Word Meanings - SURCHARGE - Book Publishers vocabulary database
1. To overload; to overburden; to overmatch; to overcharge; as, to surcharge a beast or a ship; to surcharge a cannon. Four charged two, and two surcharged one. Spenser. Your head reclined, as hiding grief from view, Droops like a rose surcharged
Additional info about word: SURCHARGE
1. To overload; to overburden; to overmatch; to overcharge; as, to surcharge a beast or a ship; to surcharge a cannon. Four charged two, and two surcharged one. Spenser. Your head reclined, as hiding grief from view, Droops like a rose surcharged with morning dew. Dryden. To overstock; especially, to put more cattle into, as a common, than the person has a right to do, or more than the herbage will sustain. Blackstone. To show an omission in for which credit ought to have been given. Story. Daniel.
Related words: (words related to SURCHARGE)
- BEASTLIHEAD
Beastliness. Spenser. - OVERBURDEN
The waste which overlies good stone in a quarry. Raymond. - BEASTLIKE
Like a beast. - CHARGEANT
Burdensome; troublesome. Chaucer. - SURCHARGE
1. An overcharge; an excessive load or burden; a load greater than can well be borne. A numerous nobility causeth poverty and inconvenience in a state, for it is surcharge of expense. Bacon. The putting, by a commoner, of more beasts on the common - CHARGE
1. A load or burder laid upon a person or thing. 2. A person or thing commited or intrusted to the care, custody, or management of another; a trust. Note: The people of a parish or church are called the charge of the clergyman who is set over them. - HIDING
A flogging. Charles Reade. - CANNON BONE
See BONE - RECLINING
Bending or curving gradually back from the perpendicular. Recumbent. Reclining dial, a dial whose plane is inclined to the vertical line through its center. Davies & Peck . - BEASTLINESS
The state or quality of being beastly. - RECLINATE
Reclined, as a leaf; bent downward, so that the point, as of a stem or leaf, is lower than the base. - CHARGEABLE
1. That may be charged, laid, imposed, or imputes; as, a duty chargeable on iron; a fault chargeable on a man. 2. Subject to be charge or accused; liable or responsible; as, revenues chargeable with a claim; a man chargeable with murder. 3. Serving - OVERCHARGE
1. To charge or load too heavily; to burden; to oppress; to cloy. Sir W. Raleigh. 2. To fill too full; to crowd. Our language is overcharged with consonants. Addison. 3. To charge excessively; to charge beyond a fair rate or price. 4. - BEASTINGS
See BIESTINGS - HIDROSIS
Excretion of sweat; perspiration. 2. Excessive perspiration; also, any skin disease characterized by abnormal perspiration. - CANNONADE
1. The act of discharging cannon and throwing ball, shell, etc., for the purpose of destroying an army, or battering a town, ship, or fort; -- usually, an attack of some continuance. A furious cannonade was kept up from the whole circle - OVERLOAD
An excessive load; the excess beyond a proper load. - SURCHARGEMENT
The act of surcharging; also, surcharge, surplus. Daniel. - CHARGE D'AFFAIRES
A diplomatic representative, or minister of an inferior grade, accredited by the government of one state to the minister of foreign affairs of another; also, a substitute, ad interim, for an ambassador or minister plenipotentiary. - HIDALGO
A title, denoting a Spanish nobleman of the lower class. (more info) something; hijo son + algo something, fr. L. - GLOCHIDIUM
The larva or young of the mussel, formerly thought to be a parasite upon the parent's gills. - SYLPHID
A little sylph; a young or diminutive sylph. "The place of the sylphid queen." J. R. Drake. Ye sylphs and sylphids, to your chief give ear, Fays, fairies, genii, elves, and demons, hear. Pope. - CHIDESTER
A female scold. - MISCHARGE
To charge erroneously, as in account. -- n. - RACHIDIAN
Of or pertaining to the rachis; spinal; vertebral. Same as Rhachidian. - ENCHARGE
To charge ; to impose upon. His countenance would express the spirit and the passion of the part he was encharged with. Jeffrey. - ORCHIDEOUS
See ORCHIDACEOUS - XANTHIDE
A compound or derivative of xanthogen. - AGRIEF
In grief; amiss. Chaucer. - APHIDOPHAGOUS
Feeding upon aphides, or plant lice, as do beetles of the family Coccinellidæ. - HEARTGRIEF
Heartache; sorrow. Milton. - CHIDER
One who chides or quarrels. Shak.