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Word Meanings - OUTSLIDE - Book Publishers vocabulary database

To slide outward, onward, or forward; to advance by sliding. At last our grating keels outslide. Whittier.

Related words: (words related to OUTSLIDE)

  • GRATICULE
    A design or draught which has been divided into squares, in order to reproduce it in other dimensions.
  • GRATICULATION
    The division of a design or draught into squares, in order the more easily to reproduce it in larger or smaller dimensions. (more info) graticuler, craticuler, to square, fr. graticule, craticule,
  • GRATITUDE
    The state of being grateful; warm and friendly feeling toward a benefactor; kindness awakened by a favor received; thankfulness. The debt immense of endless gratitude. Milton.
  • GRATIOLIN
    One of the essential principles of the hedge hyssop (Gratiola officinalis).
  • GRATIFIER
    One who gratifies or pleases.
  • ADVANCE
    supposed LL. abantiare; ab + ante before. The spelling 1. To bring forward; to move towards the van or front; to make to go on. 2. To raise; to elevate. They . . . advanced their eyelids. Shak. 3. To raise to a higher rank; to promote. Ahasueres
  • FORWARDLY
    Eagerly; hastily; obtrusively.
  • GRATIFICATION
    1. The act of gratifying, or pleasing, either the mind, the taste, or the appetite; as, the gratification of the palate, of the appetites, of the senses, of the desires, of the heart. 2. That which affords pleasure; satisfaction; enjoyment;
  • ADVANCED
    1. In the van or front. 2. In the front or before others, as regards progress or ideas; as, advanced opinions, advanced thinkers. 3. Far on in life or time. A gentleman advanced in years, with a hard experience written in his wrinkles. Hawthorne.
  • GRATED
    Furnished with a grate or grating; as, grated windows.
  • GRATULATION
    The act of gratulating or felicitating; congratulation. I shall turn my wishes into gratulations. South.
  • GRATULATORY
    Expressing gratulation or joy; congratulatory. The usual groundwork of such gratulatory odes. Bp. Horsley.
  • FORWARD
    An agreement; a covenant; a promise. Tell us a tale anon, as forward is. Chaucer.
  • ONWARDS
    Onward.
  • SLIDE
    To pass from one note to another with no perceptible cassation of sound. 7. To pass out of one's thought as not being of any consequence. With good hope let he sorrow slide. Chaucer. With a calm carelessness letting everything slide. Sir P. Sidney.
  • GRATER
    One who, or that which, grates; especially, an instrument or utensil with a rough, indented surface, for rubbing off small particles of any substance; as a grater for nutmegs.
  • GRATE
    Serving to gratify; agreeable. Sir T. Herbert.
  • SLIDDER
    To slide with interruption. Dryden.
  • OUTWARD; OUTWARDS
    From the interior part; in a direction from the interior toward the exterior; out; to the outside; beyond; off; away; as, a ship bound outward. The wrong side may be turned outward. Shak. Light falling on them is not reflected outwards.
  • SLIDING
    1. That slides or slips; gliding; moving smoothly. 2. Slippery; elusory. That sliding science hath me made so bare. Chaucer. Sliding friction , the resistance one body meets with in sliding along the surface of another, as distinguished
  • MIGRATION
    The act of migrating.
  • INTEGRATOR
    That which integrates; esp., an instrument by means of which the area of a figure can be measured directly, or its moment of inertia, or statical moment, etc., be determined.
  • INGRATEFUL
    1. Ungrateful; thankless; unappreciative. Milton. He proved extremely false and ingrateful to me. Atterbury. 2. Unpleasing to the sense; distasteful; offensive. He gives . . . no ingrateful food. Milton. -- In"grate`ful*ly, adv. -- In"grate`ful*ness,
  • REGRATE
    To remove the outer surface of, as of an old hewn stone, so as to give it a fresh appearance. 2. To offend; to shock. Derham.
  • BACKSLIDING
    Slipping back; falling back into sin or error; sinning. Turn, O backsliding children, saith the Lord. Jer. iii. 14.
  • DEFLAGRATION
    The act or process of deflagrating. (more info) 1. A burning up; conflagration. "Innumerable deluges and deflagrations." Bp. Pearson.
  • DENIGRATOR
    One who, or that which, blackens.
  • IMMIGRATION
    The act of immigrating; the passing or coming into a country for the purpose of permanent residence. The immigrations of the Arabians into Europe. T. Warton.
  • CONFLAGRATION
    A fire extending to many objects, or over a large space; a general burning. Till one wide conflagration swallows all. Pope.
  • INTERMIGRATION
    Reciprocal migration; interchange of dwelling place by migration. Sir M. Hale.
  • TRANSMIGRATION
    1. The act of passing from one country to another; migration. 2. The passing of the soul at death into another mortal body; metempsychosis.
  • PERAGRATION
    The act or state of passing through any space; as, the peragration of the moon in her monthly revolution. Sir T. Browne.
  • REINTEGRATION
    A renewing, or making whole again. See Redintegration.

 

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