Word Meanings - STREAMING - Book Publishers vocabulary database
Sending forth streams.
Related words: (words related to STREAMING)
- FORTHPUTING
Bold; forward; aggressive. - SENDAL
A light thin stuff of silk. Chaucer. Wore she not a veil of twisted sendal embroidered with silver Sir W. Scott. (more info) LL. cendallum, Gr. - FORTHCOMING
Ready or about to appear; making appearance. - FORTHY
Therefore. Spenser. - FORTHWARD
Forward. Bp. Fisher. - FORTHRIGHTNESS
Straightforwardness; explicitness; directness. Dante's concise forthrightness of phrase. Hawthorne. - FORTHINK
To repent; to regret; to be sorry for; to cause regret. "Let it forthink you." Tyndale. That me forthinketh, quod this January. Chaucer. - FORTHWITH
As soon as the thing required may be done by reasonable exertion confined to that object. Bouvier. (more info) 1. Immediately; without delay; directly. Immediately there fell from his eyes as it had been scales; and he received sight forthwith. - FORTHGOING
A going forth; an utterance. A. Chalmers. - FORTHRIGHT
Straight forward; in a straight direction. Sir P. Sidney. - FORTH
1. Forward; onward in time, place, or order; in advance from a given point; on to end; as, from that day forth; one, two, three, and so forth. Lucas was Paul's companion, at the leastway from the sixteenth of the Acts forth. Tyndale. From this - FORTHBY
See FORBY - SEND
Icel. senda, Sw. sända, Dan. sende, Goth. sandjan, and to Goth. sinp a time , gasinpa companion, OHG. sind journey, AS. si, Icel. sinni a walk, journey, a time. W. hynt a way, journey, OIr. 1. To cause to go in any manner; to dispatch; - SENDER
One who sends. Shak. - WHENCEFORTH
From, or forth from, what or which place; whence. Spenser. - HOLDER-FORTH
One who speaks in public; an haranguer; a preacher. Addison. - RESEND
To send on from an intermediate station by means of a repeater. (more info) 1. To send again; as, to resend a message. 2. To send back; as, to resend a gift. Shak. - WITHOUTFORTH
Without; outside' outwardly. Cf. Withinforth. Chaucer. - THENCEFORTH
From that time; thereafter. If the salt have lost his savor, wherewith shall it be salted it is thenceforth good for nothing. Matt. v. 13. Note: This word is sometimes preceded by from, -- a redundancy sanctioned by custom. Chaucer. John. xix. 12. - FERFORTH
Far forth. As ferforth as, as far as. -- So ferforth, to such a degree. - STRAIGHTFORTH
Straightway. - DISENDOWMENT
The act of depriving of an endowment or endowments. disendowment of the Irish Church. G. B. Smith. - UPSEND
To send, cast, or throw up. As when some island situate afar . . . Upsends a smoke to heaven. Cowper. - FERFORTHLY
Ferforth. Chaucer.