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Word Meanings - CORNEOUS - Book Publishers vocabulary database

Of a texture resembling horn; horny; hard. Sir T. Browne.

Related words: (words related to CORNEOUS)

  • HORNY-HANDED
    Having the hands horny and callous from labor.
  • HORNY
    1. Having horns or hornlike projections. Gay. 2. Composed or made of horn, or of a substance resembling horn; of the nature of horn. "The horny . . . coat of the eye." Ray. 3. Hard; callous. "His horny fist." Dryden.
  • RESEMBLINGLY
    So as to resemble; with resemblance or likeness.
  • RESEMBLANT
    Having or exhibiting resemblance; resembling. Gower.
  • HORNYHEAD
    Any North American river chub of the genus Hybopsis, esp. H. biguttatus.
  • TEXTURE
    A tissue. See Tissue. (more info) 1. The act or art of weaving. Sir T. Browne. 2. That which woven; a woven fabric; a web. Milton. Others, apart far in the grassy dale, Or roughening waste, their humble texture weave. Thomson. 3. The disposition
  • RESEMBLE
    sembler to seem, resemble, fr. L. similare, simulare, to imitate, fr. 1. To be like or similar to; to bear the similitude of, either in appearance or qualities; as, these brothers resemble each other. We will resemble you in that. Shak.
  • RESEMBLABLE
    Admitting of being compared; like. Gower.
  • RESEMBLER
    One who resembles.
  • RESEMBLANCE
    1. The quality or state of resembling; likeness; similitude; similarity. One main end of poetry and painting is to please; they bear a great resemblance to each other. Dryden. 2. That which resembles, or is similar; a representation; a likeness.
  • PRETEXTURE
    A pretext.
  • THORNY
    1. Full of thorns or spines; rough with thorns; spiny; as, a thorny wood; a thorny tree; a thorny crown. 2. Like a thorn or thorns; hence, figuratively, troublesome; vexatious; harassing; perplexing. "The thorny point of bare distress." Shak. The
  • INTERTEXTURE
    The act of interweaving, or the state of being interwoven; that which is interwoven. "Knit in nice intertexture." Coleridge. Skirted thick with intertexture firm Of thorny boughs. Cowper.
  • CONTEXTURE
    The arrangement and union of the constituent parts of a thing; a weaving together of parts; structural character of a thing; system; constitution; texture. That wonderful contexture of all created beings. Dryden. He was not of any delicate
  • INTEXTURED
    Inwrought; woven in.
  • CONTEXTURED
    Formed into texture; woven together; arranged; composed. Carlyle.
  • RETEXTURE
    The act of weaving or forming again. Carlyle.
  • NONRESEMBLANCE
    Want of resemblance; unlikeness; dissimilarity.

 

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