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Word Meanings - INFARCT - Book Publishers vocabulary database

An obstruction or embolus. The morbid condition of a limited area resulting from such obstruction; as, a hemorrhagic infarct.

Related words: (words related to INFARCT)

  • MORBIDEZZA
    Delicacy or softness in the representation of flesh.
  • LIMITARIAN
    Tending to limit.
  • LIMITIVE
    Involving a limit; as, a limitive law, one designed to limit existing powers.
  • LIMITABLE
    Capable of being limited.
  • CONDITIONALITY
    The quality of being conditional, or limited; limitation by certain terms.
  • RESULTIVE
    Resultant. Fuller.
  • CONDITIONAL
    Expressing a condition or supposition; as, a conditional word, mode, or tense. A conditional proposition is one which asserts the dependence of one categorical proposition on another. Whately. The words hypothetical and conditional may be . . .
  • OBSTRUCTIONIST
    One who hinders progress; one who obstructs business, as in a legislative body. -- a.
  • LIMITARY
    1. Placed at the limit, as a guard. "Proud limitary cherub." Milton. 2. Confined within limits; limited in extent, authority, power, etc. "The limitary ocean." Trench. The poor, limitary creature calling himself a man of the world. De Quincey.
  • HEMORRHAGIC
    Pertaining or tending to a flux o
  • INFARCT
    An obstruction or embolus. The morbid condition of a limited area resulting from such obstruction; as, a hemorrhagic infarct.
  • LIMITANEOUS
    Of or pertaining to a limit.
  • CONDITIONATE
    Conditional. Barak's answer is faithful, though conditionate. Bp. Hall.
  • LIMITATE
    Bounded by a distinct line.
  • MORBID
    1. Not sound and healthful; induced by a diseased or abnormal condition; diseased; sickly; as, morbid humors; a morbid constitution; a morbid state of the juices of a plant. "Her sick and morbid heart." Hawthorne. 2. Of or pertaining to disease
  • LIMITOUR
    See 2
  • CONDITION
    A clause in a contract, or agreement, which has for its object to suspend, to defeat, or in some way to modify, the principal obligation; or, in case of a will, to suspend, revoke, or modify a devise or bequest. It is also the case of
  • CONDITIONLY
    Conditionally.
  • LIMITEDNESS
    The quality of being limited.
  • LIMITATION
    1. The act of limiting; the state or condition of being limited; as, the limitation of his authority was approved by the council. They had no right to mistake the limitation . . . of their own faculties, for an inherent limitation of the possible
  • UNLIMITED
    1. Not limited; having no bounds; boundless; as, an unlimited expanse of ocean. 2. Undefined; indefinite; not bounded by proper exceptions; as, unlimited terms. "Nothing doth more prevail than unlimited generalities." Hooker. 3. Unconfined; not
  • PRELIMIT
    To limit previously.
  • DELIMITATION
    The act or process of fixing limits or boundaries; limitation. Gladstone.
  • INCONDITIONAL
    Unconditional. Sir T. Browne.
  • ANTIHEMORRHAGIC
    Tending to stop hemorrhage. -- n.
  • UNCONDITIONAL
    Not conditional limited, or conditioned; made without condition; absolute; unreserved; as, an unconditional surrender. O, pass not, Lord, an absolute decree, Or bind thy sentence unconditional. Dryden. -- Un`con*di"tion*al*ly, adv.
  • UNCONDITIONED
    Not subject to condition or limitations; infinite; absolute; hence, inconceivable; incogitable. Sir W. Hamilton. The unconditioned , all that which is inconceivable and beyond the realm of reason; whatever is inconceivable under logical forms or
  • ILLIMITATION
    State of being illimitable; want of, or freedom from, limitation. Bp. Hall.

 

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