CONCATENATE
CONCATENATE, verb transitive [Latin A chain.] To link together; to unite in a successive series or chain, as things depending on each other.
American Dictionary of the English Language, Noah Webster, 1828.
6.176 entradas
CONCATENATE, verb transitive [Latin A chain.] To link together; to unite in a successive series or chain, as things depending on each other.
CONCATENATED, participle passive Linked together; united in a series.
CONCATENATION, noun A series of links united; a successive series or order of things connected or depending on each other; as a concatenation of causes.
CONCAUSE, noun Joint cause. [Not used.]
CONCAVATION, noun [See Concave.] The act of making concave.
CONCAVE, adjective [Latin Hollow. See Cave.]1. Hollow, and arched or rounded, as the inner surface of a spherical body; opposed to convex; as a concave glass.2. Hollow, in a gen...
CONCAVENESS, noun Hollowness.
CONCAVITY, noun Hollowness; the internal surface of a hollow spherical body, or a body of other figure; or the space within such body.
CONCAVO-CONCAVE, adjective Concave or hollow on both surfaces.
CONCAVO-CONVEX, adjective Concave on one side, and convex on the other. [See Convex.]
CONCAVOUS, adjective [Latin] Concave, which see.
CONCAVOUSLY, adverb With hollowness; in a manner to discover the internal surface of a hollow sphere.
CONCEAL, verb transitive [Latin To withhold from sight,; G., To conceal and to heal; the primary sense is to strain, hold, stop, restrain, make fast or strong, all from the same...
CONCEALABLE, adjective That may be concealed; hid or kept close.
CONCEALED, participle passive Kept close or secret; hid; withdrawn from sight; covered.
CONCEALER, noun One who conceals; as the concealer of a crime.
CONCEALING, participle present tense Keeping close or secret; forbearing to disclose; hiding; covering.CONCEALING, noun A hiding; a withholding from disclosure.
CONCEALMENT, noun1. Forbearance of disclosure; a keeping close or secret; as the concealment of opinions or passions.2. The act of hiding, covering, or withdrawing from sight; a...
CONCEDE, verb transitive [Latin To yield, give way, depart, desist.]1. To yield; to admit as true, just or proper; to grant; to let pass undisputed; as, this must not be concede...
CONCEDED, participle passive Yielded; admitted; granted; as, a question, proposition, fact or statement is conceded
CONCEDING, participle present tense Yielding; admitting; granting.
CONCEIT, noun [Latin, to take or seize.]1. Conception; that which is conceived, imagined, or formed in the mind; idea; thought; image.In laughing there ever precedeth a conceit ...
CONCEITED, participle passive1. Conceived; imagined; fancied.2. Endowed with fancy, or imagination.3. Entertaining a flattering opinion of ones self; having a vain or too high c...
CONCEITEDLY, adverb In a conceited manner; fancifully; whimsically.CONCEITEDLY dress her.
CONCEITEDNESS, noun The state of being conceited; conceit; vanity; an overweening fondness of ones own person or endowments.
CONCEITLESS, adjective Of dull conception; stupid; dull of apprehension. [Not in use.]
CONCEIVABLE, adjective [See Conceive.]1. That may be imagined, or thought; capable of being framed in the mind by the fancy or imagination.If it were possible to contrive an inv...