Word Meanings - WIDE-AWAKE - Book Publishers vocabulary database
Fully awake; not Dickens.
Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of WIDE-AWAKE)
- Active
- Nimble
- agile
- lively
- sprightly
- brisk
- quick
- expert
- dexterous
- supple
- wide-awake
- prompt
- busy
- industrial
- diligent
Related words: (words related to WIDE-AWAKE)
- EXPERT
Taught by use, practice, or experience, experienced; having facility of operation or performance from practice; knowing and ready from much practice; clever; skillful; as, an expert surgeon; expert in chess or archery. A valiant and most expert - LIVELY
1. Endowed with or manifesting life; living. Chaplets of gold and silver resembling lively flowers and leaves. Holland. 2. Brisk; vivacious; active; as, a lively youth. But wherefore comes old Manoa in such haste, With youthful steps Much livelier - PROMPT-BOOK
The book used by a prompter of a theater. - SUPPLEMENT
The number of degrees which, if added to a specified arc, make it 180°; the quantity by which an arc or an angle falls short of 180 degrees, or an arc falls short of a semicircle. Syn. -- Appendix. -- Appendix, Supplement. An appendix is that which - SPRIGHTLY
Sprightlike, or spiritlike; lively; brisk; animated; vigorous; airy; gay; as, a sprightly youth; a sprightly air; a sprightly dance. "Sprightly wit and love inspires." Dryden. The sprightly Sylvia trips along the green. Pope. - QUICKBEAM
See TREE - PROMPTLY
In a prompt manner. - BRISK
1. Full of liveliness and activity; characterized by quickness of motion or action; lively; spirited; quick. Cheerily, boys; be brick awhile. Shak. Brick toil alternating with ready ease. Wordworth. 2. Full of spirit of life; effervescas, brick - QUICKSTEP
A lively, spirited march; also, a lively style of dancing. - DEXTEROUSNESS
The quality of being dexterous; dexterity. - WIDE-AWAKE
Fully awake; not Dickens. - SUPPLELY
In a supple manner; softly; pliantly; mildly. Cotgrave. - AGILELY
In an agile manner; nimbly. - QUICKNESS
1. The condition or quality of being quick or living; life. Touch it with thy celestial quickness. Herbert. 2. Activity; briskness; especially, rapidity of motion; speed; celerity; as, quickness of wit. This deed . . . must send thee hence With - BRISKLY
In a brisk manner; nimbly. - INDUSTRIALLY
With reference to industry. - PROMPTUARY
Of or pertaining to preparation. Bacon. - PROMPT-NOTE
A memorandum of a sale, and time when payment is due, given to the purchaser at a sale of goods. - INDUSTRIAL
Consisting in industry; pertaining to industry, or the arts and products of industry; concerning those employed in labor, especially in manual labor, and their wages, duties, and rights. The great ideas of industrial development and economic social - QUICKSILVER
The metal mercury; -- so called from its resemblance to liquid silver. Quicksilver horizon, a mercurial artificial horizon. See under Horizon. -- Quicksilver water, a solution of mercury nitrate used in artificial silvering; quick water. - SELF-ACTIVE
Acting of one's self or of itself; acting without depending on other agents. - CHYLIFACTIVE
Producing, or converting into, chyle; having the power to form chyle. - COUNTERACTIVE
Tending to counteract. - ENQUICKEN
To quicken; to make alive. Dr. H. More. - UNEXPERTLY
In an unexpert manner. - RETROACTIVE
Fitted or designed to retroact; operating by returned action; affecting what is past; retrospective. Beddoes. Retroactive law or statute , one which operates to make criminal or punishable, or in any way expressly to affect, acts done prior to - DETRACTIVE
1. Tending to detractor draw. 2. Tending to lower in estimation; depreciative. - REFRACTIVE
Serving or having power to refract, or turn from a direct course; pertaining to refraction; as, refractive surfaces; refractive powers. Refractive index. See Index of refraction, under Index. -- Absolute refractive index , the index of refraction - INEXPERT
1. Destitute of experience or of much experience. Milton. 2. Not expert; not skilled; destitute of knowledge or dexterity derived from practice. Akenside. - PRACTIVE
Doing; active. Sylvester. -- Prac"tive*ly, adv. The preacher and the people both, Then practively did thrive. Warner. - DETRACTIVENESS
The quality of being detractive. - SUBTRACTIVE
Having the negative sign, or sign minus. (more info) 1. Tending, or having power, to subtract.