Word Meanings - STILLICIDIOUS - Book Publishers vocabulary database
Falling in drops.
Related words: (words related to STILLICIDIOUS)
- FALLALS; FAL-LALS
Gay ornaments; frippery; gewgaws. Thackeray. - DROPSICAL
1. Diseased with dropsy; hydropical; tending to dropsy; as, a dropsical patient. 2. Of or pertaining to dropsy. - FALLER
A part which acts by falling, as a stamp in a fulling mill, or the device in a spinning machine to arrest motion when a thread breaks. (more info) 1. One who, or that which, falls. - DROPSICALNESS
State of being dropsical. - FALLOW
Left untilled or unsowed after plowing; uncultivated; as, fallow ground. Fallow chat, Fallow finch , a small European bird, the wheatear . See Wheatear. (more info) vaal fallow, faded, OHG. falo, G. falb, fahl, Icel. fölr, and prob. to Lith. - FALLOPIAN
Pertaining to, or discovered by, Fallopius; as, the Fallopian tubes or oviducts, the ducts or canals which conduct the ova from the ovaries to the uterus. - FALLENCY
An exception. Jer. Taylor. - FALLEN
Dropped; prostrate; degraded; ruined; decreased; dead. Some ruined temple or fallen monument. Rogers. - FALLFISH
A fresh-water fish of the United States ; - - called also silver chub, and Shiner. The name is also applied to other allied species. - FALLING
from Fall, v. i. Falling away, Falling off, etc. See To fall away, To fall off, etc., under Fall, v. i. -- Falling band, the plain, broad, linen collar turning down over the doublet, worn in the early part of the 17th century. -- Falling sickness - FALLIBLY
In a fallible manner. - FALLAX
Cavillation; a caviling. Cranmer. - DROPSIED
Diseased with drops. Shak. - DROPSY
An unnatural collection of serous fluid in any serous cavity of the body, or in the subcutaneous cellular tissue. Dunglison. (more info) idropisie, F. hydropisie, L. hydropisis, fr. Gr. Water, and cf. - FALLOWNESS
A well or opening, through the successive floors of a warehouse or manufactory, through which goods are raised or lowered. Bartlett. - FALLACIOUS
Embodying or pertaining to a fallacy; illogical; fitted to deceive; misleading; delusive; as, fallacious arguments or reasoning. -- Fal*la"cious*ly, adv. -Fal*la"cious*ness, n. - FALL
G. fallen, Icel. Falla, Sw. falla, Dan. falde, Lith. pulti, L. fallere to deceive, Gr. sfa`llein to cause to fall, Skr. sphal, 1. To Descend, either suddenly or gradually; particularly, to descend by the force of gravity; to drop; to sink; as, - FALLACY
An argument, or apparent argument, which professes to be decisive of the matter at issue, while in reality it is not; a sophism. Syn. -- Deception; deceit; mistake. -- Fallacy, Sophistry. A fallacy is an argument which professes to be decisive, - FALLOWIST
One who favors the practice of fallowing land. Sinclair. - FALLIBLE
Liable to fail, mistake, or err; liable to deceive or to be deceived; as, all men are fallible; our opinions and hopes are fallible. - THRYFALLOW
To plow for the third time in summer; to trifallow. Tusser. - UNFALLIBLE
Infallible. Shak. - MISFALL
To befall, as ill luck; to happen to unluckily. Chaucer. - BEFALL
To happen to. I beseech your grace that I may know The worst that may befall me. Shak. - INFALLIBLY
In an infallible manner; certainly; unfailingly; unerringly. Blair. - RAINFALL
A fall or descent of rain; the water, or amount of water, that falls in rain; as, the average annual rainfall of a region. Supplied by the rainfall of the outer ranges of Sinchul and Singaleleh. Hooker. - JAW-FALLEN
Dejected; chopfallen. - CRESTFALLEN
1. With hanging head; hence, dispirited; dejected; cowed. Let it make thee crestfullen; Ay, and allay this thy abortive pride. Shak. 2. Having the crest, or upper part of the neck, hanging to one side; -- said of a horse. - PITFALLING
Entrapping; insnaring. "Full of . . . contradiction and pitfalling dispenses." Milton. - TRIFALLOW
To plow the third time before sowing, as land. Mortimer. - DOWNFALLEN
Fallen; ruined. Carew.