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Word Meanings - ULTRAISM - Book Publishers vocabulary database

The principles of those who advocate extreme measures, as radical reform, and the like. Dr. H. More.

Related words: (words related to ULTRAISM)

  • REFORMALIZE
    To affect reformation; to pretend to correctness.
  • REFORMATIVE
    Forming again; having the quality of renewing form; reformatory. Good.
  • ADVOCATE
    advocatus, one summoned or called to another; properly the p. p. of advocare to call to, call to one's aid; ad + vocare to call. See 1. One who pleads the cause of another. Specifically: One who pleads the cause of another before a tribunal or
  • THOSE
    The plural of that. See That.
  • EXTREMELESS
    Having no extremes; infinite.
  • RADICALNESS
    Quality or state of being radical.
  • RADICAL
    One who advocates radical changes in government or social institutions, especially such changes as are intended to level class inequalities; -- opposed to conservative. In politics they were, to use phrase of their own time. "Root-and-Branch men,"
  • REFORMATORY
    An institution for promoting the reformation of offenders. Magistrates may send juvenile offenders to reformatories instead of to prisons. Eng. Cyc.
  • REFORMIST
    A reformer.
  • REFORMABLE
    Capable of being reformed. Foxe.
  • REFORMLY
    In the manner of a reform; for the purpose of reform. Milton.
  • REFORMED
    Retained in service on half or full pay after the disbandment of the company or troop; -- said of an officer. (more info) 1. Corrected; amended; restored to purity or excellence; said, specifically, of the whole body of Protestant churches
  • RADICALLY
    1. In a radical manner; at, or from, the origin or root; fundamentally; as, a scheme or system radically wrong or defective. 2. Without derivation; primitively; essentially. These great orbs thus radically bright. Prior.
  • EXTREME
    Either of the extreme terms of a syllogism, the middle term being interposed between them. (more info) 1. The utmost point or verge; that part which terminates a body; extremity. 2. Utmost limit or degree that is supposable or tolerable; hence,
  • REFORMADO
    1. A monk of a reformed order. Weever. 2. An officer who, in disgrace, is deprived of his command, but retains his rank, and sometimes his pay.
  • REFORMER
    One of those who commenced the reformation of religion in the sixteenth century, as Luther, Melanchthon, Zwingli, and Calvin. (more info) 1. One who effects a reformation or amendment; one who labors for, or urges, reform; as, a reformer
  • RADICALISM
    The quality or state of being radical; specifically, the doctrines or principles of radicals in politics or social reform. Radicalism means root work; the uprooting of all falsehoods and abuses. F. W. Robertson.
  • REFORMADE
    A reformado.
  • RADICALITY
    1. Germinal principle; source; origination. Sir T. Browne. 2. Radicalness; relation to root in essential to a root in essential nature or principle.
  • REFORM
    Amendment of what is defective, vicious, corrupt, or depraved; reformation; as, reform of elections; reform of government. Civil service reform. See under Civil. -- Reform acts , acts of Parliament passed in 1832, 1867, 1884, 1885, extending and
  • PREFORM
    To form beforehand, or for special ends. "Their natures and preformed faculties. " Shak.
  • SPATHOSE
    See SPATHIC
  • SPORADICAL
    Sporadic.
  • PREFORMATIVE
    A formative letter at the beginning of a word. M. Stuart.
  • EQUIRADICAL
    Equally radical. Coleridge.
  • PREFORMATION
    An old theory of the preƫxistence of germs. Cf. EmboƮtement.
  • WHEREFORM
    From which; from which or what place. Tennyson.
  • XANTHOSE
    An orange-yellow substance found in pigment spots of certain crabs.

 

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