Word Meanings - TYPIFY - Book Publishers vocabulary database
To represent by an image, form, model, or resemblance. Our Savior was typified, indeed, by the goat that was slain, and the scapegoat in the wilderness. Sir T. Browne. (more info) Etym:
Related words: (words related to TYPIFY)
- INDECOMPOSABLENESS
Incapableness of decomposition; stability; permanence; durability. - INDECOROUSNESS
The quality of being indecorous; want of decorum. - INDESERT
Ill desert. Addison. - INDEVOTE
Not devoted. Bentley. Clarendon. - INDECENCY
1. The quality or state of being indecent; want of decency, modesty, or good manners; obscenity. 2. That which is indecent; an indecent word or act; an offense against delicacy. They who, by speech or writing, present to the ear or the - INDEXICAL
Of, pertaining to, or like, an index; having the form of an index. - TYPIFICATION
The act of typifying, or representing by a figure. - INDEFICIENCY
The state or quality of not being deficient. Strype. - INDEFATIGABLY
Without weariness; without yielding to fatigue; persistently. Dryden. - INDEBT
To bring into debt; to place under obligation; -- chiefly used in the participle indebted. Thy fortune hath indebted thee to none. Daniel. - INDEFECTIBLE
Not defectible; unfailing; not liable to defect, failure, or decay. An indefectible treasure in the heavens. Barrow. A state of indefectible virtue and happiness. S. Clarke. - INDEPENDENCY
Doctrine and polity of the Independents. (more info) 1. Independence. "Give me," I cried , "My bread, and independency!" Pope. - INDEMNITY
1. Security; insurance; exemption from loss or damage, past or to come; immunity from penalty, or the punishment of past offenses; amnesty. Having first obtained a promise of indemnity for the riot they had committed. Sir W. Scott. 2. - INDEFEASIBLE
Not to be defeated; not defeasible; incapable of being annulled or made void; as, an indefeasible or title. That the king had a divine and an indefeasible right to the regal power. Macaulay. - REPRESENTABLE
Capable of being represented. - INDETERMINABLE
Not determinable; impossible to be determined; not to be definitely known, ascertained, defined, or limited. -- In`de*ter"mi*na*bly, adv. - INDEVIRGINATE
Not devirginate. Chapman. - INDECOROUS
Not decorous; violating good manners; contrary to good breeding or etiquette; unbecoming; improper; out of place; as, indecorous conduct. It was useless and indecorous to attempt anything more by mere struggle. Burke. Syn. -- Unbecoming; unseemly; - REPRESENTANT
Appearing or acting for another; representing. - INDEW
To indue. Spenser. - EARTHLY-MINDED
Having a mind devoted to earthly things; worldly-minded; -- opposed to spiritual-minded. -- Earth"ly-mind`ed*ness, n. - EVENMINDED
Having equanimity. - CARNAL-MINDEDNESS
Grossness of mind. - REMINDER
One who, or that which, reminds; that which serves to awaken remembrance. - HIGH-MINDEDNESS
The quality of being highminded; nobleness; magnanimity. - FINDER
One who, or that which, finds; specifically , a small telescope of low power and large field of view, attached to a larger telescope, for the purpose of finding an object more readily. - EAR-MINDED
Thinking chiefly or most readily through, or in terms related to, the sense of hearing; specif., thinking words as spoken, as a result of familiarity with speech or of mental peculiarity; -- opposed to eye-minded.