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Word Meanings - PARAKITE - Book Publishers vocabulary database

A train or series of kites on one string and flying tandem, used for attaining great heights and for sending up instruments for meteorological observations or a man for military reconnoissance; also, a kite of such a train.

Related words: (words related to PARAKITE)

  • TANDEM CART
    A kind of two-wheeled vehicle with seats back to back, the front one somewhat elevated.
  • STRE
    Straw. Chaucer.
  • STROKER
    One who strokes; also, one who pretends to cure by stroking. Cures worked by Greatrix the stroker. Bp. Warburton.
  • STRONTIAN
    Strontia.
  • STROMATIC
    Miscellaneous; composed of different kinds.
  • STRATARITHMETRY
    The art of drawing up an army, or any given number of men, in any geometrical figure, or of estimating or expressing the number of men in such a figure.
  • STREPITORES
    A division of birds, including the clamatorial and picarian birds, which do not have well developed singing organs.
  • STRAPPING
    Tall; strong; lusty; large; as, a strapping fellow. There are five and thirty strapping officers gone. Farquhar.
  • STRIATUM
    The corpus striatum.
  • STRUTTING
    from Strut, v. -- Strut"ting*ly, adv.
  • STRAIGHT-JOINT
    Having straight joints. Specifically: Applied to a floor the boards of which are so laid that the joints form a continued line transverse to the length of the boards themselves. Brandle & C. In the United States, applied to planking or flooring
  • STRAINABLE
    1. Capable of being strained. 2. Violent in action. Holinshed.
  • STROMATOLOGY
    The history of the formation of stratified rocks.
  • STRUVITE
    A crystalline mineral found in guano. It is a hydrous phosphate of magnesia and ammonia.
  • STRATEGIC; STRATEGICAL
    Of or pertaining to strategy; effected by artifice. -- Stra*te"gic*al*ly, adv. Strategic line , a line joining strategic points. -- Strategic point , any point or region in the theater or warlike operations which affords to its possessor
  • STRAP-SHAPED
    Shaped like a strap; ligulate; as, a strap-shaped corolla.
  • STRATUM
    A bed of earth or rock of one kind, formed by natural causes, and consisting usually of a series of layers, which form a rock as it lies between beds of other kinds. Also used figuratively. 2. A bed or layer artificially made; a course.
  • STRIPPING
    The last milk drawn from a cow at a milking. (more info) 1. The act of one who strips. The mutual bows and courtesies . . . are remants of the original prostrations and strippings of the captive. H. Spencer. Never were cows that required
  • SENDAL
    A light thin stuff of silk. Chaucer. Wore she not a veil of twisted sendal embroidered with silver Sir W. Scott. (more info) LL. cendallum, Gr.
  • STREPTOTHRIX
    A genus of bacilli occurring of the form of long, smooth and apparently branched threads, either straight or twisted.
  • IATROCHEMISTRY
    Chemistry applied to, or used in, medicine; -- used especially with reference to the doctrines in the school of physicians in Flanders, in the 17th century, who held that health depends upon the proper chemical relations of the fluids of the body,
  • MAISTRE; MAISTRIE; MAISTRY
    Mastery; superiority; art. See Mastery. Chaucer.
  • PEDESTRIAN
    Going on foot; performed on foot; as, a pedestrian journey.
  • LUSTROUS
    Bright; shining; luminous. " Good sparks and lustrous." Shak. -- Lus"trous*ly, adv.
  • OSTROGOTHIC
    Of or pertaining to the Ostrogoths.
  • REGISTRANT
    One who registers; esp., one who , by virtue of securing an official registration, obtains a certain right or title of possession, as to a trade-mark.
  • ANCESTRY
    1. Condition as to ancestors; ancestral lineage; hence, birth or honorable descent. Title and ancestry render a good man more illustrious, but an ill one more contemptible. Addison. 2. A series of ancestors or progenitors; lineage, or those who
  • NAVEL-STRING
    The umbilical cord.
  • WHITE FLY
    Any one of numerous small injurious hemipterous insects of the genus Aleyrodes, allied to scale insects. They are usually covered with a white or gray powder.
  • ESTRANGE
    extraneare to treat as a stranger, from extraneus strange. See 1. To withdraw; to withhold; hence, reflexively, to keep at a distance; to cease to be familiar and friendly with. We must estrange our belief from everything which is not clearly and

 

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