cyclic |
1. adj. Characterized by, or moving in cycles, or happening at regular intervals. | |
The weather had a cyclic pattern of rain and sun. | |
2. adj. (chemistry, of a compound) Having chains of atoms arranged in a ring. | |
Benzene and cyclohexane are both cyclic compounds. | |
3. adj. (botany) Having parts arranged in a whorl. | |
4. adj. (mathematics, of a group) Being generated by only one element. | |
5. adj. (geometry, of a polygon) Able to be inscribed in a circle. | |
activity |
1. n. The state or quality of being active; activeness; the state of having many things happening | |
Pit row was abuzz with activity. | |
2. n. Something done as an action or a movement. | |
The activity for the morning was a walk to the store. | |
3. n. Something done for pleasure or entertainment, especially one involving movement or an excursion. | |
An increasing number of sports activities are on offer at the university. | |
Quilting can be an enjoyable activity. | |
4. n. Use (of internet, Playstation, bank account etc.). | |
that |
1. conj. Introducing a clause which is the subject or object of a verb (such as one involving reported speech), or which is a complement to a previous statement. | |
He told me that the book is a good read. | |
I believe that it is true. — She is convinced that he is British. | |
2. conj. Introducing a subordinate clause expressing a reason or cause: because, in that. | |
Be glad that you have enough to eat. | |
3. conj. (now uncommon) Introducing a subordinate clause that expresses an aim, purpose or goal ("final"), and usually contains the auxiliaries may, might or should: so, so that. | |
4. conj. Introducing — especially, but not exclusively, with an antecedent like so or such — a subordinate clause expressing a result, consequence or effect. | |
The noise was so loud that she woke up. | |
The problem was sufficiently important that it had to be addressed. | |
5. conj. (archaic, or poetic) Introducing a premise or supposition for consideration: seeing as; inasmuch as; given that; as would appear from the fact that. | |
6. conj. Introducing a subordinate clause modifying an adverb. | |
Was John there? — Not that I saw. | |
How often did she visit him? — Twice that I saw. | |
7. conj. Introducing an exclamation expressing a desire or wish. | |
8. conj. Introducing an exclamation expressing a strong emotion such as sadness or surprise. | |
9. det. The (thing, person, idea, etc) indicated or understood from context, especially if more remote physically, temporally or mentally than one designated as "this", or if expressing distinction. | |
That book is a good read. This one isn't. | |
That battle was in 1450. | |
That cat of yours is evil. | |
10. pron. (demonstrative) The thing, person, idea, quality, event, action or time indicated or understood from context, especially if more remote geographically, temporally or mentally than one designated as "t | |
He went home, and after that I never saw him again. | |
11. pron. The known (thing); (used to refer to something just said). | |
They're getting divorced. What do you think about that? | |
12. pron. (demonstrative) The aforementioned quality; used together with a verb and pronoun to emphatically repeat a previous statement. | |
The water is so cold! — That it is. | |
13. pron. (relative) (plural that) Which, who; (representing a subject, direct object, indirect object, or object of a preposition). | |
The CPR course that she took really came in handy. | |
The house that he lived in was old and dilapidated. | |
14. pron. (colloquial) (Used in place of relative adverbs such as where or when; often omitted.) | |
the place that = where or to which I went last year | |
the last time that = when I went to Europe | |
15. adv. (degree) To a given extent or degree. | |
"The ribbon was that thin." "I disagree, I say it was not that thin, it was thicker... or maybe thinner...". | |
16. adv. (degree) To a great extent or degree; very, particularly (in negative constructions). | |
I'm just not that sick. | |
I did the run last year, and it wasn't that difficult. | |
17. adv. (obsolete, outside, dialects) To such an extent; so. (in positive constructions). | |
Ooh, I was that happy I nearly kissed her. | |
18. n. (philosophy) Something being indicated that is there; one of those. | |
achieves |
1. v. third-person singular present indicative of achieve | |
achieve |
1. v. (intransitive) To succeed in something, now especially in academic performance. | |
2. v. To carry out successfully; to accomplish. | |
3. v. (obsolete, transitive) To conclude, finish, especially successfully. | |
4. v. To obtain, or gain (a desired result, objective etc.), as the result of exertion; to succeed in gaining; to win. | |
5. v. (obsolete, intransitive) To conclude, to turn out. | |
6. v. (transitive, now literary) To obtain (a material thing). | |
Show all the spoils by valiant kings achieved. | |
He hath achieved a maid / That paragons description. | |
nothing |
1. pron. Not any thing; no thing. | |
2. pron. An absence of anything, including empty space, brightness, darkness, matter, or a vacuum. | |
3. n. Something trifling, or of no consequence or importance. | |
- What happened to your face?- It's nothing. | |
4. n. A trivial remark (especially in the term sweet nothings). | |
5. n. A nobody (insignificant person). | |
You're nothing to me now! | |
6. adv. (archaic) Not at all; in no way. | |