Word Meanings - FILOPLUME - Book Publishers vocabulary database
A hairlike feather; a father with a slender scape and without a web in most or all of its length.
Related words: (words related to FILOPLUME)
- FEATHERNESS
The state or condition of being feathery. - FATHER-LASHER
A European marine fish , allied to the sculpin; -- called also lucky proach. - SCAPE
1. An escape. I spake of most disastrous chances, . . . Of hairbreadth scapes in the imminent, deadly breach. Shak. 2. Means of escape; evasion. Donne. 3. A freak; a slip; a fault; an escapade. Not pardoning so much as the scapes of error and - FEATHER-FEW
Feverfew. - FEATHER-VEINED
Having the veins diverging from the two sides of a midrib. - FEATHER-FOIL
An aquatic plant , having finely divided leaves. - LENGTHFUL
Long. Pope. - SCAPEGALLOWS
One who has narrowly escaped the gallows for his crimes. Dickens. - FATHERLESSNESS
The state of being without a father. - FATHER
1. To make one's self the father of; to beget. Cowards father cowards, and base things sire base. Shak. 2. To take as one's own child; to adopt; hence, to assume as one's own work; to acknowledge one's self author of or responsible for - WITHOUT-DOOR
Outdoor; exterior. "Her without-door form." Shak. - LENGTHINESS
The state or quality of being lengthy; prolixity. - WITHOUTFORTH
Without; outside' outwardly. Cf. Withinforth. Chaucer. - FEATHER-EDGED
Having a feather-edge; also, having one edge thinner than the other, as a board; -- in the United States, said only of stuff one edge of which is made as thin as practicable. - SLENDER
Uttered with a thin tone; -- the opposite of broad; as, the slender vowels long e and i. -- Slen"der*ly, adv. -- Slen"der*ness, n. (more info) slendre, sclendre, fr. OD. slinder thin, slender, perhaps through a French form; cf. OD. slinderen, - SCAPEGRACE
A graceless, unprincipled person; one who is wild and reckless. Beaconsfield. - FEATHERED
Having a fringe of feathers, as the legs of certian birds; or of hairs, as the legs of a setter dog. (more info) 1. Clothed, covered, or fitted with feathers or wings; as, a feathered animal; a feathered arrow. Rise from the ground like feathered - FEATHER-HEADED
Giddy; frivolous; foolish. G. Eliot. - FATHERLAND
One's native land; the native land of one's fathers or ancestors. - FATHER-IN-LAW
The father of one's husband or wife; -- correlative to son-in- law and daughter-in-law. Note: A man who marries a woman having children already, is sometimes, though erroneously, called their father-in-law. - GREAT-GRANDFATHER
The father of one's grandfather or grandmother. - LENGTHEN
To extent in length; to make longer in extent or duration; as, to lengthen a line or a road; to lengthen life; -- sometimes followed by out. What if I please to lengthen out his date. Dryden. - PINFEATHERED
Having part, or all, of the feathers imperfectly developed. - SEA FEATHER
Any gorgonian which branches in a plumelike form. - ALENGTH
At full length; lenghtwise. Chaucer.