Word Meanings - LITTERY - Book Publishers vocabulary database
Covered or encumbered with litter; consisting of or constituting litter.
Related words: (words related to LITTERY)
- COVER-POINT
 The fielder in the games of cricket and lacrosse who supports "point."
- CONSISTENTLY
 In a consistent manner.
- COVERLET
 The uppermost cover of a bed or of any piece of furniture. Lay her in lilies and in violets . . . And odored sheets and arras coverlets. Spenser.
- CONSTITUTIONALIST
 One who advocates a constitutional form of government; a constitutionalist.
- COVERCLE
 A small cover; a lid. Sir T. Browne.
- CONSIST
 1. To stand firm; to be in a fixed or permanent state, as a body composed of parts in union or connection; to hold together; to be; to exist; to subsist; to be supported and maintained. He is before all things, and by him all things consist. Col.
- CONSTITUTION
 1. The act or process of constituting; the action of enacting, establishing, or appointing; enactment; establishment; formation. 2. The state of being; that form of being, or structure and connection of parts, which constitutes and characterizes
- CONSISTORIAN
 Pertaining to a Presbyterian consistory; -- a contemptuous term of 17th century controversy. You fall next on the consistorian schismatics; for so you call Presbyterians. Milton.
- COVERT BARON
 Under the protection of a husband; married. Burrill.
- CONSISTENCE; CONSISTENCY
 1. The condition of standing or adhering together, or being fixed in union, as the parts of a body; existence; firmness; coherence; solidity. Water, being divided, maketh many circles, till it restore itself to the natural consistence. Bacon. We
- CONSISTORY
 The spiritual court of a diocesan bishop held before his chancellor or commissioner in his cathedral church or elsewhere. Hook. (more info) consistorium a place of assembly, the place where the emperor's council met, fr. consistere: cf.
- COVERTNESS
 Secrecy; privacy.
- CONSTITUTIVE
 1. Tending or assisting to constitute or compose; elemental; essential. An ingredient and constitutive part of every virtue. Barrow. 2. Having power to enact, establish, or create; instituting; determining. Sir W. Hamilton.
- COVERER
 One who, or that which, covers.
- LITTERATEUR
 One who occupies himself with literature; a literary man; a literatus. " Befriended by one kind-hearted littérateur after another." C. Kingsley.
- COVERCHIEF
 A covering for the head. Chaucer.
- COVERTLY
 Secretly; in private; insidiously.
- COVER
 operire to cover; probably fr. ob towards, over + the root appearing 1. To overspread the surface of with another; as, to cover wood with paint or lacquer; to cover a table with a cloth. 2. To envelop; to clothe, as with a mantle or cloak. And
- COVERING
 Anything which covers or conceals, as a roof, a screen, a wrapper, clothing, etc. Noah removed the covering of the ark. Gen. viii. 13. They cause the naked to lodge without clothing, that they have no covering in the cold. Job. xxiv. 7. A covering
- COVERAGE
 The aggregate of risks covered by the terms of a contract of insurance.
- RECOVER
 To cover again. Sir W. Scott.
- FLITTERMOUSE
 A bat; -- called also flickermouse, flindermouse, and flintymouse.
- DISENCUMBER
 To free from encumbrance, or from anything which clogs, impedes, or obstructs; to disburden. Owen. I have disencumbered myself from rhyme. Dryden.
- DISCOVERTURE
 A state of being released from coverture; freedom of a woman from the coverture of a husband. (more info) 1. Discovery.
- INCONSISTENTLY
 In an inconsistent manner.
- DISCOVERABLE
 Capable of being discovered, found out, or perceived; as, many minute animals are discoverable only by the help of the microscope; truths discoverable by human industry.
- DISCOVERY
 1. The action of discovering; exposure to view; laying open; showing; as, the discovery of a plot. 2. A making known; revelation; disclosure; as, a bankrupt is bound to make a full discovery of his assets. In the clear discoveries of the next
- IRRECOVERABLE
 Not capable of being recovered, regained, or remedied; irreparable; as, an irrecoverable loss, debt, or injury. That which is past is gone and irrecoverable. Bacon. Syn. -- Irreparable; irretrievable; irremediable; unalterable; incurable; hopeless.
- PHASE SPLITTER
 A device by which a single-phase current is split into two or more currents differing in phase. It is used in starting single-phase induction motors.
- INCONSISTENCY
 1. The quality or state of being inconsistent; discordance in respect to sentiment or action; such contrariety between two things that both can not exist or be true together; disagreement; incompatibility. There is a perfect inconsistency between
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