INEXPRESSIVE
INEXPRESS'IVE, adjective Not tending to express; not expressing; inexpressible.
American Dictionary of the English Language, Noah Webster, 1828.
3.400 entradas
INEXPRESS'IVE, adjective Not tending to express; not expressing; inexpressible.
INEXPUG'NABLE, adjective [Latin inexpugnabilis; in and expugno; ex and pugno, to fight.] Not to be subdued by force; not to be taken by assault; impregnable.
INEXSU'PERABLE, adjective [Latin inexsuperabilis.]Not to be passed over or surmounted.
INEXTEND'ED, adjective Having no extension.
INEXTEN'SION, noun [in and extension.]Want of extension; unextended state.
INEXTERM'INABLE, adjective [in and exterminable.]That cannot be exterminated.
INEXTINCT', adjective Not quenched; not extinct.
INEXTIN'GUISHABLE, adjective [in and extinguishable.] That cannot be extinguished; unquenchable; as inextinguishable flame, thirst or desire.
INEXTIR'PABLE, adjective That cannot be extirpated.
INEX'TRICABLE, adjective [Latin inextricabilis. See Extricate.]1. Not to be disentangled; not to be freed from intricacy or perplexity; as an inextricable maze or difficulty.2. ...
INEX'TRICABLENESS, noun The state of being inextricable.
INEX'TRICABLY, adverb To a degree of perplexity not to be disentangled.
INEYE, verb transitive To inoculate; as a tree or a bud.
INFAB'RICATED, adjective Unfabricated; unwrought. [Not used.]
INFALLIBIL'ITYINFAL'LIBLE, adjective [Latin fallo.]1. Not fallible; not capable of erring; entirely exempt from liability to mistake; applied to persons. No man is infallible; t...
INFAL'LIBLE, a. [L. fallo.]1. Not fallible; not capable of erring; entirely exempt from liability to mistake; applied to persons. No man is infallible; to be infallible is the p...
INFAL'LIBLENESS, noun [from infallible.] The quality of being incapable of error or mistake; entire exemption from liability to error; inerrability. No human being can justly la...
INFAL'LIBLY, adverb Without a possibility of erring or mistaking.1. Certainly; without a possibility of failure. Our Savior has directed us to conduct that will infallibly rende...
INFA'ME, verb transitive To defame. [Not used.]
IN'FAMOUS, adjective [Latin infamis; infamo, to defame; in and fama, fame.]1. Of ill report, emphatically; having a reputation of the worst kind; publicly branded with odium for...
IN'FAMOUSLY, adverb In a manner or degree to render infamous; scandalously; disgracefully; shamefully.1. With open reproach.
IN'FAMOUSNESSIN'FAMY, noun [Latin infamia; in and fama, report.]1. Total loss of reputation; public disgrace. Avoid the crimes and vices which expose men to infamy.2. Qualities ...
IN'FAMY, n. [L. infamia; in and fama, report.]1. Total loss of reputation; public disgrace. Avoid the crimes and vices which expose men to infamy.2. Qualities which are detested...
IN'FANCY, noun [Latin infantia. See Infant.]1. The first part of life, beginning at the birth. In common usage, infancy extends not beyond the first year or two of life, but the...
INFAND'OUS, adjective [Latin infandus.]Too odious to be expressed. [Not in use.]
INFANG'THEF, noun In English law, the privilege granted to lords to judge thieves taken on their manors, or within their franchises.
IN'FANT, noun [Latin infans; in and fans, speaking, fari, to speak.]1. A child in the first period of life, beginning at his birth; a young babe. In common usage, a child ceases...