Word Meanings - RESURRECTIONIST - Book Publishers vocabulary database
One who steals bodies from the grave, as for dissection.
Related words: (words related to RESURRECTIONIST)
- GRAVES
 The sediment of melted tallow. Same as Greaves.
- GRAVEDIGGER
 See T (more info) 1. A digger of graves.
- GRAVEL
 A deposit of small calculous concretions in the kidneys and the urinary or gall bladder; also, the disease of which they are a symptom. Gravel powder, a coarse gunpowder; pebble powder. (more info) strand; of Celtic origin; cf. Armor.
- GRAVEN
 Carved. Graven image, an idol; an object of worship carved from wood, stone, etc. "Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image." Ex. xx. 4.
- GRAVEYARD
 A yard or inclosure for the interment of the dead; a cemetery.
- GRAVELING; GRAVELLING
 1. The act of covering with gravel. 2. A layer or coating of gravel .
- GRAVES' DISEASE
 See DISEASE
- GRAVELESS
 Without a grave; unburied.
- GRAVELLINESS
 State of being gravelly.
- GRAVERY
 The act, process, or art, of graving or carving; engraving. Either of picture or gravery and embossing. Holland.
- GRAVESTONE
 A stone laid over, or erected near, a grave, usually with an inscription, to preserve the memory of the dead; a tombstone.
- GRAVELLY
 Abounding with gravel; consisting of gravel; as, a gravelly soil.
- GRAVEOLENT
 Having a rank smell. Boyle.
- DISSECTION
 1. The act of dissecting an animal or plant; as, dissection of the human body was held sacrilege till the time of Francis I. 2. Fig.: The act of separating or dividing for the purpose of critical examination. 3. Anything dissected; especially,
- GRAVENSTEIN
 A kind of fall apple, marked with streaks of deep red and orange, and of excellent flavor and quality.
- GRAVEL-STONE
 A pebble, or small fragment of stone; a calculus.
- GRAVECLOTHES
 The clothes or dress in which the dead are interred.
- GRAVER
 1. One who graves; an engraver or a sculptor; one whose occupation is te cut letters or figures in stone or other hard material. 2. An ergraving or cutting tool; a burin.
- GRAVE
 To clean, as a vessel's bottom, of barnacles, grass, etc., and pay it over with pitch; -- so called because graves or greaves was formerly used for this purpose.
- GRAVELY
 In a grave manner.
- WILDGRAVE
 A waldgrave, or head forest keeper. See Waldgrave. The wildgrave winds his bugle horn. Sir W. Scott.
- PALGRAVE
 See PALSGRAVE
- PORTGREVE; PORTGRAVE
 In old English law, the chief magistrate of a port or maritime town.; a portreeve. Fabyan.
- INGRAVE
 To engrave. "Whose gleaming rind ingrav'n." Tennyson.
- UNGRAVE
 To raise or remove from the grave; to disinter; to untomb; to exhume. Fuller.
- ENGRAVEMENT
 1. Engraving. 2. Engraved work. Barrow.
- MARGRAVE
 march; mark bound, border, march + graf earl, count, lord chief justice; cf. Goth. gagrëfts decree: cf. D. markgraaf, F. margrave. 1. Originally, a lord or keeper of the borders or marches in Germany. 2. The English equivalent of the German title
- PALSGRAVE
 A count or earl who presided in the domestic court, and had the superintendence, of a royal household in Germany. (more info) Hist.)
- -GRAVE
 A final syllable signifying a ruler, as in landgrave, margrave. See Margrave.
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