Word Meanings - DISTERMINATE - Book Publishers vocabulary database
Separated by bounds. Bp. Hall.
Related words: (words related to DISTERMINATE)
- SEPARATISM
The character or act of a separatist; disposition to withdraw from a church; the practice of so withdrawing. - SEPARATIVE
Causing, or being to cause, separation. "Separative virtue of extreme cold." Boyle. - SEPARATICAL
Of or pertaining to separatism in religion; schismatical. Dr. T. Dwight. - SEPARATING
Designed or employed to separate. Separating funnel , a funnel, often globe-shaped, provided with a stopcock for the separate drawing off of immiscible liquids of different specific gravities. - SEPARATIST
One who withdraws or separates himself; especially, one who withdraws from a church to which he has belonged; a seceder from an established church; a dissenter; a nonconformist; a schismatic; a sectary. Heavy fines on divines who should preach in - SEPARATOR
One who, or that which, separates. Specifically: A device for depriving steam of particles of water mixed with it. An apparatus for sorting pulverized ores into grades, or separating them from gangue. - SEPARATE
pfref. se- aside + parare to make ready, prepare. See Parade, and cf. 1. To disunite; to divide; to disconnect; to sever; to part in any manner. From the fine gold I separate the alloy. Dryden. Separate thyself, I pray thee, from me. Gen. xiii. - SEPARATORY
Separative. Cheyne. - SEPARATISTIC
Of or pertaining to separatists; characterizing separatists; schismatical. - SEPARATRIX
The decimal point; the dot placed at the left of a decimal fraction, to separate it from the whole number which it follows. The term is sometimes also applied to other marks of separation. - SEPARATION
The act of separating, or the state of being separated, or separate. Specifically: Chemical analysis. Divorce. The operation of removing water from steam. Judicial separation , a form of divorce; a separation of man and wife which has the effect - INSEPARATE
Not separate; together; united. Shak. - OUTBOUNDS
The farthest or exterior bounds; extreme limits; boundaries. Spenser. - INSEPARATELY
Inseparably. Cranmer.