Teaze-hole
Teaze″–hole′ (?), n. [Corrupted fr. F. tisard fire door.] (Glass Works) The opening in the furnaces through which fuel is introduced.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, C. & G. Merriam Co., 1913.
6.184 entradas
Teaze″–hole′ (?), n. [Corrupted fr. F. tisard fire door.] (Glass Works) The opening in the furnaces through which fuel is introduced.
Tea″zel (?), n. & v. t. See Teasel.
Tea″zer (?), n. [Corrupted fr. F. tiser to feed a fire.] The stoker or fireman of a furnace, as in glass works. Tomlinson.
Tea″zle (?), n. & v. t. See Teasel.
Te″beth (?), n. The tenth month of the Jewish ecclesiastical year, answering to a part of December with a part of January. Esther ii. 16.
Tech″i‐ly (?), adv. In a techy manner.
Tech″i‐ness, n. The quality or state of being techy.
Tech″nic (?), a. Technical.
Tech″nic, n. [See Technical, a.] 1. The method of performance in any art; technical skill; artistic execution; technique.They illustrate the method of nature, not the technic of...
Tech″nic‐al (?), a. [Gr. �, fr. � an art, probably from the same root as �, �, to bring forth, produce, and perhaps akin to E. text: cf. F. technique.] Of or pertaining to the u...
Tech′ni‐cal″i‐ty (?), n.; pl.Technicalities (�). 1. The quality or state of being technical; technicalness.2. That which is technical, or peculiar to any trade, profession, sect...
Tech″nic‐al‐ly (?), adv. In a technical manner; according to the signification of terms as used in any art, business, or profession.
Tech″nic‐al‐ness, n. The quality or state of being technical; technicality.
Tech″nic‐als (?), n. pl. Those things which pertain to the practical part of an art, science, or profession; technical terms; technics.
Tech‐ni″cian (?), n. A technicist; esp., one skilled particularly in the technical details of his work.
Tech″ni‐cist (?), n. One skilled to technics or in one or more of the practical arts.
Tech′ni‐co‐log″ic‐al (?), a. Technological; technical. Dr. J. Scott.
Tech′ni‐col″o‐gy (?), n. Technology.
Tech″nics (?), n. The doctrine of arts in general; such branches of learning as respect the arts.
Tech″ni‐phone (?), n. [Gr. � art + -phone.] (Music) A dumb gymnastic apparatus for training the hands of pianists and organists, as to a legato touch.
Tech′nique″ (?), n. Same as Technic, n.
Tech″nism (?), n. Technicality.
Tech‐nog″ra‐phy (?), n. [Gr. � art, skill, craft + graph.] Description of the arts and crafts of tribes and peoples. — Tech′no‐graph″ic, Tech′no‐graph″ic‐al (#), a.
Tech′no‐log″ic (?), a. Technological.
Tech′no‐log″ic‐al (?), a. [Cf. F. technologique.] Of or pertaining to technology.
Tech‐nol″o‐gist (?), n. One skilled in technology; one who treats of arts, or of the terms of arts.
Tech‐nol″o‐gy (?), n. [Gr. � an art + -logy; cf. Gr. � systematic treatment: cf. F. technologie.] Industrial science; the science of systematic knowledge of the industrial arts,...