DIAPIRISM | • diapirism n. The formation of diapirs. • DIAPIRISM n. the upward movement of material through denser rock. |
EPILIMNIA | • epilimnia n. Plural of epilimnion. • EPILIMNION n. the upper, warm layer of water in a lake. |
IMPAIRING | • impairing v. Present participle of impair. • impairing n. Impairment. • IMPAIRING n. the act of making worse. |
IMPIETIES | • impieties n. Plural of impiety. • IMPIETY n. lack of piety. |
IMPINGING | • impinging v. Present participle of impinge. • impinging n. An impingement. • IMPINGE v. to collide with. |
IMPLICITY | • implicity n. (Obsolete) The quality of being implicit. • IMPLICITY n. a state of being implicit. |
IMPOLITIC | • impolitic adj. Not in accordance with good policy. • IMPOLITIC adj. not politic, also IMPOLITICAL, UNPOLITIC. |
LIMPIDITY | • limpidity n. The property of being limpid. • LIMPIDITY n. the quality of being limpid. |
MINIPILLS | • minipills n. Plural of minipill. • MINIPILL n. a low dose oral contraceptive. |
PRIMITIAE | • primitiae n. Plural of primitia. • PRIMITIAE n. (Latin) the first year's revenue of a benefice, also PRIMITIAS. |
PRIMITIAL | • primitial adj. (Rare) Being of the first production; primitive; original. • PRIMITIAL adj. of or relating to primitiae, the first year's revenue of a benefice. |
PRIMITIAS | • primitias n. Plural of primitia. • PRIMITIAS n. (Spenser) the first year's revenue of a benefice, also PRIMITIAE. |
PRIMITIVE | • primitive n. (Linguistics) An original or primary word; a word not derived from another, as opposed to derivative. • primitive n. A member of a primitive society. • primitive n. A simple-minded person. |
RHIPIDIUM | • rhipidium n. (Botany) A scorpioid cyme whose successive pedicels follow a zigzag path on the same plane. • RHIPIDIUM n. a fan-shaped cymose inflorescence. |
SIMPLICIA | • simplicia n. Plural of simplex. • SIMPLEX n. (Latin) a geometrical term, a figure with a minimum number of vertices. |
SPIRITISM | • spiritism n. Spiritualism. • spiritism n. Alternative form of Spiritism. • Spiritism prop.n. A philosophical doctrine, established in France in the mid nineteenth century, postulating that humans… |