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Word Meanings - DESPONDENCE - Book Publishers vocabulary database

Despondency. The people, when once infected, lose their relish for happiness saunter about with looks of despondence. Goldsmith.

Related words: (words related to DESPONDENCE)

  • INFECTIOUSLY
    In an infectious manner. Shak.
  • PEOPLE
    1. The body of persons who compose a community, tribe, nation, or race; an aggregate of individuals forming a whole; a community; a nation. Unto him shall the gathering of the people be. Gen. xlix. 10. The ants are a people not strong. Prov. xxx.
  • RELISHABLE
    Capable of being relished; agreeable to the taste; gratifying.
  • INFECTIVE
    Infectious. Beau. & Fl. True love . . . hath an infective power. Sir P. Sidney.
  • DESPONDENCY
    The state of desponding; loss of hope and cessation of effort; discouragement; depression or dejection of the mind. The unhappy prince seemed, during some days, to be sunk in despondency. Macaulay.
  • INFECTIOUS
    Contaminating with illegality; exposing to seizure and forfeiture. Contraband articles are said to be of an infectious nature. Kent. 4. Capable of being easily diffused or spread; sympathetic; readily communicated; as, infectious mirth. The laughter
  • INFECTIOUS DISEASE
    Any disease caused by the entrance, growth, and multiplication of bacteria or protozoans in the body; a germ disease. It may not be contagious. Sometimes, as distinguished from contagious disease, such a disease communicated by germs carried in
  • SAUNTER
    A sauntering, or a sauntering place. That wheel of fops, that saunter of the town. Young.
  • ABOUT
    On the point or verge of; going; in act of. Paul was now aboutto open his mouth. Acts xviii. 14. 7. Concerning; with regard to; on account of; touching. "To treat about thy ransom." Milton. She must have her way about Sarah. Trollope. (more info)
  • PEOPLED
    Stocked with, or as with, people; inhabited. "The peopled air." Gray.
  • PEOPLE'S PARTY
    A party formed in 1891, advocating in an increase of the currency, public ownership and operation of railroads, telegraphs, etc., an income tax, limitation in ownership of land, etc.
  • PEOPLER
    A settler; an inhabitant. "Peoplers of the peaceful glen." J. S. Blackie.
  • RELISH
    1. A pleasing taste; flavor that gratifies the palate; hence, enjoyable quality; power of pleasing. Much pleasure we have lost while we abstained From this delightful fruit, nor known till now True relish, tasting. Milton. When liberty is gone,
  • INFECTIOUSNESS
    The quality of being infectious.
  • INFECTION
    Contamination by illegality, as in cases of contraband goods; implication. 6. Sympathetic communication of like qualities or emotions; influence. Through all her train the soft infection ran. Pope. Mankind are gay or serious by infection. Rambler.
  • DESPONDENCE
    Despondency. The people, when once infected, lose their relish for happiness saunter about with looks of despondence. Goldsmith.
  • PEOPLELESS
    Destitute of people. Poe.
  • INFECT
    Infected. Cf. Enfect. Shak.
  • PEOPLE'S BANK
    A form of coöperative bank, such as those of Germany; -- a term loosely used for various forms of coöperative financial institutions.
  • INFECTIBLE
    Capable of being infected.
  • REINFECT
    To infect again.
  • ROUNDABOUTNESS
    The quality of being roundabout; circuitousness.
  • DISINFECT
    To free from infectious or contagious matter; to destroy putrefaction; to purify; to make innocuous. When the infectious matter and the infectious matter and the odoriferous matter are one . . . then to deodorize is to disinfect. Ure.
  • TRADESPEOPLE
    People engaged in trade; shopkeepers.
  • IMPEOPLE
    To people; to give a population to. Thou hast helped to impeople hell. Beaumont.
  • RACEABOUT
    A small sloop-rigged racing yacht carrying about six hundred square feet of sail, distinguished from a knockabout by having a short bowsprit.
  • DISPEOPLE
    To deprive of inhabitants; to depopulate. Leave the land dispeopled and desolate. Sir T. More. A certain island long before dispeopled . . . by sea rivers. Milton.
  • DISINFECTANT
    That which disinfects; an agent for removing the causes of infection, as chlorine.
  • DEPEOPLE
    To depopulate.
  • STIRABOUT
    A dish formed of oatmeal boiled in water to a certain consistency and frequently stirred, or of oatmeal and dripping mixed together and stirred about in a pan; a hasty pudding.
  • REPEOPLE
    To people anew.
  • DISINFECTOR
    One who, or that which, disinfects; an apparatus for applying disinfectants.

 

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