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Word Meanings - INCANTON - Book Publishers vocabulary database

To unite to, or form into, a canton or separate community. Addison.

Related words: (words related to INCANTON)

  • UNITERABLE
    Not iterable; incapable of being repeated. "To play away an uniterable life." Sir T. Browne.
  • CANTON FLANNEL
    See FLANNEL
  • CANTONIZE
    To divide into cantons or small districts.
  • COMMUNITY
    1. Common possession or enjoyment; participation; as, a community of goods. The original community of all things. Locke. An unreserved community of thought and feeling. W. Irwing. 2. A body of people having common rights, privileges, or interests,
  • UNITEDLY
    In an united manner. Dryden.
  • SEPARATE
    pfref. se- aside + parare to make ready, prepare. See Parade, and cf. 1. To disunite; to divide; to disconnect; to sever; to part in any manner. From the fine gold I separate the alloy. Dryden. Separate thyself, I pray thee, from me. Gen. xiii.
  • UNITE
    1. To become one; to be cemented or consolidated; to combine, as by adhesion or mixture; to coalesce; to grow together. 2. To join in an act; to concur; to act in concert; as, all parties united in signing the petition.
  • CANTONMENT
    A town or village, or part of a town or village, assigned to a body of troops for quarters; temporary shelter or place of rest for an army; quarters. Note: When troops are sheltered in huts or quartered in the houses of the people during
  • CANTONAL
    Of or pertaining to a canton or cantons; of the nature of a canton.
  • ADDISON'S DISEASE
    A morbid condition causing a peculiar brownish discoloration of the skin, and thought, at one time, to be due to disease of the suprarenal capsules (two flat triangular bodies covering the upper part of the kidneys), but now known not
  • UNITER
    One who, or that which, unites.
  • CANTON CRAPE
    A soft, white or colored silk fabric, of a gauzy texture and wavy appearance, used for ladies' scarfs, shawls, bonnet trimmings, etc.; -- called also Oriental crape. De Colange.
  • CANTONED
    Having a charge in each of the four corners; -- said of a cross on a shield, and also of the shield itself.
  • UNITED
    Combined; joined; made one. United Brethren. See Moravian, n. -- United flowers , flowers which have the stamens and pistils in the same flower. -- The United Kingdom, Great Britain and Ireland; -- so named since January 1, 1801, when
  • CANTON
    A division of a shield occupying one third part of the chief, usually on the dexter side, formed by a perpendicular line from the top of the shield, meeting a horizontal line from the side. The king gave us the arms of England to be borne
  • INSEPARATE
    Not separate; together; united. Shak.
  • ALUNITE
    Alum stone.
  • REUNITEDLY
    In a reunited manner.
  • BRAUNITE
    A native oxide of manganese, of dark brownish black color. It was named from a Mr. Braun of Gotha.
  • DISCOMMUNITY
    A lack of common possessions, properties, or relationship. Community of embryonic structure reveals community of descent; but dissimilarity of embryonic development does not prove discommunity of descent. Darwin.
  • PREMUNITE
    To fortify beforehand; to guard against objection. Fotherby.
  • DISUNITE
    1. To destroy the union of; to divide; to part; to sever; to disjoin; to sunder; to separate; as, to disunite particles of matter. 2. To alienate in spirit; to break the concord of. Go on both in hand, O nations, never be disunited, be the praise
  • INCANTON
    To unite to, or form into, a canton or separate community. Addison.
  • REUNITE
    To unite again; to join after separation or variance. Shak.
  • AUTUNITE
    A lemon-yellow phosphate of uranium and calcium occurring in tabular crystals with basal cleavage, and in micalike scales. H., 2- 2.5. Sp. gr., 3.05-3.19.
  • CO-UNITE
    To unite.

 

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