Gr. insect, stone.]A fossil substance bearing the figure of an insect, or a petrified insect.
ENTOMOLOG'ICAL, adjective Pertaining to the science of insects.
ENTOMOL'OGIST, noun One versed in the science of insects.
ENTOMOL'OGY, noun [Gr. insect, to cut, discourse.]That part of zoology which treats of insects; the science or history and description of insects.
ENTORTILA'TION, noun A turning into a circle.
EN'TRAILEN'TRAILS, noun1. The internal parts of animal bodies; particularly, the guts or intestines; the bowels; used chiefly in the plural.2. The internal parts; as the entrail...
EN'TRAILS, n.1. The internal parts of animal bodies; particularly, the guts or intestines; the bowels; used chiefly in the plural.2. The internal parts; as the entrails of the e...
ENTRAM'MELED, adjective [from trammel.] Curled; frizzed. [Not used.]
EN'TRANCE, noun [Latin intrans, intro.]1. The act of entering into a place; as the entrance of a person into a house or an apartment.2. The power of entering. Let the porter giv...
ENTR'ANSE, verb transitive or i. [Latin transeo.]1. To put in a transe; to withdraw the soul, and leave the body in a kind of dead sleep or insensibility; to make insensible to ...
ENTR'ANSED, participle passive Put in a transe; having the soul withdrawn, and the body left in a state of insensibility; enraptured; ravished.
ENTR'ANSING, participle present tense Carrying away the soul; enrapturing; ravishing.
ENTRAP', verb transitive To catch as in a trap; to insnare; used chiefly or wholly in a figurative sense. To catch by artifices; to involve in difficulties or distresses; to ent...