TRAJECTING
TRAJECT'ING, participle present tense Casting through.
American Dictionary of the English Language, Noah Webster, 1828.
2.778 entradas
TRAJECT'ING, participle present tense Casting through.
TRAJEC'TION, noun The act of casting or darting through.1. Transportation.2. Emission.
TRAJECT'ORY, noun The orbit of a comet; the path described by a comet in its motion, which Dr. Halley supposes to be elliptical.
TRALA'TION, noun [from Latin translatio.] A change in the use of a word, or the use of a word in a less proper, but more significant sense.
TRALATI'TIOUS, adjective [Latin translatus, transfero.]Metaphorical; not literal.
TRALATI'TIOUSLY, adverb Metaphorically; not in a literal sense.
TRALIN'EATE, verb transitive [Latin trans and linea, line.] To deviate from any direction. [Not in use.]
TRALU'CENT, adjective [Latin tralucens; trans and luceo.] Transparent; clear.
TRAM'MEL, noun1. A kind of long net for catching birds or fishes.The trammel differs not much from the shape of the bunt.2. A kind of shackles used for regulating the motions of...
TRAM'MELED, participle passive Caught; confined; shackled.1. In the manege, a horse is said to be trammeled when he has blazes or white marks on the fore and hind foot of one side.
TRAM'MELING, participle present tense Catching; confining; shackling.
TRAMON'TANE, noun One living beyond the mountain; a stranger.TRAMON'TANE, adjective [Latin trans, beyond, and mons, mountain.] Lying or being beyond the mountain; foreign; barba...
TRAMP, verb transitive To tread.TRAMP, verb intransitive To travel; to wander or stroll.
TRAMP'ER, noun A stroller; a vagrant or vagabond.
TRAM'PLE, verb transitive1. To tread under foot; especially, to tread upon with pride, contempt, triumph or scorn.Neither cast ye your pearls before swine, lest they trample the...
TRAM'PLED, participle passive Trod on; trodden under foot.
TRAM'PLER, noun One that tramples; one that treads down.
TRAM'PLING, participle present tense Treading under foot; prostrating by treading; treading with contempt and insult.
TRANA'TION, noun [Latin trano.] The act of passing over by swimming. [Not in use.]
TR'ANCE, noun tr'ans. [Latin transitus, a passing over; transeo, to pass over; trans and eo.] An ecstasy; a state in which the soul seems to have passed out of the body into cel...
TR'ANCED, adjective Lying in a trance or ecstasy.And there I left him tranc'd.
TRAN'GRAM, noun An odd thing intricately contrived. [It is said to be a cant word, and is not used.]Trannel, used by Moxon, is a mistake for tree-nail, pronounced by ship-builde...
TRAN'QUIL, adjective [Latin tranquillus.] Quiet; calm; undisturbed; peaceful; not agitated. The atmosphere is tranquil The state is tranquil A tranquil retirement is desirable; ...
TRAN'QUILIZE, verb transitive To quiet; to allay when agitated; to compose; to make calm and peaceful; as, to tranquilize a state disturbed by factions or civil commotions; to t...
TRAN'QUILIZED, participle passive Quieted; calmed; composed.
TRAN'QUILIZING, participle present tense Quieting; composing.
TRANQUIL'LITY, noun [Latin tranquillitas.] Quietness; a calm state; freedom from disturbance or agitation. We speak of the tranquillity of public affairs, of the state, of the w...