TIMOUSLY
TIMOUSLY, adverb In good season. [Not in use.]
American Dictionary of the English Language, Noah Webster, 1828.
2.778 entradas
TIMOUSLY, adverb In good season. [Not in use.]
TIN, noun [Latin stannum; stagnum.]1. A white metal, with a slight tinge of yellow. It is soft, non-elastic, very malleable, and when a bar of it is bent near the ear, distingui...
TINCT, verb intransitive [Latin tingo, tinctus.] To stain or color; to imbue.TINCT, noun Stain; color. [Obsolete. We now use tinge and tincture.]
TINC'TURE, noun [Latin tinctura.]1. The finer and more volatile parts of a substance, separated by a menstruum; or an extract of a part of the substance of a body, communicated ...
TINC'TURED, participle passive Tinged; slightly impregnated with something foreign.
TINC'TURING, participle present tense Tinging; imbuing; impregnating with a foreign substance.
TIND, verb transitive [Eng. tine; tinder.] To kindle. obsolete
TIND'ER, noun Something very inflammable used for kindling fire from a spark; as scorched linen.
TIND'ER-BOX, noun [tinder and box.] A box in which tinder is kept.
TIND'ERLIKE, adjective [tinder and like.] Like tinder; very inflammable.
TINE, verb transitive To kindle, to set on fire. [See Tind.]TINE, verb transitive [Latin teneo.] To shut or inclose; to fill. [Not in use or local.]TINE, noun [Latin dens.]1. Th...
TI'NEMAN, noun Anciently an officer of the forest in England, who had the nocturnal care of vert and venison.
TI'NET, noun [tine, to shut, supra.] In old writers, brushwood and thorns for making and repairing hedges.
TINFOIL, noun [tin and Latin folium, a leaf.] Tin reduced to a thin leaf.
TING, noun A sharp sound. [Not in use. Children use ding, dong. See Tingle.]TING, verb intransitive To sound or ring. [Not in use.]
TINGE, verb transitive [Latin tingo; Eng. to dye.] To imbue or impregnate with something foreign; to communicate the qualities of one substance, in some degree, to another, eith...
TING'ED, participle passive Imbued or impregnated with a small portion of something foreign.
TING'ENT, adjective Having the power to tinge.As for the white part, it appeared much less enriched with the tingent property. [Little used.]
TING'ING, participle present tense Imbuing or impregnating with something foreign.TIN'-GLASS, noun Bismuth, which see.
TIN'GLE, verb intransitive [Latin tinnio.]1. To feel a kind of thrilling sound.At which both the ears of every one that heareth it shall tingle 1 Samuel 3:11.2. To feel a sharp ...
TING'LING, participle present tense Having a thrilling sensation.TING'LING, noun A thrilling sensation.
TINK, verb intransitive To make a sharp shrill noise; to tinkle. [The latter is generally used.]
TINK'AL, noun Borax in its crude state or unrefined. It consists of small crystals of a yellowish color, and is unctuous to the feel.
TINK'ER, noun A mender of brass kettles, pans and the like.
TINK'ERLY, adverb In the manner of a tinker.
TINK'LE, verb intransitive1. To make small quick sharp sounds, as by striking on metal; to clink.--And have not charity, I am become as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal. 1 C...
TINK'LING, participle present tense Making a small quick sharp noise.TINK'LING, noun A small quick sharp sound.Making a tinkling with their feet. Isaiah 3:16.