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Word Meanings - SIGHT-SEER - Book Publishers vocabulary database

One given to seeing sights or noted things, or eager for novelties or curiosities.

Related words: (words related to SIGHT-SEER)

  • SEEMINGNESS
    Semblance; fair appearance; plausibility. Sir K. Digby.
  • NOTOTHERIUM
    An extinct genus of gigantic herbivorous marsupials, found in the Pliocene formation of Australia.
  • NOTUM
    The back.
  • NOTHINGNESS
    1. Nihility; nonexistence. 2. The state of being of no value; a thing of no value.
  • SEERSUCKER
    A light fabric, originally made in the East Indies, of silk and linen, usually having alternating stripes, and a slightly craped or puckered surface; also, a cotton fabric of similar appearance.
  • NOTELET
    A little or short note; a billet.
  • SEEK
    Sick. Chaucer.
  • NOTATION
    1. The act or practice of recording anything by marks, figures, or characters. 2. Any particular system of characters, symbols, or abbreviated expressions used in art or science, to express briefly technical facts, quantities, etc. Esp., the system
  • NOTTURNO
    See NOCTURNE
  • NOTCH
    1. A hollow cut in anything; a nick; an indentation. And on the stick ten equal notches makes. Swift. 2. A narrow passage between two elevation; a deep, close pass; a defile; as, the notch of a mountain.
  • NOTICE
    1. The act of noting, remarking, or observing; observation by the senses or intellect; cognizance; note. How ready is envy to mingle with the notices we take of other persons ! I. Watts. 2. Intelligence, by whatever means communicated; knowledge
  • NOTUS
    The south wind.
  • SEEMING
    1. Appearance; show; semblance; fair appearance; speciousness. These keep Seeming and savor all the winter long. Shak. 2. Apprehension; judgment. Chaucer. Nothing more clear unto their seeming. Hooker. His persuasive words, impregned With reason,
  • NOTARY
    A public officer who attests or certifies deeds and other writings, or copies of them, usually under his official seal, to make them authentic, especially in foreign countries. His duties chiefly relate to instruments used in commercial
  • NOTAEUM
    The back or upper surface, as of a bird.
  • NOTIONATE
    Notional.
  • NOTIFY
    1. To make known; to declare; to publish; as, to notify a fact to a person. No law can bind till it be notified or promulged. Sowth. 2. To give notice to; to inform by notice; to apprise; as, the constable has notified the citizens to meet at the
  • NOTAL
    Of or pertaining to the back; dorsal.
  • NOTABILIA
    Things worthy of notice.
  • NOTCHWEED
    A foul-smelling weed, the stinking goosefoot (Chenopodium Vulvaria).
  • MONOTESSARON
    A single narrative framed from the statements of the four evangelists; a gospel harmony.
  • HYPNOTIC
    1. Having the quality of producing sleep; tending to produce sleep; soporific. 2. Of or pertaining to hypnotism; in a state of hypnotism; liable to hypnotism; as, a hypnotic condition.
  • PHONOTYPY
    A method of phonetic printing of the English language, as devised by Mr. Pitman, in which nearly all the ordinary letters and many new forms are employed in order to indicate each elementary sound by a separate character.
  • MESEEMS
    It seems to me.
  • WORMSEED
    Any one of several plants, as Artemisia santonica, and Chenopodium anthelminticum, whose seeds have the property of expelling worms from the stomach and intestines. Wormseed mustard, a slender, cruciferous plant having small lanceolate leaves.
  • UNSEEMLY
    Not seemly; unbecoming; indecent. An unseemly outbreak of temper. Hawthorne.
  • MONOTHALAMAN
    A foraminifer having but one chamber.
  • MONOTONE
    A single unvaried tone or sound.
  • HUGUENOTISM
    The religion of the Huguenots in France.
  • LOPSEED
    A perennial herb , having slender seedlike fruits.
  • KNOTWEED
    See KNOT
  • GAPESEED
    Any strange sight. Wright.
  • MONOTHALMIC
    Formed from one pistil; -- said of fruits. R. Brown.
  • BESEECH
    1. To ask or entreat with urgency; to supplicate; to implore. I beseech you, punish me not with your hard thoughts. Shak. But Eve . . . besought his peace. Milton. Syn. -- To beg; to crave. -- To Beseech, Entreat, Solicit, Implore, Supplicate.
  • UPSEEK
    To seek or strain upward. "Upseeking eyes suffused with . . . tears." Southey.
  • BESEEMING
    1. Appearance; look; garb. I . . . did company these three in poor beseeming. Shak. 2. Comeliness. Baret.

 

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