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Word Meanings - VESTALES - Book Publishers vocabulary database

A group of butterflies including those known as virgins, or gossamer-winged butterflies.

Related words: (words related to VESTALES)

  • WINGY
    1. Having wings; rapid. With wingy speed outstrip the eastern wind. Addison.
  • WINGFISH
    A sea robin having large, winglike pectoral fins. See Sea robin, under Robin.
  • THOSE
    The plural of that. See That.
  • WINGLET
    A bastard wing, or alula. (more info) 1. A little wing; a very small wing.
  • GOSSAMERY
    Like gossamer; flimsy. The greatest master of gossamery affectation. De Quincey.
  • INCLUDED
    Inclosed; confined. Included stamens , such as are shorter than the floral envelopes, or are concealed within them.
  • WINGMANSHIP
    Power or skill in flying. Duke of Argyll.
  • KNOWN
    of Know.
  • GROUP
    A variously limited assemblage of animals or planta, having some resemblance, or common characteristics in form or structure. The term has different uses, and may be made to include certain species of a genus, or a whole genus, or certain genera,
  • WING-LEAVED
    Having pinnate or pinnately divided leaves.
  • WING-FOOTED
    1. Having wings attached to the feet; as, wing-footed Mercury; hence, swift; moving with rapidity; fleet. Drayton. Having part or all of the feet adapted for flying. Having the anterior lobes of the foot so modified as to form a pair of winglike
  • GROUPER
    One of several species of valuable food fishes of the genus Epinephelus, of the family Serranidæ, as the red grouper, or brown snapper , and the black grouper, or warsaw , both from Florida and the Gulf of Mexico. The tripletail .
  • GROUPING
    The disposal or relative arrangement of figures or objects, as in, drawing, painting, and sculpture, or in ornamental design.
  • GOSSAMER
    goose summer, from its downy appearance, or perh. for God's summer, cf. G. mariengarr gossamer, properly Mary's yarn, in allusion to the Virgin Mary. Perhaps the E. word alluded to a legend that the gossamer was the remnant of the Virgin Mary's
  • WINGLESS
    Having no wings; not able to ascend or fly. Wingless bird , the apteryx.
  • WING-HANDED
    Having the anterior limbs or hands adapted for flight, as the bats and pterodactyls.
  • WING
    1. To furnish with wings; to enable to fly, or to move with celerity. Who heaves old ocean, and whowings the storms. Pope. Living, to wing with mirth the weary hours. Longfellow. 2. To supply with wings or sidepieces. The main battle,
  • WING-SHELL
    Any one of various species of marine bivalve shells belonging to the genus Avicula, in which the hinge border projects like a wing. Any marine gastropod shell of the genus Strombus. See Strombus. Any pteropod shell.
  • INCLUDE
    1. To confine within; to hold; to contain; to shut up; to inclose; as, the shell of a nut includes the kernel; a pearl is included in a shell. 2. To comprehend or comprise, as a genus the species, the whole a part, an argument or reason
  • INCLUDIBLE
    Capable of being included.
  • OVERFLOWINGLY
    In great abundance; exuberantly. Boyle.
  • KNOWINGLY
    1. With knowledge; in a knowing manner; intelligently; consciously; deliberately; as, he would not knowingly offend. Strype. 2. By experience. Shak.
  • TWINGE
    OFries. thwinga, twinga, dwinga, to constrain, D. dwingen, OS. thwingan, G. zwingen, OHG. dwingan, thwingan, to press, oppress, overcome, Icel. þvinga, Sw. tvinga to subdue, constrain, Dan. twinge, and AS. þün to press, OHG. duhen, and probably
  • SPATHOSE
    See SPATHIC
  • ZWINGLIAN
    Of or pertaining to Ulric Zwingli , the reformer of German Switzerland, who maintained that in the Lord's Supper the true body of Christ is present by the contemplation of faith but not in essence or reality, and that the sacrament is a memorial
  • FOLLOWING EDGE
    See ABOVE
  • KNOWINGNESS
    The state or quality of being knowing or intelligent; shrewdness; skillfulness.
  • SWINGDEVIL
    The European swift.
  • OVERWING
    To outflank. Milton.
  • WHITEWING
    The chaffinch; -- so called from the white bands on the wing. The velvet duck.
  • SUBGROUP
    A subdivision of a group, as of animals. Darwin.
  • THROWING
    a. & n. from Throw, v. Throwing engine, Throwing mill, Throwing table, or Throwing wheel , a machine on which earthenware is first rudely shaped by the hand of the potter from a mass of clay revolving rapidly on a disk or table carried
  • WENLOCK GROUP
    The middle subdivision of the Upper Silurian in Great Britain; -- so named from the typical locality in Shropshire.
  • AGGROUPMENT
    Arrangement in a group or in groups; grouping.
  • SPUR-WINGED
    Having one or more spurs on the bend of the wings. Spur-winged goose , any one of several species of long-legged African geese of the genus Plectropterus and allied genera, having a strong spur on the bend of the wing, as the Gambo goose and
  • KNOWING
    1. Skilful; well informed; intelligent; as, a knowing man; a knowing dog. The knowing and intelligent part of the world. South. 2. Artful; cunning; as, a knowing rascal.
  • INGROWING
    Growing or appearing to grow into some other substance. Ingrowing nail, one whose edges are becoming imbedded in the adjacent flesh.

 

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