SYMBOLISM
SYM'BOLISM, noun Among chimists, consent of parts.
American Dictionary of the English Language, Noah Webster, 1828.
6.599 entradas
SYM'BOLISM, noun Among chimists, consent of parts.
SYMBOLIZA'TION, noun [See Symbolize.] The act of symbolizing; resemblance in properties.
SYM'BOLIZE, verb intransitive To have a resemblance of qualities or properties.The pleasing of color symbolizeth with the pleasing of a single tone to the ear, but the pleasing ...
SYM'BOLIZING, participle present tense Representing by some properties in common; making to agree or resemble in properties.
SYM'METRAL, adjective [from symmetry.] Commensurable.
SYMME'TRIANSYMMET'RICAL, adjective [from symmetry.] Proportional in its parts; having its parts in due proportion, as to dimensions; as a symmetrical body or building.
SYMMET'RICAL, a. [from symmetry.] Proportional in its parts; having its parts in due proportion, as to dimensions; as a symmetrical body or building.
SYMMET'RICALLY, adverb With due proportion of parts.
SYM'METRIST, noun [from symmetry.] One eminently studious of proportion or symmetry of parts.
SYM'METRIZE, verb transitive To make proportional in its parts; to reduce to symmetry.
SYM'METRY, noun [Gr. with, together, and to measure.] A due proportion of the several parts of a body to each other; adaptation of the dimensions of the several parts of a thing...
SYMPATHET'ICSYMPATHET'ICAL, adjective See Sympathy.]1. Pertaining to sympathy.2. Having common feeling with another; susceptible of being affected by feelings like those of anot...
SYMPATHET'ICAL, a. See Sympathy.]1. Pertaining to sympathy.2. Having common feeling with another; susceptible of being affected by feelings like those of another, or of feelings...
SYMPATHET'ICALLY, adverb With sympathy or common feeling; inconsequence of sympathy; by communication from something else.
SYM'PATHIZE, verb intransitive1. To have a common feeling, as of bodily pleasure or pain.The mind will sympathize so much with the anguish and debility of the body, that it will...
SYM'PATHY, noun [Gr. with, and passion.]1. Fellow feeling; the quality of being affected by the affection of another, with feelings by the affection of another, with feelings co...
SYMPHO'NIOUS, adjective [from symphony.] Agreeing in sound; accordant; harmonious.--SoundsSymphonious of ten thousand harps.
SYM'PHONY, noun [Latin symphonia; Gr. with, and voice.]1. A consonance or harmony of sounds agreeable to the ear, whether the sounds are vocal or instrumental, or both.The trump...
SYM'PHYSIS, noun [Gr. together, and to grow.]1. In anatomy, the union of bones by cartilage; a connection of bones without a movable joint.2. In surgery, a coalescence of a natu...
SYMPOSIAC, adjective sympo'ziac. [Gr. a drinking together; together, and to drink.] Pertaining to compotations and merry-making; happening where company is drinking together; as...
SYMPOSIUM, noun sympo'zium. [supra.] A drinking together; a merry feast.
SYMP'TOM, noun [Gr. a falling or accident, to fall.]1. Properly, something that happens in concurrence with another thing, as an attendant. Hence in medicine, any affection whic...
SYMPTOMAT'ICSYMPTOMAT'ICAL, adjective Pertaining to symptoms; happening in concurrence with something; indicating the existence of something else.1. In medicine, a symptomatic d...
SYMPTOMAT'ICAL, a. Pertaining to symptoms; happening in concurrence with something; indicating the existence of something else.1. In medicine, a symptomatic disease is one which...
SYMPTOMAT'ICALLY, adverb By means of symptoms; in the nature of symptoms.
SYMPTOMATOL'OGY, noun [Gr. discourse.] The doctrine of symptoms; that part of the science of medicine which treats of the symptoms of diseases.
SYNAGOG'ICAL, adjective [from synagogue.] Pertaining to a synagogue.