Word Meanings - YONDER - Book Publishers vocabulary database
At a distance, but within view. Yonder are two apple women scolding. Arbuthnot.
Related words: (words related to YONDER)
- SCOLDER
1. One who scolds. The oyster catcher; -- so called from its shrill cries. The old squaw. - DISTANCE
A space marked out in the last part of a race course. The horse that ran the whole field out of distance. L'Estrange. Note: In trotting matches under the rules of the American Association, the distance varies with the conditions of the race, being - SCOLDINGLY
In a scolding manner. - YONDER
At a distance, but within view. Yonder are two apple women scolding. Arbuthnot. - APPLE
Any tree genus Pyrus which has the stalk sunken into the base of the fruit; an apple tree. 3. Any fruit or other vegetable production resembling, or supposed to resemble, the apple; as, apple of love, or love apple , balsam apple, egg apple, oak - APPLE-JOHN
A kind of apple which by keeping becomes much withered; -- called also Johnapple. Shak. - WITHINSIDE
In the inner parts; inside. Graves. - WOMEN
pl. of Woman. - SCOLDING
a. & n. from Scold, v. Scolding bridle, an iron frame. See Brank, n., 2. - APPLE-SQUIRE
A pimp; a kept gallant. Beau. & Fl. - APPLE PIE
A pie made of apples with spice and sugar. Apple-pie bed, a bed in which, as a joke, the sheets are so doubled as to prevent any one from getting at his length between them. Halliwell, Conybeare. -- Apple-pie order, perfect order or arrangement. - SCOLD
1. One who scolds, or makes a practice of scolding; esp., a rude, clamorous woman; a shrew. She is an irksome, brawling scold. Shak. 2. A scolding; a brawl. - APPLE-FACED
Having a round, broad face, like an apple. "Apple-faced children." Dickens. - APPLE-JACK
Apple brandy. - WITHIN
with, against, toward + innan in, inwardly, within, from in in. See 1. In the inner or interior part of; inside of; not without; as, within doors. O, unhappy youth! Come not within these doors; within this roof The enemy of all your graces lives. - WITHINFORTH
Within; inside; inwardly. Wyclif. labor for to withinforth call into mind, without sight of the eye withoutforth upon images, what he before knew and thought upon. Bp. Peacock. - PINEAPPLE
A tropical plant ; also, its fruit; -- so called from the resemblance of the latter, in shape and external appearance, to the cone of the pine tree. Its origin is unknown, though conjectured to be American. - ENGRAPPLE
To grapple. - THRAPPLE
Windpipe; throttle. - INGRAPPLE
To seize; to clutch; to grapple. Drayton. - CHESS-APPLE
The wild service of Europe . - CRAPPLE
A claw. - SHELLAPPLE
See SHELDAFLE - OTAHEITE APPLE
The fruit of a Polynesian anacardiaceous tree , also called vi-apple. It is rather larger than an apple, and the rind has a flavor of turpentine, but the flesh is said to taste like pineapples. A West Indian name for a myrtaceous tree which bears - SCAPPLE
To work roughly, or shape without finishing, as stone before leaving the quarry. To dress in any way short of fine tooling or rubbing, as stone. Gwilt. - VI-APPLE
See APPLE - STRAPPLE
To hold or bind with, or as with, a strap; to entangle. Chapman. - ADAM'S APPLE
See ADAM - GRAPPLEMENT
A grappling; close fight or embrace. Spenser. - YOUNG WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION
An organization for promoting the spiritual, intellectual, social, and economic welfare of young women, originating in 1855 with Lady Kinnaird's home for young women, and Miss Emma Robert's prayer union for young women,in England, which