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Word Meanings - SCORIACEOUS - Book Publishers vocabulary database

Of or pertaining to scoria; like scoria or the recrement of metals; partaking of the nature of scoria.

Related words: (words related to SCORIACEOUS)

  • PARTAKER
    1. One who partakes; a sharer; a participator. Partakers of their spiritual things. Rom. xv. 27. Wish me partaker in my happiness. Shark. 2. An accomplice; an associate; a partner. Partakers wish them in the blood of the prophets. Matt. xxiii. 30.
  • PERTAIN
    stretch out, reach, pertain; per + tenere to hold, keep. See Per-, 1. To belong; to have connection with, or dependence on, something, as an appurtenance, attribute, etc.; to appertain; as, saltness pertains to the ocean; flowers pertain to plant
  • RECREMENTITIAL
    Of the nature of a recrement. See Recrement,2 . "Recrementitial fluids." Dunglison.
  • NATURED
    Having a nature, temper, or disposition; disposed; -- used in composition; as, good-natured, ill-natured, etc.
  • RECREMENT
    1. Superfluous matter separated from that which is useful; dross; scoria; as, the recrement of ore. Excrement. A substance secreted from the blood and again absorbed by it.
  • NATURELESS
    Not in accordance with nature; unnatural. Milton.
  • SCORIACEOUS
    Of or pertaining to scoria; like scoria or the recrement of metals; partaking of the nature of scoria.
  • SCORIA
    1. The recrement of metals in fusion, or the slag rejected after the eduction of metallic ores; dross. 2. Cellular slaggy lava; volcanic cinders.
  • RECREMENTITIOUS
    Of or pertaining to recrement; consisting of recrement or dross. Boyle.
  • NATURE
    1. The existing system of things; the world of matter, or of matter and mind; the creation; the universe. But looks through nature up to nature's God. Pope. Nature has caprices which art can not imitate. Macaulay. 2. The personified sum and order
  • RECREMENTAL
    Recrementitious.
  • SCORIAC
    Scoriaceous. E. A. Poe.
  • PARTAKE
    1. To take a part, portion, lot, or share, in common with others; to have a share or part; to participate; to share; as, to partake of a feast with others. "Brutes partake in this faculty." Locke. When I against myself with thee partake. Shak.
  • UNNATURE
    To change the nature of; to invest with a different or contrary nature. A right heavenly nature, indeed, as if were unnaturing them, doth so bridle them . Sir P. Sidney.
  • DEMINATURED
    Having half the nature of another. Shak.
  • TIME SIGNATURE
    A sign at the beginning of a composition or movement, placed after the key signature, to indicate its time or meter. Also called rhythmical signature. It is in the form of a fraction, of which the denominator indicates the kind of note taken as
  • ORNATURE
    Decoration; ornamentation. Holinshed.
  • CONSIGNATURE
    Joint signature. Colgrave.
  • TRANSNATURE
    To transfer or transform the nature of. We are transelemented, or transnatured. Jewel.
  • DENATURE
    To deprive of its natural qualities; change the nature of.
  • SIGNATURE
    An outward mark by which internal characteristics were supposed to be indicated. Some plants bear a very evident signature of their nature and use. Dr. H. More. (more info) 1. A sign, stamp, or mark impressed, as by a seal. The brain, being well
  • DISNATURED
    Deprived or destitute of natural feelings; unnatural. Shak.
  • GOOD-NATUREDLY
    With maldness of temper.
  • DECLINATURE
    The act of declining or refusing; as, the declinature of an office.
  • ESCORIAL
    See ESCURIAL

 

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