SUBGLOBULAR
SUBGLOBULAR, adjective Having a form approaching to globular.
American Dictionary of the English Language, Noah Webster, 1828.
6.599 entradas
SUBGLOBULAR, adjective Having a form approaching to globular.
SUBHASTATION, noun [Latin, under the spear.] A public sale or auction, so called form the Roman practice.
SUBHYDROSULPHURET, noun A compound of sulphurated hydrogen with a base, in a less proportion than in hydrosulphuret.
SUBINDICATION, noun [Latin Sub and indico.] The act of indication by signs.
SUBINFEUDATION, noun [sub and infeudation. See Feud.]1. In law, the act of enfeoffing by a tenant or feoffee, who holds lands of the crown; the act of a greater baron, who grant...
SUBINGRESSION, noun [Latin Sub and ingressus.] Secret entrance. [Not in use.]
SUBITANEOUS, adjective [Latin] Sudden; hasty.
SUBITANY, adjective Sudden. [Not in use.]
SUBJACENT, adjective [Latin Sub and jaceo, to lie.]1. Lying under or below.2. Being in a lower situation, though not directly beneath. A man placed on a hill, surveys the subjac...
SUBJECT, adjective1. Placed or situate under.--The eastern tower whose height commands, as subject all the vale, to see the fight.2. Being under the power and dominion of anothe...
SUBJECTED, participle passive Reduced to the dominion of another; enslaved; exposed; submitted; made to undergo.
SUBJECTION, noun1. The act of subduing; the act of vanquishing and bringing under the dominion of another.The conquest of the kingdom and the subjection of the rebels--2. The st...
SUBJECTIVE, adjective Relating to the subject, as opposed to the object.Certainty--is distinguished into objective and subjective; objective, is when the proposition is certainl...
SUBJECTIVELY, adverb In relation to the subject.
SUBJOIN, verb transitive [Latin] To add at the end; to add after something else has been said or written; as, to subjoin an argument or reason. [It is never used in a literal ph...
SUBJOINED, participle passive Added after something else said or written.
SUBJOINING, participle present tense Adding after something else said or written.
SUBJUGATE, verb transitive [Latin Sub and jugo, to yoke. See Yoke.] To subdue and bring under the yoke of power or dominion; to conquer by force and compel to submit to the gove...
SUBJUGATED, participle passive Reduced to the absolute control of another.
SUBJUGATING, participle present tense Conquering and bringing under the absolute power of another.
SUBJUGATION, noun The act of subduing and bringing under the power or absolute control of another.
SUBJUNCTION, noun The act of subjoining, or state of being subjoined.
SUBJUNCTIVE, adjective [Latin See Subjoin.]1. Subjoined or added to something before said or written.2. In grammar, designating a form of verbs which follow other verbs or words...
SUBLANATE, adjective [Latin, wool.] In botany, somewhat woolly.
SUBLAPSARIAN, SUBLAPSARY, adjective [Latin, fall.] Done after the apostasy of Adam. [See the Noun.]
SUBLAPSARIAN, SUBLAPSARY adjective [Latin, fall.] Done after the apostasy of Adam. [See the Noun.]SUBLAPSARIAN, noun One who maintains the sublapsarian doctrine, that the sin of...
SUBLATION, noun [Latin] The act of taking or carrying away.