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Word Meanings - START-UP - Book Publishers vocabulary database

1. One who comes suddenly into notice; an upstart. Shak. 2. A kind of high rustic shoe. Drayton. A startuppe, or clownish shoe. Spenser.

Related words: (words related to START-UP)

  • RUSTICAL
    Rustic. "Rustical society." Thackeray. -- Rus"tic*al*ly, adv. -- Rus"tic*al*ness, n.
  • NOTICE
    1. The act of noting, remarking, or observing; observation by the senses or intellect; cognizance; note. How ready is envy to mingle with the notices we take of other persons ! I. Watts. 2. Intelligence, by whatever means communicated; knowledge
  • RUSTICATE
    To go into or reside in the country; to ruralize. Pope.
  • CLOWNISH
    Of or resembling a clown, or characteristic of a clown; ungainly; awkward. "Clownish hands." Spenser. "Clownish mimic." Prior. -- Clown"ish*ly, adv. Syn. -- Coarse; rough; clumsy; awkward; ungainly; rude; uncivil; ill- bred; boorish; rustic;
  • RUSTICITY
    The quality or state of being rustic; rustic manners; rudeness; simplicity; artlessness. The sweetness and rusticity of a pastoral can not be so well expressed in any other tongue as in the Greek, when rightly mixed and qualified with the Doric
  • CLOWNISHNESS
    The manners of a clown; coarseness or rudeness of behavior. That plainness which the alamode people call clownishness. Locke.
  • COMES
    The answer to the theme in a fugue.
  • RUSTICLY
    In a rustic manner; rustically. Chapman.
  • RUSTICATED
    resembling rustic work. See Rustic work , under Rustic.
  • NOTICEABLE
    Capable of being observed; worthy of notice; likely to attract observation; conspicous. A noticeable man, with large gray eyes. Wordsworth.
  • RUSTIC
    1. Of or pertaining to the country; rural; as, the rustic gods of antiquity. Milton. And many a holy text around she strews, That teach the rustic moralist to die. Gray. She had a rustic, woodland air. Wordsworth. 2. Rude; awkward; rough;
  • NOTICER
    One who notices.
  • NOTICEABLY
    In a noticeable manner.
  • COMESSATION
    A reveling; a rioting. Bp. Hall.
  • UPSTART
    To start or spring up suddenly. Spenser. Tennyson.
  • SPENSERIAN
    Of or pertaining to the English poet Spenser; -- specifically applied to the stanza used in his poem "The Faƫrie Queene."
  • RUSTICATION
    Rustic work. (more info) 1. The act of rusticating, or the state of being rusticated; specifically, the punishment of a student for some offence, by compelling him to leave the institution for a time.
  • COMESTIBLE
    Suitable to be eaten; eatable; esculent. Some herbs are most comestible. Sir T. Elyot.
  • DISPENSER
    One who, or that which, dispenses; a distributer; as, a dispenser of favors.
  • FORENOTICE
    Notice or information of an event before it happens; forewarning. Rymer.

 

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