Word Meanings - THEATRICALS - Book Publishers vocabulary database
Dramatic performances; especially, those produced by amateurs. Such fashionable cant terms as `theatricals,' and `musicals,' invented by the flippant Topham, still survive among his confraternity of frivolity. I. Disraeli.
Related words: (words related to THEATRICALS)
- STILLY
Still; quiet; calm. The stilly hour when storms are gone. Moore. - INVENTIVE
Able and apt to invent; quick at contrivance; ready at expedients; as, an inventive head or genius. Dryden. -- In*vent"ive*ly, adv. -- In*vent"ive*ness, n. - PRODUCIBILITY
The quality or state of being producible. Barrow. - STILLBIRTH
The birth of a dead fetus. - INVENTRESS
A woman who invents. Dryden. - PRODUCEMENT
Production. - THOSE
The plural of that. See That. - FLIPPANT
limber, pliant, or Icel. fleipa to babble, prattle. Cf. Flip, Fillip, 1. Of smooth, fluent, and rapid speech; speaking with ease and rapidity; having a voluble tongue; talkative. It becometh good men, in such cases, to be flippant and free in their - STILLSTAND
A standstill. Shak. - STILLING
A stillion. - STILLAGE
A low stool to keep the goods from touching the floor. Knight. - FRIVOLITY
The condition or quality of being frivolous; also, acts or habits of trifling; unbecoming levity of disposition. - STILLION
A stand, as for casks or vats in a brewery, or for pottery while drying. - INVENTFUL
Full of invention. J. Gifford. - INVENTOR
One who invents or finds out something new; a contriver; especially, one who invents mechanical devices. - STILLROOM
1. A room for distilling. 2. An apartment in a house where liquors, preserves, and the like, are kept. Floors are rubbed bright, . . . stillroom and kitchen cleared for action. Dickens. - STILL-HUNT
A hunting for game in a quiet and cautious manner, or under cover; stalking; hence, colloquially, the pursuit of any object quietly and cautiously. -- Still"-hunt`er, n. -- Still"-hunt`ing, n. - PRODUCTIVITY
The quality or state of being productive; productiveness. Emerson. Not indeed as the product, but as the producing power, the productivity. Coleridge. - PRODUCTUS
An extinct genus of brachiopods, very characteristic of the Carboniferous rocks. - FASHIONABLENESS
State of being fashionable. - INSTILL
To drop in; to pour in drop by drop; hence, to impart gradually; to infuse slowly; to cause to be imbibed. That starlight dews All silently their tears of love instill. Byron. How hast thou instilled Thy malice into thousands. Milton. Syn. -- To - SPATHOSE
See SPATHIC - PISTILLIFEROUS
Pistillate. - DISTILLABLE
Capable of being distilled; especially, capable of being distilled without chemical change or decomposition; as, alcohol is distillable; olive oil is not distillable. - DISTILLATION
The separation of the volatile parts of a substance from the more fixed; specifically, the operation of driving off gas or vapor from volatile liquids or solids, by heat in a retort or still, and the condensation of the products as far as possible - FINESTILLER
One who finestills. - INSTILLATOR
An instiller. - OVERPRODUCTION
Excessive production; supply beyond the demand. J. S. Mill. - PISTILLATION
The act of pounding or breaking in a mortar; pestillation. Sir T. Browne.