bell notificationshomepageloginedit profileclubsdmBox

Search word meanings:

Word Meanings - FUSURE - Book Publishers vocabulary database

Act of fusing; fusion.

Related words: (words related to FUSURE)

  • FUSE PLUG; FUZE PLUG
    A plug fitted to the fuse hole of a shell to hold the fuse. 2. A fusible plug that screws into a receptacle, used as a fuse in electric wiring.
  • FUSILE
    See A
  • FUSURE
    Act of fusing; fusion.
  • FUSCIN
    A brown, nitrogenous pigment contained in the retinal epithelium; a variety of melanin.
  • FUSION
    The union, or binding together, of adjacent parts or tissues. (more info) 1. The act or operation of melting or rendering fluid by heat; the act of melting together; as, the fusion of metals. 2. The state of being melted or dissolved by heat; a
  • FUSTIGATE
    To cudgel. Bailey.
  • FUSIL
    1. Capable of being melted or rendered fluid by heat; fusible. "A kind of fusil marble" Woodward. 2. Running or flowing, as a liquid. "A fusil sea." J. Philips. 3. Formed by melting and pouring into a mold; cast; founded. Milton.
  • FUSTILUG; FUSTILUGS
    A gross, fat, unwieldy person. F. Junius.
  • FUSTINESS
    A fusty state or quality; moldiness; mustiness; an ill smell from moldiness.
  • FUSILEER; FUSILIER
    Formerly, a soldier armed with a fusil. Hence, in the plural: A title now borne by some regiments and companies; as, "The Royal Fusiliers," etc.
  • FUSCATION
    A darkening; obscurity; obfuscation. Blount.
  • FUSSILY
    In a fussy manner. Byron.
  • FUSIFORM
    Shaped like a spindle; tapering at each end; as, a fusiform root; a fusiform cell.
  • FUSIBLE
    CapabIe of being melted or liquefied. Fusible metal, any alloy of different metals capable of being easily fused, especially an alloy of five parts of bismuth, three of lead, and two of tin, which melts at a temperature below that of boiling water.
  • FUSE
    1. To liquefy by heat; to render fiuid; to dissolve; to melt. 2. To unite or blend, as if melted together. Whose fancy fuses old and new. Tennyson.
  • FUSTIC
    The wood of the Maclura tinctoria, a tree growing in the West Note: Other kinds of yellow wood are often called fustic; as that of species of Xanthoxylum, and especially the Rhus Cotinus, which is sometimes called young fustic to distinguish it
  • FUSTET
    The wood of the Rhus Cptinus or Venice sumach, a shrub of Southern Europe, which yields a fine orange color, which, however, is not durable without a mordant. Ure.
  • FUSAIN
    Fine charcoal of willow wood, used as a drawing implement. A drawing made with it. See Charcoal, n. 2, and Charcoal drawing, under Charcoal.
  • FUSEL; FUSEL OIL
    A hot, acrid, oily liquid, accompanying many alcoholic liquors , as an undesirable ingredient, and consisting of several of the higher alcohols and compound ethers, but particularly of amyl alcohol; hence, specifically applied to amyl alcohol.
  • FUSTED
    Moldy; ill-smelling. Bp. Hall.
  • AFFUSE
    To pour out or upon. I first affused water upon the compressed beans. Boyle.
  • PERFUSIVE
    Of a nature to flow over, or to spread through.
  • DEFUSE
    To disorder; to make shapeless. Shak.
  • CONFUSIVE
    Confusing; having a tendency to confusion. Bp. Hall.
  • CONFUS
    Confused, disturbed. Chaucer.
  • INFUSCATION
    The act of darkening, or state of being dark; darkness; obscurity. Johnson.
  • EFFUSION
    1. The act of pouring out; as, effusion of water, of blood, of grace, of words, and the like. To save the effusion of my people's blood. Dryden. 2. That which is poured out, literally or figuratively. Wash me with that precious effusion, and I
  • DIFFUSIVENESS
    The quality or state of being diffusive or diffuse; extensiveness; expansion; dispersion. Especially of style: Diffuseness; want of conciseness; prolixity. The fault that I find with a modern legend, it its diffusiveness. Addison.
  • PROFUSENESS
    Extravagance; profusion. Hospitality sometimes degenerates into profuseness. Atterbury.
  • DIFFUSE
    To pour out and cause to spread, as a fluid; to cause to flow on all sides; to send out, or extend, in all directions; to spread; to circulate; to disseminate; to scatter; as to diffuse information. Thence diffuse His good to worlds and
  • DIFFUSED
    Spread abroad; dispersed; loose; flowing; diffuse. It grew to be a widely diffused opinion. Hawthorne. -- Dif*fus"ed*ly, adv. -- Dif*fus"ed*ness, n.
  • DIFFUSATE
    Material which, in the process of catalysis, has diffused or passed through the separating membrane.
  • INFUSIVE
    Having the power of infusion; inspiring; influencing. The infusive force of Spirit on man. Thomson.

 

Back to top