bell notificationshomepageloginedit profileclubsdmBox

Search word meanings:

Word Meanings - ARCHONTS - Book Publishers vocabulary database

The group including man alone.

Related words: (words related to ARCHONTS)

  • ALONENESS
    A state of being alone, or without company; solitariness. Bp. Montagu.
  • INCLUDED
    Inclosed; confined. Included stamens , such as are shorter than the floral envelopes, or are concealed within them.
  • ALONE
    1. Quite by one's self; apart from, or exclusive of, others; single; solitary; -- applied to a person or thing. Alone on a wide, wide sea. Coleridge. It is not good that the man should be alone. Gen. ii. 18. 2. Of or by itself; by themselves;
  • 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,
  • 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.
  • ALONELY
    Only; merely; singly. This said spirit was not given alonely unto him, but unto all his heirs and posterity. Latimer.
  • 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.
  • SUBGROUP
    A subdivision of a group, as of animals. Darwin.
  • ABALONE
    A univalve mollusk of the genus Haliotis. The shell is lined with mother-of-pearl, and used for ornamental purposes; the sea-ear. Several large species are found on the coast of California, clinging closely to the rocks.
  • 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.
  • LUDLOW GROUP
    A subdivision of the British Upper Silurian lying below the Old Red Sandstone; -- so named from the Ludlow, in Western England. See the Chart of Geology.
  • AGROUPMENT
    See AGGROUPMENT
  • HYALONEMA
    A genus of hexactinelline sponges, having a long stem composed of very long, slender, transparent, siliceous fibres twisted together like the strands of a color. The stem of the Japanese species (H. Sieboldii), called glass-rope, has long been in
  • LET-ALONE
    Letting alone. The let-alone principle, doctrine, or policy. See Laissez faire.
  • LARAMIE GROUP
    An extensive series of strata, principally developed in the Rocky Mountain region, as in the Laramie Mountains, and formerly supposed to be of the Tertiary age, but now generally regarded as Cretaceous, or of intermediate and transitional character.
  • POTSDAM GROUP
    A subdivision of the Primordial or Cambrian period in American geology; -- so named from the sandstone of Potsdam, New York. See Chart of Geology.
  • SAUCE-ALONE
    Jack-by-the-hedge. See under Jack.
  • QUEBEC GROUP
    The middle of the three groups into which the rocks of the Canadian period have been divided in the American Lower Silurian system. See the Chart of Geology.
  • COLORADO GROUP
    A subdivision of the cretaceous formation of western North America, especially developed in Colorado and the upper Missouri region.
  • AGGROUP
    To bring together in a group; to group. Dryden.

 

Back to top