INCANTATORY
INCANT'ATORY, adjective Dealing by enchantment; magical.
American Dictionary of the English Language, Noah Webster, 1828.
3.400 entradas
INCANT'ATORY, adjective Dealing by enchantment; magical.
INCANT'ING, adjective Enchanting. [Not used.]
INCAN'TON, verb transitive [in and canton.] To unite to a canton or separate community.
INCAPABIL'ITYINCA'PABLE, adjective1. Wanting capacity sufficient; not having room sufficient to contain or hold; followed by of. We say, a vessel is incapable of containing or h...
INCA'PABLE, a.1. Wanting capacity sufficient; not having room sufficient to contain or hold; followed by of. We say, a vessel is incapable of containing or holding a certain qua...
INCA'PABLENESS, noun [from incapable.] The quality of being incapable; natural incapacity or want of power; as the incapableness of a child to comprehend logical syllogisms.1. W...
INCAPA'CIOUS, adjective [in and capacious.] Not capacious; not large or spacious; narrow; of small content; as an incapacious soul.
INCAPA'CIOUSNESS, noun Narrowness; want of containing space.
INCAPAC'ITATE, verb transitive [in and capacitate.]1. To deprive of capacity or natural power of learning, knowing, understanding or performing. Old age and infirmity often inca...
INCAPACITA'TION, noun Want of capacity; disqualification.
INCAPAC'ITY, noun [in and capacity.] Want of capacity, intellectual power, or the power of receiving, containing or understanding; applied to the mind, and it may be natural or ...
INC'ARCERATE, verb transitive [Latin incarcero; in and carcer, a prison; Eng. cark, care; showing the primary sense is to press or strain.]1. To imprison; to confine in a jail.2...
INCARCERA'TION, noun The act of imprisoning or confining; imprisonment.
INC'ARN, verb transitive [Latin incarno; in and caro, carnis, flesh.]To cover with flesh; to invest with flesh.INC'ARN, verb intransitive To breed flesh.
INC'ARNADINE, adjective [Latin in and caro, flesh.]Flesh-colored; of a carnation color; pale red.INC'ARNADINE, verb transitive To dye red or flesh-color. [Little used.]
INC'ARNATE, verb transitive [Latin incarno; in and caro, flesh.]To clothe with flesh; to embody in flesh.INC'ARNATE, adjective Invested with flesh; embodied in flesh; a the inca...
INCARNA'TION, noun The act of clothing with flesh.1. The act of assuming flesh, or of taking a human body and the nature of man; as the incarnation of the Son of God.2. In surge...
INC'ARNATIVE, v. Causing new flesh to grow; healing.INC'ARNATIVE, noun A medicine that tends to promote the growth of new flesh, and assist nature in the healing of wounds.
INCA'SE, verb transitive [in and case.] To inclose in a case.1. To inclose; to cover or surround with something solid.Rich plates of gold the folding doors incase
INCA'SED, participle passive Inclosed as in a case, sheath or box.
INCA'SING, participle present tense Inclosing as in a case.
INC'ASK, verb transitive To put into a cask.
INCAS'TELLATED, adjective Confined or inclosed in a castle.
INCATENA'TION, noun [Latin catena, a chain.]The act of linking together.
INCAU'TIOUS, adjective [in and cautious.] Not cautious; unwary; not circumspect; heedless; not attending to the circumstances on which safety and interest depend; as incautious ...
INCAU'TIOUSLY, adverb Unwarily; heedlessly; without due circumspection.
INCAU'TIOUSNESS, noun Want of caution; unwariness; want of foresight.