resentment |
1. n. A feeling of anger or displeasure stemming from belief that one has been wronged by others or betrayed; indignation. | |
2. n. (obsolete) The state of holding something in the mind as a subject of contemplation, or of being inclined to reflect upon it; feeling; impression. | |
3. n. (obsolete) satisfaction; gratitude | |
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. | |
skepticism |
1. n. (US) The practice or philosophy of being a skeptic. | |
2. n. (US) A studied attitude of questioning and doubt | |
3. n. (US) The doctrine that absolute knowledge is not possible | |
4. n. (US) A methodology that starts from a neutral standpoint and aims to acquire certainty though scientific or logical observation. | |
5. n. (US) Doubt or disbelief of religious doctrines | |
expressed |
1. v. simple past tense and past participle of express | |
express |
1. adj. (not comparable) Moving or operating quickly, as a train not making local stops. | |
2. adj. (comparable) Specific or precise; directly and distinctly stated; not merely implied. | |
I gave him express instructions not to begin until I arrived, but he ignored me. | |
This book cannot be copied without the express permission of the publisher. | |
3. adj. Truly depicted; exactly resembling. | |
In my eyes it bore a livelier image of the spirit, it seemed more express and single, than the imperfect and divided countenance. | |
4. adj. (retail) Providing a more limited but presumably faster service than a full or complete dealer of the same kind or type. | |
The Pizza Hut inside Target isn't a full one: it's a Pizza Hut Express. | |
Some Wal-Mart stores will include a McDonald's Express. | |
The mall's selection of cell phone carriers includes a full AT&T store and a T-Mobile express. | |
5. n. A mode of transportation, often a train, that travels quickly or directly. | |
I took the express into town. | |
6. n. A service that allows mail or money to be sent rapidly from one destination to another. | |
7. n. An express rifle. | |
8. n. (obsolete) A clear image or representation; an expression; a plain declaration. | |
9. n. A messenger sent on a special errand; a courier. | |
10. n. An express office. | |
11. n. That which is sent by an express messenger or message. | |
12. v. To convey or communicate; to make known or explicit. | |
Words cannot express the love I feel for him. | |
13. v. To press, squeeze out (especially said of milk). | |
14. v. (biochemistry) To translate messenger RNA into protein. | |
15. v. (biochemistry) To transcribe deoxyribonucleic acid into messenger RNA. | |
16. n. (obsolete) The action of conveying some idea using words or actions; communication, expression. | |
17. n. (obsolete) A specific statement or instruction. | |
by |
1. prep. Near or next to. | |
The mailbox is by the bus stop. | |
2. prep. At some time before (the given time), or before the end of a given time interval. | |
Be back by ten o'clock! We will send it by the first week of July. | |
3. prep. Indicates the actor in a clause with its verb in the passive voice: Through the action or presence of. | |
The matter was decided by the chairman. The boat was swamped by the water. He was protected by his body armour. | |
4. prep. Indicates the creator of a work: Existing through the authorship etc. of. | |
There are many well-known plays by William Shakespeare | |
5. prep. Indicates the cause of a condition or event: Through the action of, caused by, responsibility for; by dint of. | |
6. prep. Indicates a means: Involving/using the means of. | |
I avoided the guards by moving only when they weren't looking. | |
7. prep. Indicates a source of light used as illumination. | |
The electricity was cut off, so we had to read by candlelight. | |
8. prep. Indicates an authority, rule, or permission followed. | |
I sorted the items by category. By the power vested in me, I now pronounce you man and wife. | |
9. prep. Indicates the amount of some progression: With a change of. | |
Our stock is up by ten percent. | |
10. prep. In the formulae X by X and by Xs, indicates a steady progression, one X after another. | |
We went through the book page by page. We crawled forward by inches. | |
11. prep. Indicates a referenced source: According to. | |
He cheated by his own admission. | |
12. prep. Indicates an oath: With the authority of. | |
By Jove! I think she's got it! By all that is holy, I'll put an end to this. | |
13. prep. Used to separate dimensions when describing the size of something. | |
It is easy to invert a 2-by-2 matrix. The room was about 4 foot by 6 foot. The bricks used to build the wall measured 10 by 20 by 30 cm. | |
14. prep. (horse breeding) Designates a horse's male parent (sire); cf. out of. | |
She's a lovely little filly, by Big Lad, out of Damsel in Distress. | |
15. adv. Along a path which runs by the speaker. | |
I watched as it passed by. | |
16. adv. In the vicinity, near. | |
There was a shepherd close by. | |
The shop is hard by the High Street. | |
17. adv. To or at a place, as a residence or place of business. | |
I'll stop by on my way home from work. | |
We're right near the lifeguard station. Come by before you leave. | |
18. adv. Aside, away. | |
The women spent much time after harvest putting jams by for winter and spring. | |
19. adj. Out of the way, subsidiary. | |
20. n. (card games) A pass | |
21. interj. alternative spelling of bye | |
quickly |
1. adv. Rapidly; with speed; fast. | |
2. adv. Very soon. | |
If we go this way, we'll get there quickly. | |
drawing |
1. v. present participle of draw | |
2. n. A picture, likeness, diagram or representation, usually drawn on paper. | |
3. n. (qualifier) The act of producing such a picture. | |
4. n. Such acts practiced as a graphic art form. | |
5. n. The process of drawing or pulling something. | |
Proverb: An official is great in his office as a well is rich in drawings of water. | |
6. n. An act or event in which the outcome (e.g., designating a winner) is selected by chance in the form of a blind draw, notably of lots; especially such a contest in which a winning name or number is sel | |
7. n. A small portion of tea for steeping. | |
draw |
1. v. To move or develop something.: | |
2. v. To sketch; depict with lines; to produce a picture with pencil, crayon, chalk, etc. on paper, cardboard, etc. | |
3. v. To deduce or infer. | |
He tried to draw a conclusion from the facts. | |
4. v. (intransitive) (of drinks, especially tea) To leave temporarily so as to allow the flavour to increase. | |
Tea is much nicer if you let it draw for three minutes before pouring. | |
5. v. To take or procure from a place of deposit; to call for and receive from a fund, etc. | |
to draw money from a bank | |
6. v. To take into the lungs; to inhale. | |
7. v. (used with prepositions and adverbs) To move; to come or go. | |
We drew back from the cliff edge. | |
The runners drew level with each other as they approached the finish line. | |
Draw near to the fire and I will tell you a tale. | |
8. v. To obtain from some cause or origin; to infer from evidence or reasons; to deduce from premises; to derive. | |
9. v. (transitive, obsolete) To withdraw. | |
10. v. (archaic) To draw up (a document). | |
to draw a memorial, a deed, or bill of exchange | |
11. v. To exert or experience force.: | |
12. v. To drag, pull. | |
13. v. (intransitive) To pull; to exert strength in drawing anything; to have force to move anything by pulling. | |
This horse draws well. | |
A ship's sail is said to draw when it is filled with wind. | |
14. v. To pull out (as a gun from a holster, or a tooth). | |
They drew their swords and fought each other. | |
15. v. To undergo the action of pulling or dragging. | |
The carriage draws easily. | |
16. v. (archery) To pull back the bowstring and its arrow in preparation for shooting. | |
17. v. (of curtains, etc.) To close. | |
You should draw the curtains at night. | |
18. v. (of curtains, etc.) To open. | |
She drew the curtains to let in the sunlight. | |
19. v. (cards) To take the top card of a deck into hand. | |
At the start of their turn, each player must draw a card. | |
20. v. (heading, fluidic) To remove or separate or displace. | |
21. v. To extract a liquid, or cause a liquid to come out, primarily water or blood. | |
draw water from a well; draw water for a bath; the wound drew blood | |
22. v. To drain by emptying; to suck dry. | |
23. v. (figurative) To extract; to force out; to elicit; to derive. | |
24. v. To sink in water; to require a depth for floating. | |
A ship draws ten feet of water. | |
25. v. (intransitive, medicine, dated) To work as an epispastic; said of a blister, poultice, etc. | |
26. v. (intransitive, dated) To have a draught; to transmit smoke, gases, etc. | |
A chimney or flue draws. | |
27. v. (analogous) To consume, for example, power. | |
The circuit draws three hundred watts. | |
28. v. To change in size or shape.: | |
29. v. To extend in length; to lengthen; to protract; to stretch. | |
to draw a mass of metal into wire | |
30. v. (intransitive) To become contracted; to shrink. | |
31. v. To attract or be attracted.: | |
32. v. To attract. | |
The citizens were afraid the casino would draw an undesirable element to their town. I was drawn to her. | |
33. v. To induce a reticent person to speak. | |
He refused to be drawn on the subject | |
34. v. (hunting) To search for game. | |
35. v. To cause. | |
36. v. (intransitive) To exert an attractive force; (figurative) to act as an inducement or enticement. | |
37. v. (Usually as draw on or draw upon): to rely on; utilize as a source. | |
She had to draw upon her experience to solve the problem. | |
38. v. To disembowel. | |
He will be hanged, drawn and quartered. | |
39. v. (transitive, or intransitive) To end a game in a draw (with neither side winning). | |
We drew last time we played. I drew him last time I played him. I drew my last game against him. | |
40. v. A random selection process. | |
41. v. To select by the drawing of lots. | |
The winning lottery numbers were drawn every Tuesday. | |
42. v. To win in a lottery or similar game of chance. | |
He drew a prize. | |
43. v. (poker) To trade in cards for replacements in draw poker games; to attempt to improve one's hand with future cards. See also draw out. | |
Jill has four diamonds; she'll try to draw for a flush. | |
44. v. (curling) To make a shot that lands in the house without hitting another stone. | |
45. v. (cricket) To play (a short-length ball directed at the leg stump) with an inclined bat so as to deflect the ball between the legs and the wicket. | |
46. v. (golf) To hit (the ball) with the toe of the club so that it is deflected toward the left. | |
47. v. (billiards) To strike (the cue ball) below the center so as to give it a backward rotation which causes it to take a backward direction on striking another ball. | |
48. n. The result of a contest in which neither side has won; a tie. | |
The game ended in a draw. | |
49. n. The procedure by which the result of a lottery is determined. | |
The draw is on Saturday. | |
50. n. Something that attracts e.g. a crowd. | |
51. n. (cricket) The result of a two-innings match in which at least one side did not complete all their innings before time ran out. Different from a tie. | |
52. n. (golf) A golf shot that (for the right-handed player) curves intentionally to the left. See hook, slice, fade. | |
53. n. (curling) A shot that lands in the house without hitting another stone. | |
54. n. (geography) A dry stream bed that drains surface water only during periods of heavy rain or flooding. | |
55. n. (colloquial) Cannabis. | |
56. n. In a commission-based job, an advance on future (potential) commissions given to an employee by the employer. | |
57. n. (poker) A situation in which one or more players has four cards of the same suit or four out of five necessary cards for a straight and requires a further card to make their flush or straight. | |
58. n. (archery) The act of pulling back the strings in preparation of firing. | |
59. n. (sports) The spin or twist imparted to a ball etc. by a drawing stroke. | |
air |
1. n. (meteorology) The substance constituting earth's atmosphere, particularly: | |
I'm going outside to get some air. | |
2. n. (historical, philosophy, alchemy) understood as one of the four elements of the ancient Greeks and Romans. | |
3. n. (historical, medical) understood as a particular local substance with supposed effects on human health. | |
There was a tension in the air which made me suspect an approaching storm. | |
4. n. (physics) understood as a gaseous mixture of nitrogen, oxygen, and various trace gases. | |
5. n. (usually with the) The apparently open space above the ground which this substance fills, (historical) formerly thought to be limited by the firmament but (meteorology) now considered surrounded by th | |
The flock of birds took to the air. | |
6. n. A breeze; a gentle wind. | |
7. n. A feeling or sense. | |
to give it an air of artistry and sophistication | |
8. n. A sense of poise, graciousness, or quality. | |
9. n. (usually plural) Pretension; snobbishness; pretence that one is better than others. | |
putting on airs | |
10. n. (music) A song, especially a solo; an aria. | |
11. n. (informal) Nothing; absence of anything. | |
12. n. An air conditioner or the processed air it produces. Can be a mass noun or a count noun depending on context; similar to hair. | |
Could you turn on the air? | |
Hey, did you mean to leave the airs on all week while you were on vacation? | |
13. n. (obsolete, chemistry) Any specific gas. | |
14. n. (snowboarding, skateboarding, motor sports) A jump in which one becomes airborne. | |
15. n. A television or radio signal. | |
16. v. To bring (something) into contact with the air, so as to freshen or dry it. | |
17. v. To let fresh air into a room or a building, to ventilate. | |
It's getting quite stuffy in this room: let's open the windows and air it. | |
18. v. To discuss varying viewpoints on a given topic. | |
19. v. To broadcast, as with a television show. | |
20. v. (UK, MLE, slang) to ignore | |
through |
1. prep. From one side of an opening to the other. | |
I went through the window. | |
2. prep. Entering, then later leaving. | |
I drove through the town at top speed without looking left or right. | |
3. prep. Surrounded by (while moving). | |
We slogged through the mud for hours before turning back and giving up. | |
4. prep. By means of. | |
This team believes in winning through intimidation. | |
5. prep. (North America) To (or up to) and including, with all intermediate values. | |
from 1945 through 1991; the numbers 1 through 9; your membership is active through March 15, 2013 | |
6. adj. Passing from one side of something to the other. | |
Interstate highways form a nationwide system of through roads. | |
7. adj. Finished; complete. | |
They were through with laying the subroof by noon. | |
8. adj. Valueless; without a future. | |
After being implicated in the scandal, he was through as an executive in financial services. | |
9. adj. No longer interested. | |
She was through with him. | |
10. adj. Proceeding from origin to destination without delay due to change of equipment. | |
The through flight through Memphis was the fastest. | |
11. adj. (association football) In possession of the ball beyond the last line of defence but not necessarily the goalkeeper; through on goal. | |
12. adv. From one side to the other by way of the interior. | |
The arrow went straight through. | |
13. adv. From one end to the other. | |
Others slept; he worked straight through. | |
She read the letter through. | |
14. adv. To the end. | |
He said he would see it through. | |
15. adv. Completely. | |
Leave the yarn in the dye overnight so the color soaks through. | |
16. adv. Out into the open. | |
The American army broke through at St. Lo. | |
17. n. A large slab of stone laid in a dry-stone wall from one side to the other; a perpend. | |
18. n. (obsolete) A coffin, sarcophagus or tomb of stone; a large slab of stone laid on a tomb. | |
the |
1. art. Definite grammatical article that implies necessarily that an entity it articulates is presupposed; something already mentioned, or completely specified later in that same sentence, or assumed already | |
I’m reading the book. (Compare I’m reading a book.) | |
The street in front of your house. (Compare A street in Paris.) | |
The men and women watched the man give the birdseed to the bird. | |
2. art. Used before a noun modified by a restrictive relative clause, indicating that the noun refers to a single referent defined by the relative clause. | |
The street that runs through my hometown. | |
3. art. Used before an object considered to be unique, or of which there is only one at a time. | |
No one knows how many galaxies there are in the universe. | |
God save the Queen! | |
4. art. Used before a superlative or an ordinal number modifying a noun, to indicate that the noun refers to a single item. | |
That was the best apple pie ever. | |
5. art. Added to a superlative or an ordinal number to make it into a substantive. | |
That apple pie was the best. | |
6. art. Introducing a singular term to be taken generically: preceding a name of something standing for a whole class. | |
7. art. Used before an adjective, indicating all things (especially persons) described by that adjective. | |
Feed the hungry, clothe the naked, comfort the afflicted, and afflict the comfortable. | |
8. art. Used to indicate a certain example of (a noun) which is usually of most concern or most common or familiar. | |
No one in the whole country had seen it before. | |
I don't think I'll get to it until the morning. | |
9. art. Used before a body part (especially of someone previously mentioned), as an alternative to a possessive pronoun. | |
A stone hit him on the head. (= “A stone hit him on his head.”) | |
10. art. When stressed, indicates that it describes an object which is considered to be best or exclusively worthy of attention. | |
That is the hospital to go to for heart surgery. | |
11. adv. 1=With a comparative ormore and a verb phrase, establishes a parallel with one or more other such comparatives. | |
The hotter the better. | |
The more I think about it, the weaker it looks. | |
The more money donated, the more books purchased, and the more happy children. | |
It looks weaker and weaker, the more I think about it. | |
12. adv. 1=With a comparative, and often withfor it, indicates a result more like said comparative. This can be negated withnone. | |
It was a difficult time, but I’m the wiser for it. | |
It was a difficult time, and I’m none the wiser for it. | |
I'm much the wiser for having had a difficult time like that. | |
nose |
1. n. A protuberance on the face housing the nostrils, which are used to breathe or smell. | |
She has a cold in the nose. | |
2. n. A snout, the nose of an animal. | |
3. n. The tip of an object. | |
the nose of a tea-kettle, a bellows, or a fighter plane | |
4. n. (horse racing) The length of a horse’s nose, used to indicate the distance between horses at the finish of a race, or any very close race. | |
Red Rum only won by a nose. | |
5. n. A perfumer. | |
6. n. The power of smelling. | |
7. n. Bouquet, the smell of something, especially wine. | |
8. n. The skill in recognising bouquet. | |
It is essential that a winetaster develops a good nose. | |
9. n. (by extension) Skill at finding information. | |
A successful reporter has a nose for news. | |
10. v. (intransitive) To move cautiously by advancing its front end. | |
The ship nosed through the minefield. | |
11. v. (intransitive) To snoop. | |
She was nosing around other people’s business. | |
12. v. To detect by smell or as if by smell. | |
13. v. To push with one's nose; to nuzzle. | |
14. v. To defeat (as in a race or other contest) by a narrow margin; sometimes with out. | |
15. v. To utter in a nasal manner; to pronounce with a nasal twang. | |
to nose a prayer | |
16. v. To furnish with a nose. | |
to nose a stair tread | |
17. v. To confront; be closely face to face or opposite to. | |
snuffling |
1. v. present participle of snuffle | |
2. n. A breathy noise; a snuffle | |
snuffle |
1. v. (intransitive) To sniff or smell with the nose loudly and audibly. | |
2. v. (intransitive) To speak through the nose; to breathe through the nose when it is obstructed, so as to make a broken sound. | |
3. n. An act of snuffling; sniffing loudly | |
sniffling |
1. v. present participle of sniffle | |
2. n. A sniffle sound or action. | |
We heard snifflings and a cough from behind the hedge. | |
sniffle |
1. v. (intransitive) To make a whimpering or sniffing sound when breathing because of a runny nose. | |
Sonia sniffled a little, and her eyes were puffy and wet. | |
2. n. The act, or the sound of sniffling; the condition of having a runny or wet nose, as from a cold or allergies. | |
I sometimes have a sniffle during allergy season. | |