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Word Meanings - EMBLANCH - Book Publishers vocabulary database

To whiten. See Blanch. Heylin.

Related words: (words related to EMBLANCH)

  • BLANCH HOLDING
    A mode of tenure by the payment of a small duty in white rent or otherwise.
  • WHITENESS
    A flock of swans. (more info) 1. The quality or state of being white; white color, or freedom from darkness or obscurity on the surface. Chaucer. 2. Want of a sanguineous tinge; paleness; as from terror, grief, etc. "The whiteness in thy cheek."
  • WHITENING
    1. The act or process of making or becoming white. 2. That which is used to render white; whiting. Whitening stone, a sharpening and polishing stone used by cutlers; also, a finishing grindstone of fine texture.
  • WHITEN
    To grow white; to turn or become white or whiter; as, the hair whitens with age; the sea whitens with foam; the trees in spring whiten with blossoms. (more info) Etym:
  • BLANCHIMETER
    An instrument for measuring the bleaching power of chloride of lime and potash; a chlorometer. Ure.
  • BLANCHARD LATHE
    A kind of wood-turning lathe for making noncircular and irregular forms, as felloes, gun stocks, lasts, spokes, etc., after a given pattern. The pattern and work rotate on parallel spindles in the same direction with the same speed, and the work
  • BLANCH
    To bleach by excluding the light, as the stalks or leaves of plants, by earthing them up or tying them together. To make white by removing the skin of, as by scalding; as, to blanch almonds. To whiten, as the surface of meat, by plunging
  • WHITENER
    One who, or that which, whitens; a bleacher; a blancher; a whitewasher.
  • BLANCHER
    One who, or that which, blanches or whitens; esp., one who anneals and cleanses money; also, a chemical preparation for this purpose.
  • EMBLANCH
    To whiten. See Blanch. Heylin.
  • POMME BLANCHE
    The prairie turnip. See under Prairie.
  • CARTE BLANCHE
    A blank paper, with a person's signature, etc., at the bottom, given to another person, with permission to superscribe what conditions he pleases. Hence: Unconditional terms; unlimited authority.

 

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