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Word Meanings - EXHAUSTLESS - Book Publishers vocabulary database

Not be exhausted; inexhaustible; as, an exhaustless fund or store.

Related words: (words related to EXHAUSTLESS)

  • STORER
    One who lays up or forms a store.
  • EXHAUSTION
    An ancient geometrical method in which an exhaustive process was employed. It was nearly equivalent to the modern method of limits. Note: The method of exhaustions was applied to great variety of propositions, pertaining to rectifications
  • STORED
    Collected or accumulated as a reserve supply; as, stored electricity. It is charged with stored virtue. Bagehot.
  • EXHAUSTIVE
    Serving or tending to exhaust; exhibiting all the facts or arguments; as, an exhaustive method. Ex*haust"ive*ly, adv.
  • EXHAUSTURE
    Exhaustion. Wraxall.
  • INEXHAUSTIBLE
    Incapable of being exhausted, emptied, or used up; unfailing; not to be wasted or spent; as, inexhaustible stores of provisions; an inexhaustible stock of elegant words. Dryden. An inexhaustible store of anecdotes. Macaulay. -- In`ex*haust"i*ble*ness,
  • EXHAUSTLESS
    Not be exhausted; inexhaustible; as, an exhaustless fund or store.
  • STOREY
    See STORY
  • EXHAUSTIBILITY
    Capability of being exhausted. I was seriously tormented by the thought of the exhaustibility of musical combinations. J. S. Mill.
  • STOREHOUSE
    1. A building for keeping goods of any kind, especially provisions; a magazine; a repository; a warehouse. Joseph opened all the storehouses, and sold unto Egyptians. Gen. xli.
  • STORESHIP
    A vessel used to carry naval stores for a fleet, garrison, or the like.
  • EXHAUST
    To subject to the action of various solvents in order to remove all soluble substances or extractives; as, to exhaust a drug successively with water, alcohol, and ether. Exhausted receiver. See under Receiver. Syn. -- To spend; consume; tire out;
  • STORE
    Articles, especially of food, accumulated for some specific object; supplies, as of provisions, arms, ammunition, and the like; as, the stores of an army, of a ship, of a family. His swine, his horse, his stoor, and his poultry. Chaucer. In store,
  • EXHAUSTIBLE
    Capable of being exhausted, drained off, or expended. Johnson.
  • STOREKEEPER
    1. A man in charge of stores or goods of any kind; as, a naval storekeeper. 2. One who keeps a "store;" a shopkeeper. See 1st Store, 3.
  • EXHAUSTMENT
    Exhaustion; drain.
  • STOREROOM
    Room in a storehouse or repository; a room in which articles are stored.
  • EXHAUSTING
    Producing exhaustion; as, exhausting labors. -- Ex*haust"ing, adv.
  • EXHAUSTER
    One who, or that which, exhausts or draws out.
  • UNEXHAUSTIBLE
    Inexhaustible.
  • INEXHAUSTED
    Not exhausted; not emptied; not spent; not having lost all strength or resources; unexhausted. Dryden.
  • INEXHAUSTIVE
    Inexhaustible. Thomson.
  • RESTORE
    To bring back to its former state; to bring back from a state of ruin, decay, disease, or the like; to repair; to renew; to recover. "To restore and to build Jerusalem." Dan. ix. 25. Our fortune restored after the severest afflictions. Prior. And
  • CASTOREUM
    A peculiar bitter orange-brown substance, with strong, penetrating odor, found in two sacs between the anus and external genitals of the beaver; castor; -- used in medicine as an antispasmodic, and by perfumers.
  • INSTORE
    To store up; to inclose; to contain. Wyclif.
  • RESTORER
    One who, or that which, restores.
  • WARNSTORE
    To furnish. "To warnstore your house." Chaucer.
  • RE-STORE
    To store again; as, the goods taken out were re-stored.
  • ENSTORE
    To restore. Wyclif.

 

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