TRICKED
TRICK'ED, participle passive Cheated; deceived; dressed.
American Dictionary of the English Language, Noah Webster, 1828.
2.778 entradas
TRICK'ED, participle passive Cheated; deceived; dressed.
TRICK'ERTRICK'ERY, noun The art of dressing up; artifice; stratagem.
TRICK'ERY, n. The art of dressing up; artifice; stratagem.
TRICK'ING, participle present tense Deceiving; cheating; defrauding.1. Dressing; decorating.TRICK'ING, noun Dress; ornament.
TRICK'ISH, adjective Artful in making bargains; given to deception and cheating; knavish.
TRICK'LE, verb intransitive [allied perhaps to Gr. to run, and a diminutive.]To flow in a small gentle stream; to run down; as, tears trickle down the cheek; water trickles from...
TRICK'LING, participle present tense Flowing down in a small gentle stream.TRICK'LING, noun The act of flowing in a small gentle stream.He wakened by the trickling of his blood.
TRICK'MENT, noun Decoration. [Not used.]
TRICK'STER, noun One who tricks; a deceiver; a cheat.TRICK'ER, noun A trigger. [See Trigger.]
TRICK'SY, adjective [from trick.] Pretty; brisk. [Not much used.]TRICK'-TRACK, noun A game at tables.
TRICLIN'IARY, adjective [Latin tricliniaris, from triclinium, a couch to recline on at dinner.] Pertaining to a couch for dining, or to the ancient mode of reclining at table.
TRICOC'COUS, adjective [Latin tres, three, and coccus, a berry.] A tricoccous or three-grained capsule is one which is swelling out in three protuberances, internally divided in...
TRICOR'PORAL, adjective [Latin tricorpor; tres and corpus.] Having three bodies.
TRICUS'PIDATE, adjective [Latin tres, three, and cuspis, a point.]In botany, three-pointed; ending in three points; as a tricuspidate stamen.
TRIDAC'TYLOUS, adjective [Gr. three, and a toe.] Having three toes.
TRIDE, adjective Among hunters, short and ready; fleet; as a tride pace.
TRI'DENT, noun [Latin tridens; tres, three, and dens, tooth.]In mythology, a kind of scepter or spear with three prongs, which the fables of antiquity put into the hands of Nept...
TRIDENT'ATE, adjective [Latin tres and dens, tooth.] Having three teeth.
TRI'DENTED, adjective Having three teeth or prongs.
TRIDIAPA'SON, noun [tri and diapason.] In music, a triple octave or twenty second.
TRI'DING. [See Trithing.]
TRIDODECAHE'DRAL, adjective [Gr. three, and dodecahedral.]In crystallography, presenting three ranges of faces, one above another, each containing twelve faces.
TRID'UAN, adjective [Latin triduum; tres and dies, day.] Lasting three days, or happening every third day. [Little used.]
TRIEN'NIAL, adjective [Latin triennis, triennium; tres, three, and annus, year.]1. Continuing three years; as triennial parliaments.2. Happening every three years; as triennial ...
TRIEN'NIALLY, adverb Once in three years.
TRI'ER, noun [from try.] One who tries; one who makes experiments; one who examines any thing by a test or standard.1. One who tries judicially; a judge who tries a person or ca...
TRI'ERARCH, noun [Gr. a trireme, and a chief.] In ancient Greece, the commander of a trireme; also, a commissioner who was obliged to build ships and furnish them at his own exp...