Word Meanings - DISENTRAIL - Book Publishers vocabulary database
To disembowel; to let out or draw forth, as the entrails. As if he thought her soul to disentrail. Spenser.
Related words: (words related to DISENTRAIL)
- FORTHPUTING
Bold; forward; aggressive. - THOUGHT
imp. & p. p. of Think. - FORTHCOMING
Ready or about to appear; making appearance. - FORTHY
Therefore. Spenser. - THOUGHTLESS
1. Lacking thought; careless; inconsiderate; rash; as, a thoughtless person, or act. 2. Giddy; gay; dissipated. Johnson. 3. Deficient in reasoning power; stupid; dull. Thoughtless as monarch oaks that shade the plain. Dryden. -- Thought"less*ly, - FORTHWARD
Forward. Bp. Fisher. - FORTHRIGHTNESS
Straightforwardness; explicitness; directness. Dante's concise forthrightness of phrase. Hawthorne. - FORTHINK
To repent; to regret; to be sorry for; to cause regret. "Let it forthink you." Tyndale. That me forthinketh, quod this January. Chaucer. - THOUGHTFUL
1. Full of thought; employed in meditation; contemplative; as, a man of thoughtful mind. War, horrid war, your thoughtful walks invades. Pope. 2. Attentive; careful; exercising the judgment; having the mind directed to an object; as, thoughtful - FORTHWITH
As soon as the thing required may be done by reasonable exertion confined to that object. Bouvier. (more info) 1. Immediately; without delay; directly. Immediately there fell from his eyes as it had been scales; and he received sight forthwith. - FORTHGOING
A going forth; an utterance. A. Chalmers. - DISEMBOWEL
1. To take or let out the bowels or interior parts of; to eviscerate. Soon after their death, they are disemboweled. Cook. Roaring floods and cataracts that sweep From disemboweled earth the virgin gold. Thomson. 2. To take or draw from the body, - FORTHRIGHT
Straight forward; in a straight direction. Sir P. Sidney. - ENTRAILS
interaneum, pl. interanea, intestine, interaneus inward, interior, 1. The internal parts of animal bodies; the bowels; the guts; viscera; intestines. 2. The internal parts; as, the entrails of the earth. That treasure . . . hid the dark entrails - FORTH
1. Forward; onward in time, place, or order; in advance from a given point; on to end; as, from that day forth; one, two, three, and so forth. Lucas was Paul's companion, at the leastway from the sixteenth of the Acts forth. Tyndale. From this - THOUGHT TRANSFERENCE
Telepathy. - SPENSERIAN
Of or pertaining to the English poet Spenser; -- specifically applied to the stanza used in his poem "The Faƫrie Queene." - FORTHBY
See FORBY - DISENTRAIL
To disembowel; to let out or draw forth, as the entrails. As if he thought her soul to disentrail. Spenser. - DISEMBOWELMENT
The act of disemboweling, or state of being disemboweled; evisceration. - WHENCEFORTH
From, or forth from, what or which place; whence. Spenser. - BETHOUGHT
imp. & p. p. of Bethink. - DISPENSER
One who, or that which, dispenses; a distributer; as, a dispenser of favors. - FORETHOUGHT
Thought of, or planned, beforehand; aforethought; prepense; hence, deliberate. "Forethought malice." Bacon. - HOLDER-FORTH
One who speaks in public; an haranguer; a preacher. Addison. - NEW THOUGHT
Any form of belief in mental healing other than Christian Science and hypnotism or psychotherapy. Its central principle is affirmative thought, or suggestion, employed with the conviction that man produces changes in his health, his finances, - WITHOUTFORTH
Without; outside' outwardly. Cf. Withinforth. Chaucer. - THENCEFORTH
From that time; thereafter. If the salt have lost his savor, wherewith shall it be salted it is thenceforth good for nothing. Matt. v. 13. Note: This word is sometimes preceded by from, -- a redundancy sanctioned by custom. Chaucer. John. xix. 12. - FERFORTH
Far forth. As ferforth as, as far as. -- So ferforth, to such a degree.