Word Meanings - AGATE - Book Publishers vocabulary database
On the way; agoing; as, to be agate; to set the bells agate. Cotgrave.
Related words: (words related to AGATE)
- AGOUARA
The crab-eating raccoon , found in the tropical parts of America. - AGO
Past; gone by; since; as, ten years ago; gone long ago. (more info) by, AS. agan to pass away; a- (cf. Goth. us-, Ger. er-, orig. meaning - AGONOTHETE
An officer who presided over the great public games in Greece. - AGONY
1. Violent contest or striving. The world is convulsed by the agonies of great nations. Macaulay. 2. Pain so extreme as to cause writhing or contortions of the body, similar to those made in the athletic contests in Greece; and hence, extreme pain - AGOING
In motion; in the act of going; as, to set a mill agoing. - AGORA
An assembly; hence, the place of assembly, especially the market place, in an ancient Greek city. - AGOUTI; AGOUTY
A rodent of the genus Dasyprocta, about the size of a rabbit, peculiar to South America and the West Indies. The most common species is the Dasyprocta agouti. - AGONISM
Contention for a prize; a contest. Blount. - AGOUTA
A small insectivorous mammal , allied to the moles, found only in Hayti. - AGONISTIC; AGONISTICAL
Pertaining to violent contests, bodily or mental; pertaining to athletic or polemic feats; athletic; combative; hence, strained; unnatural. As a scholar, he was brilliant, but he consumed his power in agonistic displays. De Quincey. - AGONIZINGLY
With extreme anguish or desperate struggles. - AGONE
Ago. Three days agone I fell sick. 1 Sam. xxx. 13. - AGONIST
One who contends for the prize in public games. - AGONISTICALLY
In an agonistic manner. - AGON
A contest for a prize at the public games. - AGOOD
In earnest; heartily. "I made her weep agood." Shak. - AGONIZE
Etym: 1. To writhe with agony; to suffer violent anguish. To smart and agonize at every pore. Pope. 2. To struggle; to wrestle; to strive desperately. - AGONISTICS
The science of athletic combats, or contests in public games. - AGONOTHETIC
Pertaining to the office of an agonothete. - AGONIC
Not forming an angle. Agonic line , an imaginary line on the earth's surface passing through those places where the magnetic needle points to the true north; the line of no magnetic variation. There is one such line in the Western hemisphere, and - MYSTAGOGY
The doctrines, principles, or practice of a mystagogue; interpretation of mysteries. - ISAGOGE
An introduction. Harris. - HIPPOPHAGOUS
Feeding on horseflesh; -- said of certain nomadic tribes, as the Tartars. - LAGOON
1. A shallow sound, channel, pond, or lake, especially one into which the sea flows; as, the lagoons of Venice. 2. A lake in a coral island, often occupying a large portion of its area, and usually communicating with the sea. See Atoll. Lagoon - PHAGOCYTE
A leucocyte which plays a part in retrogressive processes by taking up , in the form of fine granules, the parts to be removed. - EMENAGOGUE
See EMMENAGOGUE - HARPAGON
A grappling iron. - VAGOUS
Wandering; unsettled. Ayliffe. - GAGATE
Agate. Fuller. - GALACTOPHAGOUS
Feeding on milk. - PENDRAGON
A chief leader or a king; a head; a dictator; -- a title assumed by the ancient British chiefs when called to lead other chiefs. The dread Pendragon, Britain's king of kings. Tennyson. - PARAGOGE
The addition of a letter or syllable to the end of a word, as withouten for without. - MYSTAGOGIC; MYSTAGOGICAL
Of or pertaining to interpretation of mysteries or to mystagogue; of the nature of mystagogy. - MELANAGOGUE
A medicine supposed to expel black bile or choler. - SAGOIN
A marmoset; -- called also sagouin. - WAGON
The Dipper, or Charles's Wain. Note: This word and its compounds are often written with two g's , chiefly in England. The forms wagon, wagonage, etc., are, however, etymologically preferable, and in the United States are almost universally used. - GEOPHAGOUS
Earth-eating. - ENNEAGON
A polygon or plane figure with nine sides and nine angles; a nonagon.