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Word Meanings - SANGUINELY - Book Publishers vocabulary database

In a sanguine manner. I can not speculate quite so sanguinely as he does. Burke.

Related words: (words related to SANGUINELY)

  • SANGUINENESS
    The quality of being sanguine.
  • SANGUINELESS
    Destitute of blood; pale.
  • SANGUINE
    1. Having the color of blood; red. Of his complexion he was sanguine. Chaucer. Like to that sanguine flower inscribed with woe. Milton. 2. Characterized by abundance and active circulation of blood; as, a sanguine bodily temperament.
  • MANNERIST
    One addicted to mannerism; a person who, in action, bearing, or treatment, carries characteristic peculiarities to excess. See citation under Mannerism.
  • MANNERISM
    Adherence to a peculiar style or manner; a characteristic mode of action, bearing, or treatment, carried to excess, especially in literature or art. Mannerism is pardonable,and is sometimes even agreeable, when the manner, though vicious, is natural
  • QUITE
    1. Completely; wholly; entirely; totally; perfectly; as, the work is not quite done; the object is quite accomplished; to be quite mistaken. Man shall not quite be lost, but saved who will. Milton. The same actions may be aimed at different ends,
  • MANNERLINESS
    The quality or state of being mannerly; civility; complaisance. Sir M. Hale.
  • SANGUINELY
    In a sanguine manner. I can not speculate quite so sanguinely as he does. Burke.
  • MANNERED
    1. Having a certain way, esp a. polite way, of carrying and conducting one's self. Give her princely training, that she may be Mannered as she is born. Shak. 2. Affected with mannerism; marked by excess of some characteristic peculiarity. His style
  • SPECULATE
    To consider attentively; as, to speculate the nature of a thing. Sir W. Hamilton.
  • MANNER
    manual, skillful, handy, fr. LL. manarius, for L. manuarius 1. Mode of action; way of performing or effecting anything; method; style; form; fashion. The nations which thou hast removed, and placed in the cities of Samaria, know not the manner
  • MANNERCHOR
    A German men's chorus or singing club.
  • SANGUINEOUS
    1. Abounding with blood; sanguine. 2. Of or pertaining to blood; bloody; constituting blood. Sir T. Browne. 3. Blood-red; crimson. Keats.
  • MANNERLY
    Showing good manners; civil; respectful; complaisant. What thou thinkest meet, and is most mannerly. Shak.
  • BURKE
    1. To murder by suffocation, or so as to produce few marks of violence, for the purpose of obtaining a body to be sold for dissection. 2. To dispose of quietly or indirectly; to suppress; to smother; to shelve; as, to burke a parliamentary
  • SESQUITERTIAL
    Sesquitertian.
  • SESQUITERTIAN; SESQUITERTIANAL
    Having the ratio of one and one third to one .
  • UNMANNERLY
    Not mannerly; ill-bred; rude. -- adv.
  • CONSANGUINED
    Of kin blood; related. Johnson.
  • MESQUITE BEAN
    The pod or seed of the mesquite.
  • MESQUITE; MESQUIT
    A name for two trees of the southwestern part of North America, the honey mesquite, and screw-pod mesquite. Honey mesquite. See Algaroba . -- Screw-pod mesquite, a smaller tree , having spiral pods used as fodder and sometimes as food
  • EQUITES
    An order of knights holding a middle place between the senate and the commonalty; members of the Roman equestrian order.
  • EQUITEMPORANEOUS
    Contemporaneous. Boyle.
  • EXSANGUINEOUS
    Destitute of blood; anæmic; exsanguious.
  • SQUITEE
    The squeteague; -- called also squit.
  • OVERMANNER
    In an excessive manner; excessively. Wiclif.
  • CONSANGUINEAL
    Of the same blood; related by birth. Sir T. Browne.
  • ILL-MANNERED
    Impolite; rude.
  • WELL-MANNERED
    Polite; well-bred; complaisant; courteous. Dryden.
  • ENSANGUINE
    To stain or cover with blood; to make bloody, or of a blood-red color; as, an ensanguined hue. "The ensanguined field." Milton.

 

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