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Intact
  • (a.) Untouched, especially by anything that harms, defiles, or the like

    Intaglio
  • (n.) A cutting or engraving

    Intake
  • (n.) the beginning of a contraction or narrowing in a tube or cylinder.

    Intangible
  • (a.) Not tangible

    Integer
  • (n.) A complete entity

    Integral
  • (a.) Essential to completeness
  • (n.) An expression which, being differentiated, will produce a given differential.

    Integrant
  • (a.) Making part of a whole

    Integrate
  • (v. t.) To form into one whole

    Integration
  • (n.) In the theory of evolution: The process by which the manifold is compacted into the relatively simple and permanent

    Integrator
  • (n.) That which integrates

    Integrity
  • (n.) Moral soundness

    Integument
  • (n.) That which naturally invests or covers another thing, as the testa or the tegmen of a seed

    Intellect
  • (n.) The part or faculty of the human soul by which it knows, as distinguished from the power to feel and to will

    Intelligence
  • (n.) Acquaintance

    Intelligent
  • (a.) Endowed with the faculty of understanding or reason

    Intemperance
  • (n.) Specifically: Habitual or excessive indulgence in alcoholic liquors.

    Intemperate
  • (a.) Excessive
  • (v. t.) To disorder.

    Intend
  • (v. t.) To apply with energy.

    Intense
  • (a.) Extreme in degree

    Intensifier
  • (n.) One who or that which intensifies or strengthens

    Intensify
  • (v. i.) To become intense, or more intense
  • (v. t.) To render more intense

    Intension
  • (n.) A straining, stretching, or bending

    Intensity
  • (n.) The amount or degree of energy with which a force operates or a cause acts

    Intensive
  • (a.) Characterized by persistence
  • (n.) That which intensifies or emphasizes

    Intent
  • (a.) Closely directed
  • (n.) The act of turning the mind toward an object

    Inter
  • (v. t.) To deposit and cover in the earth

    Intestacy
  • (n.) The state of being intestate, or of dying without having made a valid will.

    Intestate
  • (a.) Not devised or bequeathed
  • (n.) A person who dies without making a valid will.

    Intestinal
  • (a.) Of or pertaining to the intestines of an animal

    Intestine
  • (a.) Depending upon the internal constitution of a body or entity

    Inthrall
  • (v. t.) To reduce to bondage or servitude

    Intimacy
  • (n.) The state of being intimate

    Intimate
  • (a.) Close in friendship or acquaintance
  • (n.) An intimate friend or associate

    Intimation
  • (n.) A hint

    Intime
  • (a.) Inward

    Intimidate
  • (v. t.) To make timid or fearful

    Intinction
  • (n.) A method or practice of the administration of the sacrament by dipping the bread or wafer in the wine and administering both together

    Intine
  • (n.) A transparent, extensible membrane of extreme tenuity, which forms the innermost coating of grains of pollen

    Into
  • (prep.) Denoting inclusion

    Intracellular
  • (a.) Within a cell

    Intracranial
  • (a.) Within the cranium or skull.

    Intractable
  • (a.) Not tractable

    Intrados
  • (n.) The interior curve of an arch

    Intramolecular
  • (a.) Between molecules

    Intramural
  • (a.) Being within the substance of the walls of an organ

    Intransigent
  • (a.) Refusing compromise

    Intransitive
  • (a.) Not passing farther

    Intranuclear
  • (a.) Within the nucleus of a cell

    Intrauterine
  • (a.) Within the uterus or womb

    Intravenous
  • (a.) Within the veins.

    Intraventricular
  • (a.) Within or between ventricles.

    Intrench
  • (v. i.) To invade
  • (v. t.) To cut in

    Intrepid
  • (a.) Not trembling or shaking with fear

    Intricacy
  • (n.) The state or quality of being intricate or entangled

    Intricate
  • (a.) Entangled
  • (v. t.) To entangle

    Intrigue
  • (v. i.) A complicated plot or scheme intended to effect some purpose by secret artifice
  • (v. t.) To fill with artifice and duplicity

    Intrinsic
  • (a.) Included wholly within an organ or limb, as certain groups of muscles
  • (n.) A genuine quality.

    Introduce
  • (v. t.) To bring into notice, practice, cultivation, or use

    Introduction
  • (n.) A formal and elaborate preliminary treatise

    Introductory
  • (a.) Serving to introduce something else

    Introgression
  • (n.) The act of going in

    Introit
  • (n.) A going in.

    Intromission
  • (n.) An intermeddling with the affairs of another, either on legal grounds or without authority

    Intromit
  • (v. i.) To intermeddle with the effects or goods of another.
  • (v. t.) To allow to pass in

    Introrse
  • (a.) Turning or facing inward, or toward the axis of the part to which it belongs.

    Introspect
  • (v. t.) To look into or within

    Introversion
  • (n.) The act of introverting, or the state of being introverted

    Introvert
  • (v. t.) To look within

    Intrude
  • (v. i.) To thrust one's self in
  • (v. t.) The cause to enter or force a way, as into the crevices of rocks.

    Intrusion
  • (n.) The act of intruding, or of forcing in

    Intrusive
  • (a.) Apt to intrude

    Intrust
  • (v. t.) To deliver (something) to another in trust

    Intuition
  • (n.) A looking after

    Intuitive
  • (a.) Knowing, or perceiving, by intuition

    Intumesce
  • (v. i.) To enlarge or expand with heat

    Intussusception
  • (n.) The abnormal reception or slipping of a part of a tube, by inversion and descent, within a contiguous part of it

    Intwine
  • (v. i.) To be or to become intwined.
  • (v. t.) To twine or twist into, or together

    Intwist
  • (v. t.) To twist into or together

    Inulin
  • (n.) A substance of very wide occurrence. It is found dissolved in the sap of the roots and rhizomes of many composite and other plants, as Inula, Helianthus, Campanula, etc

    Inunction
  • (n.) The act of anointing, or the state of being anointed

    Inundate
  • (v. t.) To cover with a flood

    Inundation
  • (n.) An overspreading of any kind

    Inurbane
  • (a.) Uncivil

    Inure
  • (v. i.) To pass into use
  • (v. t.) To apply in use

    Inurn
  • (v. t.) To put in an urn, as the ashes of the dead

    Inutile
  • (a.) Useless

    Invade
  • (v. i.) To make an invasion.
  • (v. t.) To attack

    Invaginate
  • (v. t.) To insert as in a sheath

    Invagination
  • (n.) One of the methods by which the various germinal layers of the ovum are differentiated

    Invalid
  • (a.) A person who is weak and infirm
  • (n.) Not well
  • (v. t.) To classify or enroll as an invalid.

    Invaluable
  • (a.) Valuable beyond estimation

    Invariable
  • (a.) Not given to variation or change
  • (n.) An invariable quantity

    Invariant
  • (n.) An invariable quantity

    Invasion
  • (n.) A warlike or hostile entrance into the possessions or domains of another

    Invasive
  • (a.) Tending to invade

    Invective
  • (a.) Characterized by invection
  • (n.) An expression which inveighs or rails against a person

    Inveigh
  • (v. i.) To declaim or rail (against some person or thing)

    Inveigle
  • (v. t.) To lead astray as if blind

    Invent
  • (v. t.) To come or light upon

    Inveracity
  • (n.) Want of veracity.

    Inverse
  • (a.) Inverted
  • (n.) That which is inverse.

    Inversion
  • (n.) A change by inverted order

    Invert
  • (a.) Subjected to the process of inversion
  • (n.) An inverted arch.
  • (v. i.) To undergo inversion, as sugar.
  • (v. t.) To change the position of

    Invest
  • (v. i.) To make an investment
  • (v. t.) To clothe, as with office or authority

    Inveterate
  • (a.) Firmly established by long continuance
  • (v. t.) To fix and settle by long continuance.

    Invidious
  • (a.) Envious

    Invigorate
  • (v. t.) To give vigor to

    Invincible
  • (a.) Incapable of being conquered, overcome, or subdued

    Inviolable
  • (a.) Not capable of being broken or violated

    Invisible
  • (a.) Incapable of being seen
  • (n.) An invisible person or thing

    Invitation
  • (n.) A document written or printed, or spoken words, /onveying the message by which one is invited

    Invitatory
  • (a.) Using or containing invitations.
  • (n.) That which invites

    Invite
  • (v. i.) To give invitation.
  • (v. t.) To allure

    Inviting
  • (a.) Alluring

    Invocate
  • (v. t.) To invoke

    Invocation
  • (n.) A call or summons

    Invoice
  • (n.) A written account of the particulars of merchandise shipped or sent to a purchaser, consignee, factor, etc
  • (v. t.) To make a written list or account of, as goods to be sent to a consignee

    Invoke
  • (v. t.) To call on for aid or protection

    Involucre
  • (n.) A continuous marginal covering of sporangia, in certain ferns, as in the common brake, or the cup-shaped processes of the filmy ferns

    Involucrum
  • (n.) A sheath which surrounds the base of the lasso cells in the Siphonophora.

    Involuntarily
  • (adv.) In an involuntary manner

    Involuntary
  • (a.) Not having will or the power of choice.

    Involute
  • (n.) A curve traced by the end of a string wound upon another curve, or unwound from it

    Involution
  • (n.) That in which anything is involved, folded, or wrapped

    Involve
  • (v. t.) To complicate or make intricate, as in grammatical structure.

    Invulnerable
  • (a.) Incapable of being wounded, or of receiving injury.

    Inward
  • (n.) An intimate or familiar friend or acquaintance.

    Inweave
  • (v. t.) To weave in or together

    Inwrap
  • (v. t.) To cover by wrapping

    Inwreathe
  • (v. t.) To surround or encompass as with a wreath.

    Io
  • (n.) An exclamation of joy or triumph

    Iodate
  • (n.) A salt of iodic acid.

    Iodic
  • (a.) to, or containing, iodine

    Iodide
  • (n.) A binary compound of iodine, or one which may be regarded as binary

    Iodine
  • (n.) A nonmetallic element, of the halogen group, occurring always in combination, as in the iodides

    Iodize
  • (v. t.) To treat or impregnate with iodine or its compounds

    Iodoform
  • (n.) A yellow, crystalline, volatile substance, CI3H, having an offensive odor and sweetish taste, and analogous to chloroform

    Iodous
  • (a.) Pertaining to, or containing, iodine.

    Iolite
  • (n.) A silicate of alumina, iron, and magnesia, having a bright blue color and vitreous luster

    Ion
  • (n.) One of the electrified particles into which, according to the electrolytic dissociation theory, the molecules of electrolytes are divided by water and other solvents

    Ionian
  • (a.) Of or pertaining to Ionia or the Ionians
  • (n.) A native or citizen of Ionia.

    Ionic
  • (a.) Of or pertaining to an ion
  • (n.) A foot consisting of four syllables: either two long and two short

    Ionize
  • (v. t.) To separate (a compound) into ions, esp. by dissolving in water.

    Iota
  • (n.) A very small quantity or degree

    Ipecac
  • (n.) An abbreviation of Ipecacuanha, and in more frequent use.

    Iracund
  • (a.) Irascible

    Irade
  • (n.) A decree of the Sultan.

    Iran
  • (n.) The native name of Persia.

    Irascible
  • (a.) Prone to anger

    Irate
  • (a.) Angry

    Ire
  • (n.) Anger

    Irenics
  • (n.) That branch of Christian science which treats of the methods of securing unity among Christians or harmony and union among the churches

    Iridectomy
  • (n.) The act or process of cutting out a portion of the iris in order to form an artificial pupil

    Iridescent
  • (a.) Having colors like the rainbow

    Iridic
  • (a.) Of or pertaining to iridium

    Iridium
  • (n.) A rare metallic element, of the same group as platinum, which it much resembles, being silver-white, but harder, and brittle, and indifferent to most corrosive agents

    Iris
  • (n.) A genus of plants having showy flowers and bulbous or tuberous roots, of which the flower-de-luce (fleur-de-lis), orris, and other species of flag are examples

    Iritis
  • (n.) An inflammation of the iris of the eye.

    Irk
  • (v. t.) To weary

    Irksome
  • (a.) Wearisome

    Iron
  • (n.) An instrument or utensil made of iron
  • (v. t.) To furnish or arm with iron

    Iroquoian
  • (a.) Of, pertaining to, or designating, one of the principal linguistic stocks of the North American Indians
  • (n.) An Indian of an Iroquoian tribe.

    Iroquois
  • (n. sing. & pl.) A powerful and warlike confederacy of Indian tribes, formerly inhabiting Central New York and constituting most of the Five Nations

    Irradiant
  • (a.) Irradiating or illuminating

    Irradiate
  • (a.) Illuminated
  • (v. i.) To emit rays
  • (v. t.) To animate by heat or light.

    Irradiation
  • (n.) Act of irradiating, or state of being irradiated.

    Irrational
  • (a.) Not according to reason

    Irreclaimable
  • (a.) Incapable of being reclaimed.

    Irreconcilable
  • (a.) Not reconcilable

    Irrecoverable
  • (a.) Not capable of being recovered, regained, or remedied

    Irredeemable
  • (a.) Not redeemable

    Irreducible
  • (a.) Incapable of being reduced, or brought into a different state

    Irrefragable
  • (a.) Not refragable

    Irrefrangible
  • (a.) Not refrangible

    Irrefutable
  • (a.) Incapable of being refuted or disproved

    Irregular
  • (a.) Not regular
  • (n.) One who is not regular

    Irrelative
  • (a.) Not relative

    Irreligious
  • (a.) Destitute of religion

    Irremeable
  • (a.) Admitting no return

    Irremediable
  • (a.) Not to be remedied, corrected, or redressed

    Irremissible
  • (a.) Not remissible

    Irremovable
  • (a.) Not removable

    Irreparable
  • (a.) Not reparable

    Irrepealable
  • (a.) Not repealable

    Irrepressible
  • (a.) Not capable of being repressed, restrained, or controlled

    Irreproachable
  • (a.) Not reproachable

    Irresistible
  • (a.) That can not be successfully resisted or opposed

    Irresoluble
  • (a.) Incapable of being dissolved or resolved into parts

    Irresolute
  • (a.) Not resolute

    Irresolvable
  • (a.) Incapable of being resolved

    Irrespective
  • (a.) Disrespectful.

    Irresponsible
  • (a.) Nor responsible

    Irresponsive
  • (a.) Not responsive

    Irretrievable
  • (a.) Not retrievable

    Irreverence
  • (n.) The state or quality of being irreverent

    Irreverent
  • (a.) Not reverent

    Irreversible
  • (a.) Incapable of being reversed, recalled, repealed, or annulled

    Irrevocable
  • (a.) Incapable of being recalled or revoked

    Irrigate
  • (v. t.) To water, as land, by causing a stream to flow upon, over, or through it, as in artificial channels

    Irritable
  • (a.) Capable of being irriated.

    Irritant
  • (a.) Irritating
  • (n.) Any agent by which irritation is produced

    Irritate
  • (a.) Excited
  • (n.) To make morbidly excitable, or oversensitive
  • (v. t.) To excite anger or displeasure in

    Irritation
  • (n.) A condition of morbid excitability or oversensitiveness of an organ or part of the body

    Irruptive
  • (a.) Rushing in or upon.

    Is
  • (v. i.) The third person singular of the substantive verb be, in the indicative mood, present tense

    Isagogics
  • (n.) That part of theological science directly preliminary to actual exegesis, or interpretation of the Scriptures

    Isatin
  • (n.) An orange-red crystalline substance, C8H5NO2, obtained by the oxidation of indigo blue. It is also produced from certain derivatives of benzoic acid, and is one important source of artificial indigo

    Ischium
  • (n.) One of the pleurae of insects.

    Isentropic
  • (a.) Having equal entropy.

    Ishmaelite
  • (n.) A descendant of Ishmael (the son of Abraham and Hagar), of whom it was said, "His hand will be against every man, and every man's hand against him

    Isinglass
  • (n.) A popular name for mica, especially when in thin sheets.

    Isis
  • (n.) Any coral of the genus Isis, or family Isidae, composed of joints of white, stony coral, alternating with flexible, horny joints

    Islam
  • (n.) The religion of the Mohammedans

    Island
  • (n.) Anything regarded as resembling an island
  • (v. t.) To cause to become or to resemble an island

    Isle
  • (n.) An island.
  • (v. t.) To cause to become an island, or like an island

    Ism
  • (n.) A doctrine or theory

    Isobar
  • (n.) A line connecting or marking places upon the surface of the earth where height of the barometer reduced to sea level is the same either at a given time, or for a certain period (mean height), as for a year

    Isocheim
  • (n.) A line connecting places on the earth having the same mean winter temperature. Cf. Isothere

    Isochromatic
  • (a.) Having the same color

    Isochroous
  • (a.) Having the same tint or color throughout

    Isoclinic
  • (a.) Of or pertaining to, or indicating, equality of inclination or dip

    Isodiametric
  • (a.) Developed alike in the directions of the several lateral axes

    Isodynamic
  • (a.) Of, pertaining to, having, or denoting, equality of force.

    Isogonic
  • (a.) Characterized by isogonism.

    Isolate
  • (v. t.) To insulate.

    Isolation
  • (n.) The act of isolating, or the state of being isolated

    Isologous
  • (a.) Having similar proportions, similar relations, or similar differences of composition

    Isomer
  • (n.) A body or compound which is isomeric with another body or compound

    Isomorph
  • (n.) An animal, plant, or group having superficial similarity to another, although phylogenetically different

    Isopiestic
  • (a.) Having equal pressure.

    Isopod
  • (a.) Having the legs similar in structure
  • (n.) One of the Isopoda.

    Isoprene
  • (n.) An oily, volatile hydrocarbon, obtained by the distillation of caoutchouc or guttaipercha

    Isosceles
  • (a.) Having two legs or sides that are equal

    Isostasy
  • (n.) general equilibrium in the earth's crust, supposed to be maintained by the yielding or flow of rock material beneath the surface under gravitative stress

    Isotherm
  • (n.) A line connecting or marking points on the earth's surface having the same temperature. This may be the temperature for a given time of observation, or the mean temperature for a year or other period

    Isotonic
  • (a.) Having or indicating, equal tones, or tension.

    Isotropic
  • (a.) Having the same properties in all directions

    Israelite
  • (n.) A descendant of Israel, or Jacob

    Issuable
  • (a.) Lawful or suitable to be issued

    Issuance
  • (n.) The act of issuing, or giving out

    Issuant
  • (a.) Issuing or coming up

    Issue
  • (n.) A discharge of flux, as of blood.
  • (v. i.) In pleading, to come to a point in fact or law, on which the parties join issue.
  • (v. t.) To deliver for use

    Isthmian
  • (a.) Of or pertaining to an isthmus, especially to the Isthmus of Corinth, in Greece.

    Isthmus
  • (n.) A neck or narrow slip of land by which two continents are connected, or by which a peninsula is united to the mainland

    It
  • (pron.) As a demonstrative, especially at the beginning of a sentence, pointing to that which is about to be stated, named, or mentioned, or referring to that which apparent or well known

    Italian
  • (a.) Of or pertaining to Italy, or to its people or language.
  • (n.) A native or inhabitant of Italy.

    Italic
  • (a.) Applied especially to a kind of type in which the letters do not stand upright, but slope toward the right
  • (n.) An Italic letter, character, or type (see Italic, a., 2.)

    Itch
  • (n.) A constant irritating desire.
  • (v. i.) To have a constant desire or teasing uneasiness

    Item
  • (adv.) Also
  • (n.) A hint
  • (v. t.) To make a note or memorandum of.

    Iterance
  • (n.) Iteration.

    Iterant
  • (a.) Repeating

    Iterate
  • (a.) Uttered or done again
  • (adv.) By way of iteration.
  • (v. t.) To utter or do a second time or many times

    Iteration
  • (n.) Recital or performance a second time

    Iterative
  • (a.) Repeating.

    Ithyphallic
  • (a.) Lustful

    Itinerancy
  • (n.) A discharge of official duty involving frequent change of residence

    Itinerant
  • (a.) One who travels from place to place, particularly a preacher

    Itinerary
  • (a.) An account of travels, or a register of places and distances as a guide to travelers

    Itinerate
  • (v. i.) To wander without a settled habitation

    Itself
  • (pron.) The neuter reciprocal pronoun of It

    Ivied
  • (a.) Overgrown with ivy.

    Ivory
  • (n.) Any carving executed in ivory.

    Ivy
  • (n.) A plant of the genus Hedera (H. helix), common in Europe. Its leaves are evergreen, dark, smooth, shining, and mostly five-pointed

    Jab
  • (n.) A thrust or stab.
  • (v. t.) To thrust

    Jabber
  • (n.) One who jabbers.
  • (v. i.) To talk rapidly, indistinctly, or unintelligibly
  • (v. t.) To utter rapidly or indistinctly

    Jabiru
  • (n.) One of several large wading birds of the genera Mycteria and Xenorhynchus, allied to the storks in form and habits

    Jaborandi
  • (n.) The native name of a South American rutaceous shrub (Pilocarpus pennatifolius). The leaves are used in medicine as an diaphoretic and sialogogue

    Jabot
  • (n.) An arrangement of lace or tulle, looped ornamentally, and worn by women on the front of the dress

    Jacal
  • (n.) In Mexico and the south western United States, a kind of plastered house or hut, usually made by planting poles or timber in the geound, filling in between them with screen work or wickerwork, and daubing one or both sides with mud or adobe mortar

    Jacamar
  • (n.) Any one of numerous species of tropical American birds of the genus Galbula and allied genera

    Jacaranda
  • (n.) A genus of bignoniaceous Brazilian trees with showy trumpet-shaped flowers.

    Jack
  • (n.) A bar of iron athwart ships at a topgallant masthead, to support a royal mast, and give spread to the royal shrouds
  • (v. i.) To hunt game at night by means of a jack.
  • (v. t.) To move or lift, as a house, by means of a jack or jacks.

    Jacob
  • (n.) A Hebrew patriarch (son of Isaac, and ancestor of the Jews), who in a vision saw a ladder reaching up to heaven (Gen

    Jaconet
  • (n.) A thin cotton fabric, between and muslin, used for dresses, neckcloths, etc.

    Jacquard
  • (a.) Pertaining to, or invented by, Jacquard, a French mechanician, who died in 1834.

    Jactitation
  • (n.) A frequent tossing or moving of the body

    Jade
  • (n.) A disreputable or vicious woman
  • (v. i.) To become weary
  • (v. t.) To exhaust by overdriving or long-continued labor of any kind

    Jag
  • (n.) A cleft or division.
  • (v. t.) To carry, as a load

    Jagged
  • (a.) Having jags

    Jaggery
  • (n.) Raw palm sugar, made in the East Indies by evaporating the fresh juice of several kinds of palm trees, but specifically that of the palmyra (Borassus flabelliformis)

    Jaggy
  • (a.) Having jags

    Jaguar
  • (n.) A large and powerful feline animal (Felis onca), ranging from Texas and Mexico to Patagonia

    Jah
  • (n.) Jehovah.

    Jail
  • (n.) A kind of prison
  • (v. t.) To imprison.

    Jainism
  • (n.) The heterodox Hindoo religion, of which the most striking features are the exaltation of saints or holy mortals, called jins, above the ordinary Hindoo gods, and the denial of the divine origin and infallibility of the Vedas

    Jak
  • (n.) see Ils Jack.

    Jakes
  • (n.) A privy.

    Jalap
  • (n.) The tubers of the Mexican plant Ipomoea purga (or Exogonium purga), a climber much like the morning-glory

    Jalousie
  • (n.) A Venetian or slatted inside window blind.

    Jam
  • (n.) A kind of frock for children.
  • (v. t.) To bring (a vessel) so close to the wind that half her upper sails are laid aback.

    Jamb
  • (n.) Any thick mass of rock which prevents miners from following the lode or vein.

    Jan
  • (n.) One of intermediate order between angels and men.

    Jangle
  • (n.) Discordant sound
  • (v. i.) To quarrel in words
  • (v. t.) To cause to sound harshly or inharmoniously

    Janitor
  • (n.) A door-keeper

    Janizary
  • (n.) A soldier of a privileged military class, which formed the nucleus of the Turkish infantry, but was suppressed in 1826

    Jansenism
  • (n.) The doctrine of Jansen regarding free will and divine grace.

    January
  • (n.) The first month of the year, containing thirty-one days.

    Janus
  • (n.) A Latin deity represented with two faces looking in opposite directions. Numa is said to have dedicated to Janus the covered passage at Rome, near the Forum, which is usually called the Temple of Janus

    Japan
  • (a.) Of or pertaining to Japan, or to the lacquered work of that country
  • (n.) Work varnished and figured in the Japanese manner
  • (v. t.) To cover with a coat of hard, brilliant varnish, in the manner of the Japanese

    Jape
  • (v. i.) To jest
  • (v. t.) To mock

    Japonica
  • (n.) A species of Camellia (Camellia Japonica), a native of Japan, bearing beautiful red or white flowers

    Jar
  • (n.) A deep, broad-mouthed vessel of earthenware or glass, for holding fruit, preserves, etc., or for ornamental purposes
  • (v. i.) To act in opposition or disagreement
  • (v. t.) To cause a short, tremulous motion of, to cause to tremble, as by a sudden shock or blow

    Jargon
  • (n.) A variety of zircon.
  • (v. i.) To utter jargon

    Jarl
  • (n.) A chief

    Jarosite
  • (n.) An ocher-yellow mineral occurring on minute rhombohedral crystals. It is a hydrous sulphate of iron and potash

    Jarrah
  • (n.) The mahoganylike wood of the Australian Eucalyptus marginata.

    Jasmine
  • (n.) A shrubby plant of the genus Jasminum, bearing flowers of a peculiarly fragrant odor. The J

    Jasper
  • (n.) An opaque, impure variety of quartz, of red, yellow, and other dull colors, breaking with a smooth surface

    Jaundice
  • (n.) A morbid condition, characterized by yellowness of the eyes, skin, and urine, whiteness of the faeces, constipation, uneasiness in the region of the stomach, loss of appetite, and general languor and lassitude
  • (v. t.) To affect with jaundice

    Jaunt
  • (n.) A short excursion for pleasure or refreshment
  • (v. i.) To ramble here and there
  • (v. t.) To jolt

    Java
  • (n.) Java coffee, a kind of coffee brought from Java.

    Javelin
  • (n.) A sort of light spear, to be thrown or cast by thew hand
  • (v. t.) To pierce with a javelin.

    Jaw
  • (n.) A notched or forked part, adapted for holding an object in place
  • (v. i.) To scold
  • (v. t.) To assail or abuse by scolding.

    Jawbone
  • (n.) The bone of either jaw

    Jawed
  • (a.) Having jaws

    Jay
  • (n.) Any one of the numerous species of birds belonging to Garrulus, Cyanocitta, and allied genera

    Jayhawker
  • (n.) A name given to a free-booting, unenlisted, armed man or guerrilla.

    Jealous
  • (a.) Apprehensive

    Jean
  • (n.) A twilled cotton cloth.

    Jeer
  • (n.) A gear
  • (v.) To utter sarcastic or scoffing reflections
  • (v. t.) To treat with scoffs or derision

    Jehad
  • (n.) A religious war against infidels or Mohammedan heretics

    Jehovah
  • (n.) A Scripture name of the Supreme Being, by which he was revealed to the Jews as their covenant God or Sovereign of the theocracy

    Jehovist
  • (n.) One who maintains that the vowel points of the word Jehovah, in Hebrew, are the proper vowels of that word


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