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Word Meanings - PENT - Book Publishers vocabulary database

Penned or shut up; confined; -- often with up. Here in the body pent. J. Montgomery. No pent-up Utica contracts your powers. J. M. Sewall.

Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of PENT)

Related words: (words related to PENT)

  • TIRE
    A tier, row, or rank. See Tier. In posture to displode their second tire Of thunder. Milton.
  • FAINT
    feint, false, faint, F. feint, p.p. of feindre to feign, suppose, 1. Lacking strength; weak; languid; inclined to swoon; as, faint with fatigue, hunger, or thirst. 2. Wanting in courage, spirit, or energy; timorous; cowardly; dejected; depressed;
  • TIRO
    See TYRO
  • TIRING-HOUSE
    A tiring-room. Shak.
  • JADEITE
    See STONE
  • EXHAUSTION
    An ancient geometrical method in which an exhaustive process was employed. It was nearly equivalent to the modern method of limits. Note: The method of exhaustions was applied to great variety of propositions, pertaining to rectifications
  • TIRONIAN
    Of or pertaining to Tiro, or a system of shorthand said to have been introduced by him into ancient Rome.
  • FAINTLY
    In a faint, weak, or timidmanner.
  • TIRAILLEUR
    Formerly, a member of an independent body of marksmen in the French army. They were used sometimes in front of the army to annoy the enemy, sometimes in the rear to check his pursuit. The term is now applied to all troops acting as skirmishers.
  • EXHAUSTIVE
    Serving or tending to exhaust; exhibiting all the facts or arguments; as, an exhaustive method. Ex*haust"ive*ly, adv.
  • EXHAUSTURE
    Exhaustion. Wraxall.
  • TIRE-WOMAN
    1. A lady's maid. Fashionableness of the tire-woman's making. Locke. 2. A dresser in a theater. Simmonds.
  • TIREDNESS
    The state of being tired, or weary.
  • FATIGUE
    1. Weariness from bodily labor or mental exertion; lassitude or exhaustion of strength. 2. The cause of weariness; labor; toil; as, the fatigues of war. Dryden. 3. The weakening of a metal when subjected to repeated vibrations or strains. Fatigue
  • TIRRIT
    A word from the vocabulary of Mrs. Quickly, the hostess in Shakespeare's Henry IV., probably meaning terror.
  • EXHAUSTLESS
    Not be exhausted; inexhaustible; as, an exhaustless fund or store.
  • TIRRALIRRA
    A verbal imitation of a musical sound, as of the note of a lark or a horn. The lark, that tirra lyra chants. Shak. "Tirralira, " by the river, Sang Sir Lancelot. Tennyson.
  • DEBILITATE
    To impair the strength of; to weaken; to enfeeble; as, to debilitate the body by intemperance. Various ails debilitate the mind. Jenyns. The debilitated frame of Mr. Bertram was exhausted by this last effort. Sir W. Scott.
  • JADERY
    The tricks of a jade.
  • JADDING
    See HOLING
  • OVERFATIGUE
    Excessive fatigue.
  • UNATTIRE
    To divest of attire; to undress.
  • SATIRIST
    One who satirizes; especially, one who writes satire. The mighty satirist, who . . . had spread through the Whig ranks. Macaulay.
  • CULTIROSTRES
    A tribe of wading birds including the stork, heron, crane, etc.
  • EXTIRPATORY
    Extirpative.
  • UNWEARY
    To cause to cease being weary; to refresh. Dryden.
  • STIRPS
    Stock; race; family. Blackstone.
  • UNEXHAUSTIBLE
    Inexhaustible.
  • RECTIROSTRAL
    Having a straight beak.
  • INEXHAUSTED
    Not exhausted; not emptied; not spent; not having lost all strength or resources; unexhausted. Dryden.
  • MULTIRAMOSE
    Having many branches.
  • ASTIR
    Stirring; in a state of activity or motion; out of bed.
  • SUMMERSTIR
    To summer-fallow.

 

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