Word Meanings - DETERGENT - Book Publishers vocabulary database
Cleansing; purging. -- n.
Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of DETERGENT)
Related words: (words related to DETERGENT)
- PURIFY
 1. To make pure or clear from material defilement, admixture, or imperfection; to free from extraneous or noxious matter; as, to purify liquors or metals; to purify the blood; to purify the air. 2. Hence, in figurative uses: To free from guilt
- ABSTERSIVENESS
 The quality of being abstersive. Fuller.
- ABSTERSIVE
 Cleansing; purging. Bacon.
- SCOURAGE
 Refuse water after scouring.
- DETERGENT
 Cleansing; purging. -- n.
- SCOURSE
 See SCORSE
- SCOURGER
 One who scourges or punishes; one who afflicts severely. The West must own the scourger of the world. Byron.
- SCOUR
 To pass swiftly over; to brush along; to traverse or search thoroughly; as, to scour the coast. Not so when swift Camilla scours the plain. Pope. Scouring barrel, a tumbling barrel. See under Tumbling. -- Scouring cinder , a basic slag,
- SCOURER
 1. One who, or that which, scours. 2. A rover or footpad; a prowling robber. In those days of highwaymen and scourers. Macaulay.
- SCOURGE
 stripped off , fr. excoriate to strip, to skin. See 1. A lash; a strap or cord; especially, a lash used to inflict pain or punishment; an instrument of punishment or discipline; a whip. Up to coach then goes The observed maid, takes
- DISCOURAGING
 Causing or indicating discouragement. -- Dis*cour"a*ging*ly, adv.
- DISCOURSIVE
 1. Reasoning; characterized by reasoning; passing from premises to consequences; discursive. Milton. 2. Containing dialogue or conversation; interlocutory. The epic is everywhere interlaced with dialogue or discoursive scenes. Dryden. 3. Inclined
- DISCOURAGEMENT
 1. The act of discouraging, or the state of being discouraged; depression or weakening of confidence; dejection. 2. That which discourages; that which deters, or tends to deter, from an undertaking, or from the prosecution of anything; a determent;
- DISCOURSE
 fr. discurrere, discursum, to run to and fro, to discourse; dis- + 1. The power of the mind to reason or infer by running, as it were, from one fact or reason to another, and deriving a conclusion; an exercise or act of this power; reasoning; range
- REPURIFY
 To purify again.
- OFFSCOURING
 That which is scoured off; hence, refuse; rejected matter; that which is vile or despised. Lam. iii. 45.
- DISCOURSER
 1. One who discourse; a narrator; a speaker; an haranguer. In his conversation he was the most clear discourser. Milward. 2. The writer of a treatise or dissertation. Philologers and critical discoursers. Sir T. Browne.
- DISCOURE
 To discover. That none might her discoure. Spenser.
- DISCOURTESY
 Rudeness of behavior or language; ill manners; manifestation of disrespect; incivility. Be calm in arguing; for fierceness makes Error a fault, and truth discourtesy. Herbert.
- DISCOURTEOUS
 Uncivil; rude; wanting in courtesy or good manners; uncourteous. -- Dis*cour"te*ous*ly, adv. -- Dis*cour"te*ous*ness, n.
- DISCOURAGER
 One who discourages. The promoter of truth and the discourager of error. Sir G. C. Lewis.
- DISCOURTSHIP
 Want of courtesy. B. Jonson.
- DISCOURAGEABLE
 Capable of being discouraged; easily disheartened. Bp. Hall.
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