Word Meanings - BLOTCHED - Book Publishers vocabulary database
Marked or covered with blotches. To give their blotched and blistered bodies ease. Drayton.
Related words: (words related to BLOTCHED)
- MARKETABLENESS
Quality of being marketable. - BLOTCH
A large pustule, or a coarse eruption. Foul scurf and blotches him defile. Thomson. (more info) black, as bleach is akin to bleak. See Black, a., or cf. Blot a 1. A blot or spot, as of color or of ink; especially a large or irregular spot. Also - COVER-POINT
The fielder in the games of cricket and lacrosse who supports "point." - BLISTER
1. A vesicle of the skin, containing watery matter or serum, whether occasioned by a burn or other injury, or by a vesicatory; a collection of serous fluid causing a bladderlike elevation of the cuticle. And painful blisters swelled my - COVERLET
The uppermost cover of a bed or of any piece of furniture. Lay her in lilies and in violets . . . And odored sheets and arras coverlets. Spenser. - MARKETER
One who attends a market to buy or sell; one who carries goods to market. - COVERCLE
A small cover; a lid. Sir T. Browne. - MARKETSTEAD
A market place. Drayton. - MARK
A license of reprisals. See Marque. - MARKSMAN
One who makes his mark, instead of writing his name, in signing documents. Burrill. (more info) 1. One skillful to hit a mark with a missile; one who shoots well. - COVERT BARON
Under the protection of a husband; married. Burrill. - MARKABLE
Remarkable. Sandys. - MARKIS
A marquis. Chaucer. - COVERTNESS
Secrecy; privacy. - BLOTCHED
Marked or covered with blotches. To give their blotched and blistered bodies ease. Drayton. - MARKER
One who or that which marks. Specifically: One who keeps account of a game played, as of billiards. A counter used in card playing and other games. The soldier who forms the pilot of a wheeling column, or marks the direction of an alignment. An - COVERER
One who, or that which, covers. - BLISTERY
Full of blisters. Hooker. - COVERCHIEF
A covering for the head. Chaucer. - COVERTLY
Secretly; in private; insidiously. - SEAMARK
Any elevated object on land which serves as a guide to mariners; a beacon; a landmark visible from the sea, as a hill, a tree, a steeple, or the like. Shak. - TRADE-MARK
A peculiar distinguishing mark or device affixed by a manufacturer or a merchant to his goods, the exclusive right of using which is recognized by law. - RECOVER
To cover again. Sir W. Scott. - BOOKMARK
Something placed in a book to guide in finding a particular page or passage; also, a label in a book to designate the owner; a bookplate. - COMMARK
The frontier of a country; confines. Shelton. - REMARKER
One who remarks. - FOOTMARK
A footprint; a track or vestige. Coleridge. - SWANMARK
A mark of ownership cut on the bill or swan. Encyc. Brit. - NEWMARKET
A long, closely fitting cloak. - COUNTERMARK
An artificial cavity made in the teeth of horses that have outgrown their natural mark, to disguise their age. (more info) 1. A mark or token added to those already existing, in order to afford security or proof; as, an additional or special mark - DISCOVERTURE
A state of being released from coverture; freedom of a woman from the coverture of a husband. (more info) 1. Discovery.