Word Meanings - EDUCE - Book Publishers vocabulary database
To bring or draw out; to cause to appear; to produce against counter agency or influence; to extract; to evolve; as, to educe a form from matter. The eternal art educing good from ill. Pope. They want to educe and cultivate what is best and noblest
Additional info about word: EDUCE
To bring or draw out; to cause to appear; to produce against counter agency or influence; to extract; to evolve; as, to educe a form from matter. The eternal art educing good from ill. Pope. They want to educe and cultivate what is best and noblest in themselves. M. Arnold.
Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of EDUCE)
- Attenuate
- Educe
- elongate
- reduce
- fine-drawn
- narrow
- contract
- diminish
- compress
- Create
- Form
- produce
- make
- compose
- constitute
- beget
- engender
- generate
- fashion
- originate
- educe
- invent
- imagine
- cause
- Develop
- enucleate
- eliminate
- enunciate
- lay open
- disclose
- unravel
- unfold
- clear
- amplify
- expand
- enlarge
- Elicit
- Draw
- evoke
- express
- extract
- worm
- evolve
- Evoke
- Excite
- provoke
- elicit
- summon
- call out
Possible antonyms: (opposite words of EDUCE)
Related words: (words related to EDUCE)
- INVENTIVE
Able and apt to invent; quick at contrivance; ready at expedients; as, an inventive head or genius. Dryden. -- In*vent"ive*ly, adv. -- In*vent"ive*ness, n. - CAUSEFUL
Having a cause. - ELICITATION
The act of eliciting. Abp. Bramhall. - REVERSED
Annulled and the contrary substituted; as, a reversed judgment or decree. Reversed positive or negative , a picture corresponding with the original in light and shade, but reversed as to right and left. Abney. (more info) 1. Turned side for side, - DIMINISH
To make smaller by a half step; to make less than minor; as, a diminished seventh. 4. To take away; to subtract. Neither shall ye diminish aught from it. Deut. iv. 2. Diminished column, one whose upper diameter is less than the lower. - ATTENUATE; ATTENUATED
1. Made thin or slender. 2. Made thin or less viscid; rarefied. Bacon. - EVOLVENT
The involute of a curve. See Involute, and Evolute. - CLEARLY
In a clear manner. - ELIMINATE
To cause to disappear from an equation; as, to eliminate an unknown quantity. 3. To set aside as unimportant in a process of inductive inquiry; to leave out of consideration. Eliminate errors that have been gathering and accumulating. Lowth. 4. - CLEARER
A tool of which the hemp for lines and twines, used by sailmakers, is finished. (more info) 1. One who, or that which, clears. Gold is a wonderful clearer of the understanding. Addison. - REDUCEMENT
Reduction. Milton. - ENLARGEMENT
1. The act of increasing in size or bulk, real or apparent; the state of being increased; augmentation; further extension; expansion. 2. Expansion or extension, as of the powers of the mind; ennoblement, as of the feelings and character; as, an - CAUSEWAYED; CAUSEYED
Having a raised way ; paved. Sir W. Scott. C. Bronté. - FASHION-MONGERING
Behaving like a fashion-monger. Shak. - FASHIONED
Having a certain style or fashion; as old-fashioned; new- fashioned. - FASHION-MONGER
One who studies the fashions; a fop; a dandy. Marston. - INVENTRESS
A woman who invents. Dryden. - CONTRACTIBLE
Capable of contraction. Small air bladders distable and contractible. Arbuthnot. - PRODUCEMENT
Production. - UNFOLDER
One who, or that which, unfolds. - 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. - DENUNCIATE
To denounce; to condemn publicly or solemnly. To denunciate this new work. Burke. - REVOKER
One who revokes. - PROCREATE
To generate and produce; to beget; to engender. - SEDUCEMENT
1. The act of seducing. 2. The means employed to seduce, as flattery, promises, deception, etc.; arts of enticing or corrupting. Pope. - 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. - REDIMINISH
To diminish again. - SUBCONTRACTOR
One who takes a portion of a contract, as for work, from the principal contractor. - DECOMPOSE
To separate the constituent parts of; to resolve into original elements; to set free from previously existing forms of chemical combination; to bring to dissolution; to rot or decay.