Word Meanings - TAXIDERMIC - Book Publishers vocabulary database
Of or pertaining to the art of preparing and preserving the skins of animals.
Related words: (words related to TAXIDERMIC)
- PREPARATIVELY
By way of preparation. - PRESERVATIVE
Having the power or quality of preserving; tending to preserve, or to keep from injury, decay, etc. - PRESERVABLE
Capable of being preserved; admitting of preservation. - PRESERVER
1. One who, or that which, preserves, saves, or defends, from destruction, injury, or decay; esp., one who saves the life or character of another. Shak. 2. One who makes preserves of fruit. Game preserver. See under Game. - PERTAIN
stretch out, reach, pertain; per + tenere to hold, keep. See Per-, 1. To belong; to have connection with, or dependence on, something, as an appurtenance, attribute, etc.; to appertain; as, saltness pertains to the ocean; flowers pertain to plant - PRESERVATION
The act or process of preserving, or keeping safe; the state of being preserved, or kept from injury, destruction, or decay; security; safety; as, preservation of life, fruit, game, etc.; a picture in good preservation. Give us particulars of thy - PREPARER
One who, or that which, prepares, fits, or makes ready. Wood. - PREPARABLE
Capable of being prepared. "Medicine preparable by art." Boyle. - PREPARATION
The holding over of a note from one chord into the next chord, where it forms a temporary discord, until resolved in the chord that follows; the anticipation of a discordant note in the preceding concord, so that the ear is prepared for the shock. - PRESERVATORY
Preservative. Bp. Hall. - PRESERVE
1. To keep or save from injury or destruction; to guard or defend from evil, harm, danger, etc.; to protect. O Lord, thou preserved man and beast. Ps. xxxvi. 6. Now, good angels preserve the king. Shak. 2. To save from decay by the use of some - PREPARATORY
Preparing the way for anything by previous measures of adaptation; antecedent and adapted to what follows; introductory; preparative; as, a preparatory school; a preparatory condition. - PREPARATOR
One who prepares beforehand, as subjects for dissection, specimens for preservation in collections, etc. Agassiz. - PREPARED
Made fit or suitable; adapted; ready; as, prepared food; prepared questions. -- Pre*par"ed*ly, adv. Shak. -- Pre*par"ed*ness, n. - PREPARATIVE
Tending to prepare or make ready; having the power of preparing, qualifying, or fitting; preparatory. Laborious quest of knowledge preparative to this work. South. - PREPARE
1. To fit, adapt, or qualify for a particular purpose or condition; to make ready; to put into a state for use or application; as, to prepare ground for seed; to prepare a lesson. Our souls, not yet prepared for upper light. Dryden. 2. To procure - IMPREPARATION
Want of preparation. Hooker. - DISPREPARE
To render unprepared. Hobbes. - GALLIGASKINS
Loose hose or breeches; leather leg quards. The word is used loosely and often in a jocose sense. (more info) Grecian, a name which seems to have been given in Venice, and to have - NONPREPARATION
Neglect or failure to prepare; want of preparation. - SELF-PRESERVATION
The preservation of one's self from destruction or injury. - GALLYGASKINS
See GALLIGASKINS - LIFE-PRESERVER
An apparatus, made in very various forms, and of various materials, for saving one from drowning by buoying up the body while in the water. -- Life"-pre*serv`ing, a. - GASKINS
1. Loose hose or breeches; galligaskins. Shak. 2. Packing of hemp. Simmonds. 3. A horse's thighs. Wright.