SOPITE
SO'PITE, verb transitive To lay asleep. [Not in use.]
American Dictionary of the English Language, Noah Webster, 1828.
6.599 entradas
SO'PITE, verb transitive To lay asleep. [Not in use.]
SOPI'TION, noun [Latin sopio, to lay asleep.] Sleep. [Not in use.]
SOP'ORATE, verb transitive [Latin soporo.] To lay asleep. [Not in use.]
SOPORIF'EROUS, adjective [Latin soporifer; sopor, asleep, and fero, to bring; from sopio, to lull to sleep.] Causing sleep, or tending to produce it; narcotic; opiate; anodyne; ...
SOPORIF'EROUSNESS, noun The quality of causing sleep.
SOPORIF'IC, adjective [Latin sopor, sleep, and facio, to make.] Causing sleep; tending to cause sleep; narcotic; as the soporific virtues of opium.SOPORIF'IC, noun A medicine, d...
SO'POROUS, adjective [Latin soporus, from sopor, sleep.] Causing sleep; sleepy.
SOP'PED, participle passive [from sop.] Dipped in liquid food.
SOP'PER, noun [from sop.] One that sops or dips in liquor some thing to be eaten.
SOR'ABLY, adverb Suitably; fitly.
SORB, noun [Latin sorbum, sorbus.] The service tree or its fruit.
SOR'BATE, noun A compound of sorbic acid with a base.
SORB'ENT. [See absorbent.]
SORB'IC, adjective Pertaining to the sorbus or service tree; as sorbic acid.
SORB'ILE, adjective [Latin sorbeo.] That may be drank or sipped. [Not in use.]SORBI'TION, noun [Latin sorbitio.] The act or drinking or sipped. [Not in use.]
SORBON'ICAL, adjective Belonging to a sorbonist.
SOR'BONIST, noun A doctor of the Sorbonne in the university of Paris. Sorbonne is the place of meeting, and hence is used for the whole faculty of theology.
SOR'CERER, [Latin sors, lot.] A conjurer; an enchanter; a magician. The Egyptian sorcerers contended with Moses.
SOR'CERESS, noun A female magician or enchantress.
SOR'CEROUS, adjective Containing enchantments.
SOR'CERY, noun Magic; enchantment; witchcraft; divination be the assistance of evil spirits, or the power of commanding evil spirits. Adder's wisdom I have learn'd to fence my e...
SORD, for sward, is not vulgar. [See Sward.]
SORD'AWALITE, noun A mineral so named from Sordawald, in Wibourg. It is nearly black, rarely gray or green.
SOR'DES, noun [Latin] Foul matter; excretions; dregs; filthy, useless or rejected matter of any kind.
SOR'DET, SOR'DINE, noun [Latin surdus, deaf.] A little pipe in the mouth of a trumpet to make it sound lower or shriller.
SOR'DID, adjective [Latin sordidus, form sordes, filth.]1. Filthy; foul; dirty; gross. There Charon stands a sordid god. [This literal sense is nearly obsolete.]2. Vile; base; m...
SOR'DIDLY, adverb Meanly; basely; covetously.