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Word Meanings - STUDIER - Book Publishers vocabulary database

A student. W. Irving. Lipsius was a great studier of the stoical philosophy. Tillotson.

Related words: (words related to STUDIER)

  • GREAT-HEARTED
    1. High-spirited; fearless. Clarendon. 2. Generous; magnanimous; noble.
  • GREAT-GRANDFATHER
    The father of one's grandfather or grandmother.
  • GREAT-GRANDSON
    A son of one's grandson or granddaughter.
  • GREAT-HEARTEDNESS
    The quality of being greathearted; high-mindedness; magnanimity.
  • PHILOSOPHY
    1. Literally, the love of, including the search after, wisdom; in actual usage, the knowledge of phenomena as explained by, and resolved into, causes and reasons, powers and laws. Note: When applied to any particular department of knowledge,
  • STUDENTRY
    A body of students.
  • GREAT-GRANDMOTHER
    The mother of one's grandfather or grandmother.
  • STUDENT
    1. A person engaged in study; one who is devoted to learning; a learner; a pupil; a scholar; especially, one who attends a school, or who seeks knowledge from professional teachers or from books; as, the students of an academy, a college, or a
  • GREATLY
    1. In a great degree; much. I will greatly multiply thy sorrow. Gen. iii. 16. 2. Nobly; illustriously; magnanimously. By a high fate thou greatly didst expire. Dryden.
  • GREAT-GRANDDAUGHTER
    A daughter of one's grandson or granddaughter.
  • GREAT-GRANDCHILD
    The child of one's grandson or granddaughter.
  • GREATNESS
    1. The state, condition, or quality of being great; as, greatness of size, greatness of mind, power, etc. 2. Pride; haughtiness. It is not of pride or greatness that he cometh not aboard your ships. Bacon.
  • GREAT
    great, AS. gret; akin to OS. & LG. grt, D. groot, OHG. grz, G. gross. 1. Large in space; of much size; big; immense; enormous; expanded; -- opposed to small and little; as, a great house, ship, farm, plain, distance, length. 2. Large in number;
  • GREAT WHITE WAY
    Broadway, in New York City, in the neighborhood chiefly occupied by theaters, as from about 30th Street about 50th Street; -- so called from its brilliant illumination at night.
  • STUDENTSHIP
    The state of being a student.
  • IRVINGITE
    The common designation of one a sect founded by the Rev. Edward Irving , who call themselves the Catholic Apostolic Church. They are highly ritualistic in worship, have an elaborate hierarchy of apostles, prophets, etc., and look for the speedy
  • STUDIER
    A student. W. Irving. Lipsius was a great studier of the stoical philosophy. Tillotson.
  • GREATEN
    To make great; to aggrandize; to cause to increase in size; to expand. A minister's is to greaten and exalt . Ken.
  • GREATCOAT
    An overcoat.
  • GREAT-BELLIED
    Having a great belly, bigbellied; pregnant; teeming. Shak.
  • INGREAT
    To make great; to enlarge; to magnify. Fotherby.
  • NIRVANA
    In the Buddhist system of religion, the final emancipation of the soul from transmigration, and consequently a beatific enfrachisement from the evils of wordly existence, as by annihilation or absorption into the divine. See Buddhism.
  • SIRVENTE
    A peculiar species of poetry, for the most part devoted to moral and religious topics, and commonly satirical, -- often used by the troubadours of the Middle Ages. (more info) originally, the poem of, or concerning, a sirvent, fr. sirvent,
  • CLAIRVOYANCE
    A power, attributed to some persons while in a mesmeric state, of discering objects not perceptible by the senses in their normal condition.
  • TUN-GREAT
    Having the circumference of a tun. Chaucer.

 

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