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Word Meanings - CONCREATE - Book Publishers vocabulary database

To create at the same time. If God did concreate grace with Adam. Jer. Taylor.

Related words: (words related to CONCREATE)

  • GRACE
    The divine favor toward man; the mercy of God, as distinguished from His justice; also, any benefits His mercy imparts; divine love or pardon; a state of acceptance with God; enjoyment of the divine favor. And if by grace, then is it no more of
  • GRACEFUL
    Displaying grace or beauty in form or action; elegant; easy; agreeable in appearance; as, a graceful walk, deportment, speaker, air, act, speech. High o'er the rest in arms the graceful Turnus rode. Dryden. -- Grace"ful*ly, adv. Grace"ful*ness, n.
  • GRACELESS
    1. Wanting in grace or excellence; departed from, or deprived of, divine grace; hence, depraved; corrupt. "In a graceless age." Milton. 2. Unfortunate. Cf. Grace, n., 4. Chaucer. -- Grace"less*ly, adv. -- Grace"less-ness, n.
  • CONCREATE
    To create at the same time. If God did concreate grace with Adam. Jer. Taylor.
  • TAYLOR-WHITE PROCESS
    A process (invented about 1899 by Frederick W. Taylor and Maunsel B. White) for giving toughness to self-hardening steels. The steel is heated almost to fusion, cooled to a temperature of from 700º to 850º C. in molten lead, further cooled in
  • CREATE
    Created; composed; begotte. Hearts create of duty and zeal. Shak. (more info) akin to Gr. k to make, and to E. ending -cracy in aristocracy, also
  • GRACED
    Endowed with grace; beautiful; full of graces; honorable. Shak.
  • UNCREATED
    1. Deprived of existence; annihilated. Beau. & Fl. 2. Not yet created; as, misery uncreated. Milton. 3. Not existing by creation; self-existent; eternal; as, God is an uncreated being. Locke.
  • PROCREATE
    To generate and produce; to beget; to engender.
  • RE-CREATE
    To create or form anew. On opening the campaign of 1776, instead of reënforcing, it was necessary to re-create, the army. Marshall.
  • INCREATE
    To create within.
  • OCREATE; OCREATED
    See OCHREATED
  • AGGRACE
    To favor; to grace. "That knight so much aggraced." Spenser.
  • EXCREATE
    To spit out; to discharge from the throat by hawking and spitting. Cockeram.
  • UNCREATE
    To deprive of existence; to annihilate. Who can uncreate thee, thou shalt know. Milton.
  • SCAPEGRACE
    A graceless, unprincipled person; one who is wild and reckless. Beaconsfield.
  • BONGRACE
    A projecting bonnet or shade to protect the complexion; also, a wide-brimmed hat.
  • OVERGRACE
    To grace or honor exceedingly or beyond desert. Beau. & Fl.
  • DISGRACE
    1. The condition of being out of favor; loss of favor, regard, or respect. Macduff lives in disgrace. Shak. 2. The state of being dishonored, or covered with shame; dishonor; shame; ignominy. To tumble down thy husband and thyself From top of honor
  • BOWGRACE
    A frame or fender of rope or junk, laid out at the sides or bows of a vessel to secure it from injury by floating ice.
  • UNGRACEFUL
    Not graceful; not marked with ease and dignity; deficient in beauty and elegance; inelegant; awkward; as, ungraceful manners; ungraceful speech. The other oak remaining a blackened and ungraceful trunk. Sir W. Scott. -- Un*grace"ful*ly, adv. --

 

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