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Word Meanings - SURADDITION - Book Publishers vocabulary database

Something added or appended, as to a name. Shak.

Related words: (words related to SURADDITION)

  • APPENDANT
    A inheritance annexed by prescription to a superior inheritance. (more info) 1. Anything attached to another as incidental or subordinate to it.
  • ADDUCT
    To draw towards a common center or a middle line. Huxley.
  • ADDLE-BRAIN; ADDLE-HEAD; ADDLE-PATE
    A foolish or dull-witted fellow.
  • ADDUCTION
    The action by which the parts of the body are drawn towards its (more info) 1. The act of adducing or bringing forward. An adduction of facts gathered from various quarters. I. Taylor.
  • ADDITIVE
    Proper to be added; positive; -- opposed to subtractive.
  • ADDOOM
    To adjudge. Spenser.
  • ADDUCIBLE
    Capable of being adduced. Proofs innumerable, and in every imaginable manner diversified, are adducible. I. Taylor.
  • ADDER'S-TONGUE
    A genus of ferns , whose seeds are produced on a spike resembling a serpent's tongue. The yellow dogtooth violet. Gray.
  • ADDUCE
    To bring forward or offer, as an argument, passage, or consideration which bears on a statement or case; to cite; to allege. Reasons . . . were adduced on both sides. Macaulay. Enough could not be adduced to satisfy the purpose of illustration.
  • APPENDICAL
    Of or like an appendix.
  • ADDITION
    That part of arithmetic which treats of adding numbers. (more info) 1. The act of adding two or more things together; -- opposed to subtraction or diminution. "This endless addition or addibility of numbers." Locke. 2. Anything added; increase;
  • ADDITIONALLY
    By way of addition.
  • ADDERWORT
    The common bistort or snakeweed .
  • APPENDIX
    1. Something appended or added; an appendage, adjunct, or concomitant. Normandy became an appendix to England. Sir M. Hale. 2. Any literary matter added to a book, but not necessarily essential to its completeness, and thus distinguished
  • ADDITAMENT
    An addition, or a thing added. Fuller. My persuasion that the latter verses of the chapter were an additament of a later age. Coleridge.
  • ADDUCTOR
    A muscle which draws a limb or part of the body toward the middle line of the body, or closes extended parts of the body; -- opposed to abductor; as, the adductor of the eye, which turns the eye toward the nose. In the bivalve shells, the muscles
  • APPEND
    belong, OF. apendre, F. appendre, fr. L. append, v. i., to hang to, append, v. t., to hang to; ad + pend, v. i., to hang, pend, v. t., to 1. To hang or attach to, as by a string, so that the thing is suspended; as, a seal appended to a record;
  • ADDLINGS
    Earnings. Wright.
  • ADDABLE
    Addible.
  • APPENDICULATE
    Having small appendages; forming an appendage. Appendiculate leaf, a small appended leaf. Withering.
  • HADDOCK
    A marine food fish , allied to the cod, inhabiting the northern coasts of Europe and America. It has a dark lateral line and a black spot on each side of the body, just back of the gills. Galled also haddie, and dickie. Norway haddock, a marine
  • SADDER
    See SADDA
  • SADDUCEEISM; SADDUCISM
    The tenets of the Sadducees.
  • SIDESADDLE
    A saddle for women, in which the rider sits with both feet on one side of the animal mounted. Sidesaddle flower , a plant with hollow leaves and curiously shaped flowers; -- called also huntsman's cup. See Sarracenia.
  • RADDE
    imp. of Read, Rede. Chaucer.
  • SPADDLE
    A little spade.
  • WADDYWOOD
    An Australian tree ; also, its wood, used in making waddies.
  • SWADDLE
    Anything used to swaddle with, as a cloth or band; a swaddling band. They put me in bed in all my swaddles. Addison.
  • PADDLER
    One who, or that which, paddles.
  • GADDISH
    Disposed to gad. -- Gad"dish*nes, n. "Gaddishness and folly." Abp. Leighton.
  • UNSADDLE
    1. To strip of a saddle; to take the saddle from, as a horse. 2. To throw from the saddle; to unhorse.
  • KADDER
    The jackdaw.
  • NADDER
    An adder. Chaucer.
  • STRADDLE
    1. To part the legs wide; to stand or to walk with the legs far apart. 2. To stand with the ends staggered; -- said of the spokes of a wagon wheel where they join the hub.

 

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