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Word Meanings - MORTIFIED - Book Publishers vocabulary database

of Mortify.

Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of MORTIFIED)

Related words: (words related to MORTIFIED)

  • DEJECTION
    1. A casting down; depression. Hallywell. 2. The act of humbling or abasing one's self. Adoration implies submission and dejection. Bp. Pearson. 3. Lowness of spirits occasioned by grief or misfortune; mental depression; melancholy. What besides,
  • DEJECTORY
    1. Having power, or tending, to cast down. 2. Promoting evacuations by stool. Ferrand.
  • VEXILLAR; VEXILLARY
    Of or pertaining to the vexillum, or upper petal of papilionaceous flowers. Vexilary æstivation , a mode of æstivation in which one large upper petal folds over, and covers, the other smaller petals, as in most papilionaceous plants. (more info)
  • GRIEVE
    1. To occasion grief to; to wound the sensibilities of; to make sorrowful; to cause to suffer; to affect; to hurt; to try. Grieve not the Holy Spirit of God. Eph. iv. 30. The maidens grieved themselves at my concern. Cowper, 2. To sorrow over;
  • MORTIFIER
    One who, or that which, mortifies.
  • AFFLICTIVELY
    In an afflictive manner.
  • GRIEVABLE
    Lamentable.
  • AFFLICTIVE
    Giving pain; causing continued or repeated pain or grief; distressing. "Jove's afflictive hand." Pope. Spreads slow disease, and darts afflictive pain. Prior.
  • AFFLICTING
    Grievously painful; distressing; afflictive; as, an afflicting event. -- Af*flict"ing*ly, adv.
  • VEXINGLY
    In a vexing manner; so as to vex, tease, or irritate. Tatler.
  • AFFLICTION
    1. The cause of continued pain of body or mind, as sickness, losses, etc.; an instance of grievous distress; a pain or grief. To repay that money will be a biting affliction. Shak. 2. The state of being afflicted; a state of pain, distress, or
  • PAINTING
    The work of the painter; also, any work of art in which objects are represented in color on a flat surface; a colored representation of any object or scene; a picture. 3. Color laid on; paint. Shak. 4. A depicting by words; vivid representation
  • PAINTER
    A rope at the bow of a boat, used to fasten it to anything. Totten. (more info) panthera, L. panther a hunting net, fr. Gr. ; painteir a net, gin,
  • PAINTERSHIP
    The state or position of being a painter. Br. Gardiner.
  • VEXILLUM
    The upper petal of a papilionaceous flower; the standard. (more info) A flag or standard. A company of troops serving under one standard. A banner. The sign of the cross.
  • WOE-BEGONE
    Beset or overwhelmed with woe; immersed in grief or sorrow; woeful. Chaucer. So woe-begone was he with pains of love. Fairfax.
  • VEXILLATION
    A company of troops under one vexillum.
  • PAINTED
    Marked with bright colors; as, the painted turtle; painted bunting. Painted beauty , a handsome American butterfly , having a variety of bright colors, -- Painted cup , any plant of an American genus of herbs in which the bracts are
  • AFFLICTIONLESS
    Free from affliction.
  • PAINFUL
    1. Full of pain; causing uneasiness or distress, either physical or mental; afflictive; disquieting; distressing Addison. 2. Requiring labor or toil; difficult; executed with laborious effort; as a painful service; a painful march. 3. Painstaking;
  • GAINPAIN
    Bread-gainer; -- a term applied in the Middle Ages to the sword of a hired soldier.
  • AFTERPAINS
    The pains which succeed childbirth, as in expelling the afterbirth.
  • REPAINT
    To paint anew or again; as, to repaint a house; to repaint the ground of a picture.
  • CONVEXED
    Made convex; protuberant in a spherical form. Sir T. Browne.
  • AGGRIEVANCE
    Oppression; hardship; injury; grievance.
  • CONVEXEDNESS
    Convexity.
  • ENGRIEVE
    To grieve. Spenser.
  • CONVEX
    Rising or swelling into a spherical or rounded form; regularly protuberant or bulging; -- said of a spherical surface or curved line when viewed from without, in opposition to concave. Drops of water naturally form themselves into figures with a
  • OVERPAINT
    To color or describe too strongly. Sir W. Raleigh.

 

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