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Word Meanings - HYDRO-EXTRACTOR - Book Publishers vocabulary database

An apparatus for drying anything, as yarn, cloth, sugar, etc., by centrifugal force; a centrifugal.

Related words: (words related to HYDRO-EXTRACTOR)

  • SUGARPLUM
    A kind of candy or sweetneat made up in small balls or disks.
  • FORCE
    To stuff; to lard; to farce. Wit larded with malice, and malice forced with wit. Shak.
  • DRY-RUB
    To rub and cleanse without wetting. Dodsley.
  • SUGARED
    Sweetened. "The sugared liquor." Spenser.
  • DRY GOODS
    A commercial name for textile fabrics, cottons, woolens, linen, silks, laces, etc., -- in distinction from groceries.
  • CLOTHESLINE
    A rope or wire on which clothes are hung to dry.
  • SUGARY
    1. Resembling or containing sugar; tasting of sugar; sweet. Spenser. 2. Fond of sugar or sweet things; as, a sugary palate.
  • FORCEPS
    The caudal forceps-shaped appendage of earwigs and some other insects. See Earwig. Dressing forceps. See under Dressing. (more info) 1. A pair of pinchers, or tongs; an instrument for grasping, holding firmly, or exerting traction upon, bodies
  • ANYTHINGARIAN
    One who holds to no particular creed or dogma.
  • DRY-FISTED
    Niggardly.
  • DRYSALTER
    A dealer in salted or dried meats, pickles, sauces, etc., and in the materials used in pickling, salting, and preserving various kinds of food Hence drysalters usually sell a number of saline substances and miscellaneous drugs. Brande & C.
  • SUGARLESS
    Without sugar; free from sugar.
  • DRY-BEAT
    To beat severely. Shak.
  • FORCEFUL
    Full of or processing force; exerting force; mighty. -- Force"ful*ly, adv. Against the steed he threw His forceful spear. Dryden.
  • DRYAD
    A wood nymph; a nymph whose life was bound up with that of her tree.
  • CENTRIFUGAL
    1. Tending, or causing, to recede from the center. Expanding first at the summit, and later at the base, as a flower cluster. Having the radicle turned toward the sides of the fruit, as some embryos. Centrifugal force , a force whose direction
  • CLOTHESHORSE
    A frame to hang clothes on.
  • DRY-BONED
    Having dry bones, or bones without flesh.
  • FORCEMENT
    The act of forcing; compulsion. It was imposed upon us by constraint; And will you count such forcement treachery J. Webster.
  • CLOTHIER
    1. One who makes cloths; one who dresses or fulls cloth. Hayward. 2. One who sells cloth or clothes, or who makes and sells clothes.
  • SAILCLOTH
    Duck or canvas used in making sails.
  • BEDCLOTHES
    Blankets, sheets, coverlets, etc., for a bed. Shak.
  • REINFORCEMENT
    See REëNFORCEMENT
  • HEARSECLOTH
    A cloth for covering a coffin when on a bier; a pall. Bp. Sanderson.
  • BREECHCLOTH
    A cloth worn around the breech.
  • DEFORCEOR
    See DEFORCIANT
  • SUNDRY
    1. Several; divers; more than one or two; various. "Sundry wines." Chaucer. "Sundry weighty reasons." Shak. With many a sound of sundry melody. Chaucer. Sundry foes the rural realm surround. Dryden. 2. Separate; diverse. Every church almost had
  • POLYANDRY
    The possession by a woman of more than one husband at the same time; -- contrasted with Ant: monandry. Note: In law, this falls under the head of polygamy.
  • SMOULDRY
    See SMOLDRY
  • NECKCLOTH
    A piece of any fabric worn around the neck.
  • BROADCLOTH
    A fine smooth-faced woolen cloth for men's garments, usually of double width ; -- so called in distinction from woolens three quarters of a yard wide.
  • UNCLOTHED
    Divested or stripped of clothing. Byron. 2. Etym: (more info) 1. Etym:
  • DEFORCE
    To keep from the rightful owner; to withhold wrongfully the possession of, as of lands or a freehold. To resist the execution of the law; to oppose by force, as an officer in the execution of his duty. Burrill.
  • REENFORCE
    To strengthen with new force, assistance, material, or support; as, to reënforce an argument; to reënforce a garment; especially, to strengthen with additional troops, as an army or a fort, or with additional ships, as a fleet.
  • HAMADRYAD
    A tree nymph whose life ended with that of the particular tree, usually an oak, which had been her abode.
  • RIBAUDRY
    Ribaldry. Spenser.
  • CARBORUNDUM CLOTH; CARBORUNDUM PAPER
    Cloth or paper covered with powdered carborundum.

 

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