Word Meanings - HOPSCOTCH - Book Publishers vocabulary database
A child's game, in which a player, hopping on one foot, drives a stone from one compartment to another of a figure traced or scotched on the ground; -- called also hoppers.
Related words: (words related to HOPSCOTCH)
- CHILDSHIP
The state or relation of being a child. - CALLOSUM
The great band commissural fibers which unites the two cerebral hemispheres. See corpus callosum, under Carpus. - CALLOW
1. Destitute of feathers; naked; unfledged. An in the leafy summit, spied a nest, Which, o'er the callow young, a sparrow pressed. Dryden. 2. Immature; boyish; "green"; as, a callow youth. I perceive by this, thou art but a callow maid. Old Play . - TRACHEA
The windpipe. See Illust. of Lung. - CALLE
A kind of head covering; a caul. Chaucer. - STONEBRASH
A subsoil made up of small stones or finely-broken rock; brash. - CHILDISHNESS
The state or quality of being childish; simplicity; harmlessness; weakness of intellect. - TRACHELORRHAPHY
The operation of sewing up a laceration of the neck of the uterus. - SCOTCHING
Dressing stone with a pick or pointed instrument. - GROUNDWORK
That which forms the foundation or support of anything; the basis; the essential or fundamental part; first principle. Dryden. - TRACHYSPERMOUS
Rough-seeded. Gray. - CHILDED
Furnished with a child. - TRACHENCHYMA
A vegetable tissue consisting of tracheƦ. - GROUNDEN
p. p. of Grind. Chaucer. - ANOTHER-GUESS
Of another sort. It used to go in another-guess manner. Arbuthnot. - CHILDBIRTH
The act of bringing forth a child; travail; labor. Jer. Taylor. - TRACHELIPOD
One of the Trachelipoda. - TRACHELIDAN
Any one of a tribe of beetles which have the head supported on a pedicel. The oil beetles and the Cantharides are examples. - HOPPERINGS
Gravel retaining in the hopper of a cradle. - TRACTORATION
See PERKINISM - PITCHSTONE
An igneous rock of semiglassy nature, having a luster like pitch. - CAPSTONE
A fossil echinus of the genus Cannulus; -- so called from its supposed resemblance to a cap. - GYMNASTICALLY
In a gymnastic manner. - MISGROUND
To found erroneously. "Misgrounded conceit." Bp. Hall. - INTRACTABILITY
The quality of being intractable; intractableness. Bp. Hurd. - CLINKSTONE
An igneous rock of feldspathic composition, lamellar in structure, and clinking under the hammer. See Phonolite. - HYPERCRITICALLY
In a hypercritical manner. - GRINDSTONE
A flat, circular stone, revolving on an axle, for grinding or sharpening tools, or shaping or smoothing objects. To hold, pat, or bring one's nose to the grindstone, to oppress one; to keep one in a condition of servitude. They might be ashamed, - UNEMPIRICALLY
Not empirically; without experiment or experience. - SCALLION
A kind of small onion , native of Palestine; the eschalot, or shallot. 2. Any onion which does not "bottom out," but remains with a thick stem like a leek. Amer. Cyc. - GODCHILD
One for whom a person becomes sponsor at baptism, and whom he promises to see educated as a Christian; a godson or goddaughter. See Godfather. - MOORSTONE
A species of English granite, used as a building stone. - RUBSTONE
A stone for scouring or rubbing; a whetstone; a rub. - UNIVOCALLY
In a univocal manner; in one term; in one sense; not equivocally. How is sin univocally distinguished into venial and mortal, if the venial be not sin Bp. Hall.