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Word Meanings - INCORRUPTLY - Book Publishers vocabulary database

Without corruption. To demean themselves incorruptly. Milton.

Related words: (words related to INCORRUPTLY)

  • DEMEANURE
    Behavior. Spenser.
  • CORRUPTIONIST
    One who corrupts, or who upholds corruption. Sydney Smith.
  • WITHOUT-DOOR
    Outdoor; exterior. "Her without-door form." Shak.
  • CORRUPTION
    1. The act of corrupting or making putrid, or state of being corrupt or putrid; decomposition or disorganization, in the process of putrefaction; putrefaction; deterioration. The inducing and accelerating of putrefaction is a subject
  • WITHOUTFORTH
    Without; outside' outwardly. Cf. Withinforth. Chaucer.
  • THEMSELVES
    The plural of himself, herself, and itself. See Himself, Herself, Itself.
  • DEMEANANCE
    Demeanor. Skelton.
  • INCORRUPTLY
    Without corruption. To demean themselves incorruptly. Milton.
  • WITHOUTEN
    Without. Chaucer.
  • DEMEAN
    struggledé- + mener to lead, drive, carry on, conduct, fr. L. minare to drive animals by threatening cries, fr. minari to threaten. 1. To manage; to conduct; to treat. clergy have with violence demeaned the matter. Milton. 2. To conduct; to
  • MILTONIAN
    Miltonic. Lowell.
  • MILTONIC
    Of, pertaining to, or resembling, Milton, or his writings; as, Miltonic prose.
  • DEMEANOR
    1. Management; treatment; conduct. God commits the managing so great a trust . . . wholly to the demeanor of every grown man. Milton. 2. Behavior; deportment; carriage; bearing; mien. His demeanor was singularly pleasing. Macaulay. The men, as
  • WITHOUT
    1. On or at the outside of; out of; not within; as, without doors. Without the gate Some drive the cars, and some the coursers rein. Dryden. 2. Out of the limits of; out of reach of; beyond. Eternity, before the world and after, is without our
  • MISDEMEAN
    To behave ill; -- with a reflexive pronoun; as, to misdemean one's self.
  • INCORRUPTION
    The condition or quality of being incorrupt or incorruptible; absence of, or exemption from, corruption. It is sown in corruption; it is raised in incorruption. 1 Cor. xv.
  • HAMILTON PERIOD
    A subdivision of the Devonian system of America; -- so named from Hamilton, Madison Co., New York. It includes the Marcellus, Hamilton, and Genesee epochs or groups. See the Chart of Geology.
  • UNCORRUPTION
    Incorruption.
  • MISDEMEANOR
    A crime less than a felony. Wharton. Note: As a rule, in the old English law, offenses capitally punishable were felonies; all other indictable offenses were misdemeanors. In common usage, the word crime is employed to denote the offenses
  • MISDEMEANANT
    One guilty of a misdemeanor. Sydney Smith.

 

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