Word Meanings - KINDLE - Book Publishers vocabulary database
To bring forth young. Shak. The poor beast had but lately kindled. Holland.
Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of KINDLE)
- Anger Enrage
- vex
- kindle
- fret
- ruffle
- chafe
- infuriate
- exasperate
- provoke
- irritate
- incense
- wound
- inflame
- imbitter
- Burn
- Ignite
- brand
- consume
- cauterize
- rage
- glow
- smoulder
- blaze
- flash
- cremate
- incinerate
- Inflame
- Fire
- excite
- rouse
- fan
- madden
- Irritate
- Imbitter
- auger
- enrage
Possible antonyms: (opposite words of KINDLE)
Related words: (words related to KINDLE)
- BRANDLING; BRANDLIN
See WORM - BRAND IRON
1. A branding iron. 2. A trivet to set a pot on. Huloet. 3. The horizontal bar of an andiron. - DECORATE
To deck with that which is becoming, ornamental, or honorary; to adorn; to beautify; to embellish; as, to decorate the person; to decorate an edifice; to decorate a lawn with flowers; to decorate the mind with moral beauties; to decorate a hero - HONORABLE
1. Worthy of honor; fit to be esteemed or regarded; estimable; illustrious. Thy name and honorable family. Shak. 2. High-minded; actuated by principles of honor, or a scrupulous regard to probity, rectitude, or reputation. 3. Proceeding from an - AUGER
nave of a wheel + gar spear, and therefore meaning properly and 1. A carpenter's tool for boring holes larger than those bored by a gimlet. It has a handle placed crosswise by which it is turned with both hands. A pod auger is one with a straight - INFLAMER
The person or thing that inflames. Addison. - IMBITTER
To make bitter; hence, to make distressing or more distressing; to make sad, morose, sour, or malignant. Is there anything that more imbitters the enjoyment of this life than shame South. Imbittered against each other by former contests. Bancroft. - INFLAMED
Represented as burning, or as adorned with tongues of flame. (more info) 1. Set on fire; enkindled; heated; congested; provoked; exasperated. - HONORABLENESS
1. The state of being honorable; eminence; distinction. 2. Conformity to the principles of honor, probity, or moral rectitude; fairness; uprightness; reputableness. - RUFFLEMENT
The act of ruffling. - CHAFER
1. One who chafes. 2. A vessel for heating water; -- hence, a dish or pan. A chafer of water to cool the ends of the irons. Baker. - IMBITTERMENT
The act of imbittering; bitter feeling; embitterment. - IGNITE
To subject to the action of intense heat; to heat strongly; -- often said of incombustible or infusible substances; as, to ignite iron or platinum. (more info) 1. To kindle or set on fire; as, to ignite paper or wood. - BLAZE
1. To mark by chipping off a piece of the bark. I found my way by the blazed trees. Hoffman. 2. To designate by blazing; to mark out, as by blazed trees; as, to blaze a line or path. Champollion died in 1832, having done little more than blaze - INCENSEMENT
Fury; rage; heat; exasperation; as, implacable incensement. Shak. - EXCITEFUL
Full of exciting qualities; as, an exciteful story; exciteful players. Chapman. - CHAFERY
An open furnace or forge, in which blooms are heated before being wrought into bars. - BRANDER
1. One who, or that which, brands; a branding iron. 2. A gridiron. - HONOR
1. Esteem due or paid to worth; high estimation; respect; consideration; reverence; veneration; manifestation of respect or reverence. A prophet is not without honor, save in his own country. Matt. xiii. - BRANDLE
To shake; to totter. - ON-HANGER
A hanger-on. - CONTRADISTINGUISH
To distinguish by a contrast of opposite qualities. These are our complex ideas of soul and body, as contradistinguished. Locke. - DERANGER
One who deranges. - INDISTINGUISHABLE
Not distinguishable; not capable of being perceived, known, or discriminated as separate and distinct; hence, not capable of being perceived or known; as, in the distance the flagship was indisguishable; the two copies were indisguishable in form - MISKINDLE
To kindle amiss; to inflame to a bad purpose; to excite wrongly. - SELF-KINDLED
Kindled of itself, or without extraneous aid or power. Dryden. - WANGER
A pillow for the cheek; a pillow. His bright helm was his wanger. Chaucer. - ROUSE
To pull or haul strongly and all together, as upon a rope, without the assistance of mechanical appliances. - SAUGER
An American fresh-water food fish ; -- called also gray pike, blue pike, hornfish, land pike, sand pike, pickering, and pickerel. - DOUBLEGANGER
An apparition or double of a living person; a doppelgänger. Either you are Hereward, or you are his doubleganger. C. Kingsley. - TROUSERING
Cloth or material for making trousers. - TRUFFLE
Any one of several kinds of roundish, subterranean fungi, usually of a blackish color. The French truffle and the English truffle are much esteemed as articles of food. Truffle worm , the larva of a fly of the genus Leiodes, injurious - TROUSE
Trousers. Spenser.