Word Meanings - FARCEMENT - Book Publishers vocabulary database
Stuffing; forcemeat. They spoil a good dish with . . . unsavory farcements. Feltham.
Related words: (words related to FARCEMENT)
- STUFFING
Any seasoning preparation used to stuff meat; especially, a composition of bread, condiments, spices, etc.; forcemeat; dressing. 3. A mixture of oil and tallow used in softening and dressing leather. Stuffing box, a device for rendering a joint - SPOILER
1. One who spoils; a plunderer; a pillager; a robber; a despoiler. 2. One who corrupts, mars, or renders useless. - SPOILSMAN
One who serves a cause or a party for a share of the spoils; in United States politics, one who makes or recognizes a demand for public office on the ground of partisan service; also, one who sanctions such a policy in appointments to the public - SPOILABLE
Capable of being spoiled. - STUFFINESS
The quality of being stuffy. - SPOILSMONGER
One who promises or distributes public offices and their emoluments as the price of services to a party or its leaders. - STUFFER
One who, or that which, stuffs. - SPOIL
1. To plunder; to strip by violence; to pillage; to rob; -- with of before the name of the thing taken; as, to spoil one of his goods or possession. "Ye shall spoil the Egyptians." Ex. iii. 22. My sons their old, unhappy sire despise, Spoiled of - SPOILFUL
Wasteful; rapacious. - STUFFY
1. Stout; mettlesome; resolute. Jamieson. 2. Angry and obstinate; sulky. 3. Ill-ventilated; close. - SPOILFIVE
A certain game at cards in which, if no player wins three of the five tricks possible on any deal, the game is said to be spoiled. - STUFF
A melted mass of turpentine, tallow, etc., with which the masts, sides, and bottom of a ship are smeared for lubrication. Ham. Nav. Encyc. 8. Paper stock ground ready for use. Note: When partly ground, called half stuff. Knight. Clear stuff. See - FORCEMEAT
Meat chopped fine and highly seasoned, either served up alone, or used as a stuffing. - BREADSTUFF
Grain, flour, or meal of which bread is made. - DESPOIL
despoliatum; de- + spoliare to strip, rob, spolium spoil, booty. Cf. 1. To strip, as of clothing; to divest or unclothe. Chaucer. 2. To deprive for spoil; to plunder; to rob; to pillage; to strip; to divest; -- usually followed by of. The clothed - DYESTUFF
A material used for dyeing. - SPLIT STUFF
Timber sawn into lengths and then split. - DESPOILMENT
Despoliation. - DESPOILER
One who despoils.