Intercommunicate
In′ter‐com‐mu″ni‐cate (?), v. i. To communicate mutually; to hold mutual communication.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, C. & G. Merriam Co., 1913.
5.230 entradas
In′ter‐com‐mu″ni‐cate (?), v. i. To communicate mutually; to hold mutual communication.
In′ter‐com‐mu″ni‐cate, v. t. To communicate mutually; to interchange. Holland.
In′ter‐com‐mu′ni‐ca″tion (?), n. Mutual communication. Owen.
In′ter‐com‐mun″ion (?), n. Mutual communion; as, an intercommunion of deities. Faber.
In′ter‐com‐mu″ni‐ty (?), n. Intercommunication; community of possessions, religion, etc.In consequence of that intercommunity of paganism... one nation adopted the gods of anoth...
In′ter‐com‐par″i‐son (?), n. Mutual comparison of corresponding parts.
{ In′ter‐con″dy‐lar (?), In′ter‐con″dy‐loid (?), } a.(Anat.) Between condyles; as, the intercondylar fossa or notch of the femur.
In′ter‐con‐nect″ (?), v. t. To join together.
In′ter‐con‐nec″tion (?), n. Connection between; mutual connection.
In′ter‐con′ti‐nen″tal (?), a. Between or among continents; subsisting or carried on between continents; as, intercontinental relations or commerce.
In′ter‐con‐vert″i‐ble (?), a. Convertible the one into the other; as, coin and bank notes are interconvertible.
In′ter‐cos″tal (?), a.(Anat. & Physiol.) Between the ribs; pertaining to, or produced by, the parts between the ribs; as, intercostal respiration, in which the chest is alternat...
In″ter‐course (?), n. [Formerly entercourse, OF. entrecours commerce, exchange, F. entrecours a reciprocal right on neighboring lands, L. intercursus a running between, fr. inte...
In″ter‐crop′ (?), v. t. & i. [imp. & p. p.-cropped (?); p. pr. & vb. n.-cropping.] (Agric.) To cultivate by planting simultaneous crops in alternate rows; as, to intercrop an or...
In″ter‐crop′, n.(Agric.) A crop grown among or between the rows of another crop; a catch crop.
In′ter‐cross″ (?; 115), v. t. & i. [imp. & p. p.Intercrossed (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Intercrossing.]1. To cross each other, as lines.2. (Biol.) To fertilize by the impregnation of o...
In″ter‐cross′ (?), n. The process or result of cross fertilization between different kinds of animals, or different varieties of plants.We have reason to believe that occasional...
In′ter‐cru″ral (?), a.(Anat.) Between crura; — applied especially to the interneural plates in the vertebral column of many cartilaginous fishes.
In′ter‐cur″ (?), v. i. [L. intercurrere. See Intercourse.] To intervene; to come or occur in the meantime. Shelton.
In′ter‐cur″rence (?), n. [See Intercurrent.] A passing or running between; occurrence. Boyle.
In′ter‐cur″rent (?), a. [L. intercurrens, p. pr. of intercurrere: cf. F. intercurrent. See Intercur.]1. Running between or among; intervening. Boyle. Bp. Fell.2. (Med.) (a) Not ...
In′ter‐cur″rent (?), n. Something intervening. Holland.
In′ter‐cu‐ta″ne‐ous (?), a. Subcutaneous.
In′ter‐dash″ (?), v. t. [imp. & p. p.Interdashed (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Interdashing.] To dash between or among; to intersperse. Cowper.
In′ter‐deal″, v. i. To intrigue. Daniel.
In′ter‐de‐nom′i‐na″tion‐al (?), a. Occurring between or among, or common to, different denominations; as, interdenominational fellowship or belief.
In′ter‐den″tal (?), a. 1. Situated between teeth; as, an interdental space, the space between two teeth in a gear wheel.2. (Phon.) Formed between the upper and lower teeth; as, ...