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Word Meanings - PALEOCRINOIDEA - Book Publishers vocabulary database

A suborder of Crinoidea found chiefly in the Paleozoic rocks.

Related words: (words related to PALEOCRINOIDEA)

  • FOUNDATION
    The lowest and supporting part or member of a wall, including the base course , under Base, n.) and footing courses; in a frame house, the whole substructure of masonry. 4. A donation or legacy appropriated to support a charitable institution,
  • FOUNDER
    One who founds, establishes, and erects; one who lays a foundation; an author; one from whom anything originates; one who endows.
  • FOUND
    imp. & p. p. of Find.
  • FOUNDATIONER
    One who derives support from the funds or foundation of a college or school.
  • FOUNDEROUS
    Difficult to travel; likely to trip one up; as, a founderous road. Burke.
  • FOUNDRESS
    A female founder; a woman who founds or establishes, or who endows with a fund.
  • FOUNDERY
    See FOUNDRY
  • FOUNDLING
    A deserted or exposed infant; a child found without a parent or owner. Foundling hospital, a hospital for foundlings.
  • FOUNDING
    The art of smelting and casting metals.
  • ROCKSUCKER
    A lamprey.
  • CRINOIDEA
    A large class of Echinodermata, including numerous extinct families and genera, but comparatively few living ones. Most of the fossil species, like some that are recent, were attached by a jointed stem. See Blastoidea, Cystoidea, Comatula.
  • SUBORDER
    A division of an order; a group of genera of a little lower rank than an order and of greater importance than a tribe or family; as, cichoraceous plants form a suborder of Compositæ.
  • FOUNDERSHAFT
    The first shaft sunk. Raymond.
  • FOUNDRY
    1. The act, process, or art of casting metals. 2. The buildings and works for casting metals. Foundry ladle, a vessel for holding molten metal and conveying it from cupola to the molds.
  • CRINOIDEAN
    One of the Crinoidea.
  • FOUNDATIONLESS
    Having no foundation.
  • PALEOZOIC ERA
    The Paleozoic time or strata.
  • PALEOZOIC
    Of or pertaining to, or designating, the older division of geological time during which life is known to have existed, including the Silurian, Devonian, and Carboniferous ages, and also to the life or rocks of those ages. See Chart of Geology.
  • CHIEFLY
    1. In the first place; principally; preëminently; above; especially. Search through this garden; leave unsearched no nook; But chiefly where those two fair creatures lodge. Milton. 2. For the most part; mostly. Those parts of the kingdom where
  • PALEOCRINOIDEA
    A suborder of Crinoidea found chiefly in the Paleozoic rocks.
  • CONFOUNDED
    1. Confused; perplexed. A cloudy and confounded philosopher. Cudworth. 2. Excessive; extreme; abominable. He was a most confounded tory. Swift. The tongue of that confounded woman. Sir. W. Scott.
  • PROFOUNDNESS
    The quality or state of being profound; profundity; depth. Hooker.
  • PROFOUNDLY
    In a profound manner. Why sigh you so profoundly Shak.
  • CONFOUNDEDLY
    Extremely; odiously; detestably. "Confoundedly sick." Goldsmith.
  • REFOUND
    1. To found or cast anew. "Ancient bells refounded." T. Warton. 2. To found or establish again; to re
  • CHEST FOUNDER
    A rheumatic affection of the muscles of the breast and fore legs of a horse, affecting motion and respiration.
  • REFOUNDER
    One who refounds.
  • DUMFOUNDER
    To dumfound; to confound.
  • ENCRINOIDEA
    That order of the Crinoidea which includes most of the living and many fossil forms, having jointed arms around the margin of the oral disk; -- also called Brachiata and Articulata. See Illusts. under Comatula and Crinoidea.
  • UNCONFOUNDED
    Not confounded. Bp. Warburton.
  • PROFOUND
    1. Descending far below the surface; opening or reaching to a great depth; deep. "A gulf profound." Milton. 2. Intellectually deep; entering far into subjects; reaching to the bottom of a matter, or of a branch of learning; thorough; as, a profound

 

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