bell notificationshomepageloginedit profileclubsdmBox

Search word meanings:

Word Meanings - FOOTPRINT - Book Publishers vocabulary database

The impression of the foot; a trace or footmark; as, "Footprints of the Creator."

Related words: (words related to FOOTPRINT)

  • FOOTMARK
    A footprint; a track or vestige. Coleridge.
  • IMPRESSIONABLE
    Liable or subject to impression; capable of being molded; susceptible; impressible. He was too impressionable; he had too much of the temperament of genius. Motley. A pretty face and an impressionable disposition. T. Hook.
  • IMPRESSION
    The pressure of the type on the paper, or the result of such pressure, as regards its appearance; as, a heavy impression; a clear, or a poor, impression; also, a single copy as the result of printing, or the whole edition printed at a given time.
  • TRACEABLE
    Capable of being traced. -- Trace"a*ble*ness, n. -- Trace"a/bly, adv.
  • CREATOR
    One who creates, produces, or constitutes. Specifically, the Supreme Being. To sin's rebuke and my Creater's praise. Shak. The poets and artists of Greece, who are at the same time its prophets, the creators of its divinities, and the revealers
  • IMPRESSIONISTIC
    Pertaining to, or characterized by, impressionism.
  • IMPRESSIONABILITY
    The quality of being impressionable.
  • IMPRESSIONLESS
    Having the quality of not being impressed or affected; not susceptible.
  • IMPRESSIONIST
    One who adheres to the theory or method of impressionism, so called.
  • IMPRESSIONISM
    The theory or method of suggesting an effect or impression without elaboration of the details; -- a disignation of a recent fashion in painting and etching.
  • CREATORSHIP
    State or condition of a creator.
  • TRACE
    A very small quantity of an element or compound in a given substance, especially when so small that the amount is not quantitatively determined in an analysis;-hence, in stating an analysis, often contracted to tr. 3. A mark, impression, or visible
  • TRACER
    One who, or that which, traces.
  • TRACERY
    Ornamental work with rambled lines. Especially: -- The decorative head of a Gothic window. Note: Window tracery is of two sorts, plate tracery and bar tracery. Plate tracery, common in Italy, consists of a series of ornamental patterns cut through
  • IMPRESSIONABLENESS
    The quality of being impressionable.
  • LADY'S TRACES; LADIES' TRESSES; LADIES TRESSES
    A name given to several species of the orchidaceous genus Spiranthes, in which the white flowers are set in spirals about a slender axis and remotely resemble braided hair.
  • UPTRACE
    To trace up or out.
  • INTRACELLULAR
    Within a cell; as, the intracellular movements seen in the pigment cells, the salivary cells, and in the protoplasm of some vegetable cells.
  • OSTRACEAN
    Any one of a family of bivalves, of which the oyster is the type.
  • IRRETRACEABLE
    Incapable of being retraced; not retraceable.
  • RETRACE
    1. To trace back, as a line. Then if the line of Turnus you retrace, He springs from Inachus of Argive race. Driden. 2. To go back, in or over ; to go over again in a reverse direction; as, to retrace one's steps; to retrace one's proceedings.
  • NEOIMPRESSIONISM; POINTILLISM
    A theory or practice which is a further development, on more rigorously scientific lines, of the theory and practice of Impressionism, originated by George Seurat , and carried on by Paul Signac and others. Its method is marked by the laying
  • OSTRACEA
    A division of bivalve mollusks including the oysters and allied shells.
  • REIMPRESSION
    A second or repeated impression; a reprint.

 

Back to top