Word Meanings - COALESCENT - Book Publishers vocabulary database
Growing together; cohering, as in the organic cohesion of similar parts; uniting.
Related words: (words related to COALESCENT)
- GROWLER
The large-mouthed black bass. 3. A four-wheeled cab. (more info) 1. One who growls. - UNITERABLE
Not iterable; incapable of being repeated. "To play away an uniterable life." Sir T. Browne. - ORGANICALNESS
The quality or state of being organic. - GROWL
To utter a deep guttural sound, sa an angry dog; to give forth an angry, grumbling sound. Gay. - UNITIVE
Having the power of uniting; causing, or tending to produce, union. Jer. Taylor. - SIMILARY
Similar. Rhyming cadences of similarly words. South. - UNITARIANISM
The doctrines of Unitarians. - UNITARIANIZE
To change or turn to Unitarian views. - GROWAN
A decomposed granite, forming a mass of gravel, as in tin lodes in Cornwall. - GROWER
One who grows or produces; as, a grower of corn; also, that which grows or increases; as, a vine may be a rank or a slow grower. - GROW
1. To increase in size by a natural and organic process; to increase in bulk by the gradual assimilation of new matter into the living organism; -- said of animals and vegetables and their organs. 2. To increase in any way; to become larger and - UNIT
The least whole number; one. Units are the integral parts of any large number. I. Watts. 3. A gold coin of the reign of James I., of the value of twenty shillings. Camden. 4. Any determinate amount or quantity (as of length, time, heat, - COHERE
1. To stick together; to cleave; to be united; to hold fast, as parts of the same mass. Neither knows he . . . how the solid parts of the body are united or cohere together. Locke. 2. To be united or connected together in subordination - UNITABLE
Capable of union by growth or otherwise. Owen. - UNITIVELY
In a unitive manner. Cudworth. - COHERENCE; COHERENCY
1. A sticking or cleaving together; union of parts of the same body; cohesion. 2. Connection or dependence, proceeding from the subordination of the parts of a thing to one principle or purpose, as in the parts of a discourse, or of a system of - UNITARIAN
Of or pertaining to Unitarians, or their doctrines. - COHERENT
1. Sticking together; cleaving; as the parts of bodies; solid or fluid. Arbuthnot. 2. Composed of mutually dependent parts; making a logical whole; consistent; as, a coherent plan, argument, or discourse. 3. Logically consistent; -- applied to - ORGANICALLY
In an organic manner; by means of organs or with reference to organic functions; hence, fundamentally. Gladstone. - COHESION
That from of attraction by which the particles of a body are united throughout the mass, whether like or unlike; -- distinguished from adhesion, which unites bodies by their adjacent surfaces. Solids and fluids differ in the degree of cohesion, - UPGROW
To grow up. Milton. - INORGANICAL
Inorganic. Locke. - ANTICOHERER
A device, one form of which consists of a scratched deposit of silver on glass, used in connection with the receiving apparatus for reading wireless signals. The electric waves falling on this contrivance increase its resistance several times. The - FULL-GROWN
Having reached the limits of growth; mature. "Full-grown wings." Lowell. - DISSIMILARLY
In a dissimilar manner; in a varied style. With verdant shrubs dissimilarly gay. C. Smart. - MISGROWTH
Bad growth; an unnatural or abnormal growth. - INCOHERENCE; INCOHERENCY
1. The quality or state of being incoherent; want of coherence; want of cohesion or adherence. Boyle. 2. Want of connection; incongruity; inconsistency; want of agreement or dependence of one part on another; as, the incoherence of arguments, - TRIBUNICIAN; TRIBUNITIAL; TRIBUNITIAN
Of or pertaining to tribunes; befitting a tribune; as, tribunitial power or authority. Dryden. A kind of tribunician veto, forbidding that which is recognized to be wrong. Hare. - INGROWTH
A growth or development inward. J. LeConte. - OUTGROWTH
That which grows out of, or proceeds from, anything; an excrescence; an offshoot; hence, a result or consequence. - INGROWING
Growing or appearing to grow into some other substance. Ingrowing nail, one whose edges are becoming imbedded in the adjacent flesh. - JEJUNITY
The quality of being jejune; jejuneness. - TRIUNITY
The quality or state of being triune; trinity. Dr. H. More.