Word Meanings - GLOBULET - Book Publishers vocabulary database
A little globule. Crabb.
Related words: (words related to GLOBULET)
- CRABBER
One who catches crabs. - GLOBULE
A minute spherical or rounded structure; as blood, lymph, and pus corpuscles, minute fungi, spores, etc. 3. A little pill or pellet used by homeopathists. (more info) 1. A little globe; a small particle of matter, of a spherical form. Globules - CRABBISH
Somewhat sour or cross. The wips of the most crabbish Satyristes. Decker. - LITTLENESS
The state or quality of being little; as, littleness of size, thought, duration, power, etc. Syn. -- Smallness; slightness; inconsiderableness; narrowness; insignificance; meanness; penuriousness. - CRABBING
The foghting of hawks with each other. (more info) 1. The act or art of catching crabs. - LITTLE-EASE
An old slang name for the pillory, stocks, etc., of a prison. Latimer. - CRABBED
1. Characterized by or manifesting, sourness, peevishness, or moroseness; harsh; cross; cynical; -- applied to feelings, disposition, or manners. Crabbed age and youth can not live together. Shak. 2. Characterized by harshness or roughness; - CRABBY
Crabbed; difficult, or perplexing. "Persius is crabby, because ancient." Marston. - GLOBULET
A little globule. Crabb. - LITTLE
place being supplied by less, or, rarely, lesser. See Lesser. For the superlative least is used, the regular form, littlest, occurring very rarely, except in some of the English provinces, and occasionally in colloquial language. " Where love is - DO-LITTLE
One who performs little though professing much. Great talkers are commonly dolittles. Bp. Richardson. - SCRABBLE
1. To scrape, paw, or scratch with the hands; to proceed by clawing with the hands and feet; to scramble; as, to scrabble up a cliff or a tree. Now after a while Little-faith came to himself, and getting up made shift to scrabble on his - SCRABBED EGGS
A Lenten dish, composed of eggs boiled hard, chopped, and seasoned with butter, salt, and pepper. Halliwell. - BELITTLE
To make little or less in a moral sense; to speak of in a depreciatory or contemptuous way. T. Jefferson.