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Word Meanings - MANSTEALING - Book Publishers vocabulary database

The act or business of stealing or kidnaping human beings, especially with a view to e

Related words: (words related to MANSTEALING)

  • HUMANIZE
    To convert into something human or belonging to man; as, to humanize vaccine lymph. (more info) 1. To render human or humane; to soften; to make gentle by overcoming cruel dispositions and rude habits; to refine or civilize. Was it the business
  • BUSINESS
    The position, distribution, and order of persons and properties on the stage of a theater, as determined by the stage manager in rehearsal. 7. Care; anxiety; diligence. Chaucer. To do one's business, to ruin one. Wycherley. -- To make one's
  • HUMANIFY
    To make human; to invest with a human personality; to incarnate. The humanifying of the divine Word. H. B. Wilson.
  • HUMANITARIANISM
    The distinctive tenet of the humanitarians in denying the divinity of Christ; also, the whole system of doctrine based upon this view of Christ.
  • HUMANISM
    1. Human nature or disposition; humanity. looked almost like a being who had rejected with indifference the attitude of sex for the loftier quality of abstract humanism. T. Hardy. 2. The study of the humanities; polite learning.
  • KIDNAPER; KIDNAPPER
    One who steals or forcibly carries away a human being; a manstealer.
  • HUMANISTIC
    1. Of or pertaining to humanity; as, humanistic devotion. Caird. 2. Pertaining to polite kiterature. M. Arnold.
  • STEALINGLY
    By stealing, or as by stealing, furtively, or by an invisible motion. Sir P. Sidney.
  • STEALTH
    1. The act of stealing; theft. The owner proveth the stealth to have been committed upon him by such an outlaw. Spenser. 2. The thing stolen; stolen property. "Sluttish dens . . . serving to cover stealths." Sir W. Raleigh. 3. The bringing to
  • HUMANITY
    The branches of polite or elegant learning; as language, rhetoric, poetry, and the ancient classics; belles-letters. Note: The cultivation of the languages, literature, history, and archæology of Greece and Rome, were very commonly called literæ
  • HUMANIST
    1. One of the scholars who in the field of literature proper represented the movement of the Renaissance, and early in the 16th century adopted the name Humanist as their distinctive title. Schaff- Herzog. 2. One who purposes the study
  • HUMANKIND
    Mankind. Pope.
  • STEALTHLIKE
    Stealthy; sly. Wordsworth.
  • BUSINESSLIKE
    In the manner of one transacting business wisely and by right methods.
  • HUMANITIAN
    A humanist. B. Jonson.
  • STEALTHFUL
    Given to stealth; stealthy. -- Stealth"ful*ly, adv. -- Stealth"ful*ness, n.
  • HUMANIZER
    One who renders humane.
  • HUMANATE
    Indued with humanity. Cranmer.
  • ESPECIALLY
    In an especial manner; chiefly; particularly; peculiarly; in an uncommon degree.
  • HUMANNESS
    The quality or state of being human.
  • INHUMANITY
    The quality or state of being inhuman; cruelty; barbarity. Man's inhumanity to man Makes countless thousands mourn. Burns.
  • SUBPERIOSTEAL
    Situated under the periosteum. Subperiosteal operation , a removal of bone effected without taking away the periosteum.
  • PERIOSTEAL
    Situated around bone; of or pertaining to the periosteum.
  • FIBROCHONDROSTEAL
    Partly fibrous, partly cartilaginous, and partly osseous. St. George Mivart.
  • INHUMANLY
    In an inhuman manner; cruelly; barbarously.
  • INHUMAN
    1. Destitute of the kindness and tenderness that belong to a human being; cruel; barbarous; savage; unfeeling; as, an inhuman person or people. 2. Characterized by, or attended with, cruelty; as, an inhuman act or punishment. Syn. --
  • TRANSHUMAN
    More than human; superhuman. Words may not tell of that transhuman change. H. F. Cary.

 

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