Word Meanings - PROLONGER - Book Publishers vocabulary database
One who, or that which, causes an extension in time or space.
Related words: (words related to PROLONGER)
- SPACE
One of the intervals, or open places, between the lines of the staff. Absolute space, Euclidian space, etc. See under Absolute, Euclidian, etc. -- Space line , a thin piece of metal used by printers to open the lines of type to a regular distance - WHICHEVER; WHICHSOEVER
Whether one or another; whether one or the other; which; that one which; as, whichever road you take, it will lead you to town. - WHICH
the root of hwa who + lic body; hence properly, of what sort or kind; akin to OS. hwilik which, OFries. hwelik, D. welk, G. welch, OHG. welih, hwelih, Icel. hvilikr, Dan. & Sw. hvilken, Goth. hwileiks, 1. Of what sort or kind; what; what a; who. - EXTENSIONIST
One who favors or advocates extension. - EXTENSION
That property of a body by which it occupies a portion of space. (more info) 1. The act of extending or the state of being extended; a stretching out; enlargement in breadth or continuation of length; increase; augmentation; expansion. - SPACE BAR; SPACE KEY
A bar or key, in a typewriter or typesetting machine, used for spacing between letters. - SPACELESS
Without space. Coleridge. - SPACEFUL
Wide; extensive. Sandys. - EXTENSIONAL
Having great extent. - UNIVERSITY EXTENSION
The extension of the advantages of university instruction by means of lectures and classes at various centers. - COEXTENSION
The act of extending equally, or the state of being equally extended. - INEXTENSION
Want of extension; unextended state. - DISPACE
To roam. In this fair plot dispacing to and fro. Spenser. - HYPERSPACE
An imagined space having more than three dimensions. - ANCHOR SPACE
In the balk-line game, any of eight spaces, 7 inches by 3½, lying along a cushion and bisected transversely by a balk line. Object balls in an anchor space are treated as in balk. - ESPACE
Space. Chaucer. - INTERSPACE
Intervening space. Bp. Hacket. - CROOKES SPACE
The dark space within the negative-pole glow at the cathode of a vacuum tube, observed only when the pressure is low enough to give a striated discharge; -- called also Crookes layer.