Word Meanings - FARFETCHED - Book Publishers vocabulary database
1. Brought from far, or from a remote place. Every remedy contained a multitude of farfetched and heterogeneous ingredients. Hawthorne. 2. Studiously sought; not easily or naturally deduced or introduced; forced; strained.
Related words: (words related to FARFETCHED)
- FORCE
To stuff; to lard; to farce. Wit larded with malice, and malice forced with wit. Shak. - STRAINABLE
1. Capable of being strained. 2. Violent in action. Holinshed. - FARFETCHED
1. Brought from far, or from a remote place. Every remedy contained a multitude of farfetched and heterogeneous ingredients. Hawthorne. 2. Studiously sought; not easily or naturally deduced or introduced; forced; strained. - DEDUCTIVE
Of or pertaining to deduction; capable of being deduced from premises; deducible. All knowledge of causes is deductive. Glanvill. Notions and ideas . . . used in a deductive process. Whewell. - INTRODUCTOR
An introducer. - PLACEMENT
1. The act of placing, or the state of being placed. 2. Position; place. - DEDUCTIVELY
By deduction; by way of inference; by consequence. Sir T. Browne. - PLACENTARY
Having reference to the placenta; as, the placentary system of classification. - PLACE-KICK
To make a place kick; to make by a place kick. -- Place"-kick`er, n. - EVERYWHERENESS
Ubiquity; omnipresence. Grew. - EVERYWHERE
In every place; in all places; hence, in every part; throughly; altogether. - CONTAINMENT
That which is contained; the extent; the substance. The containment of a rich man's estate. Fuller. - STRAINING
from Strain. Straining piece , a short piece of timber in a truss, used to maintain the ends of struts or rafters, and keep them from slipping. See Illust. of Queen-post. - HETEROGENEOUS
Differing in kind; having unlike qualities; possessed of different characteristics; dissimilar; -- opposed to homogeneous, and said of two or more connected objects, or of a conglomerate mass, considered in respect to the parts of which it is made - FORCIBLE-FEEBLE
Seemingly vigorous, but really weak or insipid. He would purge his book of much offensive matter, if he struck out epithets which are in the bad taste of the forcible-feeble school. N. Brit. Review. (more info) Part of Shakespeare's "King Henry - FORCUT
To cut completely; to cut off. Chaucer. - FORCEPS
The caudal forceps-shaped appendage of earwigs and some other insects. See Earwig. Dressing forceps. See under Dressing. (more info) 1. A pair of pinchers, or tongs; an instrument for grasping, holding firmly, or exerting traction upon, bodies - FORCING
The art of raising plants, flowers, and fruits at an earlier season than the natural one, as in a hitbed or by the use of artificial heat. Forcing bed or pit, a plant bed having an under layer of fermenting manure, the fermentation yielding bottom - PLACER
One who places or sets. Spenser. - PLACE
Position in the heavens, as of a heavenly body; -- usually defined by its right ascension and declination, or by its latitude and longitude. Place of arms , a place calculated for the rendezvous of men in arms, etc., as a fort which affords a safe - REINFORCEMENT
See REëNFORCEMENT - RESTRAINABLE
Capable of being restrained; controllable. Sir T. Browne. - DEFORCEOR
See DEFORCIANT - REPLACEMENT
The removal of an edge or an angle by one or more planes. (more info) 1. The act of replacing. - DISTRAINER
See DISTRAINOR - HALF-STRAINED
Half-bred; imperfect. "A half-strained villain." Dryden. - ENFORCIBLE
That may be enforced.