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Word Meanings - HANDLING - Book Publishers vocabulary database

The mode of using the pencil or brush, etc.; style of touch. Fairholt. (more info) 1. A touching, controlling, managing, using, etc., with the hand or hands, or as with the hands. See Handle, v. t. The heavens and your fair handling Have made you

Additional info about word: HANDLING

The mode of using the pencil or brush, etc.; style of touch. Fairholt. (more info) 1. A touching, controlling, managing, using, etc., with the hand or hands, or as with the hands. See Handle, v. t. The heavens and your fair handling Have made you master of the field this day. Spenser.

Related words: (words related to HANDLING)

  • USHERDOM
    The office or position of an usher; ushership; also, ushers, collectively.
  • HANDSPRING
    A somersault made with the assistance of the hands placed upon the ground.
  • USTULATE
    Blackened as if burned.
  • HANDLING
    The mode of using the pencil or brush, etc.; style of touch. Fairholt. (more info) 1. A touching, controlling, managing, using, etc., with the hand or hands, or as with the hands. See Handle, v. t. The heavens and your fair handling Have made you
  • CONTROLLABLENESS
    Capability of being controlled.
  • STYLET
    A small poniard; a stiletto. An instrument for examining wounds and fistulas, and for passing setons, and the like; a probe, -- called also specillum. A stiff wire, inserted in catheters or other tubular instruments to maintain their shape
  • USURY
    1. A premium or increase paid, or stipulated to be paid, for a loan, as of money; interest. Thou shalt not lend upon usury to thy brother; usury of money, usury of victuals, usury of anything that is lent upon usury. Deut. xxiii.
  • USURPANT
    Usurping; encroaching. Gauden.
  • HANDSOMELY
    Carefully; in shipshape style. (more info) 1. In a handsome manner.
  • BRUSHWOOD
    1. Brush; a thicket or coppice of small trees and shrubs. 2. Small branches of trees cut off.
  • CONTROLLABILITY
    Capability of being controlled; controllableness.
  • USQUEBAUGH
    of life; uisge water + beatha life; akin to Gr. bi`os life. See 1. A compound distilled spirit made in Ireland and Scotland; whisky. The Scottish returns being vested in grouse, white hares, pickled salmon, and usquebaugh. Sir W. Scott. 2. A liquor
  • USURIOUS
    1. Practicing usury; taking illegal or exorbitant interest for the use of money; as, a usurious person. 2. Partaking of usury; containing or involving usury; as, a usurious contract. -- U*su"ri*ous*ly, adv. -- U*su"ri*ous*ness, n.
  • USURER
    1. One who lends money and takes interest for it; a money lender. If thou lend money to any of my people that is poor by thee, thou shalt not be to him as a usurer, neither shalt thou lay upon him usury. Ex. xxii. 25. 2. One who lends money at
  • USUFRUCTUARY
    A person who has the use of property and reaps the profits of it. Wharton.
  • HANDLESS
    Without a hand. Shak.
  • USURPATURE
    Usurpation. "Beneath man's usurpature." R. Browning.
  • BRUSH
    A tuft of hair on the mandibles. 4. Branches of trees lopped off; brushwood. 5. A thicket of shrubs or small trees; the shrubs and small trees in a wood; underbrush. (more info) F. brosse brush, LL. brustia, bruscia, fr. OHG. brusta,
  • BRUSHITE
    A white or gray crystalline mineral consisting of the acid phosphate of calcium.
  • USUCAPTION
    The acquisition of the title or right to property by the uninterrupted possession of it for a certain term prescribed by law; -- the same as prescription in common law. (more info) use; usu + capere to take: cf. usucapio
  • PROTOGYNOUS
    See PROTEROGYNOUS
  • MENISCUS
    A lens convex on one side and concave on the other. (more info) 1. A crescent.
  • ANGUINEOUS
    Snakelike.
  • BUSH
    The tail, or brush, of a fox. To beat about the bush, to approach anything in a round-about manner, instead of coming directly to it; -- a metaphor taken from hunting. -- Bush bean , a variety of bean which is low and requires no support . See
  • POLYPHYLLOUS
    Many-leaved; as, a polyphyllous calyx or perianth.
  • TROUSSEAU
    The collective lighter equipments or outfit of a bride, including clothes, jewelry, and the like; especially, that which is provided for her by her family.
  • MALACOSTOMOUS
    Having soft jaws without teeth, as certain fishes.
  • PALACIOUS
    Palatial. Graunt.
  • PSEUDO-MONOCOTYLEDONOUS
    Having two coalescent cotyledons, as the live oak and the horse-chestnut.
  • RIPARIOUS
    Growing along the banks of rivers; riparian.
  • PROVENTRIULUS
    The glandular stomach of birds, situated just above the crop.
  • DESMOGNATHOUS
    Having the maxillo-palatine bones united; -- applied to a group of carinate birds , including various wading and swimming birds, as the ducks and herons, and also raptorial and other kinds.
  • STEATOPYGOUS
    Having fat buttocks. Specimens of the steatopygous Abyssinian breed. Burton.
  • BICUSPID
    One of the two double-pointed teeth which intervene between the canines and the molars, on each side of each jaw. See Tooth, n.
  • RUSHED
    Abounding or covered with rushes.
  • HORRISONOUS
    Sounding dreadfully; uttering a terrible sound. Bailey.
  • BARBAROUS
    slavish, rude, ignorant; akin to L. balbus stammering, Skr. barbara 1. Being in the state of a barbarian; uncivilized; rude; peopled with barbarians; as, a barbarous people; a barbarous country. 2. Foreign; adapted to a barbaric taste. Barbarous
  • ANTIBILLOUS
    Counteractive of bilious complaints; tending to relieve biliousness.
  • CARNIVOROUS
    Eating or feeding on flesh. The term is applied: to animals which naturally seek flesh for food, as the tiger, dog, etc.; to plants which are supposed to absorb animal food; to substances which destroy animal tissue, as caustics.
  • RAMUSCULE
    A small ramus, or branch.

 

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