Word Meanings - PREINDISPOSE - Book Publishers vocabulary database
To render indisposed beforehand. Milman.
Related words: (words related to PREINDISPOSE)
- INDISPOSE
1. To render unfit or unsuited; to disqualify. 2. To disorder slightly as regards health; to make somewhat. Shak. It made him rather indisposed than sick. Walton. 3. To disincline; to render averse or unfavorable; as, a love of pleasure indisposes - INDISPOSITION
1. The state of being indisposed; disinclination; as, the indisposition of two substances to combine. A general indisposition towards believing. Atterbury. 2. A slight disorder or illness. Rather as an indisposition in health than as - RENDERABLE
Capable of being rendered. - BEFOREHAND
1. In a state of anticipation ore preoccupation; in advance; -- often followed by with. Agricola . . . resolves to be beforehand with the danger. Milton. The last cited author has been beforehand with me. Addison. 2. By way of preparation, - RENDERER
1. One who renders. 2. A vessel in which lard or tallow, etc., is rendered. - RENDERING
The act of one who renders, or that which is rendered. Specifically: A version; translation; as, the rendering of the Hebrew text. Lowth. In art, the presentation, expression, or interpretation of an idea, theme, or part. The act of laying - RENDER
One who rends. - INDISPOSEDNESS
The condition or quality of being indisposed. Bp. Hall. - MISRENDER
To render wrongly; to translate or recite wrongly. Boyle. - PREINDISPOSE
To render indisposed beforehand. Milman. - SURRENDER
To yield; to render or deliver up; to give up; as, a principal surrendered by his bail, a fugitive from justice by a foreign state, or a particular estate by the tenant thereof to him in remainder or reversion. (more info) 1. To yield to the power - SURRENDEROR
One who makes a surrender, as of an estate. Bouvier. - PRENDER
The power or right of taking a thing before it is offered. Burrill. - SURRENDERER
One who surrenders. - SURRENDEREE
The person to whom a surrender is made. Mozley & W. - TRENDER
One whose business is to free wool from its filth.