RAGG
RAGG, noun Rowley ragg a species of silicious stone, of a dusky or dark gray color, with shining crystals, of a granular texture, and by exposure to the air acquiring an ochery ...
American Dictionary of the English Language, Noah Webster, 1828.
3.173 entradas
RAGG, noun Rowley ragg a species of silicious stone, of a dusky or dark gray color, with shining crystals, of a granular texture, and by exposure to the air acquiring an ochery ...
RAG'GED, adjective [from rag.]1. Rent or worn into tatters, or till its texture is broken; as a ragged coat; a ragged sail.2. Broken with rough edges; uneven; as a ragged rock.3...
RAG'GEDNESS, noun1. The state of being dressed in tattered clothes.2. The state of being rough or broken irregularly; as the raggedness of a cliff.
RA'GING, participle present tense [from rage.]1. Acting with violence or fury.2.adjective Furious; impetuous; vehemently driven or agitated; as the raging sea or tempest.RA'GING...
RA'GINGLY, adverb With fury; with violent impetuosity.
RAG'MAN, noun A man who collects or deals in rags, the materials of paper.
RAGMAN'S-ROLL, noun A roll or register of the value of benefices in Scotland, made by Ragimund, a legate of the pope, according to which the clergy were afterwards taxed by the ...
RAGOO',RAGOUT, noun A sauce or seasoning for exciting a languid appetite; or a high seasoned dish, prepared with fish, flesh, greens and the like, stewed with salt, pepper, clov...
RAGOUT, n. A sauce or seasoning for exciting a languid appetite; or a high seasoned dish, prepared with fish, flesh, greens and the like, stewed with salt, pepper, cloves, &c.
RAG'STONE, noun A stone of the silicious kind, so named from its rough fracture. It is of a gray color, the texture obscurely laminar or rather fibrous, the lamins consisting of...
RAG'WORT, noun A plant of the genus Senecio.
RAIL, noun1. A cross beam fixed at the ends in two upright posts.[In New England, this is never called a beam; pieces of timber of the proper size for rails are called scantling...
RAIL-BIRD, noun A bird of the genus Cuculus.
RA'ILER, noun One who scoffs, insults, censures or reproaches with opprobrious language.
RA'ILING, participle present tense1. Clamoring with insulting language; uttering reproachful words.2.adjective Expressing reproach; insulting; as a railing accusation. 2 Peter 2...
RA'ILINGLY, adverb With scoffing or insulting language.
RA'ILLERY, nounBanter; jesting language; good humored pleasantry or slight satire; satirical merriment.Let raillery be without malice or heat.- Studies employed on low objects; ...
RA'ILLEUR, noun A banterer; a jester; a mocker. [Not English nor in use.]
RA'IMENT, noun [for arrayment. See Array and Ray.]1. Clothing in general; vestments; vesture; garments.Genesis 24:53. Deuteronomy 8:4.Living, both food and raiment she supplies....
RAIN, verb intransitive [It seems that rain is contracted from regen. It is the Gr. to rain to water, which we retain in brook, and the Latins, by dropping the prefix, in rigo, ...
RA'IN-DEER, nounThe rane, a species of the cervine genus. [See Rane.]
RA'IN-WATER, noun Water that has fallen from the clouds.
RA'INBAT, adjective Beaten or injured by the rain. [Not used.]
RA'INBOW, noun A bow, or an arch of a circle, consisting of all the colors formed by the refraction and reflection of rays of light from drops of rain or vapor, appearing in the...
RA'ININESS, noun [from rainy.] The state of being rainy.
RA'INY, adjective Abounding with rain; wet; showery; as rainy weather; a rainy day or season.
RAISE, verb transitive raze. [This word occurs often in the Gothic version of the gospels, Luke 3:8. John 6:40, 44. These verbs appear to be the Latin gradior, gressus, without ...