Word Meanings - PERFECTIONATE - Book Publishers vocabulary database
To perfect. Dryden.
Related words: (words related to PERFECTIONATE)
- PERFECT
Hermaphrodite; having both stamens and pistils; -- said of flower. Perfect cadence , a complete and satisfactory close in harmony, as upon the tonic preceded by the dominant. -- Perfect chord , a concord or union of sounds which is perfectly - PERFECTIONAL
Of or pertaining to perfection; characterized by perfection. Bp. Pearson. - PERFECTIBILITY
The quality or state of being perfectible. - PERFECTIBLE
Capable of becoming, or being made, perfect. - PERFECTION
1. The quality or state of being perfect or complete, so that nothing requisite is wanting; entire development; consummate culture, skill, or moral excellence; the highest attainable state or degree of excellence; maturity; as, perfection in an - PERFECTNESS
The quality or state of being perfect; perfection. "Charity, which is the bond of perfectness." Col. iii. 14. - PERFECTIONMENT
The act of bringing to perfection, or the state of having attained to perfection. I. Taylor. - PERFECTIBILIAN
A perfectionist. Ed. Rev. - PERFECTER
One who, or that which, makes perfect. "The . . . perfecter of our faith." Barrow. - PERFECTIONATE
To perfect. Dryden. - PERFECTIONISM
The doctrine of the Perfectionists. - PERFECTIVELY
In a perfective manner. - PERFECTLY
In a perfect manner or degree; in or to perfection; completely; wholly; throughly; faultlessly. "Perfectly divine." Milton. As many as touched were made perfectly whole. Matt. xiv. 36. - PERFECTIBILIST
A perfectionist. See also Illuminati, 2. - PERFECTIVE
Tending or conducing to make perfect, or to bring to perfection; -- usually followed by of. "A perfective alteration." Fuller. Actions perfective of their natures. Ray. - PERFECTIONIST
One pretending to perfection; esp., one pretending to moral perfection; one who believes that persons may and do attain to moral perfection and sinlessness in this life. South. - IMPERFECT
1. Not perfect; not complete in all its parts; wanting a part; deective; deficient. Something he left imperfect in the state. Shak. Why, then, your other senses grow imperfect. Shak. 2. Wanting in some elementary organ that is essential - UNPERFECT
To mar or destroy the perfection of. Sir P. Sidney. - IMPERFECTIBLE
Incapable of being mad perfect. - IMPERFECTIBILITY
The state or quality of being imperfectible. - PRETERIMPERFECT
Old name of the tense also called imperfect. - PLUPERFECT
More than perfect; past perfect; -- said of the tense which denotes that an action or event was completed at or before the time of another past action or event. -- n. - UNPERFECTION
Want of perfection; imperfection. Wyclif. - PRETERPLUPERFECT
Old name of the tense also called pluperfect.