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Word Meanings - ENTERDEAL - Book Publishers vocabulary database

Mutual dealings; intercourse. The enterdeal of princes strange. Spenser.

Related words: (words related to ENTERDEAL)

  • ENTERDEAL
    Mutual dealings; intercourse. The enterdeal of princes strange. Spenser.
  • INTERCOURSE
    A This sweet intercourse Of looks and smiles. Milton. Sexual intercourse, sexual or carnal connection; coition. Syn. -- Communication; connection; commerce; communion; fellowship; familiarity; acquaintance. (more info) commerce, exchange,
  • PRINCESSE
    A term applied to a lady's long, close-fitting dress made with waist and skirt in one.
  • PRINCESS
    1. A female prince; a woman having sovereign power, or the rank of a prince. Dryden. So excellent a princess as the present queen. Swift. 2. The daughter of a sovereign; a female member of a royal family. Shak. 3. The consort of a prince; as, the
  • STRANGENESS
    The state or quality of being strange (in any sense of the adjective).
  • MUTUAL
    1. Reciprocally acting or related; reciprocally receiving and giving; reciprocally given and received; reciprocal; interchanged; as, a mutual love, advantage, assistance, aversion, etc. Conspiracy and mutual promise. Sir T. More. Happy
  • STRANGE
    estrange, F. étrange, fr. L. extraneus that is without, external, foreign, fr. extra on the outside. See Extra, and cf. Estrange, 1. Belonging to another country; foreign. "To seek strange strands." Chaucer. One of the strange queen's lords. Shak.
  • STRANGELY
    1. As something foreign, or not one's own; in a manner adapted to something foreign and strange. Shak. 2. In the manner of one who does not know another; distantly; reservedly; coldly. You all look strangely on me. Shak. I do in justice charge
  • MUTUALITY
    Reciprocity of consideration. Wharton. (more info) 1. The quality of correlation; reciprocation; interchange; interaction; interdependence.
  • STRANGER
    One not privy or party an act, contract, or title; a mere intruder or intermeddler; one who interferes without right; as, actual possession of land gives a good title against a stranger having no title; as to strangers, a mortgage is considered
  • MUTUALLY
    In a mutual manner.
  • SPENSERIAN
    Of or pertaining to the English poet Spenser; -- specifically applied to the stanza used in his poem "The Faërie Queene."
  • PRINCESSLIKE
    Like a princess.
  • MUTUALISM
    The doctrine of mutual dependence as the condition of individual and social welfare. F. Harrison. H. Spencer. Mallock.
  • ESTRANGE
    extraneare to treat as a stranger, from extraneus strange. See 1. To withdraw; to withhold; hence, reflexively, to keep at a distance; to cease to be familiar and friendly with. We must estrange our belief from everything which is not clearly and
  • ESTRANGER
    One who estranges.
  • DISPENSER
    One who, or that which, dispenses; a distributer; as, a dispenser of favors.
  • INTERMUTUAL
    Mutual. Daniel. -- In`ter*mu"tu*al*ly, adv.
  • ESTRANGEDNESS
    State of being estranged; estrangement. Prynne.
  • TRANSMUTUAL
    Reciprocal; commutual. Coleridge.
  • ESTRANGEMENT
    The act of estranging, or the state of being estranged; alienation. An estrangement from God. J. C. Shairp. A long estrangement from better things. South.

 

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