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Word Meanings - AFORECITED - Book Publishers vocabulary database

Named or quoted before.

Related words: (words related to AFORECITED)

  • QUOTUM
    Part or proportion; quota. "A very small quotum." Max Müller.
  • NAMELESSLY
    In a nameless manner.
  • NAMABLE
    Capable of being named.
  • NAMELESS
    1. Without a name; not having been given a name; as, a nameless star. Waller. 2. Undistinguished; not noted or famous. A nameless dwelling and an unknown name. Harte. 3. Not known or mentioned by name; anonymous; as, a nameless writer."Nameless
  • NAMER
    One who names, or calls by name.
  • NAMAYCUSH
    A large North American lake trout . It is usually spotted with red, and sometimes weighs over forty pounds. Called also Mackinaw trout, lake trout, lake salmon, salmon trout, togue, and tuladi.
  • QUOTIETY
    The relation of an object to number. Krauth-Fleming.
  • BEFORETIME
    Formerly; aforetime. dwelt in their tents, as beforetime. 2 Kings xiii. 5.
  • NAMESAKE
    One that has the same name as another; especially, one called after, or named out of regard to, another.
  • NAMBY-PAMBY
    Affectedly pretty; weakly sentimental; finical; insipid. Thackeray. Namby-pamby madrigals of love. W. Gifford.
  • NAMELY
    1. By name; by particular mention; specifically; especially; expressly. Chaucer. The solitariness of man ...God hath namely and principally ordered to prevent by marriage. Milton. 2. That is to say; to wit; videlicet; -- introducing a particular
  • QUOTE
    A note upon an author. Cotgrave.
  • QUOTABLE
    Capable or worthy of being quoted; as, a quotable writer; a quotable sentence. -- Quot`a*bit"i*ty, n. Poe.
  • NAMATION
    A distraining or levying of a distress; an impounding. Burrill. (more info) Eng. & Scots Law)
  • QUOTATIONIST
    One who makes, or is given to making, quotations. The narrow intellectuals of quotationists. Milton.
  • QUOTA
    A proportional part or share; the share or proportion assigned to each in a division. "Quota of troops and money." Motley. (more info) what in number, of what number, how many, fr. quot how many, akin to
  • BEFOREHAND
    1. In a state of anticipation ore preoccupation; in advance; -- often followed by with. Agricola . . . resolves to be beforehand with the danger. Milton. The last cited author has been beforehand with me. Addison. 2. By way of preparation,
  • QUOTER
    One who quotes the words of another.
  • NAM
    Am not.
  • QUOTH
    Said; spoke; uttered; -- used only in the first and third persons in the past tenses, and always followed by its nominative, the word or words said being the object; as, quoth I. quoth he. "Let me not live, quoth he." Shak. (more info) queedhan,
  • DYNAMO
    A dynamo-electric machine.
  • DYNAMOMETRY
    The art or process of measuring forces doing work.
  • QUOTIDIAN
    Occurring or returning daily; as, a quotidian fever. (more info) daily; quotus how many + dies day: cf. OF. cotidien, F. quotidien.
  • ELECTRO-DYNAMIC; ELECTRO-DYNAMICAL
    Pertaining to the movements or force of electric or galvanic currents; dependent on electric force.
  • DYNAMOMETER
    An apparatus for measuring force or power; especially, muscular effort of men or animals, or the power developed by a motor, or that required to operate machinery. Note: It usually embodies a spring to be compressed or weight to be sustained by
  • SERIES DYNAMO
    A series-wound dynamo. A dynamo running in series with another or others.
  • MONODYNAMISM
    The theory that the various forms of activity in nature are manifestations of the same force. G. H. Lewes.
  • THEREBEFORE; THEREBIFORN
    Before that time; beforehand. Many a winter therebiforn. Chaucer.
  • BEQUOTE
    To quote constantly or with great frequency.
  • HEMADYNAMOMETER
    An instrument by which the pressure of the blood in the arteries, or veins, is measured by the height to which it will raise a column of mercury; -- called also a hæmomanometer.
  • ADYNAMIC
    Pertaining to, or characterized by, debility of the vital powers; weak.
  • ORNAMENTAL
    Serving to ornament; characterized by ornament; beautifying; embellishing. Some think it most ornamental to wear their bracelets on their wrists; others, about their ankles. Sir T. Browne.
  • DYNAMO-ELECTRIC
    Pertaining to the development of electricity, especially electrical currents, by power; producing electricity or electrical currents by mechanical power.
  • BIODYNAMICS
    The doctrine of vital forces or energy.
  • BENAME
    To promise; to name.

 

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