lacking |
1. v. present participle of lack | |
2. n. The absence of something; a lack. | |
3. adj. Missing or not having enough of (a good quality, etc). | |
This cheese is lacking in pungency. | |
4. adj. not carrying a firearm | |
are you packing or lacking? | |
lack |
1. n. (obsolete) A defect or failing; moral or spiritual degeneracy. | |
2. n. A deficiency or need (of something desirable or necessary); an absence, want. | |
3. v. To be without, to need, to require. | |
My life lacks excitement. | |
4. v. (intransitive) To be short (of or for something). | |
He'll never lack for company while he's got all that money. | |
5. v. (intransitive, obsolete) To be in want. | |
6. v. (obsolete) To see the deficiency in (someone or something); to find fault with, to malign, reproach. | |
in |
1. prep. Used to indicate location, inclusion, or position within spatial, temporal or other limits. | |
2. prep. Contained by. | |
The dog is in the kennel. | |
3. prep. Within. | |
4. prep. Surrounded by. | |
We are in the enemy camp. Her plane is in the air. | |
5. prep. Part of; a member of. | |
One in a million. She's in band and orchestra. | |
6. prep. Pertaining to; with regard to. | |
What grade did he get in English? | |
Military letters should be formal in tone, but not stilted. | |
7. prep. At the end of a period of time. | |
They said they would call us in a week. | |
8. prep. Within a certain elapsed time | |
Are you able to finish this in three hours? The massacre resulted in over 1000 deaths in three hours. | |
9. prep. During (said of periods of time). | |
in the first week of December; Easter falls in the fourth lunar month; The country reached a high level of prosperity in his fi | |
10. prep. (grammar, phonetics, of sounds and letters) Coming at the end of a word. | |
English nouns in -ce form their plurals in -s. | |
11. prep. Into. | |
Less water gets in your boots this way. | |
12. prep. Used to indicate limit, qualification, condition, or circumstance. | |
In replacing the faucet washers, he felt he was making his contribution to the environment. | |
13. prep. Indicating an order or arrangement. | |
My fat rolls around in folds. | |
14. prep. Denoting a state of the subject. | |
He stalked away in anger. John is in a coma. | |
15. prep. Indicates, connotatively, a place-like form of someone's (or something's) personality, as his, her or its psychic and physical characteristics. | |
You've got a friend in me. He's met his match in her. | |
16. prep. Wearing (an item of clothing). | |
I glanced over at the pretty girl in the red dress. | |
17. prep. Used to indicate means, medium, format, genre, or instrumentality. | |
18. prep. (of something offered or given in an exchange) In the form of, in the denomination of. | |
Please pay me in cash — preferably in tens and twenties. | |
The deposit can be in any legal tender, even in gold. | |
Her generosity was rewarded in the success of its recipients. | |
19. prep. Used to indicate a language, script, tone, etc. of a text, speech, etc. | |
Beethoven's "Symphony No. 5" in C minor is among his most popular. | |
His speech was in French, but was simultaneously translated into eight languages. | |
When you write in cursive, it's illegible. | |
20. v. (obsolete, transitive) To enclose. | |
21. v. (obsolete, transitive) To take in; to harvest. | |
22. adv. (not comparable) Located indoors, especially at home or the office, or inside something. | |
Is Mr. Smith in? | |
23. adv. Moving to the interior of a defined space, such as a building or room. | |
Suddenly a strange man walked in. | |
24. adv. (sports) Still eligible to play, e.g. able to bat in cricket and baseball. | |
He went for the wild toss but wasn't able to stay in. | |
25. adv. (UK) Abbreviation of in aid of. | |
What's that in? | |
26. adv. After the beginning of something. | |
27. n. A position of power or a way to get it. | |
His parents got him an in with the company | |
28. n. (sport) The state of a batter/batsman who is currently batting – see innings | |
29. n. A re-entrant angle; a nook or corner. | |
30. adj. In fashion; popular. | |
Skirts are in this year. | |
31. adj. Incoming. | |
the in train | |
32. adj. (nautical, of the sails of a vessel) Furled or stowed. | |
33. adj. (legal) With privilege or possession; used to denote a holding, possession, or seisin. | |
in by descent; in by purchase; in of the seisin of her husband | |
34. adj. (cricket) Currently batting. | |
35. n. Inch. | |
conscience |
1. n. The moral sense of right and wrong, chiefly as it affects one's own behaviour. | |
Your conscience is your highest authority. | |
2. n. (chiefly fiction) A personification of the moral sense of right and wrong, usually in the form of a person, a being or merely a voice that gives moral lessons and advices. | |
3. n. (obsolete) Consciousness; thinking; awareness, especially self-awareness. | |
or |
1. conj. Connects at least two alternative words, phrases, clauses, sentences, etc. each of which could make a passage true. In English, this is the "inclusive or." The "exclusive or" is formed by "either(...) | |
In Ohio, anyone under the age of 18 who wants a tattoo or body piercing needs the consent of a parent or guardian. | |
He might get cancer, or be hit by a bus, or God knows what. | |
2. conj. (logic) An operator denoting the disjunction of two propositions or truth values. There are two forms, the inclusive or and the exclusive or. | |
3. conj. Counts the elements before and after as two possibilities. | |
4. conj. Otherwise (a consequence of the condition that the previous is false). | |
It's raining! Come inside or you'll catch a cold! | |
5. conj. Connects two equivalent names. | |
The country Myanmar, or Burma | |
6. n. (logic, electronics) alternative form of OR | |
7. n. (tincture) The gold or yellow tincture on a coat of arms. | |
8. adj. (tincture) Of gold or yellow tincture on a coat of arms. | |
9. adv. (obsolete) Early (on). | |
10. adv. (obsolete) Earlier, previously. | |
11. prep. (now archaic, or dialect) Before; ere. | |
moral |
1. adj. Of or relating to principles of right and wrong in behaviour, especially for teaching right behaviour. | |
moral judgments; a moral poem | |
2. adj. Conforming to a standard of right behaviour; sanctioned by or operative on one's conscience or ethical judgment. | |
a moral obligation | |
3. adj. Capable of right and wrong action. | |
a moral agent | |
4. adj. Probable but not proved. | |
a moral certainty | |
5. adj. Positively affecting the mind, confidence, or will. | |
a moral victory; moral support | |
6. n. (of a narrative) The ethical significance or practical lesson. | |
The moral of The Boy Who Cried Wolf is that if you repeatedly lie, people won't believe you when you tell the truth. | |
7. n. Moral practices or teachings: modes of conduct. | |
8. n. (obsolete) A morality play. | |
principles |
1. n. plural of principle | |
principle |
1. n. A fundamental assumption or guiding belief. | |
We need some sort of principles to reason from. | |
2. n. A rule used to choose among solutions to a problem. | |
The principle of least privilege holds that a process should only receive the permissions it needs. | |
3. n. (sometimes pluralized) Moral rule or aspect. | |
I don't doubt your principles. | |
You are clearly a person of principle. | |
It's the principle of the thing; I won't do business with someone I can't trust. | |
4. n. (physics) A rule or law of nature, or the basic idea on how the laws of nature are applied. | |
Bernoulli's Principle | |
The Pauli Exclusion Principle prevents two fermions from occupying the same state. | |
The principle of the internal combustion engine | |
5. n. A fundamental essence, particularly one producing a given quality. | |
Many believe that life is the result of some vital principle. | |
6. n. (obsolete) A beginning. | |
7. n. A source, or origin; that from which anything proceeds; fundamental substance or energy; primordial substance; ultimate element, or cause. | |
8. n. An original faculty or endowment. | |
9. v. To equip with principles; to establish, or fix, in certain principles; to impress with any tenet or rule of conduct. | |
unscrupulous |
1. adj. Without scruples; immoral. | |
2. adj. Contemptuous of what is right or honorable. | |