Word Meanings - CELEBRATION - Book Publishers vocabulary database
The act, process, or time of celebrating. His memory deserving a particular celebration. Clarendok. Celebration of Mass is equivalent to offering Mass Cath. Dict. To hasten the celebration of their marriage. Sir P. Sidney.
Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of CELEBRATION)
- Memorial
- Monument
- record
- memento
- celebration
- remembrance
- relic
- inscription
- Observance
- Attention
- fulfilment
- respect
- performance
- ceremony
- custom
- form
- rule
- practice
- Rite
- Form
- observance
- usage
- Solemnity
- Celebration
- rite
- office
- function
- pomp
- parade
- seriousness
- pomposity
- gravity
- sacredness
- awe
- sanctity
- impressiveness
- imposingness
Possible antonyms: (opposite words of CELEBRATION)
Related words: (words related to CELEBRATION)
- DISREGARDFULLY
 Negligently; heedlessly.
- OFFICEHOLDER
 An officer, particularly one in the civil service; a placeman.
- SUPPRESSOR
 One who suppresses.
- RELICT
 A woman whose husband is dead; a widow. Eli dying without issue, Jacob was obbliged by law to marry his relict, and so to raise up seed to his brother Eli. South.
- RESPECT
 An expression of respect of deference; regards; as, to send one's respects to another. 4. Reputation; repute. Many of the best respect in Rome. Shak. 5. Relation; reference; regard. They believed but one Supreme Deity, which, with respect to the
- IMPOSINGNESS
 The quality of being imposing.
- MEMORIAL DAY
 A day, May 30, appointed for commemorating, by decorating their graves with flowers, by patriotic exercises, etc., the dead soldiers and sailors who served the Civil War in the United States; Decoration Day. It is a legal holiday in most of the
- FUNCTION; FUNCTIONATE
 To execute or perform a function; to transact one's regular or appointed business.
- RESPECTER
 One who respects. A respecter of persons, one who regards or judges with partiality. Of a truth I perceive that God is no respecter of persons. Acts x.
- CONTEMNER
 One who contemns; a despiser; a scorner. "Contemners of the gods." South.
- PRACTICER
 1. One who practices, or puts in practice; one who customarily performs certain acts. South. 2. One who exercises a profession; a practitioner. 3. One who uses art or stratagem. B. Jonson.
- INSCRIPTION
 A line of division or intersection; as, the tendinous inscriptions, or intersections, of a muscle. 4. An address, consignment, or informal dedication, as of a book to a person, as a mark of respect or an invitation of patronage. (more info) 1.
- MEMENTO MORI
 Lit., remember to die, i.e., that you must die; a warning to be prepared for death; an object, as a death's-head or a personal ornament, usually emblematic, used as a reminder of death.
- CUSTOMARY
 A book containing laws and usages, or customs; as, the Customary of the Normans. Cowell.
- CELEBRATION
 The act, process, or time of celebrating. His memory deserving a particular celebration. Clarendok. Celebration of Mass is equivalent to offering Mass Cath. Dict. To hasten the celebration of their marriage. Sir P. Sidney.
- MEMORIALIZER
 One who petitions by a memorial. T. Hook.
- MEMORIALIZE
 To address or petition by a memorial; to present a memorial to; as, to memorialize the legislature. T. Hook.
- CUSTOMABLE
 1. Customary. Sir T. More. 2. Subject to the payment of customs; dutiable.
- OFFICE WIRE
 Copper wire with a strong but light insulation, used in wiring houses, etc.
- FUNCTION
 The appropriate action of any special organ or part of an animal or vegetable organism; as, the function of the heart or the limbs; the function of leaves, sap, roots, etc.; life is the sum of the functions of the various organs and parts of the
- POST OFFICE
 See POST
- ACCUSTOMARILY
 Customarily.
- DISRESPECTABILITY
 Want of respectability. Thackeray.
- ACCUSTOMEDNESS
 Habituation. Accustomedness to sin hardens the heart. Bp. Pearce.
- BOOKING OFFICE
 1. An office where passengers, baggage, etc., are registered for conveyance, as by railway or steamship. 2. An office where passage tickets are sold.
- CROWN OFFICE
 The criminal branch of the Court of King's or Queen's Bench, commonly called the crown side of the court, which takes cognizance of all criminal cases. Burrill.
- INSUPPRESSIBLE
 That can not be suppressed or concealed; irrepressible. Young. -- In`sup*press"i*bly, adv.
- UNREMEMBRANCE
 Want of remembrance; forgetfulness. I. Watts.
- BY-RESPECT
 Private end or view; by-interest. Dryden.
- DISACCUSTOM
 To destroy the force of habit in; to wean from a custom. Johnson.
- CUSTOM
 Long-established practice, considered as unwritten law, and resting for authority on long consent; usage. See Usage, and Prescription. Note: Usage is a fact. Custom is a law. There can be no custom without usage, though there may be usage without
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