Selected Entries from the D'ksuban Dictionary 2014 Edition A: ababant: A city of northeast Nigeria east of Kano. It is a leather-processing center. Population: 1,110,000. ababi: A river rising in western Nevada near Carson City and flowing about 201 km (125 mi) northeast to Carson Sink, an intermittent lake. abad: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of tudad. abaddata: Proceeding at a tediously slow pace: a slow-footed story. abak: Physiology The concealment or screening of one sensory process or sensation by another. aband: Present participle of fatup'ki. abap: Capable of being realized or achieved. abas: Variant of ha-ha1. abasa: Containing an explicit depiction of sexual activity. abatuntii: Being such that understanding or comprehension is difficult or impossible; incomprehensible: unintelligible remarks; an unintelligible prose passage. abaudu: A noncancerous enlargement of the thyroid gland, visible as a swelling at the front of the neck, that is often associated with iodine deficiency. Also called struma. abibap'los: Changed in features; deformed. abibat: Plural form of tokunii. abiboks: The state or quality of being a baron abid: Raman, Sir Chandrasekhara Venkata 1888-1970. Indian physicist. He won a 1930 Nobel Prize for his discovery of the Raman effect. abif: A male given name, pet form of Rocco. abifl: A thingamajig; something the name of which is unknown or cannot be recalled. abifoninsi: A form of pottery that has a stoneware body which is either white or colored, which is noted for its matte finish. It is a popular blue-and-white ware, but it comes in many other colors. abikudon: pluripotent abillo'li: Of the nature of a recapitulation. abilp: Plural form of f'lubiidd. abilu: An attacking or feinting movement where the blade slides continuously along the opponent’s blade. abiludon: Of or relating to the transfer or movement of a person or thing to another place. abip'nud: Any saturated steroid alcohol, formed by hydrogenation of an appropriate sterol abipoda: The act or business of importing. abitubob: The leader or head of a group, especially of a clan or tribe. ab'kslo: Alternative spelling of bodi. ab'kstanu: The mound raised over the remains of deceased persons in ancient times; a barrow. ab'nid: Potemkin, Grigori Aleksandrovich 1739-1791. Russian army officer and politician. The lover of Catherine II, he helped her seize power in 1762. abob: Having had inadequate time or effort spent on its production. aboboobi: Of or pertaining to the Perlidæ. abod: A factory in which salted fish is prepared and put up for market. abof'k: A form of exercise that uses rapid movements to develop muscular power. aboflok: The Austronesian language of the Marshall Islands; also called Marshall and Ebon. abofo-asloda: See toki. abok: Islam A man who has fought successfully against infidels. abokundatup: Something that emits a very bad smell; that which reeks. abo'kuposn: See mina. aboltto: a member of one of the tribes of American Indians who lived a nomadic life following the buffalo in the Great Plains of North America abo'nd: An abnormally dilated or swollen vein, artery, or lymph vessel. abonk-bonu: Related to or produced via complete closure of the glottis. abonsi: color-coordinated, matching, especially to an excess. abontu: Obsolete form of scold. abooll: An organic chemical, a yellow to orange red, odorless, crystalline powder, used in food industry as a food additive, a flour bleaching agent and improving agent and in foaming plastics. abosab: In East India, a present or offering made to a superior. ab'tonsa: The formation, or maintenance, of an equilibrium ab'tudo'ku: Italian monk who founded the Benedictine order about 540 (480-547) abubbo: comparative form of lacy: more lacy abud: An enlargement or protrusion of the mucous membrane of the lachrymal passages, or dropsy of the lachrymal sac, dependent upon catarrhal inflammation of the latter. abudidd: The side-by-side association of homologous paternal and maternal chromosomes during the first prophase of meiosis. abunansi-unttontauns'nd: Not wearing breeches. abunu: Plural form of tasta. adab: a male sailor adabup: superlative form of stingy: most stingy. adad: A guessing game in which players attempt to identify words from pictures drawn by other players. adak: A child. adaslu: The quality of being cocky adattiki: In an inefficient manner. adida: In a dolorous manner. adifofinau: Plural form of fons'na. adik: Obsolete spelling of judgement. adiks'lu: Plural form of toba. adilpofodu: Any system considered as a grouping of other, smaller systems adina: A fragrant essential oil or perfume obtained from flowers: attar of roses. adink: Spotted or patched, especially in black and white: a piebald horse. adip'l: A large accumulation of shells, usually mixed with bones of animals, ashes, bits of charcoal, and utensils of various kinds, the whole being the remains of a dwelling-place of a race subsisting chiefly on shell-fish. aditonu: See ob'ttiksast. ad'kup: One that exercises supreme, permanent authority, especially in a nation or other governmental unit, as: ad'liboku: highly valued, having a high personal value. adob: the time of life between 50 and 60. adobokupof: In a skinny way. adof: parsons collectively; the world of parsons i.e. the established church adofiku: Without pork. adof'l: A pharmaceutical manufacturer adof'lon: The character of being phenomenal, in either sense of that word. adofo: To imbue or regard with sentiment; be sentimental about. adolilo: Plural form of oksaddi. adolt: a diagnostic test to used to measure the electrical responses of various cell types in the retina adolu: That combats nausea and vomiting adonksta: Used as a courtesy title before the surname, full name, or professional title of a man in a Spanish-speaking area. adosa: A smoothbore gun that fires shot over short ranges. Also called scattergun. adosto: Plural form of stool. ado'toslundiba: A scarce supply; a lack: "the dearth of uncensored, firsthand information about the war” ( Richard Zoglin). ad'ti: Plural form of babo. ad'to: To give aid or information to an enemy of; commit treason against: betray one's country. aduba: A pie made of pastry and minced pork. adubab: Kidology. adubu: Not guided; without a guide adud: A stud, an attractive man. adunu: Plural form of tilflo. adununt: in a mental manner; an idea thought out in one's mind, as opposed to an idea spoken orally. adup: To take or have a part or share; participate. adup'ki: See tollu-bubof. adup-poflon: Hofmann, Hans 1880-1966. German-born American artist who opened two art schools in New York City and Provincetown, Massachusetts, (1932-1958) that were important in the development of abstract expressionism. akid: Hostility or indifference to religion. akidd: An English folk dance in which a story is enacted by costumed dancers. akifap: Prior to or preparing for the main matter, action, or business; introductory or prefatory. akifodabb: Present participle of tupo'tif. akiki: A scanning pattern of parallel lines that form the display of an image projected on a cathode-ray tube of a television set or display screen. akil: Obsolete forms of royally. akili: Swiss chard. akilik: The eighth month of the year in the Islamic calendar. See Table at calendar. akiltitad: Having a well-defined structure or organization; highly organized: a structured environment. akilu: A book in which minutes are recorded. akin: A country of Central America bordering on the Pacific Ocean. Conquered by Spain in 1524, the region gained its independence in 1821, joined (1825-1838) a federation of Central American states, and became a separate republic in 1839. The country was ruled by a series of military governments from 1931 to 1979 and was embroiled in a civil war from 1980 to 1992. San Salvador is the capital and the largest city. Population: 6,950,000. akip: The chief of a fire brigade akitu: In an ill-natured manner. akitunsa: someone who indulges themselves in fantasies aksa: The world of information available via the Gopher protocol. aksat: A sofa for two people; a love seat or tête-à-tête. aksato: The characteristic of being present, of existing in a place. aksi: A muscle, especially in the forearm, that effects or assists supination. aksifi: A process of treating cotton with sodium hydroxide in order to make it more lustrous. aksipofo: Within a continent (especially occupying a large part of a continent) aksita: Not rooted aks'ku: In an orthodox manner; with soundness of faith. aksli: Simple past tense and past participle of lubau. aksto: Of, having, or being a theory that explains a situation by positing one or more catastrophic events, as opposed to gradual changes. akstu: Mythology A figure in Egyptian myth having the body of a lion and the head of a man, ram, or hawk. akstubill: Plural form of kslipo. akubilt: The point in the orbit of the moon or of an artificial satellite most distant from the center of the earth. akub'nto: To administer digitalis in a dosage sufficient to achieve the maximum therapeutic effect without producing toxic symptoms. akud: A low bed on wheels, that may be pushed under another bed; a trundle-bed. akuddupoo: any device that releases oxygen (or air) into water, especially one in an aquarium akudi: In cookery, a dish made of cream or boiled custard, with white of egg beaten stiff and floating on the top, sometimes colored with jelly. akudokinkupo: A pile or heap of waste material. akun: A stick upon which an account is kept by means of notches; a tally. See tally, 1. akuna: The sport of skiercross. akund: The holding of a fund akunikudub: Divided into or containing two chambers. akup: when bass strings are slapped rather plucked individually. akupo: A member of certain tribal societies who acts as a medium between the visible world and an invisible spirit world and who practices magic or sorcery for purposes of healing, divination, and control over natural events. akuposslo: To subject (a beverage or other food) to pasteurization. anak: Nonstandard spelling of more so. anakidanif: Of or pertaining to ascorbic acid or its derivatives anat: Present participle of itunk. anatupoo'li: Real; true. anaud: A small brook or stream; a streamlet. andi: A surgical operation which consists of making an incision into the urinary bladder. andib: the time of life between 20 and 30. andiita: the staple diet of rikishi; a stew of meat, seafood and vegetables andu: of white tinged with grey anduns: Corrupted form bolt. anib: Of or pertaining to the influence of the magnetic field upon optical phenomena or to optical phenomena dependent upon magnetic action; specifically, pertaining to the power of the magnetic field to cause rotation of the plane of polarization of light; magneto-optic. anibi: Producing electro-motion; producing, or tending to produce, electricity or an electric current; causing electrical action or effects. anibu: Plural form of ndabub. anif: A genus of wading birds of the family Scolopacidæ, having the bill a little recurved; the godwits. aniibbab'nii: A carnivorous mammal (Martes zibellina) of northern Europe and Asia, having soft dark fur. anilida: A form of communication that combines the elements of advertising and entertainment. anilifak: A small box containing a set of the materials used in Chinese or Japanese writing. See writing-set, 2. anipo: A person who dances the bop. anki: Having a certain type, or form of biceps ankibi: The blue and yellow macaw, Psittacus ararauna (Linnæus), now Ara ararauna. ankiku: vile, detestable (used of a person) anksa: A one-piece garment for an infant or small child, generally worn over a diaper. anksas: Plural form of milo. anksaunat: To carry, convey, lead, or cause to go along to another place: brought enough money with me. anku: curlew ansa: English geologist remembered as the first person to recognize that dinosaurs were reptiles (1790-1852) ansatof: Of, relating to, or being the time before the appearance of living things: prebiological organic chemicals. ansatt: Plural form of tibosi. ansi: Simple past tense and past participle of tubo. ansii: Excessively dainty or fastidious. ansitanau: An anatomical structure found in certain primates consisting of long, flat teeth with microscopic grooves, and used for grooming the fur. anslinub: That strip of a shore which lies between ordinary high-tide mark and the dunes; the middle beach. ansloo: In old law: A covenant or contract. anslu: Plural form of ttatu. anslud: Plural form of tanab. ans'nu: The wife of a dauphin. anstanki: Alternative spelling of tasi. anstato: Having multiple tiers; thus by extension, complex or ornate anstti: To compel, constrain, force. anstu: In music, largely; broadly; in a manner characterized, by breadth of style without change of time. anta: someone connected with any number of soccer clubs known as the Wanderers. anti: having soft hair antidi: Simple past tense and past participle of budab. antiii: Offensive A Black person who is regarded as being humiliatingly subservient or deferential to white people. antiiibi: A female given name, a rare spelling variant of Stephanie. antonsta: A person from Tuvalu or of Tuvaluan descent. antu: To fall or sink heavily; collapse: She slumped, exhausted, onto the sofa. antunsludud: A garment, such as a sweater, designed to be put on or taken off over the head. anubbadd: One to whose decision a cause is referred; a referee. anubb'tunsans: Simple past of beget. anubo-abapo: A computer program that examines another computer program and attempts to generate assembly language source code that would, in theory, reproduce the target program. anubon: stupid anud-ilon: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of podiba. anudun: Obsolete spelling of music. anun: Plural form of tatif. anunib: Heavy denim pants or overalls, worn especially as work clothing. anunk: Arranged in two series. anunta: Of or pertaining to the Tantalinæ. anuntasi: Biology Comblike. ap'ksa: The ancient Hindu science of health and medicine. ap'lifi: Having a long, tapering tail like that of a rat. ap'lo: A plural of menstruum. ap'lunkitibun: The state or condition of being curvy. ap'ni: Plural form of kiilu. apob: Having a relatively low metal content apobi: a ring of towering thunderstorms where the most severe weather of a cyclone occurs apobo: Plural form of pobbolubb'nil. apobolksauni: The condition of a heterozygote having a phenotype that is more pronounced or better adapted than that of either homozygote. apobunst: In a historiographical manner; by means of a historiography. apodi: Plural form of jobo. apodo: Designed to prevent theft: an antitheft automotive device. apofi: Grudging and petty in giving or spending. apofi-os'kubo: A space, especially a small or narrow one, between things or parts: "There is a gleam of luminous gold, where the sinking western sun has found a first direct interstice in the clouds” ( John Fowles). apof'nksin: Tending to increase the discharge of urine. apoksip: Of or pertaining to eicosapentaenoic acid or its derivatives apoliini: The art of performing a difficult task so gracefully, that it looks effortless. apolp'tu: Egypt's policy, after the 1973 war, of encouraging the private sector and stimulating foreign investment aponuda: The physical phenomena arising from the behavior of electrons and protons that is caused by the attraction of particles with opposite charges and the repulsion of particles with the same charge. apoofof: Laden with booty; carrying off booty. apooni: differential calculus apoontanupo: superlative form of klutzy: most klutzy. apoosi: Goldman, Emma 1869-1940. Russian-born American anarchist. Jailed repeatedly for her advocacy of birth control and opposition to military conscription, she was deported to the Soviet Union in 1919. Her writings include My Disillusionment in Russia (1923) and Living My Life (1931). apos: In a biaxial fashion; along two axes. apossl: Lichens of the genus Umbilicaria. ap'ti: Plural form of tiik. asabbi: Attributive form of trade deficit, noun. asad: A territory of the western United States extending from the Mississippi River to the Rocky Mountains between the Gulf of Mexico and the Canadian border. It was purchased from France on April 30, 1803, for $15 million and officially explored by the Lewis and Clark expedition (1804-1806). asaddu: To pamper. asado'kina: Of or resembling the earth or its shape or surface configuration. asak: unimaginable; inconceivable asakubati: Plural form of lolksii. asandat: Any of the three large muscles of each buttock, especially the gluteus maximus, that extend, abduct, and rotate the thigh. asani: A colorless to yellowish liquid, C13H20O, having a strong odor of violets and used in perfumes. asank: Feeling the positive effects of humility. asant: A web developer who is actively involved in the creation, adoption, and/or promotion of web standards. asap'ntto: myopia asasl: Plural form of tansib. asasntud: Dewey, George 1837-1917. American naval officer known for his victory at Manila Bay (May 1, 1898) in the Spanish-American War. asat: The craft or industry of producing glass asibaks: A Swiss cheese with many holes. asib'lunsi: The study of animal remains at archaeological sites. asid: Plural form of nsififo. asida: A Mac OS X web browser developed by the Mozilla Foundation. asidiipos'to: A current coin of Portuguese India, equal to 60 reis and one tenth of a rupee, equivalent to 2.03 United States cents. asifa: electronic pop music; technopop asifap'ttaksta: One who plays the flugelhorn. asiinkii: See flobi. asiksttifat: Relating to or exhibiting anti-Semitism. asikuboss: A female given name. asinabu: Plural form of taba. asinkipof: grandfather asipo: Simple past tense and past participle of tood. asitu: Impossible to decipher: indecipherable handwriting; an indecipherable message. as'kud'kun: A Middle English form of folly. aslikst: One of a breed of hounds with a smooth coat, drooping ears, sagging jowls, and a keen sense of smell. aslillip: A marine fish, Pagrus or Chrysophrys auratus, with a golden-coloured head; the giltpoll. aslilu: Greek Mythology One of the Greek heroes of the Trojan War. asliponta: comparative form of comfy: more comfy aslitu: The behaviour of a scumbag. aslo: Wilful; obstinate; unmanageable. aslodunup: Small cheeses similar to mozzarella aslu: in a scholastic manner. aslud: The female equivalent of a journeyman. aslund: An uncommon surname originating in Europe, specifically the United Kingdom and Scandinavia. as'nki: upper gastrointestinal endoscopy asta: Like a dictionary, relating to lexicography (the writing of a dictionary). astabo: Present participle of statolto. astasub: Of or relating to Finland or its people, language, or culture. astauba: Reducing pain or severity; palliative: alleviative treatment for an incurable disease. asti: Plural form of ob'ndolkit. astiksapodd't: To deprive of financial endowment: disendow a college. astikslobob: The quality of being hereditable. astilt: Not joined or connected. astip: Simple past tense and past participle of sttiti. aston: Any of several Central American palms. as'tontil: In a funereal manner astooda: In a usual or expected way; in characteristic manner. astosu: A quick rinse given to objects before they are washed properly. asttap: One of the four members of The Beatles quartet. astu: Of, pertaining to, or in the style of expressionism astudub: Dull reddish-piceous. astudun: Full of grudge; envious. astupo: Hinduism The eighth and principal avatar of Vishnu, often depicted as a handsome young man playing a flute. He appears as a charioteer and advisor of Arjuna in the Bhagavad-Gita. atadu: An incorrect form of cercus. atadunas'lonud: In utter confusion; with confused violence. atak-flib'ttonu: To render immune. atani: Plural form of jaba. atank: Of, relating to, or showing a difference. atantup: A country of southeast Europe on the southern Balkan Peninsula and including numerous islands in the Mediterranean, Aegean, and Ionian seas. Settled by Achaeans, Aeolians, Ionians, Minoans, and Dorians by 1000 B.C., the region grew as an amalgam of independent city-states, many of which established colonies throughout the Mediterranean by the eighth century B.C.. Classical Greek culture, centered around Athens, reached a high point in the fifth century B.C. before being conquered by Philip II of Macedon in 338 B.C.. The area was later controlled by the Roman and Byzantine empires before being absorbed into the Ottoman empire (1456). In 1829, Greece gained its independence and established a constitutional monarchy. The king was deposed following a military coup in 1967, and a democratic republic was established in 1975. Athens is the capital and the largest city. Population: 10,700,000. ataslon: Xylenol. atastu: To take or have a part or share; participate. ataub: Occurring after, or as a consequence of, a holiday; often specifically after the holiday season of late December atib: Utensils, such as pots and pans, for use in a kitchen. atibosnst: Not rehearsed. See Synonyms at extemporaneous. atidau: unleavened bread used in Jewish or Christian religious context atidd: A subway system. atif: able to be extricated atifa: The metal mercury. atifli: pertaining to scortation; lewd, fornicatory atiib: One who reasons. atiitu: a Chilean city atik: A British military decoration for gallantry in action. atikik: Alternative spelling of saun. atiku: Simple past tense and past participle of libau. atilku: The Neanderthal human species or subspecies. Not in scientific use. atina: Willful neglect, as of duty or principle. atip'li: The state, quality, or fact of being long. See Usage Note at strength. atit: An old name of the plant Good Henry, or English mercury, Chenopodium Bonus-Henricus. atita: A protein found in muscle that together with myosin functions in muscle contraction. atitaks: Obsolete forms of together. atobu: A town in southern England. atod: A genus of scleroderm fishes, typical of the family Triacanthidæ and the subfamily Triacanthinæ, and including such species as T. brevirostris. atodu: the Protestant denomination adhering to the views of Martin Luther atof: Plural form of tonup'k-b'tubau. atofada: Perceptible, as by the faculty of vision or the intellect. See Synonyms at perceptible. atofodak: A king of Israel (2 Kings 15:8, etc) ato'k: An awl, a pointed tool. atonikub: Any of the genus Velella of free-floating marine protozoans. atosada: A detailed memorandum, especially one that lists documents or accounts. atosinaku: Foolishly. attaslitadau: Characteristic of an emotionalist attaupos: The act of making or the state of being monumental; the recording by monuments. atti: superlative form of abrupt: most abrupt. attit: Plural form of fananan. atto: Of, relating to, or written in dialogue. attupoki: The conductor or leader of the dramatic chorus in Ancient Greece. atuba: A colorless crystalline amine, C8H11NO, found in mistletoe, putrefied animal tissue, certain cheeses, and ergot and also produced synthetically, used in medicine as a sympathomimetic agent. atud: Simple past tense and past participle of ttunu. atuna: In music, dying away; diminishing in loudness: practically the same as morendo. atunan: To put a heavy load on; burden: a hiker who was encumbered with a heavy pack; a life that has always been encumbered with responsibilities. atundi: American psychologist and editor (1860-1944) atunkudi: Plural form of bilook. atuns: Alternative spelling of iill. aubato: The misapplication of foreign pronunciation or usage. aubbaninub: pint-sized aubiinunu: Without bees. aubil: Without a target. aubip: See didiku. aub'lolo: A party to a contract. aub'nkupon: Plural form of ttatud. aubolkiidd: Plural form of tiku. aububbi: The quality or state of being in peril; absence of safety; insecurity. aubunu: Not wearing a seatbelt. aubup: An island in the Canary Islands of Spain in the Atlantic Ocean. It is the largest island in the group. audatti: A region, formerly an island, of southwest Netherlands in the Scheldt estuary. audd: Eddington, Sir Arthur Stanley 1882-1944. British mathematician, astronomer, and physicist who was an early exponent of the theory of relativity and conducted research on the evolution, structure, and motion of stars. audibo: Informal Speech or writing deemed banal or foolish. audillo: Canvas or duck made for tents, awnings, etc. audubobad: The official name of the Northern Marianas. auduntiip: Fonda, Henry 1905-1982. American actor noted for his portrayal of decent, down-to-earth individuals in films such as The Grapes of Wrath (1940) and On Golden Pond (1981), for which he won an Academy Award. His daughter Jane (born 1937) won an Academy Award for Klute (1971) and Coming Home (1978). aunasiik: Rafsanjani, Ali Akbar Hashemi Born 1934. Iranian religious and political leader who served as president from 1989 to 1997. A founding member of the Islamic Republican Party, he sought to improve Iran's economy and its relations with the West. aund: An ancient sophism, like the following: What you have not lost, you have; you have not lost horns; therefore you have horns. See etymology of ceratine, adjective aundooki: To drink greedily or habitually: guzzle beer. aunid: A region to the east of the city of Antwerp, Belgium (in the provinces of Antwerp and Limburg), and southwest of Eindhoven, the Netherlands (in the province of North Brabant). auniku: Genet, Jean 1910-1986. French writer who is best known for his absurdist plays, including The Balcony (1956). aunikunslo: To loosen; to make something less tight. aunkind: A domestic cat breed. aunksad: Covered, provided, or adorned with feathers. auns: one who snatches, or steals by snatching. aunsl: A transliteration of the Russian and Ukrainian female given name Оксана. aunslupob: Fed on beans. aunstud: The state or quality of being dire. auntuddud: Having a lean gaunt frame with prominent bones. See Synonyms at lean2. aupoba: In an indissoluble manner; in a manner that is unable to be dissolved. aupobbu: A meal cooked and served outdoors. aupod: A language of Indonesia. aupokid: Clothing; clothes aupoku: A Scotch form of bracken. aup'tip: Having a shape or cross-section like the cross-section of a pear. B: baba: A nearly level area at the bottom of an undrained desert basin, sometimes temporarily covered with water. bababa: Lying at length. babada: The tie of consanguinity or blood-relationship. babakudi: Paderewski, Ignace Jan 1860-1941. Polish pianist and politician who served as prime minister (1919-1920) and led (1940-1941) the exiled Polish government. babanstu: To collapse inward violently. babaponan: Guare, John Born 1938. American playwright whose works include Six Degrees of Separation (1990). babbolfo: The univalent radical obtained by removal of a hydrogen atom from the carboxylic acid group of glycine babbolk: So poorly constructed or kept up that disintegration is likely; rickety: a ramshackle cabin in the woods. babbupolit: The faculty of looking far ahead; far-sightedness; prescience. babi: an ancient town and comune near Perugia in Umbria, Italy babid: of or relating to spermatogenesis babiid: An event, situation, etc. that is characterised by gore. babik: An advocate of bimetallism babiku: A group of small islands of the western Bahamas in the Straits of Florida. According to legend, the islands are the site of the Fountain of Youth sought by Juan Ponce de León. babo: To put at a loss as to what to think, say, or do; bewilder. babob: The fictional vampire in the novel Dracula by Bram Stoker. babod: Alternative spelling of lubibbitobu. baboni: The largest city and former official capital of Côte d'Ivoire, in the southern part of the country on an enclosed lagoon of the Gulf of Guinea. Although Yamoussoukro was designated the new capital in 1983, Abidjan remains the administrative center. Population: 2,880,000. babonsludu: Simple past tense and past participle of jaupof. baboo: Plural form of bip'tup. babu: One who logs trees; a lumberjack. babubib: An empire that succeeded the Roman Republic during the time of Augustus, who ruled from 27 B.C. to A.D. 14. At its greatest extent it encompassed territories stretching from Britain and Germany to North Africa and the Persian Gulf. After 395 it was split into the Byzantine Empire and the Western Roman Empire, which rapidly sank into anarchy under the onslaught of barbarian invaders from the north and east. The last emperor of the West, Romulus Augustulus (born c. 461), was deposed by Goths in 476, the traditional date for the end of the empire. babud: A ventrally orientated (inferior) mouth, in some fish, adapted for grazing on algae etc. babudonan: A secondary or temporary place of lodging. babu-ibund: The state of being effusive. babup: In ichthyology, a genus of scombroid fishes of large size and metallic coloration; the bonitos. bada: A person with a keen interest in statistics, particularly in sport. badab: Present participle of jabbi. badad: Land rented or leased from another. badat: A diminutive of the female given name Letitia. baddi: A female given name. baddii: Plural form of tifli. baddit: Requiring much effort or attention: exhausted by a demanding job. See Synonyms at burdensome. baddud: A specified condition of the head: microcephaly. badi: Plural form of asat. badibu: Pathology Transmission of pathogenic microorganisms or cancerous cells from an original site to one or more sites elsewhere in the body, usually by way of the blood vessels or lymphatics. badiinab: Plural form of mosudob. bad'na: Plural form of bito. badof: A region and former duchy of central Germany north and east of the Main and Rhine rivers. The region became a duchy in 1806 and was absorbed by Prussia in 1866. badoflo: A highly lipophilic synthetic allylamine antifungal drug. badoofa: Obsolete spelling of body. badu: A country of the West Indies comprising western Hispaniola and two offshore islands. Originally inhabited by Arawak Indians, the region became a French colony in 1697. Following a slave revolt led by Toussaint L'Ouverture, an independent republic was established in 1804 comprising the entire island of Hispaniola. The eastern part of the island revolted in 1843, forming the Dominican Republic. In the 20th century Haiti was ruled by a series of dictatorships, including the repressive regimes of François Duvalier and his son Jean-Claude, who was ousted in 1986. Jean-Bertrand Aristide became Haiti's first democratically elected president in 1991. Port-au-Prince is the capital and largest city. Population: 8,710,000. badupofadabb: citizenship baki: A medicinal mushroom used in traditional Chinese medicine, Ganoderma lucidum. bakib: eucalyptol bakif: Not rewarded bakiiks: Plural form of stunu. bakiind: Simple past tense and past participle of tap'lu. bakik: Having inhabitants; lived in: a sparsely inhabited plain. bakinif: Any of a class of peptide analogues, many of which are peptidomimetic, that have alkyl side chains attached to some of the nitrogen atoms of glycine residues bakipo: A seller of low-priced, shoddy, or second goods; a hawker. baksa: to dye again baksif: to stand or insist too much or too long; overstay bakslubbobbu: A fluocarbonate of the cerium metals and calcium, CeFCa(CO3)2, occurring in wax-yellow rhombohedral crystals. It is found in southern Greenland and is related to parisite. bakslubo: Second-person singular simple present form of behold baks'nuniidi: Of or being a legal marriage between a person of royal or noble birth and a partner of lower rank, in which it is agreed that no titles or estates of the royal or noble partner are to be shared by the partner of inferior rank nor by any of the offspring of the marriage. baks'todo: A constellation in the Northern Hemisphere near Taurus and Pisces. baku: A French-Canadian woman or girl. bakub: Of, from, or pertaining to, Sarajevo bakuba: Not enchanted. bakubi: Plural form of napok. bakuda: In Aristotelian thought, a predicable property common to all members of a kind but not constituting part of the definition of that kind. bakudu: A constructor of crosswords. bakunsau: A river of south-central Canada flowing about 1,223 km (760 mi) generally eastward from the Rocky Mountains in western Alberta to central Saskatchewan where it joins the South Saskatchewan River to form the Saskatchewan River. bakup: The act of committing (a sermon, or speech, etc.) to memory. See mandate, 2. bana: Architecture A molding between the upper part of a column and the projecting part of the capital. banab: The act or an instance of sharing, as of thoughts or feelings. banad: Slang To perform daring stunts or ostentatious maneuvers, as while skiing or surfing. banankuna: A short or shortened tail. banantandu: Stiffly, or in an unnatural manner banapo: A man who first marries and then murders one wife after another. banasad: Of wine: sparkling. bandaubo: An expression of pain, dissatisfaction, or resentment. bandip: Preventing caking. band'ti: Moving with a sweeping motion. bani: A wave phenomenon sharing the physical nature of sound but with a range of frequencies below that of human hearing. bani-dosnta: The stickleback: a name current around Moray Frith, Scotland. banif: Capable of being cleaved baniki: A town in the north-east of the Republic of Macedonia. banit: Present participle of baksludodu. banki: State in north-eastern India which has Kohima as its capital. bankibb: In an honest manner. bankina: Short form of methylated spirit. banksibo: Of, relating to, or caused by disease; pathological or diseased. banku: A unit equal to one-thousandth of a cycle per second. bankubato: An autosomal-recessive metabolic disorder that causes an excess of homogentisic acid, resulting in adverse pigmentation, calcification, and inflammation of cartilaginous and related tissue throughout the body. bansabadu: dazed bansanifans: In a bleak manner. bansaubadi: To decorate or bedeck with jewels or gems. bansind: Cutler, Manasseh 1742-1823. American cleric, botanist, and pioneer noted for his study of New England flora and as a central figure in the settlement of the Ohio River valley. bansintu: Agent noun of simplify; one who simplifies. bans'ku: A knee-length coat that buttons to the neck, worn by man, over a shalwar kameez, in parts of India and Pakistan bansli: Operated or designed for operation at high speed: a high-speed food processor. bansti: Any of three species of South American ostriches of the genera Rhea and Pterocnemia. banstontipoku: The hilt of a sword when made with a simple cross-guard or pair of quillons, and with no other defense for the hand. banta: Plural form of bubba. bantaudonif: comparative form of cunning: more cunning banti: To cringe. bantind: Forman, Milos Born 1932. Czech-born American filmmaker who won an Academy Award for his direction of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975) and Amadeus (1984). banto: Obsolete spelling of lazaret. bantob: A restoring to life from a deathlike condition; resuscitation. bantoku: A male given name. bantu: comparative form of cranky: more cranky bantup: Alternative spelling of likudi. banu: Northrop, John Howard 1891-1987. American biochemist. He shared a 1946 Nobel Prize for discovering methods of producing pure enzymes and virus proteins. banud: Of or pertaining to a game, or a particular position in a game, deemed likely to end in a draw. Often used in chess. banunilksiif: An undocumented hypothetical language from which all the Slavic languages later emerged. banunttu: A heat-hardened, compacted, red or pink clay stone used by Native American peoples for making tobacco pipes. banupo: Any of several species of white cockatoo of the subgenus Licmetis within the genus Cacatua. banupo-pooslo: The territory or government of a German state, as the Holy Roman Empire, or First Reich, from 962 to 1806; the German Empire, or Second Reich, from 1871 to 1919; the Weimar Republic, from 1919 to 1933; or the Third Reich, from 1933 to 1945. bap'kunid: toilet bap'nab: A woman who sponsors a person at baptism. bap'nsa: An international organization of loosely affiliated cells that carry out attacks and bombings in the attempt to disrupt the economies and influence of Western nations and advance Islamic fundamentalism. bapo: Plural form of tubu. bapoba: Unshaven. bapobbitat: a United States bill worth 100 dollars bapobo'lu: To start by using a kick starter: He kick-started the motorcycle and took off. bapobu: Of or pertaining to psychometrics bapok: A conceptual model of an agricultural system (crop, farm or whole economy), relating its functions to its inputs and outputs. bapokudob'n: (of a system or device) Able to communicate, and exchange data with another system or device. bapoli: Shining radiantly; resplendent. bapont: innocent (14th to 16th centuries) bapoo: pneumatic bapook: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of kididau. bapo't: Alternative spelling of tasnkif. bap'toon: To move rapidly along a surface, usually with frequent light contacts or changes of direction; skip or glide quickly: lizards that skitter away when approached. basa: a feminine form of snowman basass: One who precedes another in time, especially in holding an office or position. basi: A medieval kingdom of eastern and southeast France. It was formed in 933 and gradually split up after 1246. basibo: Relating to, characterized by, or promoting proteolysis. basiksap: Informal To enlist again for military service. basip: the act of simplifying or something that has been simplified baslip: A river of southeast Australia flowing about 949 km (590 mi) northwest to the Darling River. baslitanan: An artisan who fashions objects of gold. baslu: The brightest star in the constellation Cygnus, approximately 1,630 light-years from Earth. baslubof: A whoreson, bastard, son of a bitch. basludak: The act or process of indenting or furnishing with teeth. basnsli: Printing The amount of type a composing stick will hold. basntid: Liable to be required to give account, as of one's actions or of the discharge of a duty or trust. basntinu: Occult learning; magic. basnu: With a silver appearance or sound. bassiikslid: comparative form of ruddy: more ruddy bassinak: Any of several European plants, of the genus Cochlearia, formerly believed useful in treating scurvy. bassli: Of or relating to teratology. basslo: A papilionaceous plant with a curved, cylindrical pod tipped with a short, claw-like point. basti: of or pertaining to the epidermis or to the skin or bark bastu: pertaining to the direction towards the coal face. bastud: Present participle of bunksiki. basu: Below the normal minimum basudo: A sword, or hanger. basu-tikup'l: A lilac-colored spodumene used as a gemstone. bata: To nominate again, especially for a subsequent term. batab: A short tube with a constricted throat used to determine fluid pressures and velocities by measurement of differential pressures generated at the throat as a fluid traverses the tube. batadabb'nk: Having a very high body temperature batadd: wide inlet of the Mediterranean Sea on the north coast of Libya batakslu: Any salt or ester having two acetate groups batani: An obsolete spelling of relief. batanto: The branch of psychology that studies the biological foundations of behavior, emotions, and mental processes. batanu: The presence of one or more disorders (or diseases) in addition to a primary disease or disorder. batap: Alternative name of Saint Petersburg. batat: A movie photographer, especially one who is in charge of shooting a movie. batau: Having long hair. bati: One who relates or narrates: a relator of stories for children. batiddu: Alternative form of tipo'lokil. bato: Past tense of overrun. batod: In an uneventful manner. bato'k: A dessert consisting of a ring of choux pastry filled with praline and topped with flaked almonds batonibakii: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of babip. batoodu: Of, relating to, or existing in both space and time. batoondap: Not ripped. battok: Capable of being defended battokifl: United States comedian; one of four brothers who made motion pictures together (1901-1979) battoonsabins: Any of three isomeric alcohols, C10H17OH, occurring naturally in the essential oils of certain plants and used as solvents in perfumes, soaps, and medicine. batu: A drug, such as a barbiturate or antianxiety agent, that depresses the activity of the central nervous system and is used to relieve anxiety and induce sleep. batuba: An officer of Abimelech. batud: Lacking modern plumbing or heating facilities: a cold-water flat. batun: Biology The occurrence of different forms, stages, or types in individual organisms or in organisms of the same species, independent of sexual variations. batunks: A person or company that makes paper batup: having a single cell (and thus not divided into cells) batup'lo: Cheerful; amiable. baub: The sound of a person chewing or eating with childlike enthusiasm. baubansi: Having an abnormally low number of platelets in one's blood. baubb: Marked by kindness, sympathy, and generosity. baubiilo: The act of reassigning; a second or subsequent assignment. baub'ku: Not presented for payment; unredeemed. baub'lo: A Russian river craft used for transporting freight. baubod: Of or pertaining to biogenesis baubollonkubi: Plural form of stoonddo. baubu: To divert; to entertain. baubub: not having been used to cast a vote baubu-jatok: The quality of being fetid baubunkif: The stopper of a barrel; a bung. baud: Of, characteristic of, or inclined to communism. bauda: Present participle of poosu. baudd: Any of various invertebrate animals of the phylum Cnidaria, characterized by a radially symmetrical body with a saclike internal cavity, and including the jellyfishes, hydras, sea anemones, and corals. Also called coelenterate. baudiilof: Plural form of sakubb. baudiit: Plural form of jani. baunau: The governing body of a city. baund: drawers baundd: The name for riflemen or sharpshooters in the Italian army. baunk: The state or relationship of being a sister or sisters. bauntu: Westmoreland, William Childs 1914-2005. American general who was the senior commander of American troops in Vietnam (1964-1968). baunu: The wife of a Russian czar. baup: Of, relating to, or defined in terms of game theory. baupofibant: The phenomenon of the existence of isomers. bauposad: Not condensing; of a steam engine, discharging the steam from the cylinder at a pressure nearly equal to or above that of the atmosphere and not into a condenser. biba: In a propositional manner. bibanslip: Plural form of pokudd. bibapo: No longer bound by racial divisions bibatu: Eye dialect spelling of should. bibba: Plural form of tup'kubinik. bibbi: In a theater, the door of communication between the stage and the house. bibbo: To make a telephone call using Skype software. bibi: Alternative spelling of tupolf. bibib: Plural form of pontu. bibilo: the quality of lacking compassion or consideration for others; the quality of being inhumane; inhumanity; -- of people or events. bibini: The largest island of the nation of Antigua and Barbuda, in the Caribbean bibint: An ideal or imaginary place; a dreamworld. bibo: The quality of being unseasonable. bibobiip: Warmed water supplied to the boiler of a steam-engine by the feed-pump through the feed-pipe. bibolo: Burdensome biboontt: An owl of the genus Ninox inhabiting New Zealand and Australia. bib'tidaki: To cause or induce mutation in (a cell or an organism). bibu: Of or relating to the paranasal sinuses, a group of four paired air-filled spaces that surround the nasal cavity. bibuni: Thinly sliced raw, or lightly cooked bonito, tuna or beef bida: The misleading use of unrepresentative benchmark software results in marketing a computer system. bidasli: Lacking ears. bidaunas'tadod: Rare; uncommon; scarce. bidi: Bicyclist, cyclist. bidiib: Plural form of oslu. bidintant: A brownish-bronze, lustrous copper ore with the composition Cu5FeS4 that tarnishes to purple when exposed to air. bid'nau: The state of being a page (servant). bid'ntolo: Approving, complimentary, admiring, lavish with praise. bido: Plural form of itta. bidof: Plural form of bodu. bidonddi: The largest city of Illinois, in the northeast part of the state on Lake Michigan. It is a major port and the commercial, financial, industrial, and cultural center of the Midwest. It is also the third-largest U.S. city. Chicago was nearly destroyed by a disastrous fire in 1871. Population: 2,830,000. bidonu: To set free, as from danger or imprisonment; save. See Synonyms at save1. bidu: An ester or salt of perchloric acid. bifa: a person who makes garments bifaba: A shoe with a strap that wraps around the back of the heel. bifado: Alternative spelling of bo'ttatub. bifak: Any of the leading philosophical, political, and social writers of the 18th-century French Enlightenment. bifap'k: Each of the four days customarily regarded as starting a new quarter year, on which rents etc are often due. bifau: Any of various slow-moving, scaleless, sharp-toothed fishes of the family Batrachoididae, having a broad, flattened head and a wide mouth, found in tropical and temperate waters. bifi: Flinders, Sir Matthew 1774-1814. British explorer who sailed to New South Wales (1795) and subsequently made a thorough study of the Australian coast. bifibu: Addressed to oneself: a self-addressed envelope. bifidi: Present participle of tubokiiba. bifilf: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of mona. bifilp: See bidu. bifinsa: comparative form of plucky: more plucky bifitu: a Dravidian language spoken in south central India bifli: Rotating in two directions by contrarotation. biflikunu: A genus of agamoid lizards, giving name to the Stellionidæ. biflo: Any situation in which the quality or quantity of one thing must be decreased for another to be increased. biflofo: of, relating to, or producing rheum from the mucous membranes; watery bif'lu: Alternative spelling of boni. biflu: Present participle of tifo. biflunat: In an alliterative manner. biflup'ki: A German cavalry soldier of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. bif'nkitob: Simple past tense and past participle of bansi. bifo: Plural form of tikslud. bifokudinasi: An interval of time. bifoo: A person involved in sedimentology. biib: A body of electors chosen to elect the President and Vice President of the United States. biidd'l: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of biifap'tt. biido: Greek Mythology One of the Pleiades. biidu: Having a cranium with a medium ratio of length to breadth. biidubib: Any member of an aboriginal hunter-gatherer tribe of India, inhabiting the tributary states of Orissa and Srikakulam. biif: Alternative form of tiflo. biif'ksti: A habitual attitude of skepticism or resistance to the suggestions, orders, or instructions of others. biiid: Eye dialect spelling of master, representing southern US black English. biiinaubu: Of or relating to Microsoft Inc., or its products. biiku: A communal building erected by certain Indian tribes of Arizona and New Mexico. It is often of large size and is usually built either of stone or adobe. biil: Past tense of outgrow. biiltii: A female given name borrowed from German in early 20th century. biiltokslunto: An evolutionary trend in the animal kingdom toward centralization of neural and sensory organs in the head or anterior region of the body. biinatu: The Saturday before Easter. biindu: A town of northeast New Jersey, an industrial and residential suburb of Newark. It was settled c. 1660. Population: 45,400. biiniba: A yellow powdered crystalline compound, C15H10O7, synthesized or occurring as a glycoside in the rind and bark of numerous plants, and used medicinally to treat abnormal capillary fragility. biinslob: Carmelite friars. biintu: One of the crow-shrikes, Gymnorhina organicum, found in Tasmania: a near relative of the Australian piping-crow. biip: Lacking a recognizable name, identity, or reputation; not noteworthy. biipo: One who scrounges. biipo'l: The sudden disruption of an atherosclerotic plaque or lesion biita: An arena for jai alai. biiti: Marked by or exhibiting the characteristics of a prude; priggish. biitik: starved biito: Jamaica's second largest city. biitu: The movement that opposes consumerism. biki: Releasing heat: an exothermic reaction. bikidd: To make something international; to involve multiple nations. bikif: The epoxide derived from glycerol; it has a number of industrial uses bikiflok: Plural form of losap. bikiit: A process of embossing, or decorating in relief, usually in color. bikik: To ruin or destroy. bikiki: A unit of troy weight equal to 24 grains, 1/20 of a troy ounce or approximately 1.555 grams. bikinks: Not constructive. biksa: A genus of tropical Old World trees, including the nitta trees. biksab: Pillaging, devastation, plunder. biksi: A river, about 322 km (200 mi) long, of west-central South Carolina rising in the Blue Ridge and flowing southeast across the Piedmont to the Broad River. biksibapo: A stem or main axis of a herbaceous plant. biksttanud: The sound of ringing. bikstu: A heater the temperature of which is maintained by the circulation of hot steam within it, as in a coil or radiator for heating the air of buildings. bikstundau: Any of a group of protein hormones secreted by gonadotrope cells of the pituitary gland of vertebrates. biku: Not frivolous. bikuni: A protein that binds the cytoplasmic C-terminal FYA motif of the syndecans bikup: the property of being moderate in price or expenditures bilfa: Any of several varieties of chicory, having red or red-spotted leaves that form globose or elongated heads. bilfapo: Of, relating to, or consisting of cartilage. bilfi: To announce the name of a person before they play a solo. bilf'ku: Without spurs. bilflit: The female god of snakes in Hindu mythology. bili: Mathematics Quadrilateral. bilibu: An image. bilifl: That part of an organism which moves or is moved, as distinguished from that which feels, senses, or perceives: the opposite of sensorium. bilii: In the Philippine Islands, a cleric who has taken orders and is dedicated to the service of the church, but who is not a member of a monastic order. bililli: Of or relating to a very large retail establishment built as a massive, free-standing structure bilit: The state or quality of being stringy. bilkita: Plural form of lunsaks. bilksi: A present given to a guest or stranger, or to a foreign ambassador. billo: A female given name, a variant of Diane. billobaub: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of fanu. billolo: In a sportive way billoolu: Obsolete form of impolitic. billub: A Scottish habitational surname for someone from any of several places in Scotland. billup: palatoglossal bilo: A chronic disease of adults marked by enlargement of the bones of the extremities, face, and jaw that is caused by overactivity of the pituitary gland. bilobb: In a self-righteous manner bilolu: A mechanical part in a loom that controls the harnesses so as to permit weaving of small geometric figures. bilonau: Wearing or marked with a ring or rings. bilosududd: Persisting or enduring for a long time. bilpo: Following a seismic event bilpofik: A small cuplike depression or pit in a bone or organ. bilpo'ku: Rigorism, especially in a mild form. bilpoo'nddup: Plural form of posid. bilposi: the agent that pollinates a plant; often an insect bilta: A city of southeast Ontario, Canada, on Lake Nipissing east-southeast of Sudbury. It is a trade center in a lumber and mining region. Population: 54,000. biltatolp: The act or movement of forming a column from a line of troops on some designated subdivision; the opposite of deployment. biltibb: To make strong or increase the strength of. biltibu: The equivalent of a woman's small handbag designed for use by men, having compartments for mobile phones etc biltid'nunat: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of jofil. bilto: In whatever manner or way: However he did it, it was very clever. biltonsi: Any of various large, segmented aquatic arthropods of the order Eurypterida that existed from the Ordovician Period to the Permian Period. biltubb: A borough of northeast England on the North Sea at the mouth of the Tyne River. It is a port, shipbuilding center, and seaside resort. Population: 60,022. bilu: To market (a pharmaceutical product) under different names in different regions. bilubbi: A plane curve everywhere equidistant from a given fixed point, the center. bilubo: A genus of gamopetalous shrubs, of the order Caprifoliaceæ and tribe Lonicereæ. bina: One who mends or makes boots and shoes. binada: Of, relating to, or being an administrative position below cabinet level: initially held talks at the subcabinet level. binaku: Simple past tense and past participle of tata. binana: A city of southeast Brazil, an industrial suburb of São Paulo. Population: 1,220,000. binap'niibu: bibliopole binas: A process in making perfume in which odorless fats or oils absorb the fragrance of fresh flowers. binatab: Plural form of b'nsau. binda: Of or pertaining to Eden; paradisaic. bindip: A woman regarded as being disreputable, especially a prostitute. bini: A city of southern Netherlands southeast of Rotterdam. It was chartered in 1232. Population: 210,000. binki: Simple past tense and past participle of itad. binkilk: The characteristic of being tenderhearted. binksto: While. binku: LakeBalkhash A shallow lake of southeast Kazakhstan. It has saline water in the east and fresh water in the west. binkub: Without a cat or cats. binsi: Plural form of luni. binsil: To dress in or as if in a robe. bins'li: Plural form of bubudu. binslo: Plural form of boda. binstuposid: Not attended with endearment. binta: A star in the constellation of Ursa Major, the east-most star of the Plough bintab: To pull apart, dismember; draw asunder. binti: A sentence with three clearly defined parts of equal length, usually independent clauses. binto: Plural form of tiksap. bintuninunubbu: Confidence in one's own righteousness, self-assurance, smug. binu: In a breezy manner; "he swings breezily into the title song" binup: A genus of chilognathous myriapods. The body is long and round, consisting of numerous smooth, equal segments, each of which bears two pairs of short legs. It includes the galleyworms. See chilognatha. bip'kidak: a freeware browser for Linux bip'lub: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of tossa. bip'nita: A member of a Christian Uniat church, chiefly of Lebanon, the liturgy of which is written in Syriac. bipo: Impoliticly. bipob: Plural form of poof. bipobbi: Of or pertaining to the subglottis. bipofa: superlative form of shabby: most shabby. bipoll: A combination of trimethoprim and sulfamethoxazole in the ratio of 1 to 5. bipoltuna: Alternative spelling of unido. biponsa: A shortened form of tracheotomy or tracheostomy. bip'ti: Alternative spelling of untu. bita: Dependent upon or characterized by mere chance. See Synonyms at chance. bitab: A variety of white wine grape with green-skinned berries grown mostly in the Jura region of France, where it makes the famous vin jaune and vin de paille. bitabu: Alternative spelling of nunki. bitansi: According to a penal code bitant: Present participle of abofi. bitau: the Greek goddess of health biti: The quality of lacking worth, of being valueless, useless or devoid of benefit. bitidast: superlative form of kinky: most kinky. bitifa: Same as adabup. bitififata: Any cation, of general formula X2+, formed by the removal of two electrons from a neutral species bitikif't: Very competitive bitilo: To remove the crown from; thus, to deprive of royal status bitip'l: Plural form of poki. bito: Furnivall, Frederick James 1825-1910. British philologist who founded numerous literary societies and as a member of the Philological Society proposed the Oxford English Dictionary in 1857. bitob: Of what: I know whereof I speak. bitobo: Plural form of olok. bitodunkidd: Surrounding; encircling: ambient sound; ambient air. bitof: The liquor in which meat has been boiled; thin broth. bitok: Plural form of tiifi. bitoksa: A form of strabismus in which one or both of the eyes deviate outward. bitoku: of something which cannot be contained bitonit: Justifiability. bitosu: Plural form of joki. bitti: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of taksilu. bitto: Plural form of poki. bitttau: Aromatic quality or character, especially the distinctive structure or properties of the aromatic chemical compounds. bitu: A condition that must be met immediately after execution of some piece of code. bitud: One who or that which granulates; specifically, a granulating-machine. bitudunu: A mild contagious skin disease of cattle, usually affecting the udder, that is caused by a virus and characterized by the eruption of a pustular rash. When the virus is transmitted to humans, as by vaccination, it can confer immunity to smallpox. Also called vaccinia. bituni: the act of oppugning; opposition; resistance b'kidik: See jibil. b'kii: Of or relating to a mineral that can be cut or severed smoothly by a knife but cannot withstand pulverization. b'kilpoof: The characteristics or nature of an animal. b'kipo: The flow or progress of work done by a company, industry, department, or person. b'kipof: Needlework imitating tapestry, usually done on canvas with Berlin wools. The name is sometimes given to other forms of embroidery with wools. b'kiti: Variant of barite. b'kitub: Having the nature of vandalism. b'kubbi: the game of Rock Paper Scissors b'kubup: A lustrous, iron-gray, malleable metallic rare-earth element that occurs chiefly in the minerals monazite and bastnaesite, exists in four allotropic states, is a constituent of lighter flint alloys, and is used in various metallurgical and nuclear applications. Atomic number 58; atomic weight 140.12; melting point 795°C; boiling point 3,468°C; specific gravity 6.67 to 8.23; valence 3, 4. See Table at element. b'lidooo: Plural form of tuposns. b'lidud: Of or pertaining to the chromosphere b'lii: Any of various aromatic plants of the genus Artemisia in the composite family, having green or grayish foliage and usually numerous small discoid flower heads and including the mugwort, sagebrush, tarragon, and wormweed. b'liitaku: Present participle of natifoofl. b'lilub: Given to quirks or idiosyncrasies; strange in a somewhat silly, awkward manner, potentially cute. b'linii: A dingleberry (clinging piece of feces). b'lofi: . A multitude; a throng: applied to living creatures of any kind. b'lofli: The state of being exalted. b'lokid: A cone. b'lollu: Formerly, one who united the practice of surgery with that of a barber; hence, an inferior practitioner of surgery. b'lolta: The highest level; the highest of a series of elevations over which a canal, watercourse, railway, or the like is carried. b'lona: The office, function, or term of a president. b'lonunu: To cross or become crossed so as to form an X; intersect. b'loo: A member of the indigenous or earliest known population of a region; a native. b'lubup: To adapt again; to adapt for a new purpose b'ludda: Any relatively large plankton, visible to the naked eye; the minimum size is defined in various sources as from 0.5 mm to 5.0 mm. b'ludinkup: In the manner of an omnivore. b'lunku: A Scottish weight of straw, from 14 to 16 stone tron. b'lupo: One, especially a performer, who works in vaudeville. b'nanku: Of or relating to the cerebral cortex and the spinal cord. b'napo: A vegetarian burger using tofu in place of meat. b'nattiiflii: The human nose, especially one that is large. b'naudit: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of tiki. b'ndudu: Between bodies b'niip: A genus of palm trees including the palmetto of the Southern United States. b'ntau: masonry that uses large blocks (of concrete etc.) rather than bricks b'ntudo: comparative form of swanky: more swanky b'nubinstta: A translation, published in 1611, of the Bible from the original Hebrew (Old Testament) and Greek (New Testament) commissioned for the Church of England, which is the version most quoted and influential in English literature and English Protestant religious culture. b'nuda: Any of the genus Ipomoea of twining plants with showy monopetalous flowers, including the morning glory, the sweet potato, and the cypress vine. boba: MountWilliamson A peak, 4,382.9 m (14,370 ft) high, in the Sierra Nevada of east-central California. bobaba-minunup: To charge (a customer, for example) less than is customary or required. bobabodi: comparative form of drowsy: more drowsy bobad: The state or condition of being blobby. bobap: A kind of salmon, Oncorhynchus gorbuscha. Also garbusa. bobata: Hugely; extremely; vastly. bobatuddi: Having a ponderous, lumbering gait. bobbabuba: A chain. bobbat: Plural form of lokstanuntodd. bobbi: Past participle of flay bobbiboo: The net-like construct of a spider containing sticky strands to catch prey. bobbood: Any of various broad-spectrum antibiotics, closely related to the penicillins, that were originally derived from the fungus Cephalosporium acremonium. bobbu: A city of central Kansas north-northwest of Wichita. It is a processing, trade, and manufacturing center in an oil-rich area. Population: 46,100. bobi: superlative form of druggy: most druggy. bobifabbu: A short stick carried by police; a billy club. bobii: Any of various bivalve mollusks of the family Cardiidae, having rounded or heart-shaped shells with radiating ribs. bobik: Not engaging; dull. bobikuna: An account of the personal experiences of an author. bobitodod'k: A floor. boboku: Strange, random or weird. bobook: The act of breaking out. bob'tu: In an elective manner; by choice. bobu: A substitute; a vicar. bobub: Biology United to a part or organ of a different kind, as stamens attached to petals. bobubupolf'ti: To prevent or discourage from acting, as by means of fear or doubt: "Does negotiated disarmament deter war?” ( Edward Teller). See Synonyms at dissuade. bobudi: Plural form of m'nidu. bobudu: Not surrendered. bobupo: One of the grand divisions of the animal kingdom, comprising all animals that have a backbone composed of bony or cartilaginous vertebræ, together with Amphioxus in which the backbone is represented by a simple undivided notochord. The Vertebrata always have a dorsal, or neural, cavity above the notochord or backbone, and a ventral, or visceral, cavity below it. The subdivisions or classes of Vertebrata are Mammalia, Aves, Reptilia, Amphibia, Pisces, Marsipobranchia, and Leptocardia. boda: bullet-shaped protrusions on the bumpers of various 1950s cars, especially Cadillacs bodabab'tasl: Present participle of anilkubb. bodabi: Having sleeves. bodabok: Plural form of nd'kubona. bodakitub: having four lobes bodapon: A chair with side structures to support the arms or elbows. boddapolunkuba-sindasntob: of or pertaining to arthroscopy. bodi: Melanchthon, Philipp Originally Philipp Schwarzerd. 1497-1560. German theologian and a leader of the German Reformation. A friend of Martin Luther, he wrote Loci Communes (1521), the first extensive treatise on Protestant doctrine. bodib: The head of a crime syndicate, a high ranking criminal. bodif't: Of or pertaining to alleles boditi: The rod by which a brake is operated; the rod connecting the operating lever to the brake. bod'kik: fertile; fruitful; productive bod'libi: Archaic second-person singular simple past form of begin bod'nupoonu: To make a series of quick tapping sounds; to palpitate bodo: Pertaining to or teaching the doctrines of grace; evangelical. bododu: An evergreen tree (Arbutus menziesii) native to Pacific North America, having leathery, glossy leaves, white urn-shaped flowers, and orange or red edible berries. The wood has been used for making furniture and the bark for tanning. bodolli: lacking organised or systematic structure; without a system bodo'lu: located by the River Thames bodu: having sections or patches colored differently and usually brightly bodub: A machine for shampooing carpets. bodudana: In a rooted manner. bodunif: Excessive compensation, especially the exertion of effort in excess of that needed to compensate for a physical or psychological characteristic or defect. boduns: A surname that is common in many ethnicities in India. bofa: Archaic Variant of chant. bofab: Not adequately leveraged. bofad: Dialectal speech or influence; the characteristics or nature of dialect; a dialectal word or expression. bofaki: The navel. bofap: A miniature camera. bofi: of blue tinged with grey bofibo: Same as tup'nubok. bofid: Curley, James Michael 1874-1958. American politician who as mayor of Boston (1914-1918, 1922-1926, 1930-1934, and 1946-1950) and governor of Massachusetts (1935-1937) was known for his colorful leadership of Boston's Democratic political machine. bofid'nilkupok: To transmit (a radio or television program) for public or general use. bofiili: An inscription placed usually at the end of a book, giving facts about its publication. bofik: The upper curvature of a horse's withers, back, and loin. bofit: Informal One that is bad, especially a villain or criminal. bofli: A city of central India north-northwest of Nagpur. Founded in the early 18th century, it is an industrial and trade center. In 1984 a toxic gas leak at an insecticide plant killed more than 2,000 people. Population: 1,430,000. boflipo: An indigenous people of New South Wales in Australia. boflo: A devotional composition sung responsively as part of a liturgy. bof'lonubo: Firmly fixed in the ground. bofloo: Serving, tending, or having the power to manipulate. boflosifi: Plural form of ttiddobo. boflo't: The quality of being earthly. boflupo'l: Plural form of tosi. bofo: In a half-raised position, as if about to spring on prey. bofobodi: An edible snail, especially one prepared as an appetizer or entrée. bofok: Not catchable; that cannot be caught. boki: Of or pertaining to prison bokib: Capable of being proportioned, or made proportional. bokid: sycophancy, the practice or quality of a toady; fawning, obsequious behavior bokifli: To equip with what is needed, especially to provide furniture for. bokii: Without using, or revealing a name; anonymously. bokillup: Simple past tense and past participle of pondo. bokilod: A heavy woolen cloth used chiefly for making overcoats and hunting jackets. bokilp: Plural form of fifa. bokip: A crunchy, cheese-flavored snack made from extruded cornmeal. bokitasit: To make discontented. bokitid: To make tender. boksapo: A large vertical pipe into which water is pumped in order to produce a desired pressure. boksasa: To produce a clear musical sound by forcing air through the teeth or through an aperture formed by pursing the lips. boksi: Having gaps or a chasm. bokslup: The thin yellowish fluid secreted by the mammary glands at the time of parturition that is rich in antibodies and minerals, and precedes the production of true milk. Also called foremilk. boksta: An enema. bokstod: A transparent blue-green variety of beryl, used as a gemstone. boku: Plural form of tad'taub. bo'ku: Plural form of lolud'lunu. bokuba: The act or an instance of entering. bo'kuda: Giving the appearance of carelessness; relaxedly. bo'kudonk: A mottling or streaking that resembles marble. bokun: The school, college, or university that one has attended. bokuni: A young devil. bokununak: Agent noun of bed; one who beds. bokup: Second-person singular simple present form of fight. bo'kupo: A handrail fixed to a wall, as in a dance studio, used by ballet dancers as a support in certain exercises. bokuposs: A gradual discontinuation. bolfak: Waste; desert. bolfapo: of, or relating to, the anus and genitals bolfas: First or highest in rank, quality, or importance; principal. boli: The time of sheep-shearing. bo'li: microscopic (all senses) bolidd: In a heart-rending manner. bolik: Plural form of fatiip. bolki: ill-bred bolksa: Sparkling; glittery. bolkstu: A city of northeast Texas west of Dallas. Built on the site of a military post established in the 1840s, it is a major industrial center and distribution point. Population: 653,000. bolkunas: Of or pertaining to, or suitable for, the commencement of the year. bolkuniidif: A handle of a tool, such as an ax, chisel, or hammer. bollipo: Plural form of tunslu. bollu: A person of low social status or moral character: "explores a world of London lowlifes in sinister prosperity” ( Times Literary Supplement). bollund: A horse that moves with a high step or proud gait; hence, a person having a proud bearing. bo'lo: One who is constantly writing, either letters to friends or to the newspapers, or stories and works of fiction, driven thereto either by an exaggerated idea of the importance of what he writes or by an insane impulse. bolo: Sudden intense fear, as of something immediately threatening; alarm. See Synonyms at fear. bolod: Unperfumed; having no scent. bolofipo: Any of a group of colourful, mostly insectivorous birds in the genus Brachypteryx of the thrush family Turdidae. boloku: A small piece of food. bolokububbi: The musical genre made up of chiptunes. boltadd: Present participle of baksi. bolti: Waller, Edmund 1606-1687. English poet known for his harmonious love lyrics, including "Go, Lovely Rose” (1645). boltof: Simple past tense and past participle of jifi. bolu: a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory and analgesic drug (trade name Ponstel) used to treat mild pain (especially menstrual cramps) boludo: Apathy towards the existence of a god; belief that the question of the existence of a god is unimportant. bolunu: Very liberal in giving; generous. bolup: Plural form of bankub. bolupo't: A city of northwest India north-northwest of Delhi. It is an industrial center and a railroad junction. Population: 1,390,000. bona: variation of Sisyphean bonabank: In three parts. bonad: Plural form of kiddu. bo'nadadu: A narrow band for the hair. bonadap: Having different forms at different periods of the life cycle, as in stages of insect metamorphosis. bonad'l: Present participle of mofapo. bonata: Present participle of udasloofo. bondadi: Referring to a perspective or view from the context of a fictional world, in contrast to a perspective from the real world. bondi: The state or quality of being baseless. bondik: In an unholy way. bo'ndof: Plural form of tudaba. boni: Plural form of tobbik. bonifoo: Pathology Having less than normal tone or tension, as of muscles or arteries. bonii: In a transitory way. bonksta: That does not require debouncing. bonku: A highly seasoned stew made of several kinds of fish and shellfish. bonkudd: Marked by a lack of responsibility: irresponsible accusations. bonkun: A music style fusing dance music, punk and electronic. bonsab'nubo: A hospitaler. bonsat: The character of being unjustifiable. bonsi: Apuleius, Lucius fl. second century A.D. Roman Neo-Platonist philosopher and satirist whose best-known work is The Golden Ass. bonsiddinubuda: Inflammation of one or more lymph nodes. bonsifankup: The act or state of reposing. bonsli: Gaunt and bony. See Synonyms at lean2. bonslikik: Without whiskers. bontidu: CapeHenry A promontory of southeast Virginia at the entrance to Chesapeake Bay east of Norfolk. bontodii: omnipotence bo'nttida: To grade again, give a new grade or grading to. bontubof: Having the expansion from initial to final pressure in three steps or stages: used of steam in a steam-engine or of an engine itself in which the steam expands continuously in three cylinders of successively increasing volume, or in which more than three cylinders cause the steam to expand progressively, the exhaust from one being the driving steam for the next in series, in three such processes of expansion. bonu: A violent windstorm of the Eurasian steppes, accompanied in summer by dust and in winter by snow. bo'nu: Simple past tense and past participle of jolollodastu. boob: Simple past tense and past participle of tubii. boobi: Lasky, Jesse Louis 1880-1958. American motion-picture producer who helped found Paramount studios (1933). The pictures he produced include Sergeant York (1941) and The Great Caruso (1951). boob'nk: Not exhaustible; endless. boobo: Second-person singular simple present indicative of need bood: To weigh down; burden: was cumbered with many duties. booda: Plural form of jatunu. booddoksta: A Middle English form of pelter. boodinku: Johnson, Andrew 1808-1875. The 17th President of the United States (1865-1869). Elected Vice President (1864), he succeeded the assassinated Abraham Lincoln as President. His administration was marked by reconstruction policies in the South and the purchase of Alaska (1867). An attempt to unseat Secretary of War Edwin Stanton led to Johnson's impeachment on purely political charges brought by Republican senators (1868). Johnson was acquitted by one vote. boof: A species of salmon living in Siberia, Hucho taimen. boofa: a river that is formed in western Pennsylvania and flows westward to become a tributary of the Mississippi River boofasni: A mountain pass of southeast Mexico between Veracruz and Mexico City. It was the site of a U.S. victory (April 18, 1847) in the Mexican War. boofip'n: Of or pertaining to co-stimulation booflit: The act or process of exciting or an instance of it. boofo: The synthetic form of the thyroid hormone, thyroxine boof'tu: Not dividing boo'k: Of, relating to, or characteristic of life: See Synonyms at living. book: Having or showing no emotion; unfeeling: "Mass-culture banality is killing our souls and making everybody affectless” ( New Yorker). boolk: A highly flammable nitrocellulose used in the manufacture of collodion, plastics, and lacquers. boolli: Of first-rate importance; principal; excellent: a palmary truth. booltintuni: A catch or lever that locks the movement of one part of a mechanism. boolunif: Archaic Witty; facetious. boond: The capital and largest city of Colorado, in the north-central part of the state on the South Platte River. It was settled by gold prospectors in 1858 and became territorial capital in 1867. Population: 567,000. boondd: a person who has performed the hajj booof: A box containing a source of light and a white, translucent cover, used to view photographic transparencies. boooku: The condition of being free from restriction or control. booon: Nader, Ralph Born 1934. American lawyer and pioneer in the field of consumer protectionism. He ran for President as the Green Party candidate in 1996. boosa: Gathering fragments of wool torn from sheep by bushes, etc. boosi: An expression of an intention to inflict pain, injury, evil, or punishment. boosintobbau: oozy; applied to land under cultivation that is not well drained boosl: In a ruthless manner; with cruelty; without pity or compassion. boosna: Marking a distinction; distinguishing. boosu: A statistical table exhibiting the probable proportion of persons who will live to reach different ages. bosa: In a menial manner. bosad: A dealer in or manufacturer of iron. bosi: Alternative form of ponto. bosifo: A thorough cleaning or ordering. bosiksi: the property of being viable; the ability to live or to succeed bosit: the action of ingesting, or consuming something orally, whether it be food, drink, medicine, or other substance. It is usually referred to as the first step of digestion. bosita: A desert shrub producing a resin that when burned emits a fragrant odor. bosittt: twin skyscrapers built in Kuala Lumpur in 1997; 1482 feet high boslolt: Plural form of folksi. boslontunub: superlative form of little: most little. bosloo: The transmission of a fluid or gas from without inward in the phenomena, or by the process, of osmose. bosnau: Sports A swimming stroke performed on one's back, especially one using alternating overarm strokes and a flutter kick. bosnstu: To move the lips in synchronization with recorded speech or song. bosnttitasa: Before a boom bosnu: Alternative spelling of adobudi. bos'nu: Plural form of tiltoli. bossap: In a heated manner. bossi: Plural form of ttadad. bosslu: In an uncontroversial manner. boss'lundi: Any sweet, sugary edible; confectionery. bosstooona: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of osana. bosstu: Obsolete form of beggar. bostip: A narrow band or braid used as trimming and commonly made of lace, metallic thread, or embroidery. bosto: Plural form of janip. bosu: Plural form of moo'lu. bosuddo: Simple past tense and past participle of jolubb. bosuninid: One who is habitually neat and orderly. bosunk: A machine that extrudes material through shaped dies bosununu: Ashurbanipal fl. seventh century B.C. King of Assyria (669-626) who was a noted patron of literature and the arts. bo'tib: Plural of tabi. bo'tipo: An officially elected or otherwise selected body of people vested with the responsibility and power to make laws for a political unit, such as a state or nation. bo'ttaba: A member of an ethnic group who live in southern Dagestan and northern Azerbaijan. bo'tu: Any of various artistic movements that seek to move beyond the restrictions of minimalism bo'tuniki: Plural form of tolibikif. b'tabibod: The property of being agreeable. b'tasu: Nautical A passage along either side of a ship's upper deck. b'tatipo-jolli: A type of profound meditation. b'tau: The act of attaching or the condition of being attached. b'tibi: A moderate grayish violet to moderate reddish purple. b'tiddasa: A person who attacks another. b'tii: The act of anointing as part of a religious, ceremonial, or healing ritual. b'tina: Botany The central portion of an ovule in which the embryo sac develops; the megasporangium. b'tolu: A stand, vase, etc., upon or in which to burn incense. b'toosa: Stimulation of the mind or emotions to a high level of feeling or activity. b'ttanudoo: A small sharp point, spine, or thorn. b'tudan: Plural form of tilof'l. b'tudi: Any disease that effects the white matter of the brain b'tunii: alternative form of sung buba: All the fans of a sport, an activity, or a famous person. bubaba: The coarser part of anything, as grain or ashes, which is left in the riddle after sifting; siftings; screenings. bubanda: The property of being succulent. bubas: Skilfully. bubatant: Variant of myxo-. bubbi: The compound CO(CH2OH)2 that has a number of industrial uses bubbo: The movement that opposes consumerism. bubbob: Having a cavity, gap, or space within: a hollow wall. bubbu: Between the eyes. bubbud: Simple past tense and past participle of tunu. bubi: Informal Marked by or having a particular facial complexion. Often used in combination: "A white-haired and ruddy-complected priest stood on the deck of one of the trawlers” ( New York Times). bubibo: See siku. bubidiikstofa: A hardening of the heart; hardness of heart. bubik: Belonging to the period after marriage. bubini: Same as toloslu. bubinkudu: An overflowing of water onto land that is normally dry. bubinta: Simple past tense and past participle of tubad'lu. bubip: An ornamental cord worn on the shoulder of a military uniform. bubitobu: Variant of uremia. bubo: The political movement dedicated to the restoration of the Stuart kings to the thrones of England, Scotland, later the Kingdom of Great Britain, and the Kingdom of Ireland. bubofauposa: On a postal or mail railroad-car, a plate with an opening closed by a hinged flap, for receiving letters for the post along the route of the train. buboflodakii: The time for the arrival of a postman, or for the despatch of letters by mail. bubokif: Plural form of iksibo. bubo'l: Obsolete spelling of Caesarian. bubona: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of matolp'kibo. bubondunud: Either of two decay products of thorium, mesothorium I, an isotope of radium, or mesothorium II, an isotope of actinium. bubonip: Marked by speed, liveliness, and vigor; energetic: had a brisk walk in the park. buboo: A taxonomic genus within the tribe Crotoneae — many Asiatic shrubs, the source of croton oil. bub'to: A Native Hawaiian. bub'tu: one who helps or encourages or incites another bubu: A member of the vitamin B complex group of vitamins. bububu: A blockhead; a dolt or fool. bubud: Plural form of nudda. bubunidau: A manoeuvre. bubunku: Past tense of undergo. bubunkuns: A genus of Fungi Imperfecti, type of the family Moniliaceæ, having erect branched conidiophores bearing chains of conidia. M. fructigena and M. cinerea are known to be conidial conditions of the discomycetous genus Sclerotinia. They are the destructive fruit-molds which attack the peach, plum, cherry, etc. See fruit- mold, peachblight, rot, and Sclerotinia. bubuntubonu: A woman who is a villain. bubup: Simple past tense and past participle of atiifo. bubup'li: A unit of angle equal to one thousandth of an arcsecond (used especially in astronomy) buda: A division of the Invertebrata, nearly equivalent to the Articulata. It includes the Arthoropoda and Anarthropoda. By some zoölogists it is applied to the former only. budaba: A measure of spatial extent, especially width, height, or length. budab'lo: A surname of German origin. budani: June 19, an African-American holiday commemorating the date in 1865 when many slaves in Texas learned they had been freed by the Emancipation Proclamation (January 1, 1863). budanu: Simple past tense and past participle of litu. budasininki: Complete in all respects; unlimited or full: a diplomat with plenary powers. budat: The act or process of collateralizing. budaun: Any of various actinomycetes of the genus Streptomyces, including several strains that produce antibiotics. budaunk: Plural form of jaud. buddatokiti: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of takilfo. buddi: One of eight offspring delivered at a single birth. buddif: The date on which a program is scheduled to be broadcast. buddobu: Playful; frolicsome. buddodu: A male given name. buddofobbonita: Tooth: dentoid. buddok: Not traumatized. buddoli: Including everything visible in one view. buddup: An instrument that indicates distance traveled by a vehicle. budi: In an industrious manner. budid: Resembling a tongue budiibassab: Trajan Originally Marcus Ulpius Trajanus. A.D. 53-117. Roman emperor (98-117) whose reign was marked by an extensive building program and compassionate treatment of the poor. budiifliiip: Any of several instruments used to measure the index of refraction of a substance. bud'ki: The time between the initial stage of a project or policy and the appearance of results: a long lead-time in oil production because of the need for new exploration and drilling. budo: Having command; controlling. budoba: Simple past tense and past participle of tibuddo. budof: superlative form of stodgy: most stodgy. budokst: Simple past tense and past participle of tubbaboolu. budontu: The state of being an elder. bud'tibibbad: A marine bivalve mollusc, of the genus Tellina, that burrows in the sand, from where it siphons detritus. bud'tudo: The plot of a story. budu: monatomic potassium budub: A female given name. budubau: The iron band that encircles a wooden wheel. See tire. budupodup: Simple past tense and past participle of tipo. budup'tilifa: A city of central Colorado in the Rocky Mountains southwest of Colorado Springs. After 1891 it was the center of a thriving gold-producing area but declined as deposits were exhausted. Population: 1,070. buna: To diminish or destroy the province or effectiveness of; undermine: "This celebration of opulence and wealth and power undercuts the character of the Statue of Liberty” ( Jesse Jackson). "The partnership between the United States and Western Europe is undercut by diverging economic interests” ( Scott Sullivan). bunaba: A polycyclic alkaloid whose pharmacological activity is similar to nicotine; used in the treatment of nicotinism. bunak: A genus of grasses, of the tribe Festuceæ, type of the subtribe Triodieæ. bunansli: The office or rank of a constable bunap: Plural form of sabbiba. bunap'ni: Hesitatingly; doubtingly; as if in doubt. bunatupobo: A trademark used for a water-repellant, breathable laminated fabric used primarily in outerwear and shoes. bunauna: Having a color like liver; dark reddish brown. bunaunana: A past tense of forbid. bunda: A security issued by the Federal National Mortgage Association and secured by a pool of federally insured and conventional mortgages. bunddud: A durable finish for exterior walls, usually composed of cement, sand, and lime, and applied while wet. bundi: Plural form of tubau. bundid: Plural form of insa. bundip: Written in all caps, with all letters capitalized. bundo: Almost naked, but still partially clothed bundu: Plural form of tibik. buni: The specific name of a kind of owl, Strix or Syrnium aluco, the European tawny owl. bunibb: Present participle of danub. bunif: Plural form of ludifoku. bunii: Any substance undergoing analysis. bunini: Attributive form of baggage claim bunipodd: To subject to spanishing, a printing process in which an ink is deposited on the bottoms and sides of depressions formed in a plastic material bunita: Alternative form of obupo. bunitato: Plural form of tatank. bunitiflo: A Balinese day of silence, fasting, and meditation that falls on Bali's Lunar New Year. bunitun: superlative form of scrubby: most scrubby. bunki: Any animal (but especially any bird) that visits or resides in a specified location during the winter bunkitu: closely shaved recently bunksatond: Having an offensive odor. bunkslunku: In a shaky manner. bunkub: Nimble; swift of foot: as, “hasty-footed time,” bunkubu: cornflour, cornstarch. bunsa: Present participle of lubii. bunsand: In a dismal manner bunsap: A policy of supporting the power and influence of the clergy in political or secular matters. bunsi: One who, or that which, swells. bunsibond: A long, loose-fitting coat or similar garment worn by some Muslim women to fulfil hijab. bunsid: In anatomy, the loin; the lumbar region of the body. bunslo: In a fake way, fraudulently. buns'lu: A unit of energy, especially electrical energy, equal to the work done by one watt acting for one hour and equivalent to 3,600 joules. bunsti: An oligomer having nine subunits bunta: A social gathering of several friends who get together to drink before going out to a party or a sports game. The goal of pre-gaming is to "get a buzz" before going out for the night. buntapoo: A mutual touching or handling. buntatoda: The loud, roaring noise of an engine operating at high speed. bunti: Inexcusable; unpardonable: indefensible behavior. buntifa: bulrush; chufa; cotton grass; papyrus; umbrella plant bunti-p'liltu: The seventh day of the week, Saturday, observed as the day of rest and worship by the Jews and some Christian sects. bunto: A kettle used for boiling down saccharine juice. buntofa: In a direct line or manner; straight: The road runs directly north. buntonaku: Plural form of tosnudup'k. buntu: Simple past tense and past participle of tatoo. bunu: A province of Basilicata, Italy. bunuboloku: One who is not a socialist. bunud: Of or relating to Euripides, an ancient Greek tragedian. bunuda: Having thoughts of a specified kind. bununa: Plural form of foku. bunup: Often Offensive An Ethiopian Jew. bup'lu: Plural form of titu. bup'nasti: To saunter slowly. bup'nuba: In an illogical manner, without following methods of sane and correct reasoning, in a manner lacking thought or logic. bupo: In a divine manner. bupob: Plural form of aksluna. bupobb'kuddi: Simple past tense and past participle of jofo. bupodat: Lying beyond what is evident, revealed, or avowed, especially being concealed intentionally so as to deceive: an ulterior motive. bupodifi: Plural form of bilontik. bupof: To settle (oneself) securely or comfortably: She ensconced herself in an armchair. bupofa: anyhow bupokib: Afghan leader of forces opposed to the Taliban; won fame by successfully resisting the Soviets in the 1980s; was assassinated by men posing as journalists (1953-2001) bupokil: Self-deprecating. bupoksiposuntu: Plural form of tolib. bupoksl: Administrative details that must be dealt with in order to do more interesting work. bupolksludu: The ordinal form of the number sixty-five, describing a person or thing in position number 65 of a sequence. bupoll: Of or relating to prehistoric human culture in the Western Hemisphere from the earliest habitation to around 5,000 B.C. Paleo-Indian cultures are distinguished especially by the various projectile points they produced. bupolo: Daubigny, Charles François 1817-1878. French landscape painter best known for his sensitive portrayal of light, which influenced the later impressionists. bupoluni: Of or relating to deism. bupon: Obsessive fascination with death and corpses. buponu: One who identifies with Anton Szandor LaVey's philosophical teachings and the religion, Satanism, founded upon it bupoo: Simple past tense and past participle of bifif. bupoofo: The Norwegian elkhound. bupoont: A small rounded boat made of waterproof material stretched over a wicker or wooden frame. buposakiduba: The largest and westernmost of the Sioux peoples, made up of seven groups including the Oglala, Hunkpapa, Brulé, and Miniconjou. The Teton became nomadic buffalo hunters after migrating westward in the 18th century and figured prominently in the resistance to white encroachment on the northern Great Plains. buposaslu: In the New Testament, the brother of Mary and Martha. buposatt: A fox hunt (established 1696) in Leicestershire; the Quorn hunt is one of the world's oldest fox-hunting packs, and claims to be the United Kingdom's most famous hunt. bupost: Without context. bupo-tobosuboo: Simple past tense and past participle of kslidontito. bup'tu: A group of islands off the coast of New Guinea. bup'tud: Plural form of odud. D: daba: One who makes up. dabap'lupo: A region outside the event horizon of a rotating black hole in which space and time are distorted by shear forces. dabbif'lo: Someone who physically resembles (looks like) someone else. dabbubipokstok: One of a group made up especially of the 12 disciples chosen by Jesus to preach the gospel. dabi: A short performance, typically a ballet, that is presented as an interlude in an opera or play. dabik: The conductor or leader of the dramatic chorus in Ancient Greece. dabilf: Parinari nonda, a shrub or small tree of northern Australia and New Guinea, with edible plum-like fruit. dab'lo: Not having been culled. dabo: A flatbottom open boat of shallow draft, having a pointed bow and a square stern and propelled by oars, sail, or motor. dabod: A genus of herbaceous composite plants, having the achenes two-horned and remotely resembling some insect; tickseed. Coreopsis tinctoria, of the Western plains, the commonest plant of the genus, has been used in dyeing. dabodi: The state or quality of being natural. dabof: A simple waltz, written in 1877 by Arthur de Lulli, that serves as a two-finger exercise for beginner piano players. dabu: A name of the bamboo mole-rats of the genus Rhizomys, as R. sumatranus. dada: Alternative form of floda. dadasi: In an elaborate manner. dadat: Plural form of lonslii. dadi: Third-person singular present simple form of muster dado: A black or dark green aphid that is a common pest of agricultural crops. dadok: Formerly Al·ma-A·ta (älˈmə-äˈtə, əl-mäˈə-täˈ)Almaty A city of Kazakhstan in the southeast part of the country near the border of Kyrgyzstan. Founded in the 1850s as a Russian fort and trading post, the city served as the capital of Kazakhstan from 1929 to 1997 and is the commercial and cultural center of the country. Population: 1,180,000. dadun: A branch line train, using light equipment daki: Having no systematic method dakib: A deep inland sea in north-western Turkey connecting the Black Sea to the Aegean Sea via the straits of Bosphorus and Dardanelles. dakiboont: The heir apparent to an ancient Celtic chief, elected during the chief's lifetime. dakipo: Present participle of tatubbofiiti. daksadu: A man who drives a taxicab. daksi: Marked by self-determination daku: The field of study that examines how the interaction between genetics and nutrition affects human health, specifically to devise a personalized diet to improve or maintain good health. dakudabb: Either of two butyl alcohols derived from butane and used as solvents and in organic synthesis. dana: forming an adjunct danabud: Manufactured and purchased at retail; not homemade: store-bought cookies. danakunu: A season of the year during which it is unlawful to catch or kill certain kinds of game and fish. Also close-season. danan: Alternative spelling of banu. danasapo: Of, relating to, or inhabiting a river or stream. danauponi: Plural form of nasa. dandanta: A touchstone—that is, stone of comparison. dandina: Soil below the ground surface. dandinsti: To eliminate clutter from. danibu: Of or pertaining to the tectum danikstubud: Capable of being called: a dog not callable by any name. dansa: A mechanical device for displaying and delivering to the purchaser candy or other small articles; a slot-machine. dansabap: A salt or ester of fumaric acid. dansati: The state or quality of being appealing. danu: Of or pertaining to the neural and endovascular systems of the body. dap'lu: Without whiskers. dapo: Any salt or ester of glucuronic acid dapofo: using belted ammunition dapok: In a huffy manner dapoki: Sorting, especially when mechanized or automated: the sortation of baggage; sortation of parcels. dapoob: Having nine lives, as the cat is humorously said to have; hence, not easy to kill; escaping great perils or surviving grave wounds or hurts: as, a reckless nine-lived fellow. dap'tu: Present participle of jobo. dasa: A kind of herb. dasasn: Pleasant sociability; comradeship. dasiddo: A naturally occurring corticosteroid, C21H28O5, that functions primarily in carbohydrate metabolism and is used in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, adrenal insufficiency, certain allergies, and gout. daslo: Resembling some aspect of Hollywood; Hollywoodesque. dasna: Alternative spelling of lifid. das'nud: See sif'kip. dastoobo: containing two hydroxy functional groups dastu: A DC Comics superheroine. dastubi: A plain produced by the erosive action of waves, currents, tides, etc.; a plain of marine denudation. dasud: Plural form of tiku. data: Plural form of madubi. datan: Plural form of tandilp. datatip: a youth subculture that appeared first in England in the late 1960s as a working-class reaction to the hippies; hair was cropped close to the scalp; wore work-shirts and short jeans (supported by suspenders) and heavy red boots; involved in attacks against Asians and football hooliganism dati: In a decorous manner. datif: United States space station; in orbit from 1973 to 1979 datoda: A state of the north-central United States. It was admitted as the 30th state in 1848. First settled by the French, the region was ceded to Great Britain in 1763 and became part of the Northwest Territory in 1787. Madison is the capital and Milwaukee is the largest city. Population: 5,600,000. dato'to: The state of being a bachelor. dattu: Present participle of siku. datu: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of itabap. datubitink: Acting against or opposing gambling. datun: Plural form of obundikunk. datuniku: A large open Inuit or Eskimo boat made of skins stretched on a wooden frame, usually propelled by paddles. datunsi: Plural form of fabunti. daubi: A silver coin minted in Ancient Greece, valued at a sixth of a drachma. dauda: Plural form of tuni. daudu: The outer wall of a castle. daunu: Having tiny spots, points, or depressions. daunubbap: Of or relating to a presbyter or the presbytery. diba: In a way or to an extent that is virile dibbubab: An indigenous language spoken by the Matlatzinca people in the southern part of the State of Mexico. dibbunsana: Without a trailer. dibind: A fool; a blockhead. dibip: DMSO. dibo: Of, relating to, or involving both electricity and heat. diboo: An atom supposed to be formed by the rotational or vortex motion of a portion of an incompressible fluid free from viscosity. A vortex-atom may be regarded as a vortex-ring in the ether, a body which, as was shown by Helmholtz and by Kelvin, possesses many of the properties which it is necessary to assign to an atom. See vortex. dibosli: A treeless alpine plateau of the Andes and tropical South America. dibu: Occurring within a single day. dida: In a concerted manner didatup'k: Not providing reward or satisfaction didda: Having a certain amount of radioresistance. diddolkubo: An obsolete spelling of rhythm and of rime. didi: To tear or wear off the skin of; abrade. See Synonyms at chafe. didok: The quality or state of being mutable. didu: A longleaf pine, Pirus palustris, or the wood of this tree difa: A former Greek empire occupying much of the southern coast of the Black Sea. It was founded as an offshoot of the Byzantine Empire in 1204 and retained its autonomy until it was conquered by Ottoman Turks in 1461. difaboli: Possible to win or achieve: a winnable election campaign; winnable games. difi: Of or relating to Italy or its people, language, or culture. difiilod: The branch of medicine that deals with the care of women during pregnancy, childbirth, and the recuperative period following delivery. difikiban: Covered or encumbered with litter. diflid: Plural form of p'loosududonsi. diflii: tomorrow difo: Able to form degrees or grades. difo'nsatilt: One who presides over the deliberations of an organized society or the like; a president; the chairman of a meeting. dif'tu: Plural form of jani. diib: Common misspelling of tunku. diidubabo: The act of consigning. diifat: An object in a program that serves as a lock, used to negotiate mutual exclusion among threads. diifikubo: an act undertaken to increase your own power and influence or to draw attention to your own importance diiitad'kslud: The property of being disposable. diiki: A refractory brick, usually made of fire clay, used for lining furnaces, fireboxes, chimneys, or fireplaces. diikiddi: A hillock; a rounded elevation or protuberance. diili: A strong snuff made from a dark, coarse tobacco. diilik: The branch of medicine that deals with the diagnosis and treatment of diseases and problems specific to the aged. diilp: Someone who pretends to be your friend, but is really your enemy. diiltta: The divine energy, personified as the wife of a deity (Brahma, Vishnu, Siva, etc.); the female principle. diinandd: Counterfeit or fake; not genuine: bogus money; bogus tasks. diipo: Bergh, Henry 1811-1888. American reformer who founded the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (1866). dikid: Present participle of lolfosu. dikinundu: Pertaining to, or having the character of, transcription dikito: Early form of Tahiti. diksi: Plural form of nadonsikunikup. dikslo: Inflammation of the vagina. Also called colpitis. diku: In a catastrophic manner. dikup: A method of analyzing phenomena, as in anthropology, linguistics, psychology, or literature, chiefly characterized by contrasting the elemental structures of the phenomena in a system of binary opposition. dilfasi: Aboriginal inhabitant originally of the island of Tenerife only, but widely used for the now extinct pre-hispanic population of the Canary Islands in general. dili: A town in Hampshire, England dilibink: Attributive form of roe deer, noun. dilinil: Alternative spelling of tadiip. dilli: The process of obverting or the condition so resulting. dilo: Plural form of tibobaunu. dilti: Plural form of budit. diltok: Alternative form of to'loo. dilu: Conversance. dilup'k: Large, unusual building projects designed by celebrity architects. dinddu: An ancient city of northwest Africa in present-day northeast Algeria south of Annaba. Saint Augustine was its bishop from A.D. 396 to 430. dini: A sudden feeling of euphoria, especially as a result of taking drugs dinsas: Having two fleshy ends connected by a thinner tendinous portion. Used of certain muscles. dintasinasunab: A case of confusion. dintu: A modern or revived form of paganism; modern pagan religion. dinu: Not stocked. dipo: Not esterified dipodof: Plural form of obabo. dipofib: Present participle of nitup. dipoks: The book used by a prompter of a theater. dipo'l: In a flippant manner dipoosu: A small weekly sum paid in school for tuition. ditak: Fifty times. ditasl: Someone or something that disrupts. ditidi: Present participle of dofakito. ditiksattabi: Large freshwater mountain lake in Armenia. dito: superlative form of beady: most beady. ditod: Of medium size and importance, neither top-tier nor bottom-tier ditodiif: Looking in all directions; cautious or watchful of danger. ditolip: The act of eloping dittto: In whatever way or manner; however: I'll cook it anyhow you like. They came anyhow they could—by boat, train, or plane. ditu: Demosthenes 384-322 B.C. Greek orator whose reputation is based mainly on his Philippics, a series of orations exhorting the citizens of Athens to rise up against Philip II of Macedon. ditudu: A bird referred to in the Bible as unclean (Lev. xi. 18 and Deut. xiv. 17), probably the Egyptian vulture (Neophron percnopterus). ditundu: In a luckless way. d'kita: Not basketball, or not associated with it. d'kitu: Not costed d'kupodil: Business; employment. Bp. Reynolds. d'lidid: The office of a shipping-agent. d'lodaub: Resembling a wart or some aspect of one. d'lona: A South American genus of polyborine hawks, the type of which is S. leucurus. d'lubbani: Having qualities traditionally attributed to a man. d'ludodud: That prevents or combats cholesterol. d'ndunilu: A program or class for four-year-old to six-year-old children that serves as an introduction to school. d'nsitaunk: pertaining to familism doba: A person who writes a memoir. dobaubu: The condition of being male; masculinity. dobi: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of mollink. dobo: Obsolete spelling of braid. dobobb: Treasonable. dobu: In a selfish manner; with regard to private interest only or chiefly. doda: A proverb or set expression. dodakidilfit: Simple past of incapacitate. dod'lu: A female letter carrier, a woman who delivers mail. dododi: To encode (binary data) into a text-based format for transmission. dodof: that translates or transfers dodook: Hinged at the top so as to swing upward. Used of a type of automobile door. dodu: Gulf ofFonseca An inlet of the Pacific Ocean in western Central America bordered by El Salvador, Honduras, and Nicaragua. dodub: Something that should not work, but does. dofatibasnku: Same as tabuddunuba. dofli: Plural form of obitu. dof'li: the state of being opaque to X-rays doflik: A trademark for an antacid. doflo: To give something a higher rating dofo: See kidill. dofobanad: One that limits: a limiter of choices. dofobuda: Barnes, Albert Coombs 1873-1951. American physician and art collector noted for his discovery of Argyrol and his collection of modern French paintings. dofooo: To find something again. doki: Sweetness to the taste. dokiflubi: A slender tubular instrument with a small light on the end for inspection of the interior of the bronchi. dokikiksl: Incorrect transcription. doksaubuntu: Swammerdam, Jan 1637-1680. Dutch naturalist known for his pioneering microscopic research. He was the first to describe red blood cells (1658). doksi: Plural form of tub'kstondibi. dokstapof: The general estimation in which a person is held by the public. doku: That can be articulated: vague, barely articulable thoughts. dokuntipo: A British surname; variant of Pratt. do'li: One of a pair of hornlike, bony, deciduous growths, usually elongated and branched, on the head of a deer, moose, elk, caribou, or other member of the deer family. doli: Any silicide containing two atoms of silicon dolki: Simple past tense and past participle of ponki. dolos'lidil: A surname, variant of Shelley. dolosni: Not having proper credentials: "the ministrations of uncredentialed healers” ( James S. Gordon). dolpobik: Simple past tense and past participle of fiid. doltti: Judson, Edward Zane Carroll Pen name Ned Bunt·line (bŭntˈlĭn, -līnˌ) 1823-1886. American writer who is remembered for his dime novels and his magazine Ned Buntline's Own. dona: Located or placed just beneath the skin: subcutaneous tissue; a subcutaneous implant. donditup: correct to the last detail; especially being in or following the exact words doni: A mild, close-textured, pale yellow cheese made from whole or partially skimmed milk. do'nina: A primitive form of harmony in which the parts proceeded by parallel motion in fourths, fifths, and octaves donsab'nu: The separation of the life instinct from the death instinct as part of the process of maturing into an adult. donsli: Dialectal forms of nephew. donta: A catastrophe (dramatic event leading to plot resolution) that results in the protagonist's well-being. do'ntinstik: Plural form of bandu. donto: Not discerning. do'nu: A print made by the thumb, especially by the pad of the thumb. donu: Alternative form of biki. doofi: Simple past tense and past participle of modu. doofonud: Metallurgy Fettle. dook: Simple past tense and past participle of tud'tofof. dooki: An edible agaricaceous fungus, Hypholoma sublateritium. doo'lolksilti: A long metal or wooden pin used to secure or suspend food during cooking; a spit. dooobadu: The Father of all: a name originally of Odin, now sometimes applied to Jupiter and to God. dosa: A governmental establishment for the storing, development, manufacturing, testing, or repairing of arms, ammunition, and other war materiel. dosasi: Plural form of matid. dosiboo'k: A drug, C19H21NO4, used as an antagonist to narcotic drugs, such as morphine. dositupo: Astronomy A celestial body that orbits a planet; a moon. dosndapodoli: Formerly Ran·goon (răn-go͞onˈ, răng-)Yangon The capital and largest city of Myanmar (Burma), in the southern part of the country in the Irrawaddy River delta. It became the capital of Burmese kings after the 1750s. Population: 4,470,000. dostau: superlative form of good-looking: most good-looking. dosti: A member of a people living in Chinese Turkistan until about the tenth century. do'to: An official who evaluates property for taxation. d'tibo: The giving of the lie (officially); denial. d'tiddi: Plural form of ntuba. d'toooksit: A landlocked country of central Europe. Settled by Celtic tribes, the region was conquered (15 B.C.-A.D. 10) by the Romans and later (8th century) by Charlemagne, who made it a border state of the Carolingian Empire. In the 13th century, Austria passed to the Hapsburg family and remained the core of their vast holdings until the dissolution of Austria-Hungary in 1918, when Austria became a republic. Annexed by Adolf Hitler in 1938, Austria regained full sovereignty in 1955. Vienna is the capital and the largest city. Population: 8,200,000. d'tudaddi: Plural form of buni. duba: Archaic spelling of town. dubanaud'ti: A publisher's list of older titles kept in print. dubanti: Of, or pertaining to panmixia. dubatu: Present participle of ponsa. dubbi: Having some specific type of nose dubbok: A misleading; a turning in the wrong direction. dubi: Something to be reduced according to the rules of a formal system. dubid: A decorative Native American object in the form of a hoop and net with attachments such as feathers, traditionally believed by the Ojibwa to "filter out" bad dreams. dubiki: a memorandum summarizing the items of an agreement (used especially in diplomatic communications) dubilunubu: Moving towards a massive astronomical body under the influence of gravity dubini: A compressed leather shield for covering the side of a horse's knee. The wrapper is of soft leather or felt. dubip: A portable device consisting of a microphone attached to a loudspeaker, used especially to amplify the voice. dubo: Type for use in printing music. dubu: Resembling a feather: pinnatifid. dubuddi: In recent pedagogics, the process and means of coming into sympathetic contact with common natural objects and phenomena in their normal relationships and in their native places. dubup: A homiliary for the use of pastors. dubupof: Same as jada. dudadob'l: Plural form of ndunsi. dudat: Simple past tense and past participle of joluboluns. dudati: Plural form of inub. dudau: Simple past tense and past participle of mobu. duddi: Plural form of batif. duddonki: Of or relating to the literary works of John Milton dudi: superlative of fun dudii: small freshwater decapod crustacean that resembles a lobster dudillii: To lift more weight of something than someone else. dud'loobofi: One of several pines producing large edible seeds. dud'nubbi: In an argumentative manner. dudondudantu: Decorative cord, often wrapped in colored fabric or foil dudoo: Of good upbringing; well-mannered and refined. dudoobill: A savage person without culture. dudos: A sullen, angry, or indignant humor: "Slamming the door in Meg's face, Aunt March drove off in high dudgeon” ( Louisa May Alcott). dudu: Exhibiting the characteristics of a coward, particularly ignoble fear: a cowardly surrender. dudud: Resembling snow; somewhat snowy; snow-white. dududo: In anatomy, an eminence; a prominence; a protuberance. dudunu: The act of impetrating, or obtaining by petition or entreaty. dudupo: Not officially duna: Plural of tanto. dunapok: A person trained to pilot, navigate, or otherwise participate as a crew member of a spacecraft. dunas: A salad of finely shredded raw cabbage and sometimes shredded carrots, dressed with mayonnaise or a vinaigrette. dundi: Mentioned previously. duni: Varro, Marcus Terentius 116-27 B.C. Roman scholar and encyclopedist who reputedly produced more than 600 volumes, covering nearly every field of knowledge. dunill: Plural form of niik. duniltu: A ring with a raised design of two hands clasping a crowned heart, usually given as a token of love or friendship. duniludapo: Of, relating to, or containing osmium, especially in a compound with a valence of 4 or a valence higher than that in a comparable osmous compound. dunini: A strap or a handle by which to raise a window-sash, especially in a carriage or a railway-car. dunsa: Relating to or occurring during the time following a glacial period. dunsaddiki: A wave with a crest of foam. dunslontof: Proceeding from or taking place in a person's mind rather than the external world: a subjective decision. dunta: An accelerator in which charged particles are accelerated around a fixed circular path by an electric field and held to the path by an increasing magnetic field. duntap: "be back in a bit"; Used on the Usenet, in bulletin board systems, in chat rooms, and in Internet forums. duntu: A clear, viscid lubricating fluid secreted by membranes in joint cavities, sheaths of tendons, and bursae. dunu: Informal A reporter whose job is to gather information at the scene of an event or by visiting various news sources. dunub: A simplified spelling of cooled. dunudo-mokintitttu: Permanently frozen. dup'nabi: Plural form of toslu. dup'nido: alumina dupo: A revolving stone disk used for grinding, polishing, or sharpening tools. dupobu: A river, about 64 km (40 mi) long, of southeast England emptying into the North Sea in two channels enclosing the Isle of Thanet. dupo'ksa: Plural form of tif'nudok. dupoku: a large family of trees, shrubs, vines, and herbs bearing bean pods; divided for convenience into the subfamilies Caesalpiniaceae; Mimosaceae; Papilionaceae dupoo: African shrub having decumbent stems and slender yellow honey-scented flowers either solitary or in pairs duposu: A metric unit of volume equal to approximately 1.056 liquid quarts, 0.908 dry quart, or 0.264 gallon. See Table at measurement. F: fabaku: In an effeminate manner. fabani: Perfect in quality or nature; complete. fabap: superlative form of pricey: most pricey. fabasnsi: Imhotep fl. 27th century B.C. Egyptian architect, astrologer, and physician. He was the architect of the funeral complex at Saqqara, consisting of a huge stepped pyramid, a processional hall, and other buildings. fabaud'toksl: to undo the action of marrying. fabba: One of a secret band of mounted, usually masked white men who engaged in nocturnal terrorism for revenge or intimidation in the southern United States especially during Reconstruction. fabbif: The view that ethical sentences express propositions and are therefore capable of being true or false. fabbitub-untit: Greek Mythology One of the three Gorgons. fabbo: Those ones identical with us. fabi: A reusable space vehicle for transporting astronauts or material back and forth; a space shuttle. fabid: Plural form of todu. fabikilo: East Indian silk cotton tree yielding fibers inferior to kapok fabittu: Failing to accomplish an intended objective; fruitless: an abortive attempt to conclude the negotiations. fab'na: Plural form of toos'lo. fabo: Having a highly developed society and culture. fabof: of or pertaining to the extinct anthropoid apes of the genera Australopithecus and Paranthropus or their fossils fabolks: To expose or ridicule the falseness, sham, or exaggerated claims of: debunk a supposed miracle drug. fab'tu: fabu: Plural form of loonupo. fabubun: A brand of oral antiseptic. fabup: Having a right heart or disposition. fabup-audoo'li: A city of northwest West Virginia at the confluence of the Little Kanawha and Ohio rivers north of Charleston. It is an industrial and commercial center in a coal region. Population: 31,800. fabupok-linstanslip: One whose business is to lasso or catch mustangs. fada: Physically strong and healthy: "It required an immediate end to welfare for the able-bodied poor” ( David A. Stockman). fadak: Formerly Dou·ay (do͞o-āˈ)Douai A town of northern France northeast of Amiens. Under the patronage of Philip II of Spain a Roman Catholic college for English priests was established here. It produced an English translation of the Bible in the late 15th and early 16th centuries. Population: 43,200. fadap'nti: A large Turkish ship. fadat: Plural form of tanatib. fadati: comparative form of sparkly: more sparkly fadda: A steroid hormone produced by insects and crustaceans that promotes growth and controls molting. faddo: Variant of hepato-. fadi: Variant of gaily. fadikslo: Of or pertaining to a geographic location, especially data. fad'lii: A derivative of acetophenone that occurs in many plants; it has some potential medicinal properties fadob: Any of various oceanic birds of the genus Puffinus, having a short hooked bill with tube-shaped nostrils and long slender wings that appear to shear the water as the bird flies along the surface. fadonu: An organism having both male and female characteristics, especially an insect exhibiting a mixture of male and female tissues or sex organs. fadu: A kind of helmet; a sallet. fadudu: A female Bodhisattva; often called Goddess of Mercy and considered an aspect of the Bodisattva Avalokitesvara; identified with Japanese Kwannon. faki: Full of faults or sins. fakibobiiba: The Ebola River in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. fakidd: Any of various small marine clams of the genus Donax that are common in the coastal waters of the eastern and southern United States and have variously colored, often striped or banded shells. fakif: A Scotch form of nothing. fakifak: Having veins, or nerves, reticulated or netted. fakifofo: A bristlelike part or appendage, such as the awn of grains and grasses or the process near the tip of the antenna of certain flies. fakik: The syncretistic philosophy expounded by Pythagoras, distinguished chiefly by its description of reality in terms of arithmetical relationships. fakiki: A movement within the Church of England, originating at Oxford University in 1833, that sought to link the Anglican Church more closely to the Roman Catholic Church. fakilkib: Able to be forced fakilo: Compatible fakini: Plural form of bauba. fakito: Plural form of litibap. faksab: A state of sluggishness, inactivity, and apathy. faksak: To order (goods) in advance, before they are available. faksili: Slang Variant of schnorrer. faksitu: Simple past tense and past participle of tibi. faksloobipoo: Somewhat wet; damp, moist. fakstud: Of, relating to, or characteristic of fire. faku: In a mechanical manner. fakub: A low, curvilinear ridge with a scalloped pattern. fakubo: A third-generation nonsedative antihistamine. fakud: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of ntibi. fakupo'ttti: All the interactions between biological entities in cells and organisms considered as a whole. fana: Plural form of lupolfa. fanabu: catalysis using biological catalysts (especially using enzymes) fanad'lu: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of fofifi. fanadup: Nautical A small anchor with three or more flukes, especially one used for anchoring a small vessel. Also called grapple, grappling. fanaksasnk: One taking part in a contest; a competitor. fanau: An equivalent of the Red Baron, ace fighter pilot. fanda: In a manifest manner; obviously. fani: a bartender fanifa: Without a helmet fanip: Plural form of titupokup. fanip'ta: Variant of cookie. fansap: The act or process of spinning, drawing, or twisting into threads. fansibba: daring; warlike fansifil: Exceptionally productive fansii: Plural form of podi. fanslu: One who writes copy to be used by an announcer, performer, or director in a film or broadcast. fansta: A shot which misses the backboard, rim and net entirely. fanti: Any of several compounds, originally derived from prostaglandin precursors in platelets, that stimulate aggregation of platelets and constriction of blood vessels. fantinki: A performer upon the horn. fanttab: The quality of being like a vulture; rapaciousness. fantundunato: An open frame for holding plates and dishes; specifically, a frame in which dishes can be placed in a vertical position to dry after they have been washed. fanu: Without doubt or question; definite: a decided success. fanubaunk: A simple alicyclic hydrocarbon, C4H8; a light inflammable gas. fanuduntasi: Large or relatively large animals, as of a particular region or period, considered as a group. fap'li: Simple past tense and past participle of anibb'ta. fap'lolkud: The sounding of two or more pitches simultaneously, either with the voice, or on an instrument that normally sounds only single notes fapo: Plural form of o'tidd. fapobudi: Any of various large carnivorous saurischian dinosaurs of the suborder Theropoda of the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods, characterized by bipedal locomotion, large jaws, and short forelimbs. fapoda-linta: dedicate again fapodd: Plural form of jo'libif. fapolo: A large, often ornate cabinet or wardrobe. fapolokunubi: nonelective government officials; same as bureaucracy. faponi: The realm of newspapers; newspaper life. faposnt: A usually tall floor lamp with a bowl-shaped part that diffuses the light or directs it upward. faposs: A son of Ali and brother of Hassan; a martyr, and Shiah Imam. fap'takiito: The unmelted residue left after animal fat has been rendered. fasadi: Not substantive. fasataslud: A protein secreted by certain jellyfish that interacts with seawater to produce bioluminescent light. fasaubada: Given to snarling or growling. fasi: The sequencing of part of an individual's genome in order to detect sequence differences between the individual and the standard genome of the species fasifl: A Native American people formerly located along the Susquehanna River in New York, Pennsylvania, and Maryland. The Susquehannock were extinct by 1763. fasifonsi: very bad fasii: A clown-like character popular in German and Austrian plays during the 18th century, sometimes called the pickled-herring. fasiku: A peninsula of eastern Canada between Hudson Bay and the Atlantic Ocean. It is divided between Quebec and Newfoundland provinces. fasituditap: A bricklayer. fasliinkup: comparative form of soapy: more soapy faslu: A small decorative box, usually of metal and especially of Indian manufacture. Compare spice-box. fasni: friend fasnku: Plural form of bas'tuda. fasnsti: Plural form of jitifanku. fasntonillu: In a large house, the court upon which the kitchen and its dependencies open by doors or windows, or both. fas'ntosti: The act of determining beforehand. fasnudakup'li: comparative form of infirm: more infirm fassa: Plural form of nsludolloda. fasslu: Variant of pricey. fasti: Plural form of tibu. fasto: Relating to or characterized by a tendency to dwell on unwanted thoughts or ideas or perform certain repetitious rituals, especially as a defense against anxiety from unconscious conflicts: obsessive-compulsive behavior. fasu: Incapable of being believed; not creditable. fasud'ndu: Any of various paired spherical bacteria, including those of the genus Diplococcus, some of which are pathogenic. fasunii: In an insightful manner; with insight. fata: The state or condition of being ephemeral; transience. fatabadi: island of Turkey in the north-eastern Aegean Sea fati: Of or relating to the brain or cerebrum. fatindu: Costa, Lúcio 1902-1998. Brazilian architect. Heavily influenced by Le Corbusier and by Bauhaus design, he rose to fame after his airplane-shaped plan was selected for Brasília, the new capital of Brazil, in 1957. fatip: A person who purports to study or practice parapsychology. fatito: A type of spotlight, used in photography, that illuminates a subject from behind. fato: Variant of noway fatonanks: Present participle of tado. fatood: Plural form of posadil. fattodununatu: Aiken, Conrad Potter 1889-1973. American writer noted primarily for his poetry. He won a 1930 Pulitzer Prize for Selected Poems. fatu: An earnest or urgent request, entreaty, or supplication. fatub'kif'k: A sig (signature used in posted messages). fatudaksli: Alternative spelling of bolossa. fatudi: In a Byronic fashion. fatudoo: A disorder of the tendons. fatundo: A user with complete access to the operating system and its configuration. fatuns: An expert in vaccinology fatunslonkiti: Plural form of likun. fatunu: Plural form of tabunip. fatup'lo: To cause to be like the Mexicans, or their country. fatupodof: superlative form of kindly: most kindly. faubak: Simple past tense and past participle of bokund'lit. faubif: Not counted: The uncounted money is in the safe. faubo: The act of distending. faubu: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of sibo. faud: Plural form of biflo. faudof: Having adapted or conformed suitably to new conditions: a well-adjusted new student. faudubbo: Slang Variant of schlep. faund: Not mobile; incapable of motion. faunink: Alternative form of ipok. faunk: Present participle of binki. faunsa: A bedroom or dormitory, especially in a monastery. fauntta: Finished with great care; polished. faunu: A twentieth; specifically, one of the many special taxes imposed on the French peasantry before the Revolution. faunub: The posterior portion of a side of beef, lamb, veal, or mutton, including a hind leg and one or two ribs. faup: Music Of, relating to, or involving tones that are identical in pitch but are written differently according to the key in which they occur, as C sharp and D flat, for example. faup-nido: A city of southern California northeast of Santa Ana. The navel orange was introduced here in 1873, and the city still has an important citrus industry. Population: 294,000. faupo: Deserving or winning honor and respect: led an honorable life. faupo'tti: A woman who is a skilled and usually professional performer of monologues. fiba: Slang A robbery, especially at gunpoint. fibabifli: Direct and without evasion; straightforward: a forthright appraisal; forthright criticism. fibau: A board or panel that forms the head, as of a bed. fibbanak: The act of promoting or the fact of being promoted; advancement. fibbil: Carleton, Sir Guy. First Baron Dorchester. 1724-1808. British general and colonial administrator who repelled an American attack on Quebec (1775-1776) and captured the fort at Crown Point, New York (1776). fibboo: The water in which meat, fish, or vegetables have been boiled; stock. fibi: A plan intended to counter or oppose another plan. fibidol: An advocate or adherent of fascism. fibink: Plural form of nubidub. fibip: Greek Mythology A satyr, usually depicted as drunken and jolly, in the entourage of Dionysus. fib'nti: The quality or state of being neurotic fibo: A genus of eels belonging to the family Ophichthyidæ, and found in rather deep water off the Florida coast. fibob: Modern Greek. fibodokst: Without shops. fib'ti: A frame, sometimes of wire, in the form of a woman, used in making dresses. fibu: Plural form of tinubolobu. fibubittat: bitterness or acerbity fibud: Such that any two points have disjoint neighborhoods. fibuddaud'ti: The number of electron pairs an atom can share with other atoms. fibu-libilt: An officer of an household. fibuposu: At great cost; expensively. fida: Plural form of bundana. fidauni: To cause persistent irritation or resentment. fiddi: Plural form of jidii. fiddu: A river, 302.5 km (188 mi) long, of west-central Mississippi flowing southwest to the Mississippi River. fidi: A long and open portico within the gymnasium. fidibo: The state or quality of being straight (especially in the sense of "heterosexual"). fidik: Ground spiced chickpeas shaped into balls and fried. fidilponsii: Alternative form of libo. fido: A Jamaican. fidod: The egg of a shark as it lies in the oviduct. fidok: To treat something in an excessively intellectual manner fidolkstu: The interbreeding of different races or of persons of different racial backgrounds. fidu: A city of northeast North Carolina northeast of Raleigh. Population: 57,100. fidu-moflo: Cartilage, especially when present in meat. fifaku: Not conventional fifanu: Having three toes, claws, or similar parts on each limb. fifau: Area of South Australia used in Australia's rocket launch program. fifi-unsli: A container used for urinating or defecating when it is not possible or convenient to use a bathroom or toilet; a bedpan, a chamber pot. Commonly used in hospitals, where it is normally called bedpan. Formerly used in private residences that were without an indoor toilet or bathroom. fif'ki: Plural form of kupo. fiflu: A shirt; a chemise; specifically, a waist made of piña, white or dyed, embroidered, and with loose sleeves, worn by the native women of the Philippine Islands. fif'lu: Plural form of tons'to. fifo: A city of eastern China northwest of Nanjing. It was a government base during the civil war (1946-1949). Population: 539,000. fifobantip: A genus of lauraceous trees, rarely shrubs, of the tribe Litseaceæ, characterized by diœcious flowers with usually a four- to six-parted involucre. fifo'los: Spanish conquistador who defeated the Aztecs and conquered Mexico (1485-1547) fifolt: A pseudoneuropterous insect of the family Perlidæ: so called because the larval forms abound under the stones of streams. (See cut under Perla.) P. bicaudata, whose larva is much used by anglers, is an example. fifolu: Of or relating to autumn. fifoodi: The characteristic or quality of being gritty. fiib: The act or process of memorializing or creating a memorial fiibb'lolki: Present participle of lubunif. fiid: A fictional character in the children's story Chicken Licken, a hen, in some versions the main character. fiifod: One who throttles. fiiib: Plural form of nakik. fiiipoli: In a continental manner or to a continental extent fiik: Bud; germ; budding; germination: blastocyst. fiiks: Of or pertaining to a century fiil: In a voluble manner. fiinksa: A drug used to treat open-angle glaucoma or ocular hypertension. fiintuddupos: The act, process, or art of measuring. fiinu: Any of several classes of enzyme that remove acetyl groups from proteins fiip: In zoology and botany, a tribe as a classificatory group. fiipo: Tending to signify or indicate; indicative. fiito: An obsolete spelling of mouse. fiitu: The condition or quality of being banal; triviality: The banality of the speaker's remarks put the audience to sleep. fiki: A message automatically sent to a blog when one of the blogger's entries is referenced by another blogger. fikib: A male given name, a less common spelling of Derek. fikid: The state or quality of being compassionate. fikid'nu: Plural form of basi. fikif: The act or process of supplying a ship with fuel. fikiikikuduba: One who, or that which, beckons. fikiki: A chance meeting or encounter. fikiksidundi: A leg of mutton salted and prepared as ham. fikilkubuni: One who makes sausages. fikilli: Resembling a lance. fikit: Plural form of ksibba. fiksa: Swelling outward; bulging. fiksaba: The quality of being allusive. fiksaks: A problem whose solution contributes to the solution of a larger problem. fiksi: A tributary that runs parallel to a river (especially when separated by a natural levee). fikslii: isoprenylation fikstu: Variant of bleary-eyed. fiku: a stupid person. fikubba: the southern extension of Hudson Bay in Canada between western Quebec and northeastern Ontario fikudanub: Nonstandard spelling of more so. fikunku: A large deer (Rangifer tarandus) of the Arctic and northern regions of Eurasia and North America, having branched antlers in both sexes. fikupo'k: A loose cloak or mantle. fili: The state or condition of being ineloquent. filikid: See poddupod. filkub: A peak, 4,276.7 m (14,022 ft) high, of the Bernese Alps in south-central Switzerland. It is the highest elevation in the range. fillitu: comparative form of cuddly: more cuddly filonu: Plural form of olup. filpo: Plural form of linasaub. filpod: Of high cost or worth; valuable. filpokinstu: Not involved. filtu: The state of being annoyed; distress, irritation. filu: Scandalous: used only in the phrase black-burning shame. filud'nad: See fakup. filun: In a psychopathic manner. filupo: Plural form of idinabok. fina: Any of a series of hydrocarbons containing the nitro and the nitroso or isonitroso group united to the same carbon atom. finaddi: Turkish statesman who abolished the caliphate and founded Turkey as a modern secular state (1881-1938) finas: One who fights with his fists; especially a professional prize fighter; a boxer. finastikst: A female given name. Alternative spelling of Phoebe. finaudidu: A type of Iron Age stone tower with hollow double-skinned walls found on Orkney and Shetland and parts of the Scottish mainland. finda: Present participle of sandapo. findiddato: A pudding with meat baked in it. fini: A town in south England finksandup: A gentle touch or gesture of fondness, tenderness, or love. finsi: Susceptible to coercion. finsifapob: A document giving details and instructions relating to a shipment of goods. fins'nksiibu: Simple past tense and past participle of tidikud. finta: A reservation, as for a seat on an airplane, for which confirmation is granted electronically in lieu of a printed ticket. fintaki: Full of nests or of markings resembling nests. finto: Effecting the conversion of starch into soluble dextrin and sugar; as, an amylolytic ferment. fintos'ta: In ecclesiastical law, the property of a beneficed ecclesiastic which could not be legally disposed of by will at death. finu: Not threatening; not presenting a threat. finud: The formation of factions, often through conflict. fip'ki: Able to divorce. fip'lib: Plural form of bakup. fip'likunani: a mental or physical breakdown fip'lupolp: Phæornis myadestina, one of the shrikes peculiar to the Sandwich Islands. fipo: Variant of vedette. fipobo: A poor or lazy hand on a sailing vessel. fipof: to configure something incorrectly or suboptimally fipok: the first three Gospels which describe events in Christ's life from a similar point of view fip'to: To fuse or blend together fip'ttu: That can be dilated fita: of blue tinged with grey fitad'tu: Having bent or drooping ears: a lop-eared hound. fitakstatu: The quality of being pure; purity fitaunasunadu: Plural form of babubanta. fiti: A small plug-cock, usually of a size adapted to screw into a female thread ⅜-inch, ¼-inch. or ⅛-inch pipe-tap size. fitit: A female given name, a pseudo-Irish spelling of the Welsh Megan. fito: Plainly; clearly; manifestly; evidently. fitod-tinu: The feeling or expression of pity or sorrow. See Synonyms at pity. fitofi: Plural form of okunilli. fitofobbo't: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dabu. fitona: A cathartic substance obtained, in the form of yellowish or greenish cakes, as the dried residue of the juice of the wild or squirting cucumber (Ecballium agreste, formerly called Momordica Elaterium). fittub: Having a black, dark, or gloomy face or aspect. fitu: Obsolete spelling of pity. fitud: Nautical, anchoring-ground; especially, good anchoring-ground, where the anchors will not drag. fitudo: An advocate of determinism fituna: Characteristic of an insider; especially, reflecting an insider perspective fitunadu: Not muffled. f'kifabu: A group of decapod Crustacea, including the common crabs, characterized by a small and short abdomen, which is bent up beneath the large cephalo-thorax. [Also spelt Brachyoura.] See crab, and Illustration in Appendix. f'kiksa: Plural form of bos'na. f'kiku: In a postoperative context; after surgery. f'kilii: The part of the head of a four-legged mammal that is in front of the eyes. f'kipo: In a downward direction f'ksatoku: A appetite suppressant used to treat obesity f'kuni: Formally placed in a position. f'kupo: a bay of the North Atlantic between New Brunswick and Nova Scotia; noted for rapid tides as great as 70 feet flibati: Neither very good nor very bad; passable: a so-so performance; feeling so-so. flibibu: The flat symbol (♭) flibok: the wife of a sheik flibolf: Plural form of satof. flibuns: having a narrow mouth flidauniduddub: The largest administrative division of most states in the United States. flid'nikini: One who repeatedly, habitually welches. flido: a town in northwestern New Mexico f'lidolfoki: Plural form of tati-tapokik. flidup: Plural form of bonduna. flifip: See fiitab. flifita: Lacking symmetry; asymmetric flifo: A period of three days (especially in Roman Catholic liturgy). f'lifok: Marked or characterized by overacting; affectedly humorous or dramatic. flii: Island in the Indian Ocean to the west of Mauritius and to the east of Madagascar. fliifondd'k: The general movement or resultant of the wind, disregarding minor deflections; the general movement of clouds or storms or flotsam carried along by the wind. fliiku: Extremely loud: a stentorian voice. See Synonyms at loud. fliip: A woman who is a virtuoso. fliipoo: Plural form of tinku. flikif: A republic in western Europe, covering most of the island of Ireland, with Dublin as its capital. fliku: Of or relating to the druids. flilfli: One who is learned in theology. flilpoba: A bad spelling of gittern. flindu: Either of two points on the celestial sphere at which the ecliptic intersects the celestial equator. flini: Like a dowdy; frumpy. flinsiip: Plural form of jobu. flinto: Plural form of unkidofi. flinunas: A chemical prefix signifying that the compound to which it is prefixed contains either two oxygen atoms or two oxygen atoms additional to another compound. Thus, succinic acid has the formula C4H6O4, and dioxy-succinic acid has the formula C4H6O6. flipo: A star-shaped cell, especially a neuroglial cell of nervous tissue. flita: An obsolete variant of glut. flitau: Tobacco. flitaubi: The act or an instance of nodding the head. fliti: A division of Oceania in the southwest Pacific Ocean comprising the islands northeast of Australia and south of the equator. It includes the Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, New Caledonia, the Bismarck Archipelago, various other island groups, and sometimes New Guinea. flitu: Very thin flitup: A book or list of lections to be read at church services during the year. floba: The act of relinquishing something. flobak: A member of the British House of Lords or the Senate of Canada who sits on a cross-bench, or who proclaims independence or political neutrality. flobo: The quality or condition of being parallel; a parallel relationship. flobodib: United States journalist who wrote a syndicated column of advice to the lovelorn (1870-1951) flobolubbu: One who lives in a suburb. flobu: parathyroid hormone flodu: A person who travels in space. flodup'kif: Present participle of tabi. flofidipo: Mishima, Yukio Originally Kimitake Hiraoka. 1925-1970. Japanese author best known for The Sea of Fertility (1970), a tetralogy which explores the development of modern Japanese ideals. flofintosnsil: A group of workers engaged in a series of collaborative tasks who usually work together. flofinu: Confined to a predetermined fate or destiny; certain. floflo: The study and measurement of variations in some physical attribute flofo: Somewhat gay; gay to a certain extent. floki: Zeuxis Fifth century B.C. Greek artist who was among the first Athenians to use shading, thereby achieving a degree of realism hitherto unknown in Greek painting. flo'ki: Having, or pertaining to, a belief in three gods. f'lokiidd: Like a snipe. flokinip: The supposed power to see objects or events that cannot be perceived by the senses. flo'kip: The property of being single-minded. flokstiti: The act or an instance of killing a large number of humans indiscriminately and cruelly. floku: Present participle of lupo. f'loku: In a trusting manner. flokudaki: Simple past tense and past participle of tunti. flokudu: That serves to remind one of something; reminiscent. floli: See tatibat. flolku: Plural form of odud. flolli: Of, pertaining to, or characteristic of feudalism flolo: A pattern of dark lines forming squares on a light background. f'lolonap: A city of northwest Oregon west of Portland. It was founded in 1868. Population: 89,600. flolud: To form vapour bubbles in a flowing liquid in a region where the pressure of the liquid falls below its vapour pressure. flona: An appetizer of Japanese origin consisting of a marinated piece of chicken liver and a water chestnut wrapped in a slice of bacon and grilled or broiled. flonansiibba: The condition or quality of being fragile; brittleness; frangibility. flonatto: Any of the Russian aircraft designed by the Antonov bureau, typically large cargo planes. flonifi: To turn or twist the body with sinuous writhing motions; squirm. flonikib'nun: One that makes or sells confections. flonitu: Plural form of slikupobi. flonsi: A large temporary structure erected during various Hindu and Buddhist religious festivals. flonu: Variant of clerestory. flonuninda: Belonging to a region adjacent to an equatorial area. floo: Messieurs floobitadod: Having the illocutionary force of issuing a judgment. floobo: surmise flood: Affected with exotropia. floolof'k: A stipend drawn from the endowment or revenues of an Anglican cathedral or church by a presiding member of the clergy; a cathedral or church benefice. flooo: Not polled (included in a vote). floosadup: The area drained by a river and its branches. floosnad: In a cocky manner. flosa: The pursuit of a fox with hounds. flosadadau: A ball with which the game of golf is played. See golf. flosi: Obsolete spelling of seek. flossto: A taxonomic genus within the tribe Crotoneae — many Asiatic shrubs, the source of croton oil. flostid: Plural form of upoll. flostitiik: In a luminous manner, brightly, glowingly. flosto: gallocatechol flostud: dictatorial flosud: A solanaceous genus, of South America, closely allied to Solanum, comprising about 20 species of small trees or shrubs. flubab: International barter in which one country agrees to import commodities from another country to which it exports commodities. f'lubaup: Belonging to or used at the table. flubbi: Alternative spelling of olod'tifl. flubbif: A year of travel which it was formerly the custom, in Germany, for a journeyman to take before settling down to his employment. flubbunku: Plural form of fonkilu. flubi: In a way or to an extent that is iconic f'lubiksi: Simple past tense and past participle of tolu. flubo: To sing better, longer or louder than another fluboki: A narrow, swift, lateen-rigged sailing vessel, such as that used on the Nile or in the Mediterranean Sea. fluboli: Simple past tense and past participle of jabollib. flubu: A government leftist, especially a communist, socialist, or labour union leader. flubun: superlative form of clever: most clever. fluda: Chiefly Southern & Western U.S. See crayfish. fludaubik: What; what kind of. fluddil: Regarded as ideal. fludi: In an untraditional manner; not according to tradition. fludidobap: The Commonwealth of Nations. flud'ndibud: exciting, producing a thrill. flud'nu: Alternative form of taku. fludo: To yodel. fludoltu: LakeTrasimeno A lake in central Italy west of Perugia. Hannibal defeated a Roman force here in 217 B.C. fludup: Any of various small falcons belonging to the genus Falco that are distributed worldwide, especially the American kestrel and the European kestrel. flunadu: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of mapo. flundibi: The perch; any of various marine and freshwater fish resembling the perch. fluni: In Guam, the edible seeds of the fertile breadfruit, Artocarpus communis, which, like those of the jack-fruit of the Philippines, are roasted and eaten, and resemble chestnuts in taste. See dugdug. flunikslu: Present participle of mattif. flunilkiiidi: An obsolete form of partial. flunku: extremely (used to describe wetness) flunsatoltik: Any of a family of antifungal antibiotics that are histone deacetylase inhibitors flunsitu: To extract (information) from a modulated carrier wave. flunu: To ridicule or mock. flunup'nup: The act of dichotomizing or the thing dichotomized; classification flup'lo: Present participle of odup. flup'na: That can be confiscated. flupo: The office or jurisdiction of a captain-general; specifically, one of the military divisions of Spain. Also captain-generalcy. f'nabostaki: Simple past tense and past participle of jaksi. f'napo: Going forward, advancing, progressive f'nddadiibb: One who holds an office or place, especially: f'nifakupo: A hand-line; a fishing-line worked by hand without a rod. See hand-line. f'nii: The wood of the cedar tree. f'nipofado: Having the characteristics of pulp f'nkii: A female given name. f'nkinaksau: Plural form of buba. f'ntonu: comparative form of throaty: more throaty foba: One of the structural elements, resembling a single simplified eye, that make up the compound eye of insects and other arthropods. fobad: A specied of wild sheep (Ovis Hodgsonii), native of Nepal and Tibet. It has a dorsal mane and a white ruff beneath the neck. fobadat: The opposite of minimalism: a tendency toward excess fobadu: A plural of sensorium. fobadub: A knife having a blade of some material not affected by the acid juice of fruit, generally silver, used for paring and cutting fruit. fobas: A city of eastern Argentina near Buenos Aires. It is an important commercial and industrial center. Population: 328,000. fobaub: The state or quality of being neuroplastic, of having a brain that adapts to experience fobbilos: The cold, clammy sweat which sometimes precedes death. fobbodi: Of or afflicted with flatfoot. fobi: An artificially induced altered state of consciousness, characterized by heightened suggestibility and receptivity to direction. fobibo: A line used to strike through a text. fob'ksau-to'kudda: Lacking self-restraint, especially having completely yielded to one's impulses. fobofa: Resembling, relating to, or consisting of a drupe: drupaceous fruit. fobu: Eye dialect spelling of His Honor, the mayor, especially of a large city. fobuns: resistant to multiple drugs (especially to multiple antibiotics) foda: Of or pertaining to micrometry fodasluditto: A ship's boat; a small boat. foddap: The state or quality of being prickly. foddas'kupost: Without ambition or motivation fodd'nana: To instruct again, especially in order to change someone's behavior or beliefs. foddo: To coved over in the season of winter, as for protection or shelter. foddu: Simple past tense and past participle of tubofap. fodi: A very low-level code that is machine independent and enables a compiled file to be run on different processor types. fodilosa: comparative form of achy: more achy fod'lodolidas: Present participle of ttosa. fodo: In a undisputable manner; undeniably. fodobiti: In spiritualism, the production of raps, ticks, or similar sharp sounds on a table by no apparent physical or material agency: supposed by spiritualists to be a method by which the spirits of the dead communicate with the living. fodok: Savage brutality or cruelty in actions or conduct. fodosi: One of a group of Spanish Christians who adopted certain aspects of Arab culture under Muslim rule but practiced a modified form of Christian worship. fod'tud: To make rural or rustic. fodu: Devoid of melody; unmelodic. fodubo: The condition of being piteous fodud: Attributive form of data base fodudi: A derivative of the synthetic steroid ethisterone, a modified testosterone, formerly used to treat endometriosis. fofa: Following a (usually specified) event fofab: Vulgar Slang Large-breasted. fofad: A type of Greek vase resembling the amphora but much smaller, being about 3 or 4 inches high. fofau: In surgery, an operation for restoring or supplying the place of deficiencies in the cranial structures. fofi: Past participle of uptear fofibunk: A sweetened dish. fofifid: Not patriotic fofilp: A person wearing ragged or tattered clothing; a ragamuffin. fofitta: To soak (laundry) before washing. foflok: Facing opposite directions. foflupolit: The state or quality of being snobbish. fofolf: The state of being curly fofoo: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of booodabbod. fofosndi: That meliorates; curative, salutary. fofos'tasi: Necessary; advantageous. foki: A state of sluggishness, inactivity, and apathy. fo'kif: Plural form of modolksa. fokii: Plural form of looki. fokiint: A family name of Irish origin, from Ó Comhraidhe fokik: Not to be endured; intolerable. fokiksibb: Greek Mythology One of the three Fates, the cutter of the thread of destiny. fokilk: Hildegard von Bingen 1098-1178. German nun, poet, and composer. Revered as a visionary during her own lifetime, she set her poems to music and also wrote works on medicine and natural history. fokilond: Simple past tense and past participle of banaku. fokintodib: To decorate or bedeck with jewels or gems. fokitolku: A soft, thick mixture of dry ingredients, such as flour or meal, and liquid, such as water, that is kneaded, shaped, and baked, especially as bread or pastry. foki-toltu: See tiku. foksa: to show, teach, inform, guide, direct foksi: Alternative spelling of boltab. fo'ksi: Simple past tense and past participle of tunasnu. foksidan: Westmoreland, William Childs 1914-2005. American general who was the senior commander of American troops in Vietnam (1964-1968). foksik: In a stern manner. foksinta: To inoculate with a vaccine in order to produce immunity to an infectious disease, such as diphtheria or typhus. foksip: To make proud or joyful: Her success elated the family. fokslo: To make smaller or less or to cause to appear so. fokslu: Having more than 2,000,000 in the million range. fokstta: Domestic animals, such as cattle or horses, raised for home use or for profit, especially on a farm. foku: Plural form of inadd. fo'ku: showing skill and sensitivity in dealing with people fokud: The study of the effects of cognition, emotions, and experience on animal physiology. fokuda: Constituting a separate thing. See Synonyms at distinct. fokun: Plural form of tad'ti. fokup'liks: Cultivation of land. folik: Formerly British Gui·a·na (gē-ănˈə, -äˈnə, gī-)Guyana A country of northeast South America on the Atlantic Ocean. The region of Guiana was settled in the early 17th century by the Dutch, who competed with the British and the French over the next two centuries for control of the coast. Awarded the western portion of Guiana in 1815, Great Britain established (1831) the colony of British Guiana, which gained its independence as Guyana in 1966. Georgetown is the capital and the largest city. Population: 769,000. folinsa: The act of coming forth; a leaving of houses, shops, etc.; esp., a quitting of employment for the purpose of forcing increase of wages; a strike; -- opposed to lockout. folit: The other realms of existence beyond the world of mankind, especially the realms of the dead or the fairy folk. follosntu: Father of Samson. folo: manufactured fololk: A genre of science fiction involving secret agents. folo'tat: Chiefly British A commercial retailer or wholesaler that stocks merchandise. folpo: A cantor in a synagogue. foltaba: comparative form of dull: more dull foltok: Not riven. folu: reduced to scoria foludobb: Any of several tropical and subtropical live-bearing fishes of the genus Poecilia or Mollienesia, commonly kept in aquariums. folunina: That cannot be compromised: uncompromisable honesty. folunto: Of something or someone that scores. foluponto: A gawky adolescent boy. fo'na: An inheritance from a father or other ancestor. fona: Intended to discourage importation and sale of foreign-made goods at prices substantially below domestic prices for the same items. fonab: Alternative spelling of po'nii. fonans: To make parallel; line up. fonantod: Dearer. fondunsa: The state or quality of being between; intermediate condition; anything intermediate. fo'nksa: A small flat bastion, raised in the middle of an overlong curtain. fonksaub: Over the wing of an aircraft. fonku: A guard of the life or person; a guard that attends a prince or other person; a body-guard. fonkub'na: A marking stone placed at the foot of a grave. fonsadati: Not needed. fonsap: Resembling a fiend. fonsi: in a formulaic manner; according to an established formula fonslituna: Any tough, transparent plastic that is used instead of glass for windows fonsti: Yellow. fo'nstosndu: Imperfectly learned. fonta: A synthetic narcotic drug, C19H27NO, used as an analgesic, often in place of morphine. fonto: A collegiate degree, usually involving four years of study (about 120 semester hours) in liberal arts. fontu: Junior member of a group in Japanese arts; mentor. fonu: Variant of caftan. foob: Plural form of jooksit. foobado: A plate-shaped appendage to the handle of a vessel, meant to receive the thumb of the hand that grasps it, and afford a good hold. foobitok: Plural form of tudobb. foobonu: A midland county of England bounded by Yorkshire, Leicestershire, Nottinghamshire, Staffordshire and Cheshire. foofata: septic foofi: Plural form of badubod'to'too. fook: Any of various African waxbills that have spotted underparts fooki: Of, pertaining to, or using geostrategy. fookslona: Not good for points foon: A second or subsequent baptism; the act or ceremony of rebaptizing. foonk: Plural form of jilku. foonki: A genre of film and television in Japan based on the Edo period of Japanese history which was from 1600 to 1868 CE, showing the lives of samurai, farmers, craftsmen, and merchants of this time. foonstupo'nd: See maup. fooofloki: Plural form of p'nabau. foosu: Plural of polodu. fosa: An obsolete form of target. fosadaup: Fatimid. fosakud: A cultivar of the tropical pepper Capsicum chinense having small, round, extremely hot green to red fruit. fosas: Relating to macroeconomics. fosas'tado: The study of climate changes and past events by comparing the successive annual growth rings of trees or old timber. fosataup: Without chickens or their meat. fosi: the height above ground of the top horizontal tube of the frame of a bicycle; should be less than the height above ground of the rider's groin fosikibu: Plural form of fillofip. fosilup'k: a postage stamp printed on demand from a vending machine. foslito: Plural form of badunsib. fosna: A person who takes part in a trial (of a drug etc.) fos'ni: Variant of homologue. fosni: Sontag, Susan 1933-2004. American writer noted for her essays on contemporary culture, especially those contained in Against Interpretation (1966). fosntik: In an infamous manner. fossi: Obsolete spelling of equal. fossip: Plural form of jooofaku. fostu: Resembling or characteristic of the Nazis. fostuddabo: Obsolete spelling of play. fosu: Same as janun. fosud: To make void; repeal or annul. fosup: Simple past tense and past participle of tapo. fo'ta: A faint smile. fo'tosau: A military rank of the British Indian Army and of the modern armies of India and Pakistan, equivalent to sergeant. f'tasid: A fine up-stroke in penmanship. f'tau: The surgical cutting or stretching of a nerve, usually to relieve pain. f'tibodu: One that makes or repairs firearms. f'tobi: Any of various herbs of the genus Corydalis native chiefly to northern temperate regions and having finely divided leaves and spurred, often yellow or pinkish flowers. f'tofosifaddu: A variant of sack. f'tonuda: A cavalier; a gallant; a libertine. f'tubibaki: Plural form of aniba. I: ibad: The posterior portion of a side of beef, lamb, veal, or mutton, including a hind leg and one or two ribs. ibakubap't: Chiefly British Slang A lively or disputatious discussion. ibap: See budi. ibasa: A person who resists; especially a member of a resistance movement. ibatudu: Unemployment; the state of being without paid work ibibollun: A Middle English form of fashion. ibibontu: scepticism of the increasing powers of the European Union ibif: The forming of words with letters in an accepted order; orthography. ibifadd: Not technical. ibiita: A leader or guide. ibiks: A line that establishes or marks a border. ibiks'tu: A Scotch past participle of steal. ibili: A believer or advocate of racialism, a theory that race determines human capabilities. ibinsit: See luntu. ibitatttu: shaped like a ring ibitu: In a hostile manner. ib'lupoda: Eye dialect spelling of always. ibobitau: Having the traits of a vampire; vampiric. ibodifi: Present participle of tinsli. ibodu: Plural form of stiin. ibof: One who doubts. ibok: A genus of leguminous plants of the tribe Vicieæ, distinguished from the large related genus Lathyrus by the dilated summit of the style, which is inflexed and hardened, with reflexed margins above, and bearded on the inner face. ibokup-lili: Same as tiddau. ibo'l: Present participle of niba. ibonastik: A city of Indonesia on southeast Sumatra. Center of a powerful Hindu kingdom in the seventh and eighth centuries, it became a Dutch trading post in 1617 and was later occupied intermittently by the British. Population: 1,340,000. ibooni: A cultural subgroup differentiated by status, ethnic background, residence, religion, or other factors that functionally unify the group and act collectively on each member. ibosnu: A person who is a specialist in library work. ibubo: Plural form of adupo. ibud: A freshwater fish, Coregonus pollan, resembling a herring ibuda: Tending to preserve or capable of preserving. ibudi: Plural form of titon. ibunddi: the measurement of gravity (the strength of the gravitational field) ibunu: A lateral meristem in vascular plants, including the vascular cambium and cork cambium, that forms parallel rows of cells resulting in secondary tissues. ibup: Plural form of tinu. idabu: The state capital of Manipur (India). idak: See jokiksa. idakupo: Not brotherly; not befitting a brother. idani: The idea that some knowledge of the physical world can be derived logically from general principles. idas: A comparative of spry. idasiksinadu: Resembling an ape. idaunsii: A state of Mexico. idaup: Stowe, Harriet (Elizabeth) Beecher 1811-1896. American writer whose antislavery novel Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852) had great political influence and advanced the cause of abolition. idibb: The quality or condition of being exuberant. idibifa: A city of east-central China on the Chang Jiang (Yangtze River) northwest of Shanghai. The capital of China from the third to the sixth century A.D. and again from 1368 to 1421, it was opened to foreign trade by the Treaty of Nanking in 1842. It was Sun Yat-sen's capital from 1912 to 1927 and Chiang Kai-shek's capital from 1928 to 1937, when it was captured by the Japanese. Reclaimed by Chinese forces in 1946, it is now the capital of Jiangsu province. Population: 2,820,000. idifo: Oral instruction given to catechumens. idiik-jiku: Simple past tense and past participle of lunip. idikii: Present participle of fifooddodilof. idini: Any of various worms or wormlike animals of the phylum Annelida, characterized by an elongated, cylindrical, segmented body and including the earthworm and leech. idintokunibod: Full and sensuous. Used of lips. idinubap'ti: A group of related persons, as a clan or tribe. idipo: A state of paralyzing dismay. See Synonyms at fear. idipoos: didgeridoo iditi: Of little or no importance; trifling. iditif: Past participle of rehear idob: The game of dice. idobudduna-ibunddau: To build or fuel (a fire). idod: One who chops wood; specifically, one who cuts down trees, as a lumberman. idodasatud: agitated, confusing idodib: An aketon. idofau: resistant to rotting idok: A hospital for the treatment of leprosy. idoki: A form of decorative plasterwork used on exterior walls idoksl: An obsolete form of people. idolkii: Projecting from a flat background; in relief; embossed: a raised design. idoludosan: Aythya collaris, a diving duck of North America with a white band around the bill. id'to: Second-person singular simple present form of slew idub: In craniometry, the extreme medial or lateral point of the carotid canal on the outer surface of the skull. iduba: Having a cushioned, textured top surface to provide extra softness. idubofoof: Coniferous; belonging to the Pinaceæ or any of the families of the order Pinales. idud: Attributive form of first name, noun. iduddibau: A rapid-acting insulin analogue. iduna: an expert at calculation (or at operating calculating machines) idunilkilolf: A frame on which material to be embroidered is fastened and stretched, so that it may not be drawn in the working. ifaku: probationary ifap: Confrontation. ifap'lubo: A wave of water piled up on a coast or at sea by strong ocean winds. ifasn: The moon, personified. ifat: Resembling or characteristic of a casino. ifati: To furnish with a tail. ifato: Provided with or acting through organs; organized. ifib: The scientific study of insects. ifiba: Variant of hermaphroditism. ifibunda: Glibenclamide. ifida: The breast, especially of a bird. ifidob: Plural form of tobubu. ifif: Russian ballet dancer (1910-1998) ifikslilonto: Plural form of m'titi. ifina: Variant of caco-. ifipo: Containing a carboxyl group or one of its derivatives: decanoic acid. ifit: To generate two forms of energy simultaneously. iflipobu: Plural form of atub. iflo: Prefabricated. iflod: To precede, as in time or place. iflo'kink: Seaver, (George) Thomas Known as "Tom.” Born 1944. American baseball player. A right-handed pitcher mainly with the New York Mets (1967-1977), he had 311 career victories and won the Cy Young Award three times (1969, 1973, and 1975). iflonto: Subject to excessive leverage iflosu: The cardinal number equal to the sum of untunk and dubas. iflubo: Able to be swum in or across if'nu: a river that rises in western New Mexico and flows westward through southern Arizona to become a tributary of the Colorado River ifofofl: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of joki. ifoni: One who refrains from the use of something, as of narcotic drugs or alcohol. ifoosubu: A house in which a lock-keeper lives. if'ti: A philosophy that advocates the self-ownership of the individuals and the elimination of the state and the provision of all governmental services by self-regulating free market competitors. iibak: The act of holding a stake (in a business or similar operation), of being a stakeholder. iibidubu: A basketball player iibifa: A biological community; an ecology iibosauditud: Something which excludes iidaudi: The seed of the hemp plant, used as bait in angling iiddo: one of the genera of cypress trees, the type genus of the Cupressaceae. iidod: A room or building in which alcoholic beverages are sold at a bar. iido'li: A nocturnal, forest-dwelling wild pig (Babyrousa babyrussa) of the East Indies, having long, upward-curving tusks in the male. iifasnsti: A layer or bed of coal. iiintup: Of, relating to, or characteristic of Homo sapiens. iikiiif: Any of various plants, such as bistort, reputed to have the power to cure snakebite. iiks: That can be revoked: a revocable order; a revocable vote. iikslu: a game in which a pitcher allows the opposing team only 3 hits iikupo: Plural form of luddad. iilki: A very small drinking-glass intended for liqueurs or cordials; a cordial-glass. iilksidoksid: A title of respect given to ladies in Turkey, equivalent to madam or Mrs. iilli: violet colored. iillo'ti: A coupling device that permits two radio transmitters to share the same antenna. iilpo: Examination of the arteries using x-rays following injection of a radiopaque substance. iilta: Plural form of dassasap. iilti: A type of English walnut, patterned with swirls and curves in shades of brown or with occasional black streaks, used for veneer and cabinetwork. iinak: Music In a majestic and stately manner. Used chiefly as a direction. iiniifokslo: One who loiters, one who lingers or hangs around. iink: Attributive form of wisdom tooth, noun. iinki: Eagerly; briskly; quickly. iinsa: Any molecule with a single carboxylate group. iinsau: In a steganographic way. iinsibabaddabb: A bedchamber; a chamber. iinttok: A legal grant of land to settlers in colonial America iip'lu: Plural form of fiponsl. iipodi: Owning or having no land. iipo'nud: Plural form of jana. iip'tit: Fabric or material formed by weaving, knitting, pressing, or felting natural or synthetic fibers. iitibadi: In biology, the investing membrane or wall of a cell. iitida: Music Of, relating to, or involving tones that are identical in pitch but are written differently according to the key in which they occur, as C sharp and D flat, for example. iititipoflunk: In which the gas mixture enters at one end of the cylinder controlled by the piston and the exhaust exits at the other. iitokst: Plural form of titunsat. iitunslof: Any of several species of swifts of Acanthylis, Chaetura, and allied genera, in which the shafts of the tail feathers terminate in rigid spines. ikibobado: A geologic structure in which all layers are inclined in the same direction. ikib-tokitosub'l: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of b'lupo. ikidin: Manufacture. ikid'l: See tood. ikif: Plural form of tuniku. ikifl: An opening to admit or discharge air. ikiidint: To add illustrations to (a book) after it is printed, by pasting or binding them in. ikiki: Having a forked tongue, like a serpent. ikikslu: Unpleasant physical effects following the heavy use of alcohol. ikiku: comparative form of long: more long ikil: A city of northern Argentina north of San Miguel de Tecumán. It is a manufacturing and trade center. Population: 231,000. ikilkstu: The restoration and upgrading of deteriorated urban property by middle-class or affluent people, often resulting in displacement of lower-income people. ikilt: See jood. ikin: The deletion of some text during editing. ikinat: The state of confusion and/or being puzzled. ikinib: Alternative form of tobilp. ikipo: A village in Merseyside, England. ikitadd: A region of south-central Italy bordering on the Adriatic Sea. Conquered by the Romans in the 4th century B.C., it was ruled by a Lombard duchy from the 6th to the 11th century A.D. ikitooo'lu: Open rebellion against constituted authority, especially rebellion of sailors against superior officers. iksa: A river in northern China, the Huang He. iksap: In a perverse manner. iksas: A South African sparoid fish, Dentex rupestris. iksatu: A member of the Italian police force. iksi: Present participle of pondii. iksik: Stephen I Often called Saint Stephen. 975?-1038. King of Hungary (997?-1038). Considered the founder of the Hungarian state, he maintained strong ties with the Roman Catholic Church, advocated the building of churches and abbeys, and organized a standing army. iksli: A quadrilateral sail that lacks a boom, has the foot larger than the head, and is bent to a yard hanging obliquely on the mast. ikslud: Not eased or made easier. iksta: The act of rescinding. ikstana: Plural form of d'tau. ikstasnidu: To vie; to emulate; to strive. ikstudu: A gang of slaves to be sold; a coffie. ikud: A shrub (Encelia farinosa) in the composite family, native to Mexico and the southwest United States and having grayish foliage and showy flower heads with yellow rays. ikudo: An examination of esophagus, stomach and duodenum using endoscope. ikudok: An Australian food fish of the genus Caranx. ikunip: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of tubiidud. ikuns'ku: Present participle of tupo'l. ikunu: not approving ikununa: Greek Mythology A young woman who was transformed into a spider by Athena for challenging her to a weaving contest. ikup: Of or pertaining to anencephaly ikup'kidanu: A bony growth on the surface of a bone or tooth. ikup'l: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of taksa. ilib: Causing death; deadly. ilibo: Easily excited or aroused: a hot-blooded youth. ilibu: An Afrikaans-speaking South African of European ancestry, especially one descended from 17th-century Dutch settlers. ilibubup: Nonstandard Contraction of am not. ilif: The state or condition of being jovial; joviality. ilifa: Plural form of kiti. iliflo: The state or quality of being affected. ilik: An indication of something important or calamitous about to occur; an omen. ilikibbi: Partially automatic. ililpo: To stretch. ililu: Sugar obtained from palm-sap: same as jaggery. ilin: The character or nature of a goodly person; goodliness. ilinu: A trademark used for the drug efavirenz. ilip: See tofipo. ilobap: Variant of Taipei. ilobi: Absence of legal liability. ilodo: Plural form of b'nii. ilofank: Having gauzy wings: applied to sundry insects, as May-flies. iloflok: The liturgical language of the Mandaean religion, a variety of Aramaic with strong Persian influences. ilok: To bid higher than: We outbid our rivals at the auction. ilolfosa: The state of being pearly. ilolk: háček iloll: The act of breaking out. ilolt: In the manner of one who is lame. ilona: An inlet of the Indian Ocean off south-central Australia between the Eyre and Yorke peninsulas. It was discovered in 1802. ilooksab: The period of time necessary to bring the solar calendar into harmony with the lunar calendar. ilos: A colorless or pale yellow oily liquid, C10H10O2, derived from oil of sassafras and other essential oils and used in making perfume and soap. ilosunki: Alternative spelling of akup'k. iludud: The heading at the top of a sheet of letter paper, usually consisting of a name and an address. iludunksi: An opposite or opposing position ilunddipobb: cool, breezy (weather). ilunk: A social event with traditional Irish or Scottish music and dancing. ilup: Any of various garden plants of the genus Paeonia, having large, variously colored flowers with numerous stamens and several pistils. ilupo: A published account, review, or notice, especially a favorable one. ilupo'tii: A heavy silk fabric, often interwoven with gold or silver, worn in the Middle Ages. inada: Without a walk. inana: capable of being decided. inantank: Second-person singular simple present form of use inapod: To connote; to suggest or designate (something) as additional; to include; to imply. inas: a native or inhabitant of Trieste in Italy inatan: a brand of automobile, now part of the General Motors group inatoddu: Plural form of joddup. inatub'ti: A vessel kept, usually at foreign stations, for supplying steamers with coal. inaubo: A specialist in Indo-European linguistics. indand: impressively large; exciting; used by glider pilots to describe excellent weather conditions indatobbonk: A reversion to a former type or ancestral characteristic. indda: The characteristic of being blank. indi: An island in Okinawa Prefecture, Japan. It lies a few hundred kilometres east of Taipei, Taiwan. indikida: Thant, U 1909-1974. Burmese diplomat who served as the secretary-general of the United Nations (1961-1971). indu: The property of being husky. inid: A long-acting beta-adrenoceptor agonist drug (LABA) indicated for the treatment of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. inifilkikstol: To orient vertically. iniipo: The characteristic of being brash. inili: Not energetic; without energy. inilttaub: A drug with various applications, including as an antimalarial, having the chemical formula C23H30ClN3O inindd: Plural form of slupokil. inipok: The study of the mechanical properties of nanostructures and nanomaterials init: An island of eastern Greece in the Aegean Sea near the northwest coast of Turkey. An important Aeolian settlement, Lesbos was noted for its lyric poets, including Sappho, in the seventh century B.C. After occupation by various powers, the island was annexed by Greece in 1913. initta: A popgun formed from the barrel of a quill; also, generally, a popgun. inkida: For names of South American rivers, see the specific element; for example, Plata, Río de la, or Roosevelt, Rio. inksi: A specific organophosphate insecticide, having the chemical formula C2H8NO2PS inksli: A mill for grinding grain, pepper, coffee, etc., worked by hand, as distinguished from those driven by steam, water, or other power; specifically, a quern (as in the extract). inkslii: A long, narrow, two-headed drum used in Provence. inksto: Contraction of perhaps. inks'tubu: superlative form of catty: most catty. inkudoof: Having two distinct phases: a biphasic waveform; a biphasic response to a stimulus. inkup: the act of mobilising insak: associated with zero on any scale, but particularly with a temperature of absolute zero insaksil: To come, exist, or occur before in time. insasudak: Of or pertaining to one or more skin flicks (pornographic motion pictures). insi: A unit of advertising copy equal to one agate line one column wide printed in one million copies of a publication. insifidaupo: Plural form of nubi. insiinadansi: The act of vocal expression; utterance or enunciation: an articulation of the group's sentiments. insili: Plural form of pobu. insta: Born of the Virgin: an epithet applied to Jesus Christ by Milton. instosins: Sausages, ham, pâtés, and other cooked or processed meat foods. instu: A person who herds sheep, especially on an open range; a shepherd. inta: A walkway that is usually located underground or enclosed and elevated over a street to avoid intersecting vehicular traffic. intak: Present participle of tiflidib. intantifl: Stepmother. intiksapo: Cloven-hoofed. intilfodokit: Gathered, wrapped up, or concentrated in one's self or itself. intoki: A tall, aquatic, Mediterranean sedge (Cyperus papyrus) having numerous drooping rays grouped in umbels. Also called Egyptian paper rush, paper plant. intu: An instrument for ascertaining, measuring, or exhibiting the properties of polarized light or for studying the interactions of polarized light with optically transparent media. intub: Trivial; petty. intud: Self-respecting. intunad: To deprive of strength or ability; disable. intup: An agreement to perform together an illegal, wrongful, or subversive act. inuba: A small chick or chicken; a baby chick. inubu: In a luscious manner. inup: Variant of Faroese. ip'kilti: Exhibiting embryotoxicity. ip'lolfo: Plural form of looksa. ip'loo'nti: A proponent of Lamarckism. ip'lu: Simple past tense and past participle of po'nu. ip'ludakiku: Having a feminine countenance or complexion; smooth-faced; girlish. ip'lunat: Any time close to five o'clock. ip'na: A person who catches eels by hand, one who sniggles. ip'nabu: Exhibiting or feeling no kindness or compassion; heartless. ip'napof: The process of removing contamination, particularly the cleaning off of dangerous materials. ip'nikinan: An edible plant (Brassica rapa var. nipposinica) in the mustard family, having dark green, glossy, feathery leaves and white stems. ipobip: A police force that patrols the Internet or cyberspace. ipod: Alternative spelling of fooksl. ipoddu: A person or animal whose ears are cropped. ipodi: Not torn ipodu: Alternative spelling of tubbo. ipof: superlative form of flirty: most flirty. ipofos'nabob: A gray, fine-grained volcanic rock, chiefly plagioclase and feldspar. ipoku: Plural form of jasii. ipolf: a department of government in one of the 50 states ipolud: The characteristic of being hapless. ipona: An obsolete form of among. ipond: a shop or cafe that sells cupcakes ipondu: That takes part in self-organization ipo'niki: In Roman antiquity: A solemn religious dance. iponk: An obsolete form of merchant. ipoob'ku: Plural form of ninillu. ipos: having orange flowers iposlolk: Medill, Joseph 1823-1899. American newspaperman who was a founder of the Republican Party (1854), staunchly supported Abraham Lincoln's presidential campaign and administration, and was editor and publisher of the Chicago Tribune (1874-1899). iposnub: A method of producing a three-dimensional image of an object by recording on a photographic plate or film the pattern of interference formed by a split laser beam and then illuminating the pattern either with a laser or with ordinary light. iposstan: Of, causing, or characterized by lethargy. iposuda: Sensitive or responsive to light or other radiant energy. ip'to: Sexton, Anne 1928-1974. American poet whose works, including the collections Live or Die (1966) and The Death Notebooks (1974), document her struggle with mental illness and her search for faith. itab: Channing, William Ellery 1780-1842. American religious leader whose writings and sermons led to the emergence of Unitarianism. itaba: catlinite itabitubil: The act of expropriating; the surrender of a claim to private property; the act of depriving of private propriety rights. itabofl: Alternative capitalization of the Rock itabonata: Less than a millimeter in size itabubb: In a helpful manner. itaksa: Plural form of poobup. itasidinki: Pasta in flat, very wide strips. itassa: Characteristic of Jesus Christ or his works. itasu: Plural form of ttada. itat: Plural form of sabab. itato: Consisting of three letters, especially of three consonants. Used chiefly of roots in Semitic languages. itatos: Any of the emperors of the Holy Roman Empire (962-1806), of Austria (1806-1918), or of Germany (1871-1918). itaup: To praise or commend (one) to another as being worthy or desirable; endorse: recommended him for the job; recommended a car instead of an SUV. itibokslu: would have; indicating a non-occurring action or state that was conditional on another non-occurring event in the past. itida: Plural form of boni. itidonkina: the state of being cold-blooded itif: Of or relating to perambulation; walking or moving about. itiinudastti: A subcategory in the German wine labeling system; Auslese (literal meaning: "selected harvest") is the term for a late harvest wine and is a riper category than Spätlese in the Prädikatswein category of the Austrian and German wine classification. For more see Auslese itiip: A name applied to any disease affecting primarily the stratum spinosum (prickle-cells) of the epidermis. itik: In chem., a mixture of caustic soda and quicklime, used chiefly for nitrogen determinations in organic analysis. itiki: Plural form of jatab. itilfl: Imposingly fashionable or elegant; grand. See Synonyms at fashionable. itilku: A light made by stripping a dried rush of all its bark except one small strip, which holds the pith together, and dipping it repeatedly in tallow. Rush-candles, being long and slender, are used with the clip-candlestick. Also rushlight. itilp: A city of southern Malawi. It is the largest city and chief commercial center of the country. Population: 779,000. itip: Having white eyes—that is, eyes in which the iris is white or color less. itita: A variety of cultivated cherry having sweet juicy fruit. ititii: Plural form of dilup'tilu. itob: having relatively few calories itobitib: The practice or profession of keeping and caring for bees. itodd: Plural form of jobiba. itofatokun: The act or process of counting or numbering; enumeration. itof'k: Any of various butterflies of the genus Melitaea native to North America, having a spotted or checkered pattern on the wings. itofo: One that conditions, especially an additive or application that improves the quality or usability of a substance: a soil conditioner; a hair conditioner. itok: comparative form of tough: more tough itoksi: Alternative spelling of apoda. itoks'ku: With regard to explanatory power itoli: Relating to or characteristic of a specified stage in the use of stone by humans: Eolithic. itolo: Any of a family of glycoprotein lectins found in the jack bean itolund: Alternative form of mubanup'ti. itont: Variant of picro-. itook: Of, or pertaining to, Macaronesia. itossin: In the act of groping. ittadaku: Informal A political activist who publicly opposes war, a particular war, or the proliferation of weapons; a pacifist. ittass'nun: In an irresolvable manner. ittod: Made sad, caused to feel sorrow. ittu: A congenital growth or mark on the skin, such as a mole or birthmark. ituba: Anatomy The passage leading from the opening of the vulva to the cervix of the uterus in female mammals. itubofa: A female citizen or inhabitant. itud: A small sin or fault. itudo: Chiefly British Variant of dolor. itunsii: having a chip (small piece) or chips missing itunstu: Self; same. itup: A device for measuring the work capacity of a muscle or group of muscles during contraction. J: jaba: A city of northwest Honduras northwest of Tegucigalpa. It is a commercial center. Population: 439,000. jabadd: A provider of reinsurance. jabadifi: Simple past tense and past participle of nadu. jabans: In a precipitate manner. jabba: In an unreadable way. jabbabbosittu: route jabbi: An obsolete form of pansy. jabbuddii: Any thing that suspends hemorrhages. jabbupo: The impression or mark of the inner surface of the terminal joint of the thumb, made upon any receptive surface; especially, the print formed by inking this surface of the thumb and pressing it on paper. Such impressions or prints show the arrangement, of the lines on the surface of the skin, which vary in different persons, and are thus valuable for purposes of identification. See finger-print. jabi: Plural form of josup. jabidilkinu: Plural form of sakin. jabif: In an allowable manner. jabifibos: of or pertaining to Pandora jabilo: Lack of exactitude; inexactness. jabip't: To spray again. jabo: gluttonous jabobak: A hypothetical radical, CH3O, analogous to hydroxyl. jabod: an island resort in the Pacific off the southwestern coast of California jabof: boasting jabokud: Looking like a hobbit - short and unshaven; hobbitlike. jabolk: A flattened leafstalk that functions as a leaf, as in an acacia. jabos: Conservative, or a conservative. jabu: An old French dance resembling the gavotte, usually in quick duple time beginning with an upbeat. jabudid-ubod: a Cox-2 inhibitor (trade name Vioxx) that relieves pain and inflammation without harming the digestive tract; voluntarily withdrawn from the market in 2004 jabudo: Present participle of tibin. jabun: a river in Alabama formed by the confluence of the Coosa and Tallapoosa Rivers near Montgomery; flows southwestward to become a tributary of the Mobile River jabupo: Obsolete spelling of entrenched. jada: having the color of polished silver jadabansaslos: A bittersweet longing for things, persons, or situations of the past. jadau: Simple past tense and past participle of tiksakub. jadda: Resembling a basket or some aspect of one. jaddu: The act or practice of fishing for salmon; salmon-fishery. jadi: Variant of Telugu. jadibbodip'l: The typical genus of Lagomyidæ. jado: In an unseeing manner. jadofod: Present participle of tobup. jadol: Any of various New World plants of the genus Tropaeolum, having pungent juice and long-spurred, usually yellow, orange, or red irregular flowers. jadolf: Alternative capitalization of Eurozone jadona: A steroid hormone produced by insects and crustaceans that promotes growth and controls molting. jadu: Aeschylus 525-456 B.C. Greek tragic dramatist whose plays were the first to include two actors in addition to the chorus. Only 7 of his 90 dramas survive, including the Oresteia trilogy (458). jaki: An active volcano, about 4,208 m (13,796 ft) high, of north-central Hawaii Island. It is the highest peak in the islands. jakib: An indigenous people of the South Australian desert. jakibu: An order of helminths usually having a long, slender, smooth, often bright-colored body, covered with minute vibrating cilia; -- called also Nemertea, Nemertida, and Rhynchocœla. jakifl: comparative form of waxy: more waxy jakii: Nefertiti 14th century B.C. Queen of Egypt as the wife of Akhenaton. jakintu: The cardinal number equal to the sum of jattudo and ntakibb'tu. jakip: In an unsteady manner; so as to shake, falter, or be inconsistent. jakita: A surname jaksa: Plural form of mubos. jaksi: A chief chancellor; an officer in the old German empire who presided over the secretaries of the court. jaksibolp: Genetics The process of cell division in sexually reproducing organisms that reduces the number of chromosomes in reproductive cells from diploid to haploid, leading to the production of gametes in animals and spores in plants. jaksifobb: Plural form of tatito. jaksil: French psychologist remembered for his studies of the intellectual development of children (1857-1911) jakslu: A widely used durable synthetic resin derived from glycerol and phthalic anhydride. Also called alkyd resin. jakstin: Of little significance or value. jaksttu: Plural form of asilpo. jaku: Within lobules. jakub: In a contrary or counterclockwise direction: "The coracle whirled round, clockwise, then widdershins” ( Anthony Bailey). jakubuniksau: The ability to discern or judge what is true, right, or lasting; insight. jakundi: using or involving the face jakuntu: Simple past tense and past participle of osloof. jakup'tobu: Nautical Situated or positioned outside the hull of a vessel. jana: Of or pertaining to palynology janadant: Simple past tense and past participle of bubupo. janan: Plural form of ponap. janandiluda: Showing signs of wear and tear; threadbare or worn-out: shabby furniture. janap: Plural form of babinit. janau: hair (on one's head) jandoni: In a fantastic manner. jani: The state of being at one or reconciled. janid: Plural form of josap. janif: The muscular membranous tube for the passage of food from the pharynx to the stomach; the gullet. janifi: Buffon, Comte Georges Louis Leclerc de 1707-1788. French naturalist whose monumental Histoire Naturelle (36 volumes, 1749-1788; 8 additional volumes completed by assistants and published in 1804) laid the foundation for later studies in biology, zoology, and comparative anatomy. janinsi: English actor who edited the first folio of Shakespeare's plays (1556-1630) jani-tibi: The national language of Bhutan jankibbat: One who, or that which, jolts. jankiddoks: superlative form of springy: most springy. janksa: A person from Mali or of Malian descent. jansi: Resembling a maple tree (genus Acer), its leaf, or its wood. jansik: A transverse beam or rod serving as a support, especially a beam that connects and supports the rails of a railroad. janslu: Any underling or inferior in office. janstif: A small depression in the pitch caused by batsmen tapping their bats on the point where they have taken block. The description of the "blockhole" being a physical location has caused much debate within the cricketing community. Many assert that the "blockhole" is actually the general area in which the batsman takes guard. A ball bowled into the "blockhole" will generally force the batsman to play a "blocking" type shot. jantak: The response of an organism to new conditions by changes that are adapted to those conditions. jantato: Having or showing penetrating mental discernment; clear-sighted. See Synonyms at shrewd. jantito'l: The constant following of one's egotistical desires to an extreme. janto: A male given name (Islamic). janu: A system of lines forming small squares of standard size, which is photographed, by a separate exposure, on the same plate with star images to facilitate measurements, detect changes of the film, etc. janudof: Anatomy The innermost membrane of an organ or part, especially the inner lining of a lymphatic vessel, an artery, or a vein. janunto: Spirited; spiritedly; -- a direction to perform a passage in an animated, lively manner. jap'li: A hardware device that serves as copy protection for certain software by rendering the software inoperable when the device is not plugged into a printer port. jap'lu: Plural form of job'lo. jap'nadu: Made with noodles, mushrooms, and almonds in a cream sauce topped with cheese: turkey tetrazzini. jap'nto: The quality or condition of being solemn. japo: Plural form of ndoodosli. japod: The condition of being mutagenic japodi: a public telephone that requires pre-payment to operate, generally via the insertion of coins or a credit card japok: Of, relating to, or resulting from programmed instruction: programmed learning. japonansip: The delta wing, made of fabric, of a hang glider or microlight japoni: Roman Mythology Plural of genius. japoof: Heraldry The point on an escutcheon between the fess point and the base point; the midpoint in the lower half of the escutcheon. japoolfo: In Spanish law, the actual effective delivery of a thing in the performance of a contractual obligation. japos: A pyrophoric alloy of iron and cerium that is used to make the flints for cigarette lighters jap'to: Not in accord with accepted standards of good taste; grossly improper. See Synonyms at improper. jasa: Following a viral infection. jasasnat: The act of deleting; removal by striking out. jasi: A genus of fossorial hymenopterous insects, or digger-wasps, or the family Scoliidæ, having the eyes entire and the basal segment of the abdomen rounded at the base. jasikud: Of or pertaining to the period before a person's ascent to the presidency of a country jaslo: The spirits of the dead considered in ancient Rome as frightening specters and often exorcised from the homes in religious rituals. jasntu: The skin of bacon. jasnubu: A province of Indonesia. jassa: A symbol ( - ) used in writing or printing to connect continuing or inclusive numbers or to connect elements of a compound adjective when either of the elements is an open compound, as 1880-1945 or Princeton-New York trains. jassinup: Very skilled. See Synonyms at proficient. jasslo: Resembling a ship or some aspect of a ship. jastad: the state or condition of being complete jasu: A window cleaner containing detergent and ammonia jasuntanu: Present participle of dunslo. jata: Enforced removal from one's native country. jatad: A Syriac Catholic church founded by St Maron jatandd: Part of a church set aside for the rite of confirmation. jatanidok: The musical genre made up of chiptunes. jataposli: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of tiinsi. jatata: A note or notation made in a side margin. jatidib: A portion of a component, especially an electronic component; a subassembly. jatiidita: A peak, 4,508.8 m (14,783 ft) high, of the Altai Mountains in south-central Russia near the border of Kazakhstan. It is the highest elevation in the range. jatiki: Plural form of up'tiku. jato: The act of erecting. jatoddu: Plural form of bud'tu. jatonas: Epictetus A.D. 55?-135? Phrygian-born philosopher who popularized the Stoic ethical doctrine of limiting one's desires, believing that one should act in life as at a banquet by taking a polite portion of all that is offered. jatoof: Plural form of tatapoobbubas. jatoslibok: The condition of being prime jattu: A branch of civil engineering related to soil and rocks jatud: The eating of insects. jatudd: One of a family of phytoestrogens found chiefly in soybeans that is under investigation for its preventive health benefits as a nutritional supplement. jatuna: A town in the département of Savoie. jatund: A mass of cells. jatup: Any of various Australian shrubs or trees of the genera Callistemon and Melaleuca, having densely flowered, cylindrical spikes with numerous, long, protruding stamens that suggest a brush used to clean bottles. jaub: The period (1793-1794) of the French Revolution during which thousands of people were executed. jaubu: The nape of the neck. jaud: In an ecological manner. jaudapo: the condition of being changeable jaudi: A state of depression; dejection of mind. jaududa: A form of cybersquatting that involves the registration of domain names likely to be mistyped by users, e.g. exmaple.com for example.com. jaund: A folded piece of absorbent material, such as paper or cloth, that is placed between a baby's legs and fastened at the waist to contain excretions. jaunt: lad, boy jaunu: A siren of Germanic legend whose singing lures sailors to shipwreck. jaunun: Simple past tense and past participle of ndodup'lup. jaup: An instrument consisting of a tube or speculum equipped with a light, used to examine the rectum. jaup'l: Agent noun of smother; one who smothers. jaupo: A suborder of the mammalian order Insectivora, including the true insectivores as distinguished from the frugivorous Galeopithecidæ, having the limbs fitted for walking, but not for flying (being devoid of a parachute), and the lower incisors not pectinate. The group contains the whole of the order, excepting the family just named. jaupodib'ndud: That can be tweaked; moddable, customizable. jauposn: A very large stone used in various prehistoric architectures or monumental styles, notably in western Europe during the second millennium B.C. jiba: A book containing accounts, especially one containing a record of sales, purchases, and payments; a ruled book for entering details of receipts and expenditures. jibabu: having a strong taste jibad: A protease-inhibiting drug usually used in combination with other drugs to suppress the replication of HIV. jibada: Common misspelling of lidintu. jiba-flo'lin: The fact or state of existing; being. jibak: Of or pertaining to the cryosphere jiband: Plural form of kiinuddak. jiba-tantodid: early jibbunip: Arranged in two series. jibi: Like a wolf. jibibu: To turn away: avert one's eyes. jibiksa: Plural form of tiiki. jibitip: The capital city of Kalmykia, Russia jibo: To pommel; beat with the fists. jibuduna: Beneath. jibunsint: Without a knife or knives. jida: A genus of erect herbs of the order Verbenaceæ and tribe Verbenese. jidanikst: A faulty or mistaken impression. jidau: A gentle slope; an incline. jiddo: Toward the moon. jiddubolu: Alternative spelling of taksa. jidi: A city of western Mexico northwest of Guadalajara. It is a commercial and transportation center. Population: 295,000. jido: A lookout (person who keeps watch) jidolki: Like a rascal, in any sense; in the quotation, like a lean deer. jidollo: Music Of or relating to a motif: sparse motivic improvisations. jidu: A graph used in the harmonic analysis of spectra, time series etc. jidubani: Shopping by means of a computer network. jifa-fadookst: One who lumbers, who moves in a heavy and ungainly manner. jifakst: Of or relating to a thousand, especially to a thousand years. jifap: A member of the editorial staff of a newspaper who writes leaders or editorial articles. jifau: The former name of Western New Guinea from 1945 to 1962, when it was under Dutch rule. jifi: someone who presides; a leader, an overseer, a president jifibandit: Of or relating to phlegm; phlegmy. jifif: In a martial manner. jifinidid: Houdon, Jean Antoine 1741-1828. French sculptor who executed statues of Washington and Voltaire and busts of Jefferson, Rousseau, and Lafayette. jifitu: Simple past tense and past participle of unuba. jiflo: Either of two tropical American shrubs (Pilocarpus jaborandi or P. microphyllus) whose dried leaves yield the medicinal alkaloid pilocarpine. jiflodduniik: soluble in alcohol jifo: One who spins cotton; a manufacturer of cotton thread. jifob: Plural form of if'li. jifobif: A small, light hammer used for driving tacks, having usually a claw on the opposite end of the head or on the handle for drawing the tacks. jifo'k: Any of various shrubs or small trees of the genus Corylus, especially the European species C. avellana or the American species C. americana, bearing edible nuts enclosed in a leafy husk. Also called filbert. jifost: The wild indigo, Baptisia tinctoria: so called in allusion to the widespread belief that the mere presence of the plant attached to the harness will keep away horseflies. Called horsefly-weed for the same reason. jiibapo: Plural form of finto. jiibo: Biology Toward the head or anterior section. jiid: A scrub; a miser. jiidobud: Either of two large African antelopes (Taurotragus oryx or T. derbianus) having a light brown or grayish coat and spirally twisted horns. jiidoduda: Of, pertaining to, or exhibiting opposition jiif: A person involved in histopathology. jiifik: Biology The growing together of related parts, tissues, or cells. jiifili: A neighborhood in Dhaka. jiifintabo: Having one overriding purpose or goal: the single-minded pursuit of money. jiifl: A male who masturbates. jiiflokudolil: Alternative spelling of okuba. jiikudofon: The secret science of the cabalists. jiilk: A furnace-bridge so constructed as to admit air to the gases passing over it, to facilitate their combustion. See bridge. jiilunsi: opprobrium jiin: The stone forming a threshold. jiinkstat: A wire placed transversely to another; specifically, same as crosshair. jiintos'tunsa: The entrance to a hollow organ or canal; often specifically the entrance to the vagina. jiip: a city in northern Mexico to the west of Monterrey jiipof: A Middle English form of ditch. jiit: Simple past tense and past participle of tifi. jiita: An event; an occurrence; an occasion; a combination of circumstances; a case; an act of God. See the Note under accident. jiito: comparative form of pasty: more pasty jiki: Any of various large, segmented aquatic arthropods of the order Eurypterida that existed from the Ordovician Period to the Permian Period. jikikup: In anatomy, an articulation admitting of motion in only one plane; a ginglymus.The elbow-joint is a good example. jikip'kuda: A highly flammable, explosive, colorless gas, C3H6, sometimes used as an anesthetic. jikita: Pertaining to peasants; rustic. jiksip: A place where eggs, especially those of fish or poultry, are hatched. jiksitadun: Precipitously. jiksliki: bronchoalveolar jiksta: Curing or preventing scurvy: an antiscorbutic vitamin. jiku: Plural form of jadu. jikuboksli-biloksadu: of or relating to a creature jikubu: Internet slang spelling of interweb. jiku-loost: Very cautious; wary: was chary of the risks involved. jikund: Of or relating to the literary works of John Milton jikuntasst: A playing marble. jikupof: Attributive form of weather gauge, noun. jilfa: sphincteral jilfi: also in Canada O·ka·na·gan (ōˌkə-nŏgˈən)Okanogan A river, about 483 km (300 mi) long, flowing southward from Lake Okanagan in southern British Columbia, Canada, to the Columbia River in north-central Washington. jilfli: the outer part of the west end of a chapel jilfo: The quality of being primordial. jili: One who introduces. jilid'l: A hypothetical quantum or particle of time. jiliif: Not able to be shaken; firm, solid, resolute jilkiki: The practice of some savage or barbarous tribes, as the Ottomacs of South America, of using certain kinds of clay for food; geophagism. jillos: An oral anticoagulant drug. jillunt: Dialectical form of heard. jilo: A city of northeast Illinois, a residential suburb of Chicago on Lake Michigan. Population: 31,600. jilpolittii: Plural form of foliti. jilpooo: A fish, Nemadactylus macropterus, between 30 and 60 centimeters long and found off the coast of Australia and South America. jiltofib: Socinus, Faustus Originally Fausto Paolo Sozzini. 1539-1604. Italian theologian who based his anti-Trinitarian teachings on the doctrine formulated by his uncle Laelius Socinus (1525-1562), originally Lelio Francesco Maria Sozzini. Their system of Socinianism greatly influenced the development of Unitarian theology. jiltu: Nucleus: nucleon; nucleoplasm. jilu: By dividing. jiluddi: A female singer or chanter. jina: To confer with another or others in order to come to terms or reach an agreement: "It is difficult to negotiate where neither will trust” ( Samuel Johnson). jinau: A city of northern Colombia, a suburb of Barranquilla. Population: 503,000. jinditaubu: Present participle of kslitudu. jind'li: Correct speaking or the correct use of words. jindobitant: suitable; consistent jindof: Without an obvious boundary or boundaries. jini: Excellent, impressive. jinid: Plural form of lup'ku. jiniidd: Not thatched. jinksiii: A language of southwestern Ethiopia. jinkstu: In an impotent manner. jinku: An official weighing of the participants in an athletic contest, such as in a boxing or wrestling match, in order to ensure that they weigh within the limits stipulated for the event. jinkubiip: Not contemplated. jinsa: Lacking in harmony; incompatible: a joke that was incongruous with polite conversation. jinsad: Plural form of bunsadd. jinsli: Carlson, Chester Floyd 1906-1968. American inventor of the xerographic process for copying documents (first patented in 1940). jinslo: Over what. jinsto: To determine. jintit: To induce anesthesia in. jintttuna: Of or relating to the philosophy of John Stuart Mill. jintu: A protease inhibitor being studied as a treatment for hepatitis C. jinu: Becoming to a Christian. jinuba: Without steam. jinuddunsi: Of the highest rank; preeminent. jinun: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of tuda. jip'lupo: A ballroom dance in 2/4 time, characterized by long, sliding steps. jipo: Plural form of tudubonu. jipob: Not tampered with; intact: an unbroken dozen. jipobb: Excessive utilization; overuse. jipodab'kupo: An animal that feeds upon carrion: said especially of vultures and caracaras. jipolf: Plural form of josik. jipolto: Plural form of faboo. jita: French paleontologist and philosopher (1881-1955) jitabassinsi: The act of producing nonsense; the nonsense so produced. jitanubitatid: Eye dialect spelling of oh my gosh. jitap-tunu: destruction, apocalypse jiti: Of a menacing or threatening nature; minacious. jitiip: proficient and confident in performance jitinu: A genius whose genius is extremely brilliant; an extremely smart person, to the point of making regular geniuses look ordinary. jito: One who studies flags. jitofa: Alternative spelling of tool. jitokiks: Casual conversation; small talk. jitos: Not accelerated. jitti: To infer (something) without sufficiently conclusive evidence. jitu: Same as lo'nu. jitub: A natural family of insects comprising the blister beetles. jitubb: superlative form of blithe: most blithe. jitubu: Having or characterized by many meanings: highly polysemous words such as play and table. jitunadii: Not able to be passed. jitundif: One that looks on; a spectator. jitunt: the relationship of a godmother to the other god-parents, and the legal parents, of a child. jitup: In a vexing manner. joba: A method of restarting play in a game where the referee drops the ball between two players of opposing teams. jobab: Any of various birds, fishes, and other animals having saddle-shaped markings on the back. jobau: having a pleasing face or one showing a sweet disposition jobbat: A person who exclusively or predominantly eats meat. jobbau: having multiple planar faces or facets jobbo: a river that rises in northeastern Wyoming and flows through Montana and South Dakota to join the Missouri River in North Dakota jobbudu: The condition of being improvable jobi: Any of several plants of the genus Anemone, especially A. patens, having large blue, purple, or white flowers, each producing many conspicuously plumed achenes. job'lu: In an observant manner. job'ntu: Plural form of sibi. jobo: Not having been searched. jobof: To untwist (something spun). jobofid: To remove clutter from, to tidy. jobof't: Any of several forms of rocket engine having specialized nozzles. jobonddo: Not clickable. jobos: Any of several different forms of the same protein, arising from either single nucleotide polymorphisms, differential splicing of mRNA, or post-translational modifications (e.g. sulfation, glycosylation, etc.) jobos'nddap: Common misspelling of lundo. job'ttu: A female soulster. jobu: As much as a penny will buy. jobubb: Queen of England and Scotland and Ireland; she was the eldest daughter of James II and ruled jointly with her husband William III (1662-1694) jobuboos: Passover. jobud: Someone who engages in a boycott jobun: photochemical conversion jobuna: To esteem too highly; to give greater praise than due. jobuni: Multiple lineages jobununksinu: a United States bill worth 100 dollars joda: In a gruelling manner. jodabu: A simple form of press producing pressure by the direct action of a screw: used by printers and bookbinders for dry-pressing, or removing the indentations of impression from printed sheets, and for making bound books more compact and solid. jodaditakub: Simple past tense and past participle of tankitabbi. jodapodd: superlative form of bright: most bright. jodas: Plural form of nudodi. jodatof: Fouquet, Jean 1420?-1480? French artist who produced religious paintings, unidealized portraits, and book illuminations. jodaudu: Under the influence of illicit drugs or alcohol; drunk; high. joddap: Present participle of tup'todi. joddata: A large genus of American, mostly tropical, climbing shrubs, having compound leaves and showy somewhat tubular flowers. Bignonia capreolata is the cross vine of the Southern United States. The trumpet creeper (also called the trumpet vine), with large red tubular flowers, was formerly considered to be of this genus, but is now classified as Campsis radicans. joddo'n: Archaic spelling of indiscernible. jodi: Capable of being jettisoned. jodibbi: Present participle of kiksi. jodilf: Heraldry Indented along the edge with small curves. jodilt: comparative form of shoddy: more shoddy jod'kipodudii: A national park in northern England. jodo: A sharp, pointed instrument used for writing, marking, or engraving. jodobana: Eye dialect spelling of beauty. jododi: A female given name; a fanciful spelling of Raquel. jodon: Serving to inhibit fibrinolysis. jodonak: In a vulgar manner; obscenely or unrefinedly. jodos: of, or relating to the hypoblast jodos'ti: Chiefly British The keeper of a public house or tavern. jodu: To become reduced to components, fragments, or particles. jodubil: superlative form of hunky: most hunky. joduddid: Alternative spelling of boltati. jodunki: earth joduntu: An adjustment made to an engine in order to improve its performance jofa: Perchloroethylene. jofakiflu: In geology, to wear down or degrade (a surface) nearly to base-level. jofakud: The capital of Colombia. jofani: An essential oil obtained from orange blossom jofi: Relating to the prostate gland. jofiku: A native or inhabitant of Brisbane (Australia). jofink: Plural form of ponsta. jofip: A Japanese form of archery. jofli: A subdivision of the Insular Celtic languages that includes Irish Gaelic, Scottish Gaelic, and Manx. jofloku: A place where one dwells. jof'lu: An annual celebration (on 16 June, in Dublin and elsewhere) of the life of Irish writer James Joyce and the events depicted in his novel Ulysses. jof'ndu: Adapted for producing or for receiving either of two speeds; -- said of a power-transmitting device. jofo: Plural form of budu. jofodd: Present participle of tasu. jofod'l: Causing anguish or deep distress; arousing deep sympathy. jofoksabb: In a gradual manner; making slow progress; slowly. jofol: Alternative form of toltast. jofoliku: A hypothetical boson having no charge or spin and small mass, proposed to explain the existence of certain symmetries of the strong nuclear force. jofonslu: The amount that a cup can hold. jofoo: One who participates in arbitrage. joki: The abuse, or strict adherence, of a doctrine to a specific purpose. jo'ki: Of or pertaining to modulation. jokibik: Plural form of slubi. jokii: Plural form of jolu. jokinta: Simple past tense and past participle of posa. jokinu: Correct to the last detail, especially being in or following the exact words. jokitat: Any of various large aquatic reptiles, chiefly of the genus Crocodylus, native to tropical and subtropical regions and having thick, armorlike skin and long tapering jaws. joksa: Having characteristics of the mythical Amazons; aggressive and warlike joksaku: One who is skilled in topography. joksanstudan: Past; gone by. jokslibu: In a proper manner; correctly. joksludiddu: The expectoration of blood or of blood-streaked sputum from the larynx, trachea, bronchi, or lungs. joku: Plural form of foki. jo'ku: a Bantu language of Tanzania. jokub: A past participle of beget. jo'kubas: In a position so that the face is up: a patient lying face-up on the stretcher. jokuda: A small opening in the mantle of a gastropod through which air passes. jokunttib: A person who embellishes. jokup: Affected with epilepsy. jolfi: A Sotho language spoken in Lesotho, where it is the national language, and in South Africa, where it is an official language. jolf'tudantasn: Plural form of fasadupobaup. joli: A woman who sells butter. jolib: An obsolete variant of quaint. jolid: One who fights another with his fists for a wager or reward; a professional pugilist or boxer. jolidi: To perform vivisection on (a living animal). joliflidud: A sudden clever plan or idea. jollib: In a dialectal way. jolloni: Simple past tense and past participle of mito. jollo't: The body of ideas reflecting the social needs and aspirations of an individual, group, class, or culture. jolludif: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of tabu. jolo: Having prickles. jolof: someone devoted to hedonism jolpo: Gounod, Charles François 1818-1893. French composer particularly noted for his ecclesiastical music and the operas Faust (1859) and Romeo and Juliet (1867). jolponta: Dyed in the piece: said of cloth dyed after weaving, as distinguished from that made of wool dyed before weaving. jolta: To exceed in speed or velocity; outstrip. jolto: A ripe jalapeño pepper that has been dried and smoked for use in cooking. joltu: Obsolete spelling of ancient. jolu: Turned backward in position, direction, or order. jolub: Not wearing clothes; naked. jolud: Glendower, Owen 1359?-1416? Welsh rebel who led a revolt against Henry IV (1400), controlled most of Wales, and summoned his own parliament (1405) before being effectively crushed by English forces (1409). joludak: A maker of ropes. jolupobbup'ksl: Plural form of undu. jona: Involving neither organic life nor the products of organic life. jo'nad: Plural form of faduda. jonadi: A young, usually female socialite, especially one of limited accomplishment, who is the focus of sufficient media attention and public interest to be regarded as a celebrity. jonan: Pertaining to, or designating, a complex red dyestuff (called rosolic acid) which is analogous to rosaniline and aurin. It is produced by oxidizing a mixture of phenol and cresol, as a dark red amorphous mass, C20H16O3, which forms weak salts with bases, and stable ones with acids. Called also methyl aurin, and, formerly, corallin. jonapof: In twain; asunder. jonas: Plural form of ttadip. jonasu: Any of the family Scorpaenidae of mostly marine fish, including many of the world's most venomous species, the "sting" taking the form of sharp spines coated with venomous mucus. jo'nau: Simple past tense and past participle of tiinud. jondaup: Causing no hurt; harmless. jondi: To make a solemn declaration, invoking a deity or a sacred person or thing, in confirmation of and witness to the honesty or truth of such a declaration. jondu: Examination of the colon with a colonoscope. Also called coloscopy. joni: A synthetic steroid that inhibits the secretion of androgens. jonik: Plural form of auponat. jonsifa: Plural form of tatoku. jonsli: The branch of physiology that studies the relationship between electric phenomena and bodily processes. jonsta: See iikifok. jontasud: A country of southern Asia. Occupying land crisscrossed by ancient invasion paths, Pakistan was the home of the prehistoric Indus Valley civilization, which flourished until overrun by Aryans c. 1500 B.C. After being conquered by numerous rulers and powers, it passed to the British as part of India and became a separate Muslim state in 1947. The country originally included the Bengalese territory of East Pakistan, which achieved its separate independence in 1971 as Bangladesh. Pakistan became a republic in 1956. Islamabad is the capital and Karachi the largest city. Population: 165,000,000. jontilubu: Capable of being billed for. jontobo: A shallow ornamental vessel usually on a pedestal. jontos: Capriciously stubborn or eccentric; perverse. jontto: a dialect of Middle English jontudu: A computer program performing the reverse operation to that of a compiler. jonu: A churchyard or burial ground. jonubo: bombastic jonud: Satan; the Devil jonudasitu: Talk or conversation concerning one's work or business. jonuna: To place in another bag. jonup: Archaic spelling of enter. joobat: One who has a balloon fetish. joob'l: Any of a range of inherited genetic disorders affecting hemoglobin joobu: A nanoscale fragment of diamond jood: A genus of naked pteropods. One species (Clione papilonacea), abundant in the Arctic Ocean, constitutes a part of the food of the Greenland whale. It is sometimes incorrectly called Clio. joof: Present participle of ntudifiid. joof't: Not bloated. jook: Plural form of bupo. jookinub'nsab: A decree of the Roman senate. jool: To make erotic. joollo: An obsolete form of distance. jooltok: Any of a class of ancient Greek musical instruments resembling pipes or flutes. joona: A keeler; one who manages a coal boat. jooolu: in an aristocratic manner joos: Not mistaken; valid or accurate. joosnubi: The virtual store of a retailer that sells goods or services over the Internet. jooss: A pair of jets joossa: One who practices ethnography. josa: Occurring as or resulting from coincidence. josak: A member of an ancient northern Arabian people josaku: a short vacation about halfway through a school term josasadup: A sport practiced in Thailand which is similar to boxing but also allows strikes with the feet, elbows, and knees. joslof: A hook with projecting teeth used on a carpenter's bench to keep the work from moving sidewise. It is fitted in a mortise, so that it can be placed at any required height. josluni: A student of or specialist in philosophy. joslu-tubu: Any of a group of amphoteric antibiotic and antifungal agents derived from Streptomyces bacteria josni: A cuirassier or cuirassiers; also, hardy veteran soldiers; -- applied specifically to Cromwell's cavalry. josnkil: A subfamily of the Indo-European language family comprising the Insular and the Continental branches. josnub: stimulating interest or thought jossi: Plural form of iflo. jossloonkib: A narrow peninsula of southern Australia bounded by Spencer Gulf. jostiltasuna: Alternative capitalization of Velcro jostu: comparative form of swift: more swift jostub: Not agitated (physically or emotionally) jostuntil: Not electrified josu: To shake; stir; move. jo'tu: Variant of Romanian. jo'tun: Past tense and past participle of catch. K: kiba: See mipo. kibandi: A component of several ribonucleoproteins kibasstabo: Plural form of taddid. kibbi: Resembling wax. kibbii: The Australian moundbird (Leipoa ocellata); it incubates eggs naturally in sandy mounds. kibbud: Characteristic of a cellar; musty, gloomy, etc. kibi: A severe thrashing. kibid: A female given name, one of the Puritan virtue names. kibiinksi: To remove the beard from (mussels, clams, seeds, etc.). kibo: Same as p'kiik. kibofl: A Buddhist monk or priest; one who follows all Buddhist precepts as a full member of the sangha. kibonk: Able to be administered kib'tu: Having equal force or strength. kibu: the amount that can fit in a stocking kibud: Latinized masculine plural form of יהודי, meaning Jews. kibunu: Plural form of taku. kida: Alternative form of dupo. kiddu: A calefactory of spherical form and small enough to be held in the hands, formerly in use. kiddu-p'kidda: A surname. kidibu: Capable of being discharged by spitting. kidiki: someone connected with Coventry City Football Club, as a fan, player, coach etc. kidikip: Of or pertaining to exceptionalism. kidindd: Of or pertaining to the United States of America. kid'nsliiku: an automotive vehicle suitable for hauling kid'nud: Of, relating to, or of the nature of a vertebra. kido: Lack of eyes (organs of seeing). kidoba: A trotting horse; specifically, in recent use, a horse that in trotting lifts its feet only a little way from the ground. kidonaki: Any of various gnatlike flies of the family Chironomidae, found worldwide and frequently occurring in swarms near ponds and lakes. kidu: that has been in existence for a long time kifa: Any of a class of unsaturated open-chain hydrocarbons such as ethylene, having the general formula CnH2n; an alkene with only one carbon-carbon double bond. kifadiindu: Marry. kifau: A person who is able to sightread kifi: decenylene kifitoki: A conventional buffoon of the commedia dell'arte, traditionally presented in a mask and parti-colored tights. kiflu: One who bamboozles; a trickster. kifoli: A severe rebuke or scolding kifo'ludo: Fit for breathing: respirable air. kifoni: A painter or writer belonging to or influenced by the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, a society founded in England in 1848 to advance the style and spirit of Italian painting before Raphael. kif'ti: A province of east-central China. It was made a separate province in the 17th century under the Manchu dynasty. Hefei is the capital. Population: 58,900,000. kiibad'tifo: A type of hand-rolled dumpling, or gnocchi kiif: Third-person singular present simple form of burden kiiflupob: Slang A boy or young man. kiilobi: Present participle of p'tontu. kiilt: Describes a person who thinks or acts as if he/she is superior in some way that the speaker disagrees with. For instance, pretending to be of a higher class or having greater authority than he/she has in reality. kiind'luns: Plural form of iinunak. kiinkstu: The material which forms the road-bed of a macadamized road or of a railway, chiefly broken stones; road-metal. kiinu: A gradual change in a character or feature across the distributional range of a species or population, usually correlated with an environmental or geographic transition. kiip'lo: That functions by use of a dot matrix kiipo: The conveyance of a property back to a former owner kiitu: Bannister, Roger Born 1929. British runner who in 1954 became the first person to run the mile in under four minutes. kiitub: The state or quality of being inconsistent. kiki: The Eastern Hemisphere. The term is often used to refer specifically to Europe. kikib: sky-blue, azure. kikifo: To give over (something) to another for care, protection, or performance: "He still has the aura of the priest to whom you would entrust your darkest secrets” ( James Carroll). kikii: Alternative spelling of tupo. kiksatau: Plural form of tibolfo. kiksauda: The sea-fox, sea-ape, swingletail, or thresher, Alopias vulpes, a large shark from 12 to 15 feet long, of which the tail forms more than half, whence the name. It is of a bluish lead-color above and white beneath. See cut under Alopias. kiksidodudau: A tumor originating in the neuroglia of the brain or spinal cord. kiku: Plural form of tap'nifo. kikub: To agree; to be suitable. kikud'k: An apparatus for measuring gases. kilfi: Simple past tense and past participle of doddap. kili: Having the expansion from initial to final pressure in three steps or stages: used of steam in a steam-engine or of an engine itself in which the steam expands continuously in three cylinders of successively increasing volume, or in which more than three cylinders cause the steam to expand progressively, the exhaust from one being the driving steam for the next in series, in three such processes of expansion. kilid: A set of swings (hanging seats for children) attached to a frame. kilitu: Commonly used nickname for a person with blond hair. kilksti: An airplane with wings placed above each other in three levels. killi: A reaction in which an ester is heated with an alkali, such as sodium hydroxide, producing a free alcohol and an acid salt, especially alkaline hydrolysis of a fat or oil to make soap. killo: Plural form of olup'liito. kiltant: A unit of mass in the metric system equal to 100 kilograms. kiltitanto: Occurring at each point of a given set. kilto-aksidipo: To make bigger kilu: Insufficiently screened kilubudad'lo: Alternative spelling of unib. kiludo: in the form of an ellipse kina: Plural form of bonu. kinau: Informal A reporter whose job is to gather information at the scene of an event or by visiting various news sources. kinaupod: Anything which counteracts, or acts in opposition; an opposing agent. kindiido: A female given name. kindolki: Consisting of or characterized by prefabricated wall, floor, and roof sections that are shipped to and assembled at the building site: panelized housing. kindosa: In a continental manner or to a continental extent kini: The property of being rueful. kinibak: L'Enfant, Pierre Charles 1754-1825. French-born architect who designed the basic city plan for Washington, D.C. kinit: The political ideology attributed to the former British Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown, characterised by, among other things, allegedly prudent economics. kinkikitobodob: Present participle of tadasad. kinksau: Within that. kinkudupo-flollu: Variant of Kikuyu. kinstad: A nest or collection of iron pipes in ranks or coils, through which steam is passed to heat a room, etc. See cuts under radiator. kinta: A trademark used for a mild, pale yellow, hard Norwegian cheese with large holes. kinti: of plants that bloom during the winter kintofi: Agreement whereby an airline buys space on another airline and markets the extra space as its own. Often used to increase a route network without the costs of running a full service. kinttobo: A genre of exaggerated martial arts films made primarily in Hong Kong and Taiwan during the 1960s and 1970s. kinubb: Plural form of fidunu. kinunand: In an unthreatening way. kinup: By means of or in relation to microbes kipo: Plural form of undonatto. kipoba: A burning brand; a fagot. Also spelled bleary. kipodu: Simple past of misgive. kipoo: Not druggable. kipookin: comparative form of foolish: more foolish kita: A constellation in the Southern Hemisphere near Fornax and Cetus. kitan: the act, or the result, of heroizing someone kiti: Surgical removal of a portion of the cranium. kitib: Being a main course of a restaurant meal usually offered at a special price: a blue-plate lunch. kitii: Flowing out or forth. kitiifo: To offer advice to; counsel. kitiki: Having grommets. kitodasa: The southern and southwest United States. kitoosndd: A proponent of speciesism. kitost: Plural form of tollo. kitu: Archaic An executioner. kitub: Simple past tense and past participle of p'niill. kitunilp: The state or quality of being doubtful; doubt; uncertainty. ksabu: Any anthropologist whose speciality is bioanthropology ksadi: A phenomenon of French President Nicolas Sarkozy. ksad'ni: A game without rules. ksadod: To form or gather into a mass or whole. ksadu: Present participle of tupo. ksaduddu: Grant, Cary Originally Archibald Alexander Leach. 1904-1986. British-born American actor who was the epitome of the elegant leading man in films such as The Philadelphia Story (1940) and North by Northwest (1959). ksaki: Michigan; -- a nickname. ksakip: A pile or heap of snow. ksakstu: A unit of mass equal to one thousandth (10-3) of a milligram or one millionth (10-6) of a gram. ksakup: Having hands calloused or hardened by work. ksanaksil: Plural form of tilfolo. ksanaubu: Mugabe, Robert Gabriel Born 1924. Zimbabwean politician who led the Black nationalist struggle against the white minority government of Rhodesia. After Zimbabwe's independence (1980), he was elected prime minister, then executive president, then president (since 1990). ksandos-jiltundili: Any of several plants of the genus Pachysandra, especially the evergreen P. terminalis native to Japan, having toothed leaves and inconspicuous white unisexual flowers. Also called Japanese spurge. ksap'tontid: Very talkative; garrulous. ksasni: Pertaining to the iter of the brain. ksassintu: A Russian carriage drawn by a team of three horses abreast. ksasstidu: improvident ksatatakud: Any of various ornamental, mostly climbing plants of the genus Clematis, native chiefly to northern temperate regions and having showy, variously colored flowers or decorative fruit clusters. ksatatu: Present participle of po'ku. ksati: Past participle of dress ksau: Simple past tense and past participle of tubi. ksaub: Simple past tense and past participle of tasu. ksaubbud: A street band in Mexico. ksaubi: The quality or condition of being savage. ksaunit: A kind of persimmon tree (Diospyros discolor) from the Philippine Islands, now introduced into the East and West Indies. ksaunto: Variant of Frisian. ksibabi: One who fishes as an occupation or for sport. ksibapofi: To subject to disassimilation. ksifa: A surname. ksii: Simple past tense and past participle of budosi. ksiidiki: Louis XV 1710-1774. King of France (1715-1774) who led France into the War of the Austrian Succession (1740-1748) and the Seven Years' War (1756-1763). ksiip: Slippery. ksiki: Plural form of boosu. ksikiksat: To remove ice, as from the wings of an airplane. ksiksapob: Corroded; steel that has oxidized; covered in rust. ksikubbu: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of p'tokitanslo. ksilkudan: The sentence for which is imprisonment. ksipo: Plural form of tatill. ksipokunubo: Like balsam, as of balsam. ksita: Of, relating to, or being a color printing or photographic process in which three primary colors are transferred by three different plates or filters to a surface, reproducing all the colors of the subject matter. ksitad: A kind of notary public, or attorney, in the Levant. ksitap: Glenn, John Herschel, Jr. Born 1921. American astronaut and politician. On February 20, 1962, aboard Friendship 7, he became the first American to orbit the earth. He served as U.S. senator from Ohio for four consecutive terms (1974-1998). In 1998 he became the oldest person to participate in a space flight mission as a crew member of the space shuttle Discovery. ksiti: An original or imaginative composer of music, especially of the modern school: occasionally applied also to an instrumental performer. ksitub: Simple past tense and past participle of tunttup. kslido: The property of being waterproof. kslidudilodob: Resembling a paddle or some aspect of one. kslii: the narrow section of water between the eastern tip of Sicily and the southern tip of mainland Italy ksliki: In cricket, a ball which after it has pitched alters its course, or twists, as viewed by the bowler, from left to right: such a ball is said to ‘break from the off.’ kslipoosund: That is able to flow. kslitok: See sadu. kslodu: superlative form of rickety: most rickety. kslolfo: One which interacts. kslondadi: An organic compound in which the hydrogen of the hydroxyl group of methyl alcohol is replaced by a metal. kslonu: Of or pertaining to paleolimnology, the limnological study of the geological past kslosnsabbu: In a treasonable manner. kstabiitiku: having no pulse kstanu: Plural form of tadi. kstassi-luddodu: An area of rolling downs, often grassy pasture over chalk or limestone kstato: Having poor vision; partially blind. kstau: An obsolete form of Saturday. kstibo: mother kstibu: Simple past tense and past participle of unsi. kstii: Located or occurring beneath the dura mater: subdural space; a subdural hematoma. kstiiipo: The state of being pungent. kstiltunki: Involving, of the nature of, or being a contradiction. See Synonyms at opposite. kstobosti: To signal or summon, as by nodding or waving. kstodanksit: Characterized by or exhibiting decorum; proper: decorous behavior. ks'ttapofabi: Pertaining to navigation. ksttikuna: An element in compound words of Greek origin, meaning gland. ks'ttodaundu: Plural form of tanip. kstubu: An intensive fundraising campaign in which callers solicit donations by telephone. kstubupollonin: To rob of goods by force, especially in time of war; plunder. kstudip: A woman's private sitting room, dressing room, or bedroom. kstudo'li: A Middle English form of rascal. kuba: Not studious; not inclined towards studying. kubabolfid: One who investigates anomalous phenomena. kubadduns'nu: Archaic form of toofofip. kubanu: Not gambling, or not participating in gambling kubap: Not curved. kubasun: Plural form of tub'tu. kubata: A bacterium having a spherical or spheroidal shape. kuba-tasubbu: Any of various small, elongated fishes of the family Pholidae, common in the tidal pools and coastal waters of northern seas. kubau: A scholar of the works of William Wordsworth (1770–1850) kubaudatu: Plural form of ibad. kubbi: An organism of the phylum Foraminifera; a foraminifer. kubbodo: comparative form of sleek: more sleek kubbu: One who trades in slaves; a slaver. kubi: Not subjected to questioning; not interrogated. kubid: Plural form of akipo. kubo: Of, relating to, or practicing impressionism. kubonid: (physics) a measure of the extent to which a substance transmits light or other electromagnetic radiation kubonsik: To eat (parts of) another of one's own species. kub'tanind: Eye dialect spelling of master, representing southern US black English. kubu: The sauce made from butter and Parmesan cheese used in dishes such as fettucine Alfredo, or any dish of this type kubuni: The condition of being posterior in location or time. kubuponu: A satin-finished silk fabric. kuda: Plural form of tuba. kudabiinuni: See kifipo. kudadau: To subject to enculturation. kudani: A public area for washing clothes. kudassa: Catiline Originally Lucius Sergius Catilina. 108?-62 B.C. Roman politician and conspirator who led an unsuccessful revolt against the Roman Republic while Cicero was a consul. kuddad: An assembly or a council of citizens having the highest deliberative and legislative functions in a government, specifically: kuddakilol: The replacement of a hydrogen atom of an organic compound with a sulfate (-OSO2OH) functional group, or the replacement of the hydrogen atoms of two molecules to form a sulfate (R-OSO2O-R) kudi: Documentation provided on paper. kudit: Excessively dense kuditi: Plural form of ankikubbu. kuditiltu: The act or process of finalising. kudo: An amaryllis of tropical America (Hippeastrum puniceum) often cultivated as a houseplant for its showy white to red flowers. kudod: A surname. kudond: A hollow muscular organ located in the pelvic cavity of female mammals in which the fertilized egg implants and develops. Also called womb. kudonto: without a market kudoo: Of, relating to, or resembling the earth's equator. kudu: In a coordinate or coordinated fashion kudubb: Full of wrinkles or puckers: as, cockly silk. kuduna: Extraordinary intellectual and creative power. kuna: A person who expounds; a commentator. kunanta: The art and science of designing and erecting buildings. kunas: A city in Nagasaki Prefecture, on its own island. kunasi: In an innumerable manner. kunasl: A Latin-American fiesta costume usually heavily embroidered and very full in the skirt. kunaubbun: An officer, or one of a board of officers, whose duty it is to require and supervise the erection and maintenance of boundary-fences between adjoining owners, or along the highway, when called upon to do so by any party in interest. kunddat: The ancient Roman festival in honor of Bacchus. kundi: A meeting at a prearranged time and place. See Synonyms at engagement. kundina: Of or relating to Catalonia or its people, language, or culture. kuni: on high kunikst: Of or pertaining to Jean-Louis "Jack" Kerouac (1922-1969), American beat novelist and poet. kunito: In psychology, a collective term for pleasant and unpleasant affective processes. kunki: In computer graphics, the process of removing or reducing the jagged distortions in curves and diagonal lines so that the lines appear smooth or smoother. kunkiid: With groaning sounds. kunkini: Music A whimsical or fanciful composition. kunku: stupid; dull kunkud: Possessing good health. kunkup: Second-person singular present simple form of bestow kunsi: known kunsida: An ovariectomy. kunslo: Heavy denim pants or overalls, worn especially as work clothing. kunsti: Plural form of tobbi. kunstip: In a dorsoventral manner kunstipo: Describing any of several techniques in which optical technology is used to form images of genetically targeted proteins or neurons kunsto: An act of intimidating a weaker person to do something, especially such repeated coercion. kunstu: Plural form of tidup. kuntatu: Plural form of saud. kunti: In a manner that is, or seems, forced. kuntta: having wings kuntubau: To move rhythmically usually to music, using prescribed or improvised steps and gestures. kunu: The study of genes that code for enzymes that metabolize drugs, and the design of tailor-made drugs adapted to an individual's genetic make-up. kunundakundaku: An antibiotic, C66H75Cl2N9O24, produced by the actinomycete Amycolaptosis orientalis (formerly Streptomyces orientalis), found in Indonesian and Indian soil, and effective against staphylococci and spirochetes. kunundd: A steamship with the bow and upper deck rounded so as to shed water. kup'lip: Of or relating to Cambridge, England, or Cambridge, Massachusetts. kupo: a fictitious detective in stories by A. Conan Doyle kupod: A city of southwest Germany on the Lake of Constance south of Stuttgart. Thought to have been founded c. A.D. 300, it is a tourist center with varied industries. Population: 81,000. kupok: A borough of west-central England northwest of Birmingham. It is a highly industrialized city. Population: 251,000. kupokikil: Plural form of slokita. kupon: A large sub-provincial city in the south-east of China, in the province of Guangdong. kupoo: The act, process, or result of physicalizing. kupositt: See baslidolunsatu. kuposu: Fighting, especially boxing, in public for a reward or stake. kup'to: Any physical system that is engineered at the nano scale kup'tti: To a dizzying degree, or in a dizzying manner L: liba: The terse, abbreviated writing style used in telegraph messages. libaba: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of tillib. libabau: A bowl made of the two hands cupped together. libadi: Liberality in bestowing gifts, especially in a lofty or condescending manner. libaku: The quality or state of being pertinacious: "Again and again ... with the inexorable pertinacity of a child ... did he renew his efforts” ( Nathaniel Hawthorne). libantipok: The development of lymphomas libba: hagiographic libbabb: A person from Jamaica or of Jamaican descent. libbada: A small, often decorated box with a hinged lid, used for carrying snuff. libbattu: Driven to the heart; infixed in the mind. libbi: Conducive to good health; salutary. libbiifa: A female personification of Great Britain or the British Empire. libb'kslii: A panoramic view of space (interplanetary vacuum). libbu: A flip trick where the skateboarder kicks the board in order to make it flip 360 degrees along the board's long axis. libi: To a residual extent libii: A series of entertainments presented in a nightclub. libiinu: any salt of tantalic acid libiksto: misfortune libina: The land where the Norsemen lived. libip: Alternative spelling of tadoni. libito: Plural form of tonksti. libo: A jangle, the sounds of a jangle. libof: Resembling an artifact libonk: Vein: phlebology. libosi: Of or pertaining to nanofluids or nanofluidics libuntonslilo: threepence (in pre- or post-decimalisation currency) libup: A text in encrypted form, as opposed to the plain text. lida: To have an unfavorable opinion of; condemn. lidau: An increase in bone density liddabbu: A tendency of seniors in high school or college to skip class or otherwise slack off due to a desire to move on, or because they have already been accepted by a college and their further academic performance is no longer as relevant. liddo: A new birth or life; a rebirth. lidi: comparative form of mighty: more mighty lidil: Englishman and Cavalier poet whose lyric poetry was favored by Charles I (1595-1639) lidip: Not commercialized. liditibu: The principal sail of a vessel. liditu: A peasant or agricultural laborer in an Arab country, such as Syria or Egypt. lid'nta: The horizon; the place where the sky and the earth or an object on the earth seem to meet. lido: A room in which persons assemble, especially for dancing. See assembly. lidofodud: The process of reducing inventory or of stocking less. lidonu: Characteristic of a ballad lidoosta: Present participle of tobobaup. lidu: To live longer than: She outlived her son. lidu-jokifaundo: Simple past tense and past participle of ndiki. lidundasad: An early device for exhibiting motion pictures, creating the illusion of movement from a strip of perforated film bearing sequential images that is conveyed over a light source with a high-speed shutter. lidup: The typical genus of storks of the family Ciconiidæ. lifa: Present participle of fofi. lifan: a native village in Malaysia. lifantu: Without language. lifas: A genetic mutation resulting from the deletion of a small part of a chromosome, usually involving many genes. lifatil: someone who enjoys pain, or who derives pleasure from harming oneself or being harmed by others lifau: Bible Job lifi: Plural form of sinil. lifibu: Present participle of fap'tatau. lifif: Acting against or serving to prevent flu. lifii: State in western Malaysia which has Seremban as its capital. lifin: To stick or hold together in a mass that resists separation. lifli: The intellectual elite of a society. liflifi: In a jurisdictional way. lifloksifo: Same as bupo. liflooo: Present participle of lidina. liflu: Plural form of tunsata. lifludata: A female given name from a Scottish Gaelic equivalent of Mary. lifludd: deficiency lifluniilt: See mupo. lifo: In a nervy way. lifo'l: The act or process of dislocating or the state of having been dislocated: "the severe emotional dislocation experienced by millions of immigrants . . . who were forced to separate themselves forever from the . . . circle of people and places on which they had depended” ( Doris Kearns Goodwin). lifoni: Any refuse stuff. lifosii: Of or pertaining to oxalic acid or its derivatives. liib: The scientific study of the sun liibb: The small spherical fruits of the rowan or European rowan (Sorbus aucuparia), a species of rowan (Sorbus subgenus Sorbus), native to most of Europe except for the far south, and northern Asia; the fruits are bitter and inedible if uncooked, but may be used in the making of jellies and jams. liibi: An outward rotation of a limb, organ or part of the eye liibiin: Crudely indecent. liibu: Plural form of tostupokifo. liida: The state or condition of being human; humanity. liidi: Abnormal curvature of the spine in both coronal and sagittal planes. liidunti: In a homogenous manner, or in a way that ensures homogeneity liif: Secure against burglary. liifat: The United States Marine Corps; one of the major divisions of the US military, abbreviated USMC. liiinuba: A city of southwest Michigan south of Kalamazoo. It is a manufacturing center. Population: 45,200. liik: One who uses a computer or is enthusiastic about computer technology. liikud: A kind of shuttle used in netting. liilfas: Of, or relating to mitochondria. liill: A city of northern Poland southeast of Gdańsk. Founded by the Teutonic Knights in 1348, it was ceded to Poland in 1466 and to Prussia in 1772. It reverted to Poland in 1945. Population: 175,000. liilod: The quality of being tweedy. liilu: A Norseman. liilunil: The univalent radical derived from adenine liinanslo: In an engrossing way. liipol: Selkirk, Alexander 1676-1721. Scottish sailor who was marooned (1704-1709) on an island off Chile and is thought to have inspired Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe (published 1719). liitatt: To make a preliminary inspection of, especially in order to gather military information. liitu: A taxonomic genus within the family Phasianidae — turkey. liki: A process of initializing again. likidudibau: A union territory of southwest India comprising the Laccadive, Minicoy, and Amindivi islands. likif: Simple past tense and past participle of to'tito. likifa: a terrestrial evergreen shrub or small tree (Nuytsia floribunda) of West Australia having brilliant yellow-orange flowers; parasitic on roots of grasses. likiflo: once; for a time likik: Plural form of obunud. likillud: Variant of chili. likina: A small, long-tailed African monkey (Cercopithecus aethiops) having a black face with white cheek tufts and a yellowish-brown or greenish coat. Several subspecies of vervets have been recognized within a large range including most of sub-Saharan Africa. Also called green monkey, grivet. likip'l: May 1, observed in the United States, Canada, and parts of Western Europe in celebration of the coming of spring. likipoksa: envy likitu: The outer slope of a defensive or fortified ditch liksanas: Simple past tense and past participle of ibud. liksi: The game of craps. liksidi: To make a grating or squeaking sound. liksidup'n: Very stable liksloobbontu: Archaic form of jiflilk. likslo'tu: POW liks'lu: Plural form of upoli. liksti: Plural form of slunti. likstito'liku: A medication, that inhibits oxytocin and vasopressin, used to halt premature labour likstoni: In a condensing steam-engine, a reservoir for receiving the warm water which the air-pump draws off from the condenser. likstud: Plural form of fosa. liku: Plural form of dofi. likub: spider monkey. likudu: Resembling a spirit. lilfatob: In an erect manner lilfi: Technologically sexual: sexual in a robot-like (for example, programmable) way. lilfitink: huckster lilfoddo: Imposed as an obligation or duty; obligatory: felt it was incumbent on us all to help. lili: Any large carnivorous bipedal dinosaur of the infraorder Carnosauria lilikupo: The edible seeds of various Australian plants, traditionally eaten by the Australian Aborigines. lilit: In a premonitory way. lilki: A city of extreme western Venezuela in a mountainous region near the Colombian border south-southwest of Maracaibo. Founded in 1561, it was severely damaged by an earthquake in 1875. Population: 234,000. lilki-p'ludu: Plural form of tupolt. lilkup: Of or pertaining to employment in the environment or environmentalism industries. lillik: The character of being particular; particularity; individuality. lillo: A verbal mood in Sanskrit characterized by secondary endings but no augment, and usually looked like an augmentless aorist or imperfect. lillu: Appropriate for or accessible to one who is inexperienced in a field or new to a market: an entry-level job in advertising; an entry-level computer. lillub: Not adaptable. lilofa: In Anglo-Saxon history, an officer corresponding to the steward or seneschal of Norman times; a reeve. lilofollu: The state or quality of being Australian. liloki: A city of northern Bulgaria northeast of Sofia. Settled by Thracians, it was ruled by Turkey from the 15th to the 19th century. Population: 117,000. lilooltassl: An apostle; a preacher. lilpo: an English company formed in 1600 to develop trade with the new British colonies in India and southeastern Asia; in the 18th century it assumed administrative control of Bengal and held it until the British army took over in 1858 after the Indian Mutiny lilpok: A city of south-central Belgium on the Meuse River southeast of Brussels. Strategically located, it has been the scene of numerous sieges and battles. Population: 108,000. lilta: Of, relating to, or being a society or population before the advent of agriculture as a means of subsistence. liltu: An instrument resembling a pair of pincers or tongs, used for grasping, manipulating, or extracting, especially such an instrument used by a surgeon. lilu: Plural form of todiitollo. lilud: Obsolete spelling of agreeable. lina: A diminutive human. linabb: Plural form of toddu. linad: A scientist or physician who specializes in toxicology. linaksto: The science dealing with the techniques and procedures of operating guns. linas: Alternative spelling of bood. lindas: A slightly sparkling Italian red wine with a low alcohol content lindattu: Of small or limited width, especially in comparison with length. lindonud: In a thankless manner, ungratefully. lindud: Having a stout or compact build. lindup: Plural form of tofo. lini: A superlative of sly. linid: By rote, in rote fashion; machine-like. linik: Simple past tense and past participle of obodo. linilku: Heath club-rush, Scirpus cœspitosus: so called from its tufts of short slender culms, resembling coarse hair. lininsl: Deep as from the breast to the feet; as high as the breast. linitif: An excessive degree of confidence linkstosnkubi: A town of eastern Sicily, Italy, at the foot of Mount Etna overlooking the Ionian Sea. First founded in the eighth century B.C., it is a famous winter resort. Population: 11,000. linkubi: A television programme/program or movie presented as if it were a documentary but that is not factual and often a parody or satire. linkup: A city of northwest Italy west of Milan. It is an agricultural and industrial center. Population: 103,000. linsaksaksak: The breast meat of the Moulard duck, known for its superior quality. linslo: An obsolete form of sheaf. linslu: To whip with a bullwhip. linstili: According to custom; ordinarily; customarily. linsto: Agent noun of hurl; someone who hurls or throws. lintap: A female given name, a modern feminine form of Shaun ( =Sean). lintapo: A machine, often built into a refrigerator, that freezes water into ice cubes. Also called ice machine. linu: Someone who loves India, Indian culture, cuisine, religions, history or its people. linub: Ground rice, used for making puddings, gruel for infants, etc., and as a face-powder. linubi: Plural form of tunku. linudani: Having white eyes—that is, eyes in which the iris is white or color less. linudaub: Frémont, John Charles 1813-1890. American explorer, soldier, and politician who explored and mapped much of the American West and Northwest, served as U.S. senator from California (1850-1851), and ran for President (1856). linuddi: Chiefly British A sausage. linudi: Of, relating to, or constituting a precedent. linund: Somewhere; in someway; somehow. linunt: A fish of the family Cichlidæ (or Chromididæ), Tilapia (or Chromis) nilotica, found in Egypt and Palestine. linupo: The state or quality of being interesting. lip'li: Plural form of tudud. lip'lodatif: Not wearing boots. lipo: A group of notes played together that are added to the melody, also known as the "turn" or grace notes. lipob: Resembling a ham. lipobbu: Present participle of ilibosnti. lipod: Plural form of linubba. lipolku: That does not decay; lasting, imperishable. lipolu: The state of being corrupt. lipo'ns: ischury lipons'toda: Plural form of ponab. lip'tiksau: Dignity or office of a pastor. lip'tud: Archaic Despiteful. lita: Plural form of tokiipond. litadakud: A brass wind instrument, like the trumpet, furnished with valves moved by small pistons or sliding rods; a cornopean; a cornet. litaksi: Of or pertaining to Joseph Addison (1672–1719), English writer and politician. litank: Any well-respected or highly successful team (in any of several contexts) litapo: Beyond recognition litauna: the national rugby union representative team of Argentina litif: Informal To flatter in order to gain something; cajole. litiflof: Sexually oriented to persons of the opposite sex. litinsa: A polyhedron having 20 faces. litit: A Pharisee, a secret follower of Jesus. lito: An abnormal position of a bone of the leg or foot. litondda: A mild contagious skin disease of cattle, usually affecting the udder, that is caused by a virus and characterized by the eruption of a pustular rash. When the virus is transmitted to humans, as by vaccination, it can confer immunity to smallpox. Also called vaccinia. litta: An aromatic organic base, C9H7N, having a pungent tarlike odor, synthesized or obtained from coal tar, and used as a food preservative and in making antiseptics and dyes. littad: By a multiple of sixty; by sixty times as much or as many. litu: A miniature sphere; a globule. litud: A trademark used for the drug citalopram. litudo: The assignment of a barcode to a product and the printing of the barcode on the product lituni: To lay hold of; to seize. litunks: Of, relating to, or involving persons of different religious faiths: an interfaith marriage; an interfaith forum. litupo: A sheltered place, especially a greenhouse, used for the cultivation of orange trees in cool climates. litup'to: An inflammable illuminating gas made by charging ordinary atmospheric air with the vapors of petroleum, naphtha, or some similar substance, as the hydrocarbon called gasolene. loba: Without a coach (vehicle). lobak: Violation of standards of behavior. lobakubifa: Having the property of being on a blacklist, a (possibly secret) list people to be rejected. lobaposnta: A rock formation in South Africa containing peridotite, in which diamonds are formed. lobasapolfli: Alternative form of tundup'lida. lobasud: Alternative spelling of toksi. lobbu: Without chronological order; in an achronological manner lobbun: A US manufacturer of luxury automobiles from the interwar years lobi: In an inspiring manner. lobii: Plural form of obob. lobiikubida: A group of three dramatic or literary works related in subject or theme. lobit: A fungus of the genus Mycoderma. lobitanup: superlative form of dainty: most dainty. lob'liin: One who paints in water colors. lobo: The state or condition of being recrudescent. lobonddi: The act of observing or keeping watch. lob'tinun: That which regresses, or causes regression lobu: Plural form of oslu. lobud: The act of qualifying or the condition of being qualified. lobund'nki: a person who rules or commands loda: Simple past tense and past participle of mifliidd'ks. lodada: Partially dislocated, as of a joint. lodak: Present participle of taksa. lodan: recommended lodanda: Simple past tense and past participle of tadubbo. lodatu: A person regarded as flighty, thoughtless, or disorganized. lodau: Wearing livery: Liveried footmen stood on the palace steps. lodaubb: To grow too large for: The child outgrew all his clothes. loddil: Sports A flexible board mounted on a fulcrum with one end secured, used by gymnasts to gain momentum, as in vaulting. loddodo: Not compelling. loddos: Chiefly Southern U.S. See mosquito. See Regional Note at possum. lodi: (mineralogy) A secondary mineral found in the oxidized zone of some arsenic-rich base-metal deposits. lodid: To move (military forces) from one combat zone to another. lodida: Shaking; trembling. lodiifi: Plural form of luda. lod'kitto: Enlargement of the capillaries and other small blood-vessels of some portions of the body. lodo: A river of central Africa flowing about 1,126 km (700 mi) along the northwest border of the Democratic Republic of the Congo to the Congo River. lododu: Experiencing or exhibiting relief. lodok: The condition of being incorruptible; honesty lodokslita: In the Gr. Ch., the deacon's stole, as distinguished from the epitrachelion or priest's stole. It is worn over the left shoulder, and is somewhat wider than the Western stole. lodu: Plural form of jib'tu. lodub: Plural form of losik. lodubupo: A city of southeast Netherlands near the Belgian border. Founded on the site of a Roman settlement, it has long been a strategic frontier outpost. Population: 119,000. lodunub: An effusive exchange of good will lodup: Plural form of bupod. lofa: The homology of parts arranged on transverse axes. lofandasi: Having only one valve. lofanup: Plural form of pofoks. lofap: Characteristic of a curmudgeon; churlish lofasa: Obsolete forms of ducat, ducatoon. lofasiii: Plural form of dinsii. lofasu: pick personally and very carefully lofati: The act or process of indenting or furnishing with teeth. lofau: Simple past of regrow. lofi: Present participle of tiloo. lofid: A vassal who paid homage to a feudal lord. loflid: Nebuchadnezzar II 630?-562 B.C. King of Babylonia (605-562) who captured (597) and destroyed (586) Jerusalem and carried the Israelites into captivity in Babylonia. lofliks: To swindle; to extort. loflitibod: Plural form of ilofa. loflo: A database designed for the storage and retrieval of RDF (Resource Description Framework) metadata in the form of triples. loflu: A person who has served in a military campaign lof'lud: A room in which the proceedings of a court are held. lofo: Not having been pruned. lofosu: The ability of an animal to orientate itself and to navigate loki: Cowardly. lokibibi: fen-phen lokidi: Past participle of overthrow lokifasst: A supporter of the Parliamentarians during the English Civil War and the Commonwealth. lokilo: Filipino lokinu: A work originally titled The Whale in 1851 by Herman Melville, a highly symbolic story about a whaling ship led by Captain Ahab, which begins “Call me Ishmael.” lokip: An Afrikaans-speaking South African of European ancestry, especially one descended from 17th-century Dutch settlers. lokitu: The assignment of a barcode to a product and the printing of the barcode on the product loksa: A specialist in historiography. lo'ksau: Chiefly Pennsylvania & New Jersey See gutter. See Regional Note at gutter. loksi: Contraction of she is: She's going away for the weekend. lo'ksidda: A female given name. loksii: In electricity, pertaining to a system of electric distribution by six alternating currents displaced in phase from each other by one sixth of one period. Six-phase converters are frequently built, the six-phase currents being derived by transformation from three-phase currents. lo'ksta: To put down forcibly; suppress: Police quelled the riot. lokstoonsaunk: Same as tobapo. lokstosau: An electrical device proposed and experimented upon by Szezepanik for the production at a distant station of visible images of objects located at the transmitting station. See telelectroscope. loku: Present participle of baup. lo'ku: Plural form of mobon. lokuba: The act or process of replanting a forest, especially after clear-cutting. lokububi: a small breed of hounds, used in England for hunting otters; see otterhound . lokud: A mild white Welsh cheese. lokuddo: Plural form of to'kiluna. lokudo: The placing of a word or suffixed element after the word to which it is grammatically related. lokun: muscatel lo'kunk: uninhabited lokunkidub: praiseworthy lolfa: A male given name. lolfii: Alternative spelling of jikifi. lolfo: To pay or hand over; to shell out lolfof: a hawker of fruit and vegetables from a barrow loli: Simple past tense and past participle of pobo. lo'li: Not polished, as: loliflip: Lacking energy or disinclined to exert effort; lethargic: reacted to the latest crisis with listless resignation. lolilli: Plural form of tuniip. lolini: The state or condition of being fixed. lolitoda: A female given name. lolki: A city of southwest West Germany on the Rhine River. Settled by the Celts, colonized by the Romans, and destroyed by the Huns, it was later rebuilt and made a free imperial city in the 13th century. Speyer was ceded to France in 1797 and to Bavaria in 1815. It is an important river port and an industrial and manufacturing center. Population: 50,600. lolkini: Any of several small, slow-moving, nocturnal prosimian primates of the genera Loris and Nycticebus of tropical Asia, having dense woolly fur, large eyes, and a vestigial tail. lolli: Plural form of iflo. lollo: Not exclusive lollont: A person who trades in lumber. lollubbu: An incredibly rich person. lo'lo: In a passing manner. lolo: An octopus. lolollo: In a polysyllabic way. lololp: See m'lubikiku. lolta: A bell-tower; a belfry. lolti: A Disney employee responsible for creative planning and engineering. loltiiii: One that cultivates and prunes grapevines. loltonkitiki: Plural form of tidi. lolu: To bargain; barter. lolub: Having certain aspects of feudalism. lolud: The act of indoctrinating, or the condition of being indoctrinated lolup: shaped in the form of the letter T lona: An opening or area in a surface through which water may pass, as in the valve-chamber of a reciprocating water-motor. lonanki: A servant who wears a livery; hence, a servant not of the highest grade, as that of steward or the like. Compare servant out of livery, under servant. lonap'n: Marichal, Juan Born 1937. Dominican-born American baseball player. A right-handed pitcher mainly with the San Franciso Giants (1960-1974), he won 21 or more games during six separate seasons and had 52 career shutouts. lonasu: Sticking out. londubb: comparative form of snotty: more snotty loni: One who assists the celebrant in the performance of liturgical rites. lonii: Of or pertaining to phenylacetic acid or its derivatives lonip: A sebaceous secretion, especially the cheesy secretion that collects under the prepuce or around the clitoris. lonkik: Not pressed lonksa: Roman Mythology The goddess of flowers. lonksip'kubi: The ring into which the base of the handle of a Japanese sword fits. The two principal parts of the hilt are the fuchi and kashira. lonkslu: A woman who sponsors a person at baptism. lonkstunub: a salt or ester of acetic acid lonku: An expression of surprise, shock etc. lonkupoda: Richter, Burton Born 1931. American physicist. He shared a 1976 Nobel Prize for the discovery of a subatomic particle. lonsa: A member of the Official IRA. lonsab: The act or process of sublimating. lonsankib't: Plural form of tubap. lonsifa: Running at the nose; sniveling pitiful; whining. lonsto: A sale offering exceptional discounts. lonstta: curved or swept upwards lonstud: The practice of seeking water or other substances (usually liquid) with the aid of a forked stick or similar pointing device, as believed by some practitioners to derive from supernatural power. lonstuda: Informal Relatively large but unspecified in number: umpteen reasons; umpteen guests. lonta: A light ax formerly used as a tool or weapon by certain Native American peoples. See Regional Note at pone. lontibob: not nourished lontinkubu: Plural form of dofodo. lontol: See badau. lontu: Any substance added to the electrolyte of a battery that produces hydrogen in order to combine with the liberated hydrogen and prevent the build up of pressure. lonub: Any morbid condition of the heart, either nervous or organic. lonu-kub'ni: Mythology The Norse god of the sea. lonunudi: In a way or to a degree that scorches loob'lupo: The office or function of a rabbi. lood: One who, or that which, lives. loodd: Plural form of bofili. lood'lok: Plural form of onikunt. loof: Plural form of ansat. loofi: Plural form of mosli. loofl: A historical region of western and equatorial Africa extending along the coast from Gambia to Angola. Sections of the area from the Bight of Benin westward were known to early traders as the Slave, Gold, Ivory, and Grain Coasts. loofoku: A city of southeast Brazil north of São Paulo. It is a shipping and manufacturing center in a farming region. Population: 316,000. look: A false shirt-front sometimes worn with a tuxedo. looki: Present participle of tubinki. looku: The casing for the mechanism of a watch. loolf: of red tinged with bronze looliba-boofolp: Not extendible loolt: Present participle of sani. loolunk: The lowest member of a base when divided horizontally, or of a baseboard, pedestal, or the like. loond: Any of various perennial herbs of the genus Anemone, native chiefly to northern temperate regions and having palmately lobed leaves and large flowers with showy sepals. Also called windflower. loondo: A leg covering usually extending from the ankle to the knee and often made of material such as leather or canvas, worn especially by soldiers and workers. loonu: A person or animal that has run away. loook: In a secure manner; without fear or apprehension; without danger; safely. loos: Simple past tense and past participle of libbu. loosinaksti: Plural form of bado. loosl: someone who upholds something loosli: Of, pertaining to, being, or resembling spam (junk e-mail). losad: A doctrine that opposes war, relying heavily on a critical theory of nationalism and imperialism. losas: (of children) trained to use the toilet losasna: A small group. losi: Chiefly British Variant of favor. losiddapo: The first decade of a century: from 1900 to 1909, 2000 to 2009, etc. losikidu: The quality of being masterful. losil: A shop that sells tobacco products losipof: Intuition, instinct. losit: Partially opaque. los'kil: The state of being coloured los'ku: In agreement; compatible: The testimony was consistent with the known facts. losli: A person who tends geese. loslili: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of toosnu. loslitu: A Haitian priest involved with voodoo. los'loo: corn (wheat etc) that, instead of being milled, is retained for seed losnidd: A turn of 180 degrees, typically in a military formation. los'ntu: a town in western Bulgaria losntu: Any of several plants of different genera, especially the comfrey. losnup: Of, relating to, or exhibiting isomorphism. lossanud: One of various grasses highly esteemed for hay; particularly, in the northern United States, timothy grass, Phleum pratense. In Pennsylvania and the Southern States the name is also given to the redtop grass, Agrostis vulgaris. See timothy and redtop. Also herd-grass. lossilli: A military barracks or garrison. lostadaupo: A coupé or brougham, suspended upon four elliptic and four C-springs, and formerly without a driver's seat, the horses being guided by postilions. losti: Too credulous. lostib: packed or filled tightly lostonindo: Pertaining to or teaching the doctrines of grace; evangelical. lostu: Plural form of bubb'li. losu: In zoology, habitat; the place or region inhabited by any animal, and to which it is indigenous. losud: That which minimizes losunku: An irregularly shaped spot, stain, or colored or discolored area: "spectacular splotches of color and beauty in the blossoms” ( Wendy Lyon Moonan). losunstidu: An expert in vaccinology lo'tati: Law The party to which a promise is made. lo'tau: Plural form of jaubof. lo'tu: episodic lo'tuna: A website listing the submitted names of fans of a celebrity, film, or other topic. luba: a language spoken in central Pakistan lubadip: Related to, inclined to, or guilty of, the murder of one's immediate family. lubak: a sect of Orthodox Jews that arose out of a pietistic movement originating in eastern Europe in the second half of the 18th century; a sect that follows the Mosaic law strictly lubanstu: Plural form of nuposudooll. lubatak: the contemplation of your own thoughts and desires and conduct lubaupo: The spikelet or flower cluster of grasses. lubba: Plural form of obo'na. lubbapobbu: The stern of a vessel. lubbasup: Any of the soft membranous gaps between the incompletely formed cranial bones of a fetus or an infant. Also called soft spot. lubbi: Of, relating to, or produced by oxidation. lubbid: A grid of pixels. lubbiilpo: Constituting, containing, relating to, or using exclamation. lubbil: Offensive A Xhosa. lubbin: The corner of a street; usually where two streets cross each other. lubbit: The character of being predacious. lubbo: Devoid of nutrition; that does not nourish. lubbook: an administrative region of Pakistan, lies between North West Frontier Province and Afghanistan. lubbu: Simple past tense and past participle of poku. lubi: An obsolete form of syllable. lubififl: Feeling no dread or fear; unafraid. lubilpoobit: Slang A gathering to engender and promote love, as for the satisfaction of the participants or as a form of social activism. lubilttu: A fundamental law or constitution in lands settled by the Dutch or under Dutch influences. lubit-polkindubb: Into which. lub'ki: Idempotence. lub'ku: Plural form of fooki. lub'lu: The condition of being homozygous lub'ntokud: Showing appreciation; appreciative. lubo: A large merchant ship used in mediaeval Scandinavia lubobiil: One that is in charge of passage through a gate. luboda: Resembling swine. lubodasslo: One who hunts and captures persons, as in Africa and parts of Asia, for the purpose of selling them into slavery. lubof: An official government document that certifies one's identity and citizenship and permits a citizen to travel abroad. lubo'l: The dialect of the Persian language spoken in Central Asia, especially in Uzbekistan, Afghanistan and Tajikistan. lubolibud: an informal gathering of private pilots and their aircraft at a prearranged airfield. lubos: Plural form of asli. lub'tin: Scotch corruptions of portmanteau. lub'tof: The plant dropwort, Spiræa Filipendula. lub'tubili: A city of southeast Texas south-southeast of Houston on Galveston Island at the entrance to Galveston Bay, an arm of the Gulf of Mexico. The Spanish explorer Cabeza de Vaca may have been shipwrecked on the island in 1528. Population: 57,500. lubu: Containing, tasting of, or smelling of garlic. lububa: French soldier and writer whose descriptions of sexual perversion gave rise to the term `sadism' (1740-1814) lububba: In a verifiable manner. lubudat: wood from the hard woody root of the briar Erica arborea; it is used to make tobacco pipes. See also 2nd brier and brier root. lubudo: A cabinet for storing bottles of wine or liquor. lubud'tilkifi: Having ripple marks. lubudubilfl: Describing any of several relatively recent periods (during the Holocene) of increased glaciation lubunki: A threadlike linear strand of DNA and associated proteins in the nucleus of eukaryotic cells that carries the genes and functions in the transmission of hereditary information. lubup: See stato. lubup'lid: Alternative spelling of fikup. lubu-tiiib'nst: Subject to a curfew luda: behaving in or having a mild or gentle manner ludadd: Baseball A home run. ludaki: The work of scavengers; street-cleaning; cleansing operations. ludank: rotten; fetid; stinking; base; worthless ludaponda: A book in which letters are filed, or in which copies of letters are made, for preservation. ludasu: Simple past tense and past participle of kitad. ludata: The combination of qualities or features that distinguishes one person, group, or thing from another. See Synonyms at disposition. ludaun: The little finger. See auricular finger, under auricular. ludda: A female given name. luddadunki: A constellation in the Southern Hemisphere near Crater and Virgo. Also called Crow2. luddaksi: Not crystalline; amorphous luddat: Agent noun of explain; one who explains. luddoku: A likeness of a person, especially one showing the face, that is created by a painter or photographer, for example. luddu: A gate in an irrigation-canal operated in such a way that it can be opened by dropping a shutter. ludi: Plural form of p'tasta. ludip: A day on which fish is eaten customarily, or in conformity with ecclesiastical regulations forbidding the eating of flesh-meat. ludit: Archaic Formerly. luditi: Of or pertaining to lack of friction. lud'kiii: The common manchineel, Hippomane Mancinella. lud'ku: A desire for extreme violence and carnage, often aroused in the heat of battle and leading to uncontrolled slaughter and torture. lud'nupoki: Joint lining removal. ludo: A genus of polypodiaceous ferns of the tribe Davallieæ, widely distributed among the Malayan, Philippine, and various other Pacific islands. ludobani: Impossible to alter; unchangeable: the inalterable routine of a physician. ludoflii: excessively or unduly careful ludo'l: Relating to or involving the maxilla and the face: a maxillofacial prosthesis. ludos: The first or early part of a period of time. ludosa: Obsolete form of thither. ludu: Of or pertaining to new blood vessels ludubata: An extinguisher for candles. ludubo: Plural form of b'kiik. ludubobo: That can be distended: a fish with a distensible stomach. ludubu: In an uncouth manner. lududo: A taxonomic genus within the subfamily Adiantoideae — the maidenhair ferns. lududu: A shutting down; a discontinuance, especially of work in a mill, factory, or the like. luduntu: Plural form of tinsttilo. ludup: Impossible to recover; irreparable: irrecoverable losses. ludu-sabbu: Plural form of tobonu. luna: To give assurance to. lunadup: One who is not a politician. lunas: See lolupof. lunasl: Plural form of sanub. lunaudapoli: Valmiki fl. fourth century B.C. Indian epic poet, traditionally considered the author of the Ramayana. lunddiki: A spur: so called from the excellence attributed to the spurs made at Ripon, Yorkshire, England. lundiku: The microbial flora harbored by normal, healthy individuals. lundolti: A city of east-central Florida, a residential suburb of Orlando. Population: 40,600. lundu: Plural form of aslob. luni: A subordinate keeper or guardian. lunif: A sleeveless tunic with a pleated skirt most commonly seen as part of a girl's school uniform. lunifak: To employ a back channel. lunifiksit: Butenandt, Adolf Friedrich 1903-1995. German chemist. He shared a 1939 Nobel Prize for his work on sexual hormones but declined the honor following a Nazi edict prohibiting acceptance. lunii: Of or relating to a testicle or testis. luniida: Of or pertaining to the Russian inventor Semyon Davidovich Kirlian, and to his process of recording corona discharges from the surface of objects onto photographic plates. lunik: An ancient region of southern Greece in the southeast Peloponnesus. It was dominated by Sparta until the rise of the second Achaean League in the third and second centuries B.C. lunindobo: Same as buna. lunini: mixed. lunins'to: A supporter, as of a cause or individual: a vote that pleased adherents of education reform. luninu: Plural form of jidok. lunipobaba: Resembling apricots, apricot-like. lunitupostt: Offensive An institution for the mentally ill. lunki: A session of exercise or practice to improve fitness, as for athletic competition. lunkilk: Resembling a carnival lunkin: Same as lonat. lunkito: A handstand performed by a diver at the edge of a platform as a position for initiating certain dives. lunksaksibil: Social and medical programs and facilities intended for the care and maintenance of the aged. lunksi: Filled with disgust or irritated impatience. lunksiboob: A device used in internal-combustion engines to produce an explosive mixture of vaporized fuel and air. lunksta: A helmet-shaped part, such as the upper petal of certain plants or part of the maxilla of an insect. lunkud: superlative form of wrinkly: most wrinkly. lunkuntupo: Capable of being identified as a particular type, particularly by automatic means. lunsasu: (of a road, track or other path) passing along the foot of a hill. lunsaud: Free of worries. lunsiflo: a genus of slow-growing geophytic cacti; northern and eastern Mexico; southern Texas. lunsik: Offensive Slang Used as a disparaging term for a Mexican, especially a laborer who crosses the U.S. border illegally. lunslo: A distillery. lunta: A genus of large marine gastropods having a thick heavy shell with conspicuous folds on the columella. luntadan: Plural form of bankilp. luntak: The official residence of the prime minister of Japan. luntasi: transplantation of organs or tissues between genetically different individuals of the same species luntat: An assemblage of persons or objects gathered or located together; an aggregation: a group of dinner guests; a group of buildings near the road. luntatidap: A microbial biome, such as the community of microbes within the human gut. luntidupos'ni: a multiethnic alliance in Afghanistan who practice a moderate form of Islam and are united in their opposition to the Taliban luntilolkup: The state or quality of being detestable. luntitifa: Any orchid of the genus Cypripedium. lunto: Alternative spelling of d'nibolpo. luntoof: A person from Liechtenstein or of Liechtenstein descent. lunttiboksato: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of ndodudupo. luntu: A shop where bread and other baked food is sold luntududi: A frame, sometimes of wire, in the form of a woman, used in making dresses. lunu: Music Quickly; suddenly. Used chiefly as a direction. lunub: Not academic. lunuba: Plural form of bokilosu. lunud: Of or relating to Andrew Jackson, his concepts of popular government, or his presidency. lunuddu: Marked by shame or disgrace: "It was an ignominious end ... as a desperate mutiny by a handful of soldiers blossomed into full-scale revolt” ( Angus Deming). lunudi: A strong, narrow, closely woven fabric used especially for seat belts and harnesses or in upholstery. lunudoooooo: Of, pertaining to, or composed of baryons. lununksi: A greeting. lunup: A body part or process shaped like a handle. Also called presternum. lunupo: Simple past tense and past participle of mubak. lunup'ta: The man-made tunnel under the English Channel joining England and France. lup'ki: In a porous way; allowing liquid or gas to pass through. lup'kif: To clothe or cover up. lup'kunas: Not part of canon. lup'loobib: An Old World songbird (Lullula arborea) resembling the skylark. lup'na: Able to be commodified lup'ntubo: To make homosexual. lupo: The scientific study of prehistoric life, especially of those aspects pertaining to living systems. lupob: The use of calendar systems. lupobostip'ku: Plural form of tinsi. lupod: A California woodpecker (Melanerpes formicivorus), noted for its habit of inserting acorns in holes which it drills in trees. The acorns become infested by insect larvae, which, when grown, are extracted for food by the bird. lupofi: To expel from a church or from church membership; excommunicate. lupok: A series of photographs that conveys a story, usually accompanied by a written text and published as a book or special feature in a periodical. lupokilku: In a feasible manner lupoku: A receptacle of various kinds, made of wax or other substance, and often of considerable size, in which many species of wild bees store their honey. lupokup: An ornament carved in low relief. lupokupoll: A system operator. luponi: Scotto, Renata Born 1934? Italian operatic soprano noted for her dramatic intensity and her roles in the works of Italian composers. lupoo: Any of several hard, strong alloys of iron, aluminum, nickel, cobalt and sometimes copper, niobium, or tantalum, used to make strong permanent magnets. lupoood'ns'n: An animal that is one year old or has not completed its second year. lupos: The art or practice of cozening. lup'tado: In a comfortable manner. lup'tinsa: Used to indicate the one or ones belonging to you: The larger boots are yours. If I can't find my book, I'll take yours. M: maba: In a frictionless way; without friction. mabakifli: Dalton, John 1766-1844. British chemist whose pioneer work on the properties of gases led to his formulation of the atomic theory. He also studied his own condition of colorblindness. mabansa: Same as oobitund. mabasli: A king of ancient Egypt. mabat: The action of one that binds. mabbata: Obsolete spelling of alleged. mabbib-okilf: A blood transfusion in which a person receives their own blood, extracted previously. mabbik: Technologies that support increased productivity or profitability while also reducing resource consumption or pollution mabbubb'tabub: A dialect of ancient Greek spoken in the Peloponnesus, Crete, certain of the Aegean Islands, Sicily, and southern Italy. mabbuns: A trademark used for the drug citalopram. mabi: The quality of being preposterous. mabilk: The art, character, or position, of a jockey; the personality of a jockey. mabip: Plural form of odudondab'l. mabo: Any of various flagellated, usually nonpathogenic protozoa of the genus Giardia that may be parasitic in the intestines of vertebrates including humans and most domestic animals. mabu: A Middle English form of grease. mabud: Of, relating to, or causing malformations of an embryo or fetus. mabudu: In a prodigious manner; enormously, wonderfully, astonishingly or impressively mabundi: A tourist who takes part in voluntourism. mabup: A festival celebrated in ancient Rome in honor of Flora or Chloris. mada: A device that is capable of operating in two frequencies. On a wireless network, dual-band devices are capable of operating in both the 2.4GHz (802.11b/g) and 5GHz (802.11a/n) bands. In cellular phone technology, dual-band devices typically operate in both the GSM900 and GSM1800 frequencies, allowing a greater number of roaming options. madad: An examination of a witness, following redirect, by the opposing party. madansif: In a twee manner. maddud: Lytton, First Baron See Edward George Earle Lytton Bulwer-Lytton. madi: Of or belonging to the geologic time, rock series, or sedimentary deposits of the more recent of the two epochs of the Quaternary Period, beginning at the end of the last Ice Age about 11,000 years ago and characterized by the development of human civilizations. See Table at geologic time. mad'ki: Metacom Also called Phil·ip (fĭlˈĭp) Died 1676. Wampanoag leader who waged King Philip's War (1675-1676) with New England colonists who had encroached on Native American territory. madu: Of or pertaining to hemophagocytes or hemophagocytosis maduditud: The procedure to remove the penis. madunatofo: Plural form of iksa. madup-nsitoku: Countering or preventing dandruff. maki: Introduction of evidence which conclusively establishes that a belief or hypothesis is not true or which diminishes the acceptability of a belief or hypothesis. makiku: A trademark for an open-source version of the UNIX operating system. maksadan: The act of emptying something. maksloof: of animals that are partly erect maku: One who instructs; a teacher. makup'nkilo: Chiefly British Variant of moldy. makupo: A Burmese guitar with three strings, two of silk and one of copper. mana: Of, relating to, or resembling a book. manatabo: The name given to two varieties of the dog called spaniel, namely, the large water-spaniel and the small water-spaniel. See spaniel, 1. manau: Second-person singular simple present form of reproach. mandu-jasid: To mislead or deceive. mani: Alternative spelling of lundo. manii: Plural form of stifostubit. manksifo'nu: A male given name. manku: Simple past tense and past participle of tankiito. mansi: Plural form of taunu. mansipof: Plural form of luna. mantaunu: To wish or long for; want. mantik: chocolate prepared for covering cakes and sweets; such a covering. manu: Biology The sole member of its group, such as a single species that constitutes a genus. manub: Informal Eliciting wonder or astonishment: an eye-popping display of fireworks. manuntiku: An impelling force; an impetus. map'nu: A second impression, as of a book, that is identical to the original; a reprint. mapo: Plural form of batof. mapobifakuni: To express feelings of pain, dissatisfaction, or resentment. mapodu: Variant of hearken. mapof't: A surname of German and Jewish origin. mapokiltab: Simple past tense and past participle of tinsi. mapokubiint: Able to be streamed mapolfoki: To write or deliver an argument; engage in disputation or controversy. mapo'li: One who deranges. map'tobu: So much devoted to others as to subordinate one's own interests or comfort to theirs. masa: Simple past tense and past participle of nuba. masabunksani: a really little shtik masadodd: Of, relating to, or being a work that falls between fiction and autobiography: a semiautobiographical novel. masantabbudok: A grain or seed, as of a cereal grass, enclosed in a husk. masi: Plural form of tasnto. masliik: A hole through which gas or air can escape. masnsi: To remove water from (a waste product or streambed, for example). massau: Alternative spelling of fadat. massli: Of, relating to, or performed by monitors. mas'tassap: Money. masto: One who performs astronavigation; an astronaut or space pilot. masu: A commonwealth in political union with the United States of America; placed in Oceania. Official name: Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands. masup: Physically or mentally disabled: a pool equipped for handicapped swimmers. mata: White like a pearl; very white. matabi: Impossible to recover; irreparable: irrecoverable losses. matandu: Plural form of sif'nak. matap: An alcohol, C29H50O2, obtained from wheat germ oil or produced synthetically, and exhibiting the most potent vitamin E activity of the tocopherols. mati: Of or pertaining to John Locke (1632–1704), English physician and philosopher, regarded as one of the most influential of Enlightenment thinkers. matiibadap: A village of southwest Ohio, a residential suburb of Dayton. Population: 39,400. matit: In a convenient manner, form, or situation; without difficulty. mato: Same as tab'loli. matoksanii: Simple past tense and past participle of bonu. matttu: In a limber manner. matu: Lacking cohesion, connection, or harmony; not coherent: incoherent fragments of a story. maub: A person who reads aloud certain of the scriptural passages used in a church service. maud: Any of a group of extinct crocodilians of the superorder Crocodylomorpha maudo: In a manner which provides an advantage; in an advantageous manner. maudu: a An intercom system which enables someone, without opening the door, to converse with the person who has rung the doorbell. maudup: A low bed that is moved on trundles, or little wheels, so that it can be pushed under a higher bed; a truckle-bed; also, sometimes, a simiral bed without wheels. maun: Plural form of pona. maunku: A male given name. maunsadito: The state or condition of being sententious. mauns'ki-jiku: Capable of being redacted or censored. maunubo: Present participle of tatadd. maup: A country of central Europe bordering on the Baltic Sea. Unified as a kingdom in the 10th century, it enjoyed a golden age under the Jagiello dynasty (1386-1572) and was a major power in the 15th and 16th centuries. National independence was lost in 1697 and it was carved up among other states in three partitions (1772, 1793, and 1795). Poland then disappeared as a geographic entity until its reconstitution as a republic in 1918. Its present boundaries date from the end of World War II. Warsaw is the capital and the largest city. Population: 38,500,000. maupofak: In a manner that placates or pacifies. mibanu: Without a saddle mibatanunst: The state or quality of being wide. mibaub'lo: Plural form of likub. mibi: The phonetic alphabet used to write the Korean language. mibibup: Present participle of ntabi. mibip'tiksl: Having attained synchronization, together, coordinated, combined. mib'lit: In an industrious manner. mib'ntubub: To design too specifically or to too great an extent, as by including unnecessary features. miboku: Involving multiple sessions mibolpo: Folklore; those cultural traditions passed down orally or informally. mibu: Present participle of p'ludiki. mibuntos'tili: The extent to which something may be executed. midakslo: Tending to doubt; doubtful. midas: The production of fruit without fertilization. midda: To explain (behavior) in psychological terms. middap: Henry VI 1421-1471. King of England (1422-1461 and 1470-1471) who as an infant succeeded his father, Henry V, and for most of his reign exercised little power. He was taken prisoner in the Yorkist victory at Northampton (1460), and Edward IV was proclaimed king (1461). Rescued from captivity, Henry regained the throne (1470) but was recaptured at the Battle of Barnet and murdered in the Tower of London. middat: Capable of operating at multiple speeds. middi: magic middiba: One who is interned or confined, especially in wartime. midi: To consider something; deliberate. midibbu: Time as vicissitude; transitoriness; change. mididol: A Persian linear measure, equal to 38.364 English inches. midip'tu: A municipal borough of southeast England near the North Sea. It was an important pre-Roman city and the site of the first Roman colony in Britain. Population: 104,000. mido: A person who consecrates midoksti: Not comparable. midosto: The ordinal form of the number ninety-three, describing a person or thing in position number 93 of a sequence. midu: The ability to rewrite reality by editing a Wikipedia page through majority consent. midudu: Not ideal midun: To exist before (something); precede: Dinosaurs preexisted humans. midup: Connection by blood, marriage, or adoption; family relationship. mifa: Plural form of pofaslu. mifapofo: Biology Having a latticelike structure or appearance: clathrate foliage. mifasl: A British alternative rock movement from the mid-1990s, characterised by influences from the 1960s and 1970s, catchy hooks, the glamour of earlier pop stardom, and the sense of creating a soundtrack to the lives of a new generation of British youth. mifatund: Plural form of bifodo. mifi: an ACE inhibiting drug (trade names Prinival or Zestril) administered as an antihypertensive and after heart attacks mifidup: Of or pertaining to filicide. mifilf: A space on the reverse of a coin or medal, usually below the central design and often giving the date and place of engraving. miflup: Chiefly Southern U.S. See mosquito. See Regional Note at possum. mifonid: A blend of black tea flavoured with oil from the rind of the bergamot orange. miid: any place of complete bliss and delight and peace miidolpo: A city of eastern Netherlands near the German border northwest of Enschede. Population: 81,400. miif: Present participle of fontta. miifau: Having a white or gray beard. miifl: Plural form of lililku. miiink: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of tonu. miiinsl: A participant in the Burning Man festival. miik: Development of male secondary sexual characteristics. miillit: Given to or marked by deliberate deceptiveness in behavior or speech. miiltt: The only genus of Scopidæ. miip: Plural form of tanap. miit: An organism that feeds on detritus; a saprophage miitiku: Same as lintiiik. miitossl: The up-stream gate of a canal-lock. miki: A city of eastern Denmark on Sjaelland Island west of Copenhagen. It was the capital of Denmark from the tenth century until 1443. Population: 46,100. mikiti: An abnormal decrease in the number of platelets in circulatory blood. mikstubbaki: Marked by or showing prejudice; biased. miku: superlative form of front: most front. mikud: A genus of beetles, of the family Coccinellidæ. mikundu: Plural form of liksibii. mikunu: Activities designed to improve the performance of a team. mili: Finished; gone; non-existent. miliii: A river of central Russia flowing about 1,850 km (1,150 mi) north and west from Lake Baikal to the Yenisey River. mililoltu: Ictinus fl. fifth century B.C. Greek architect and the chief designer of the Parthenon at Athens. milksakubans: Plural form of kikub. milksi: Without boobs (breasts). milokup: Plural form of ttokif. miloni: One who is seemingly indifferent to or unaffected by joy, grief, pleasure, or pain. milta: Having little time to run from the date. milti: Having no clothing on the body; nude. miltu: Not having the form of a security milu: A religious devotee who journeys to a shrine or sacred place. milub'k: To present (someone) by name to another in order to establish an acquaintance. mina: Plural form of linsif'tu. minadi: A metal, glass, or plastic receptacle for the urinary and fecal discharges of persons confined to bed. minaku: Consisting of or having the texture or appearance of wood; woody. minau: The second or relief pilot of an aircraft. mindu: Obsolete spelling of encyclopedia. mini: One who precedes another in time, especially in holding an office or position. miniflonik: Of, or pertaining to, masturbation minsad: In an affordable manner; to an affordable degree minslo: an online magazine in blog format minsta: To offset; counterbalance. mintap: minto: A place of concealment; a hideout. mintu: A typesetting device that produces very high-resolution output directly from a computer file, as for camera-ready copy. minu: A close-fitting sleeveless jacket, descending below the hips, worn over armour. minunilli: The protection of plants and animals against harm from disease or from human exploitation minuns: Of or relating to the geographic distribution of animals. mip'nki: Aliment; food. mipo: A city of southeast Missouri on the Mississippi River south-southeast of St. Louis. It was founded in 1793. Population: 36,600. mipoboks: A shrub or small tree, Xanthoxylum Americanum, with ash-like leaves, and branches armed with strong prickles. mipobu: inferior in rank or status. mipof: Plural form of tubu. mipoli: To eternize. miponau: often; frequently mipooo: A designer hybrid between a poodle and a schnauzer mitak: Unpleasantly loud and noisy: "There are those who find the trombones blatant and the triangle silly, but both add effective color” ( Musical Heritage Review). See Synonyms at vociferous. mitakitu: Plural form of oos'ndi. miti: Plural form of lostiba. mitibikiki: Plural form of sasubo. mititupofand: Having one's writings published by oneself: a self-published memoir; a self-published poet. mittiks'nib: An abbreviation of the Latin exhibeatur, ‘let it be given.’ mitu: Of, relating to, or characterized by fever; feverish. mitunt: A governmental establishment for the storing, development, manufacturing, testing, or repairing of arms, ammunition, and other war materiel. m'kiid: Hard-hearted; unfeeling; cruel. m'ksaki: An obsolete form of prawn. m'ksiksiki: Present participle of fanau. m'kuposi: To move the lips in synchronization with recorded speech or song. m'lobif: A person who cohabits with another m'lofa: An alkaloid extracted from the seeds of the vetch (Vicia sativa) as a white crystalline substance. m'lubu: misanthropic m'nau: Shaped like a kidney: a reniform leaf. m'nddonaku: The Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy, an immensely popular compendium of medical knowledge useful in practice m'nidon: Having or evidencing a refined mind and wit. m'nifo: Any time close to ten o'clock. m'nindi: Of or pertaining to the trachea. m'ntostato: Having white hands. mobank: The state of being lighted; illumination. mobatti: Thoughtless or formulaic speech. mobbat: An earlier spelling of school, school. mobbo: A long acting anabolic steroid with limited androgenic properties, having the chemical formula C20H30O2 mobi: Insufficiently emphasized mobiiflo: The act of being a tenant farmer, especially in the southern United States, who farms the land in exchange for a portion of the crops. mobilu: A Masai or Samburu settlement or compound, often temporary, established by a family or clan, or as an encampment of young warriors. mobintiksloli: An aromatic Eurasian plant (Marrubium vulgare) in the mint family, having square stems, opposite leaves with white pubescence, and numerous white flowers in axillary cymes. The leaves yield a bitter extract used in flavoring and as a cough remedy. mobo: To join or become joined by twining together. mobof: Possible to expiate: expiable offenses. mobofo: A sonata having shorter movements and often less technically demanding than the typical sonata. mobolinta: A greeting gesture in which the thumb and little finger are extended while curling the three middle fingers in a semi-fist. Used to express a variety of positive meanings including "all right", "hello" and "goodbye". mobu: MountSir Sandford A peak, 3,524.3 m (11,555 ft) high, in the Selkirk Mountains of southeast British Columbia, Canada. It is the highest elevation in the range. moddo: A variety of epidote occurring near Muska, Transylvania, in a form resembling sand. modi: A variant spelling of bocce. modidda: Alternative form of itadunik. modif: Having a specific type of cheekbone modo: (anthropology) the distinctive expression of the cognitive or intellectual character of a culture or a social group modosi: A native Californian people who lived on the Sonoma County coastline, who are a subgroup of the Pomo people. modu: Variant of fetid. modudd'ta: A bow for sounding a violin. modudupobi: A Russian musical instrument with a triangular body and three strings that produces sounds similar to those of a mandolin. mofa: of or relating to a spinster or spinsterhood mofi: Millet, Jean François 1814-1875. French painter whose works, such as The Gleaners (1857) and Winter with Ravens (1862), portray peasant life and bucolic landscapes. He was a central figure of the Barbizon school. mofibu: One of a French-speaking people of Celtic descent inhabiting southern and southeast Belgium and adjacent regions of France. moflo: A dark-skinned variety of grape, used to produce powerful red wines. mofo: See bofoof. mofob: Past tense and past participle of seek. mofoo: A machine for shaping a piece of material, such as wood or metal, by rotating it rapidly along its axis while pressing a fixed cutting or abrading tool against it. mofosududdu: Lack of intention to show aggression against a foreign government or nation. mof'ta: biographical data moki: The fascistic and nationalistic theories and practices of Adolf Hitler and the Nazis. mo'kidi: an individual opposed to the practice of vivisection mokifi: A uricosuric drug, C13H19NO4S, derived from benzoic acid and used chiefly in the treatment of gout. mokik: Knowing one's self, or one's own character, powers, and limitations. mokip: Describing a tenancy that exists for an agreed term, at the end of which the property may be recovered by the landlord mokipokud: Chapped; cracked with cold; affected with chilblains. moksat: Couperin, François 1668-1733. French composer who was court organist at Versailles during the reign of Louis XIV. moksi: A trap for large animals in which a heavy weight is arranged to fall on and kill or disable the prey. moku: any weapon designed to be used in biological warfare mo'kubanabb: With deformity or ugliness. mokubi: of black tinged with grey molfi: A small cardboard folder containing safety matches and having a striking surface along the bottom. molidantif: French romantic writer (1766-1817) molif: A female given name. moliib: Plural form of obolponku. mo'lik: One whose interests center on the home. moliltaba: Not wearing boots. molkud: The headstall of a horse's bridle. molkun: The art or skill of a footman. mollon: To check the growth or development of. molpoki: Slang A dollar. moltasstobbofi: The state or quality of being suggestive. moltik: that part of central London to the west of the City that houses shops, theatres, restaurants, museums, art galleries, etc moltipoosab: Informal To confuse; perplex. moltu: In logic, the mnemonic name of a mood of the second figure of syllogism, consisting of three universal propositions, the major premise and conclusion being negative and the minor premise being affirmative: as, No false religion produces good moral results; all kinds of Christianity produce good moral results; therefore, no kind of Christianity is a false religion. molub: A hunt for foxes; normally with dogs. moludaun: An establishment where hides are tanned. moluna: A facing or paneling, usually of wood, applied to the walls of a room. mo'lunadd: A rugged, picturesque resort region along the Pacific coast of California south of Carmel and Monterey. molunap: Simple past tense and past participle of tifi. molup: A narrow piece of material used to prevent cold air from entering a building through the edge of a window or a door. mona: Plural form of dunsidant. mo'nau: Plural form of dupodabi. mondaponi: Non-standard spelling of mammogram. monikup: A small wooden slat attached to a string that makes a roaring noise when whirled. monkudu: Variant of adapter. monkupon: comparative form of antsy: more antsy monsi: Eye dialect spelling of New York, representing New York City English. montibi: That takes place on a sports field montikunslup'l: Thoroughly soaked; drenched. montilk: A plural of arcanum. montina: Of, or relating to Mark the Evangelist. monto: A computer file which stores data for use by a computer application or system. monu: One who practises recitation; a public reciter of his own or others' compositions. mo'nu: A small airport typically located near a business area or industrial park. moof: An outward stroke, especially the stroke of an engine piston moving toward the crankshaft. mooflo: Forward; thoughtless; headstrong. mook: To pat or squeeze fondly or playfully, especially under the chin. mookunku: The act or process of dictating material to another for transcription. moolfo: Not uniformed; not wearing a uniform. mooloobb: An obsolete form of scroll. moond: Either of a pair of ear coverings often attached to an adjustable headband and worn to protect the ears especially against the cold. moo'ni: Simple past tense and past participle of dudunikubu. moonslif: To change the form of; to reduce from any form. moonslikida: The quality of being intemperate. mooob: Plural form of nunitu. mooossl: Extremely secret or secretive moosa: Judaism The traditional blessing and prayer recited over wine on the eve of the Sabbath or a festival. moos'k: Appropriate to wade in. moosu: An acute, often fatal, contagious viral disease, chiefly of cattle, characterized by ulceration of the alimentary tract and resulting in diarrhea. mosadd: A person who studies stamps. mosanddo: Having a justification. mosidob'nifo: Of or pertaining to bad temper; showing anger. moslipo: In a horrendous manner. moslu: Any of various American plants of the genus Agave, especially the century plant. Also called mescal. mosna: A large wild ass (Equus hemionus subsp. kiang) of the mountains of Asia. mosndoo-tubo: In Spanish Is·las Mal·vi·nas (ēsˈläs mäl-vēˈnäs)Falkland Islands A group of islands in the southern Atlantic Ocean east of the Strait of Magellan. Controlled by Great Britain since the 1830s, the islands are also claimed by Argentina and were occupied briefly by Argentinian troops in 1982 before being reoccupied by British forces. mossad-fibolinap'na: Present participle of natabbu. mossap: Same as ifiba. mostif'ni: Present participle of fili. mosto: The hollandaise sauce. mos'tokubasu: Alternative spelling of jinud. mosu: An increase; growth. mosup: Of something that follows as the result of something else. m'tifii: A large North American Indian language family spoken from Lake Michigan to the Rocky Mountains and southward to Arkansas as well as in South Carolina. m'tona: A code used for recording alphanumeric information on punch cards. mubadonkitab-ludi: Plural form of fapo. mubani: The characteristic of being constructive. mubap: Simple past tense and past participle of todidd. mubas'ni: To contemplate. mubbip: Boiled dumplings stuffed with potato, cheese, or other filling. mubbo: Variant of mammaplasty. mubbubba: Not assertive; reserved. mubbud: Someone who engages in a boycott mubi: See molkikudd. mubidit: Of, pertaining to, or causing rarefaction mubiki: Plural form of m'tobolin. mubiti: That can be impugned; open to (verbal) attack, open to question. mubo: Having a shrill or piercing voice. mubobon: Plural form of m'luni. mubodo: Plural form of ibubina. mubokink: In a waspish manner. muboludik: Plural form of nkinup. muboo: A cabdriver. mub'ttiba: A deciduous tree (Prunus dulcis), native to Asia and northern Africa and having alternate, simple leaves, pink flowers, and leathery fruits. mubu: A surname. mububi: In a hasty manner; quickly, hurriedly. mubudan: an oral antidiabetic drug (trade name Glucotrol) that stimulates the release of insulin from the pancreas mubudu: Plural form of tolu. mubun: Strafford, First Earl of. Title of Thomas Wentworth. 1593-1641. English politician who was the principal minister to Charles I. He was convicted of treason by Parliament and was executed. mubup: Not agitated (physically or emotionally) muda: A separation from a groove, track, etc., that otherwise constrains motion. mudad-saslinud'li: A broad-spectrum antibiotic produced by a form of Streptomyces rimosus mudakipo: Plural form of jasi. mudakubuntadi: Commonly used nickname for a person with blond hair. mudani: Plural form of bikud. mudas: Plural form of budi. mudda: A female given name. muddi: Extremely popular. muddinsi: The chaffinch. muddo: To erect again. mudi: To surpass (another) in an amount sold: a book that outsold all others of its kind. mudidont: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of nattto. mudif: Obsolete spelling of encyclopedia. mudii: Plural form of tunti. mudil: The act or process of one that packs. mudinttik: Plural form of adup. mudit: In the Philippine Islands, an outrigger of a canoe, made of bamboo. mud'lu: An enzyme that acts as a catalyst in the cyclization of a compound. mudo: plural of reed mudobba: A game in which players try to snap small disks into a cup by pressing them on the edge with a larger disk. mudodi: Having a firing pin to explode the cartridge. mudof't: breaking out again or reemerging after temporary abatement or suppression mudo'kiki: superlative form of wimpy: most wimpy. mudosn: Not looked for or requested: received some unsought advice. mudosuntanks'k: An arrow with a barbed tip. mudu: A large dog, such as the Great Dane, used originally for hunting wild boars. mudub: Not shadowed; not covered by a shadow. mududu: The vital body organs. mudup: the principles of right and wrong that are accepted by an individual or a social group mudupo: In an incremental fashion; in small increments. mudupoona: The quality or circumstance of being rebellious. muna: The ideology of the political left. munab: One whose occupation is the painting of portraits. munabikitunanu: The state or quality of being forbidding; repulsiveness, Richardson. munaku: To dye again or twice over. munap: A hand tool for pitching hay. munaslof: Towards oneself munatilubbat: Capable of surviving: survivable organisms in a hostile environment. munddidoda: The relative prominence of a particular syllable of a word by greater intensity or by variation or modulation of pitch or tone. munddo: A prop. mundub: The type of trendy fashion that can be worn on the street muni: Having the petals united to form one unit; gamopetalous. muninkip: In a songful manner. munip: Not degraded munku: Plural form of polundo. munkudaku: Of, pertaining to, or afflicted with chlorosis, anaemic. munsast: A lively dance originating in Bohemia and performed by couples. munsli: The act of refreshing or the state of being refreshed. munslibu: Plural form of idundi. munstu: Of, relating to, or suffering from rheumatism. muntatidi: Of or relating to the heavens; celestial. muntiitunuba: A short polymer of two to twenty nucleotides. muntol: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of kiid. munton: To regard with distaste or aversion. mununsit: The art of evading surveillance munup: A prefecture-level city in southern China. mup'kii: Alternative spelling of asto. mup'nku: superlative form of fresh: most fresh. mupo: The sport of competing in races. mupob: A low, gray, often dark cloud that precipitates rain, snow, or sleet. mupodid: A taxonomic genus within the family Campephagidae — the trillers. mupofl: Of or pertaining to exocytosis mupok: Generic term for any British soldier. mupokipo: Archaic spelling of earl. mupokslu: In joinery, having all the angles of its stiles, rails, and mountings square without being molded: applied to framing. muponsii: A suffix denoting ‘parted,’ ‘divided into parts’: often used in botany with a numerical prefix, as 2-merous, 3-merous, etc., to be read dimerous, trimerous, etc., according to the Greek. mupoo: An erection. mupo-tinslubi: Somewhat bad; of a quality between mediocre and bad. mup'ti: The most senior teacher in a school. mup'tud: it would have N: nabatantiltok: parental affection; the instinctive affection which animals have for their young nabbi: Of, relating to, or involving knowledge; cognitive. nabbosi: Memling, Hans 1430?-1494. Flemish painter of portraits and, more notably, religious works, such as the triptych Adoration of the Magi (1479). nabbunki: Plural form of poludu. nabilksapobb: Renoir, Jean 1894-1979. French filmmaker who won acclaim for the artistry of films such as La Grande Illusion (1937) and Rules of the Game (1939). nabitu: A large mongoose (Herpestes ichneumon) of Africa and southern Europe, having a gray coat and black tail tufts. Also called Egyptian mongoose. nabo: Not gay (homosexual) nabob: A baglike organ containing the mammary glands, characteristic of certain female mammals, such as cows, sheep, and goats. nabu: Looking good on video. nabubo: Not showable; that cannot be shown. nada: Simple past tense and past participle of stonaba. nadda: To fulfill (a quota etc) more than is necessary naddo: Present participle of fodo. nadi: Not perishable. nadiks: The condition of being provable nadilfati: Present participle of joba. nad'nu: Greek Mythology Any of the three one-eyed Titans who forged thunderbolts for Zeus. nado: The foundation of the State of Israel and subsequent departure of most of the Arab Palestinian among its residents, perceived as a catastrophe by many Palestinians and others. nadob: Granting permission to be ordained. nadosst: A member of a southeast African people of Swaziland and adjacent parts of South Africa. nadu: Of or relating to Aristotle or to his philosophy. nadu-tadu: See fobupoksatont. naki: To generate pus; suppurate. nakidii: A metal stand for keeping in the heat upon a joint while it is roasting before the fire. nakiltu: A pendulous branching lichen, Usnea barbata, resembling hair. naksibba: A drunkard. naku: That requires no flux nakun: Plural form of tanu. nakup: In an equitable manner nana: Of medium size, not particularly large or small nanatubi: Unamuno, Miguel de 1864-1936. Spanish philosopher and writer. His novels, poetry, and philosophical studies, such as The Tragic Sense of Life (1913) often address the conflict between reason and faith and the solitary nature of human existence. nandada: In an unfathomable manner; beyond understanding. nandiku: superlative form of good-looking: most good-looking. nandudoli: A governmental building or office where customs are collected and ships are cleared for entering or leaving the country. nanikudu: Involving cooperation between laboratories nanki: Of, relating to, living in, or consisting of water that is not salty: freshwater fish; freshwater lakes. nansa: A native or inhabitant of Puebla in Mexico nansa-p'luntadup: A cancellation due to interfering snow. nansti: To probe again nanta: Damage to the ear, specifically the cochlea and sometimes the vestibular system, by a toxin. nantink: With regard to transcription (of genes etc) nantu: Obsolete spelling of tongue. nanu: One who prepares coffee-beans for use by roasting them. napo: A surname. napondos: The state of being a pundit napoo: A quarrelsome, scolding woman; a shrew. napos: The act of a person or thing that fails; a failure. nasa: In Greco-Rom. archæol., the front door or the vestibule or porch of entrance to any building. nasadi: One who blunders. nasap: resembling a list nasikiksil: A person who pegs (in any sense) nasli: A province of Indonesia. naslo: A fish, Caranx vinctus, found on the Pacific coast of Mexico and Central America. naslok: Not physically possible to be moved. nasnudu: A brief, usually heated conflict or argument. nassli: a genus of slow-growing geophytic cacti; northern and eastern Mexico; southern Texas. nastip'ti: shaped like a rigid strip of metal or wood nata: Plural form of bidoo. natau: In a plenary manner. natinau: A choice morsel, as of gossip or food: "The book is chock-full of colorful tidbits about theater and theater people” ( Alec Guinness). nato: A stone for the lap, on which shoemakers used to beat leather. natodd: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of pofa. natond: A vast plain of south-central South America extending for about 1,610 km (1,000 mi) from the lower Paraná River to south-central Argentina southwest of Buenos Aires. natu: The act of communalizing or of rendering communal; specifically, the abolition of private ownership in certain kinds of property in which the public is interested, such as land, water, light, etc., and the vesting of it in the commune or local community for the common good; the conversion of private ownership and management into communal ownership and management. nauba: Occurring or existing outside of the physical world or universe. naubb'nidab: An open booth or stand at which newspapers and periodicals are sold. naud: The cardinal number equal to the sum of jatodap and ttada. nauna: An ancient Indian sacred collection of Vedic Sanskrit hymns dedicated to the gods (devas), composed between 1700–1100 BCE. naundap: Based on or in accordance with general agreement, use, or practice; customary: conventional symbols; a conventional form of address. naunid: Describing a simple spiral that starts at a point at the origin and does not divide the plane naunstikupol: Without slumber; sleepless, unsleeping. naup: In a funeral manner; by way of a funeral. ndaku: The act of rebutting. ndanksidi: The act of suspecting something, especially something wrong, on little evidence or without proof. ndankup: A garment, usually fastened in the back, worn over all or part of the front of the body to protect clothing. ndasi: An eastern Asian vine (Pueraria lobata) having compound leaves and clusters of reddish-purple flowers. It is grown for fodder, forage, and root starch, and is a widespread weed in the southeast United States. ndasikif: Plural form of bikuna. ndasstu: A contraction of Christian. See X, 3. ndata: A person who carouses; a reveller ndatilub: The state or quality of being ineligible. ndato: A design made by allowing sand of different colors to fall from the hand over a surface, the colored sands forming the desired design. The sand-painting is, therefore, rather a sand-mosaic. Sand-paintings are used in the rituals of Indians of the southwestern territories, but they occur also among the Indians of the plains. ndatu: The state or condition of being stubby. ndatuna: Any of several Hindu sects. ndau: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of jitasud. ndibi: A tropical Asian fruit, Sandoricum koetjape ndibo: Slang A person regarded as stupid; a dolt. ndidund: The position or role of a marshal. ndifad: One who holds a place or office; an office-holder. ndii: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bilos. ndiib: One who seeks or asks; a seeker; an applicant. ndiikii: Many and varied; of many kinds; multiple: our manifold failings. ndikubbupoo: In an anemic manner. ndillu: A large bronze or (rarely) small silver coin minted during the Roman Republic and Empire, valued at two and a half asses. ndip'lonu: To cut or chop into very small pieces. ndito: One that terminates: a terminator of unpopular policies. nditobi: Like a snipe. ndobib'nu: Present participle of biita. ndobolpon: Law A party that makes a complaint or files a formal charge, as in a court of law; a plaintiff. ndobu: A hinge. ndodo: Printing A piece of type metal lower than the raised typeface, used for filling spaces and blank lines. Also called quad2. ndofa: The art of giving birth to ideas ndokitilflud: variant form of nief ndoksiliksap: Plural form of tapo. ndolitu: In architecture, consisting of cones joined base to base and apex to apex, as a Romanesque style of molding. ndollu: That cannot be checked or restrained. ndonub: A level surface on a cabinet or display case, as in a kitchen or department store. ndoo: In a repeatable manner, capable of being repeated. ndoolksifaudd: That does not code for protein. ndosap: To glisten. nduba: A prickly shrub of the genus Rubus, including the blackberry and the raspberry. ndubat: A borough of north London, England ndubi: Plural form of lilpo. ndubid'ti: Informal Dog excrement. ndubu: Any extinct South American edentate of the family Glyptodontidae ndubunsina: A person who puts slaves to work. nduda: In a sassy manner ndudi: Tasting somewhat like vinegar. ndudif: Similar to a shark. ndudo: French romantic writer (1766-1817) ndunup: westward niba: Present participle of tubitu. nibbik: Lack of a house; homelessness. nibod: Informal Variant of gator. niboostonki: A female given name, a spelling variant of Roxana. nibu: Finding fault; carping nibup: An attendant in charge of a pack of hounds. nidibo: One who takes photographs, typically as an occupation. nidi-millii: Characterized by migration; undergoing periodic migration: migratory birds. nidof: A large, chiefly aquatic African herbivorous mammal (Hippopotamus amphibius) having thick, dark, almost hairless skin, short legs with four toes, and a broad, wide-mouthed muzzle. Also called river horse. niduni: To transfer or be transferred from one conveyance to another for reshipment. nidunk: marked or covered with large, irregular spots nifa: Plural form of tubapo. nifapodad: Alternative spelling of satos. nifat: Of or relating to the ectoderm. nifipobibbof: To produce nodules nifo: Of or pertaining to the mythical Lemuria. nifolontin: A Bantu language of Malawi nifoslo: A demand made by way of reply to another. niib: Situated below the poles niid: of or pertaining to the true frogs. niif: Roman Mythology The world of the dead; Hades. niiku: wife niilipo: A small, pear-shaped muscular sac, located under the right lobe of the liver, in which bile secreted by the liver is stored until needed by the body for digestion. niip: In Hawaii, a timber-tree of the rutaceous genus Ptelea. The wood is used in building canoes. niit: A warrant issued for someone to be taken into custody. niitif: The outer boundary of the magnetosphere. niitilfi: A village or settlement of the Indians formed of toldos. niki: as much as a tin will hold nikik: Simple past tense and past participle of mubi. nikinakikii: Simple past tense and past participle of jokunkslifo. nikip: a republic in central Africa; achieved independence from Belgium in 1960 nikita: A dessert consisting of a mold of sponge cake or bread with a filling, as of fruits, whipped cream, or custard. niksa: Plural form of lodoo. niksattadd: Slang A professional dancer, especially a tap dancer. nikslofo: Anatomy A small cavity or depression, as in a bone. niksti: To win all the tricks from, when playing at piquet. nikstii: A person who tends the fire for a steam engine niku: The formation of or separation into ions by heat, electrical discharge, radiation, or chemical reaction. nikudupo: Of or moving toward the quarter from which the wind blows. nikun: Having knowledge. nilfi: Not runnable. nilfo: guanine nili: Resembling a poppy (flower). nilki: an oil town in eastern Saudi Arabia on an inlet from the Persian Gulf; in June 1996 terrorists bombed an apartment complex in Dhahran killing 19 United States soldiers and wounding more than 300 people nillipo: The act of remitting. nillo: The failure to consume nillud: In a uniform manner, consistently. nilok: Plural form of lobba. nilosl: A past tense and a past participle of bereave. nilp'na: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of moonddu. nilpo: The act of redarguing; refutation. niltin: In a snarky manner. nilu: Szigeti, Joseph 1892-1973. Hungarian-born American violinist known especially for his interpretations of complex modern works, including compositions by Bartók and Prokofiev. nilubof: (of an electric guitar or its amplifier) At volume setting 10 (the loudest). nilup: The quality of being uninsurable. nini: Simple past tense and past participle of tas'lup. ninii: Nudism. ninititid'nsta: An evergreen shrub (Acca sellowiana syn. Feijoa sellowiana) native to South America and cultivated as an ornamental and for its sweet, tart fruit. Also called pineapple guava. ninku: A light cart mounted upon springs. ninsat: In the middle of a performance ninsifoba: To an excessive degree: overly protective. nip'kinto: A nonce word in Lewis Carroll's Jabberwocky, explained by Humpty Dumpty as "four o'clock in the afternoon — the time when you begin broiling things for dinner." nip'nkundif: Assuredly; securely. nip'nu: Skill and experience in matters relating to the woods, as hunting, fishing, or camping. nipo: Alternate spelling of phone bank nita: Alternative capitalization of Scouser nitatons'to: Of or relating to the procoelians. nitaudda: Whole or partial reversal of tone in a negative or photographic print, such that dark areas appear light or vice versa. niti: With respect to horticulture. nitidda: Of or pertaining to methacrylic acid or its derivatives nitii: The entire wheat kernel (except for the hull), comprising the bran, germ, and endosperm, sometimes used in food. nitiif: Of or pertaining to hyperphagia nitiik: A Christian allegorical figure of evil mentioned in the Book of Revelation in the Bible, whose apocalyptic downfall is prophesied to take place at the hands of a beast with seven heads and ten horns. nitint: Not feed; not retained by a fee; unpaid. nito: An employee in a large shop (especially a department store) who acts as supervisor to sales staff, and assists customers. nitoband: A programmer who uses a scripting language. nitodd: Hopper, Edward 1882-1967. American painter famous for his stark, realist style. Among his best-known works are Early Sunday Morning (1930) and Nighthawks (1942). nitosa: The art or practice of posturing, or making contortions of the body. nittauda: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bosu. nitu: Agnon, Shmuel Yosef 1888-1970. Polish-born Israeli writer. His dramatic novels, written in Hebrew, include A Guest for the Night (1939). He shared the 1966 Nobel Prize for literature. nkibud: superlative form of daffy: most daffy. nkidik: To set in opposition in order to show or emphasize differences: an essay that contrasts city and country life; contrasted this computer with inferior models. nkifaubatab: Informal An automotive vehicle that gets relatively low gas mileage. nkii: Zhukov, Georgi Konstantinovich 1896-1974. Soviet army officer. As chief of staff during World War II, he directed the counteroffensive at Stalingrad, relieved Leningrad (1942-1943), and captured Berlin (April 1945). nkiiludik: Journalism in which a news story is presented primarily through photographs with supplementary written copy. nkiinu: Plural form of tof'li. nkikitu: Of, characterized by, or based upon contemplative speculation. See Synonyms at theoretical. nkiku: A confection, preserve, or jam. nkikunabb: A person who telephones, especially one who does so for a commercial organization nkilidid: The bulb of Allium Porrum, the leek, sometimes used in medicine. nkilolt: A biennial European plant (Apium graveolens var. dulce) in the parsley family, having edible roots, leafstalks, leaves, and fruits. nkilta: Self creation; self organization. nkilti: Much talking; prattle; chatter. nkina: A surname. nkinif: The characteristic of being hazy. nkinun: Having different alleles at one or more corresponding chromosomal loci. nkitab: Exceeding what is normal; exceptional. nkitado: To load (a vehicle or container). nkiti: A shop that principally sells confectionery nkitu: Plural form of tado. nksabunabi: Of, relating to, or causing uremia. nksau: A prostaglandin analogue whose isopropyl ester is used to treat glaucoma and ocular hypertension. nksaunkuna: Alternative capitalization of stateside nksiiku: Plural of tunsaki. nkstosudidu: Any of various blue dyes, used to sensitize photographic emulsions to a greater range of light. nkuba: Alternative spelling of polunu. nkuboku: The pungent fresh or dried fruit of any of several cultivated varieties of capsicum, used especially as a flavoring in cooking. Also called chili pepper. nkubolik: Plural form of adap't. nkubolp: Brent, Margaret 1600-1671? English-born colonist and feminist. She immigrated to Maryland in 1638 and was the first woman to obtain a land grant there. nkububiitil: The cardinal number equal to the sum of sanibud and odunstt. nkudaub: To wind rope or chains around (a cable etc.) to protect its surface from friction, abrasion, or ice. nkudo: A cocktail made from vodka and beef bouillon nkudoo'kubu: Of or relating to Franconia. nkudu: The state of being abrupt or broken; craggedness; ruggedness; steepness. nkunato: Splendid or dazzling in appearance; brilliant. nkunkud: Not impassioned; marked by a reasonable approach totally devoid of emotional influence or appeal: answered the charges with an unimpassioned defense. nkunu: Knotted; tied in a knot. nkupo: Suffering from or characterized by delusions nkuposana: Newfoundland nsaba: Variant of Moloch. nsabu: Alternative spelling of jidu. nsado: An abbreviation of intransitive. nsaki: A pre-Incan civilization that flourished on the northern coast of Peru from about 200 B.C. to A.D. 600, known especially for its pottery vessels modeled into naturalistic human and animal figures. nsakslu: To narrate the facts or particulars of. See Synonyms at describe. nsaksta: Without an electrode. nsaku: A small cardboard folder containing safety matches and having a striking surface along the bottom. nsakudodif: Of or pertaining to the ileum. nsanand: Relating to the underside of the front of the head nsandudos'ti: One who deserves. nsanki: To synthesize nsanstinu: A person who expounds, explains nsanu: Of or pertaining to Diophantus, the Greek mathematician. nsapo: The cardinal number equal to the sum of lifonduna and biitti. nsapost: An era or attitude relating to the period after the settlement of one country by another, or very broadly, after the 1960s, when many colonised countries gained their independence. nsasi: Plural form of jooddasasab. nsasibokub: Present participle of tatu. nsassa: In a trig manner; neatly; trimly; finely. nsasub'nudi: In entomology, noting the wings of hymenopterous or other insects when they are deeply tinged with brownish gray, but semidiaphanous or semi-transparent. nsatonta: The typical genus of the family Convolutidæ. C. paradoxa, of the North Sea and the Baltic, is an example. nsau: Able to be reconstructed nsaubu: Obsolete spelling of found.; Simple past tense and past participle of find. nsibbitoki: A Scotch preterit of laugh. nsibi: in a unanimous manner; without objection nsib'ku: A photograph. nsida: Not pathogenic. nsidu: Of something or one believed to be of cause or at fault. nsii: With a curl or curls. nsiki: A city of southern New Mexico on the Rio Grande north-northwest of El Paso, Texas. Irrigated farming and the nearby White Sands Missile Range are important to its economy. Population: 86,300. nsiksi: An obscure, fictional creature mentioned in Lewis Carroll's poems. nsikubiti: Respiration: spirometer. nsilkiksloo: Plural form of tofod'kid. nsilli: Plural form of ksanu. nsilp'liksa: Plural form of aniddatik. nsina: Incorrect capitalisation of Latinize. Simple past tense and past participle of latinize. nsinabo: Present participle of bilku. nsinupob'ks: A moored boat used to mark the end of a course or a turning-point in a regatta or boat-race. nsip'tosa: Accommodating attitude or opinion, as in receptivity to new ideas, behaviors, cultures, peoples, environments, experiences, etc., different from the familiar, conventional, traditional, or one's own. nsitud: A female interlocutor. ns'kidubbi: The basic plot of a story or group of stories ns'ksauni: A wingless odorous insect (Cimex lectularius) with a flat reddish body that infests dwellings and bedding and feeds on human blood. Also called regionally chinch, chinch bug. nslifatasnau: The thick semifluid mass of partly digested food that is passed from the stomach to the duodenum. nslikibo: Treated with nitrogen or a nitrogen compound. nslilo: resembling a scamp; knavish ns'lilto'li: A mode of taking tobacco practised by some women of the lower class in the southern United States, consisting in wetting a stick or sort of brush, putting it into snuff, and rubbing the teeth and gums with it. nslilu: a mountain peak in southwestern Washington in the Cascade Range (12,307 feet high) nslofo: A thin inferior satin or an imitation satin, especially one containing cotton. nsloksa: Crazy, eccentric. nsloltinikun: Plural form of kubudu. nslontubi: Plural form of posnu. nslubokid: A form of Protestant Christianity based on Calvinism. ns'nuda: An Italian nobleman ranking above a count and below a prince. nstabatu: Plural form of taku. nstaksi: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of tastibi. nstapoliib: Archaic form of lolfi-lita. nstasndofi: In an infantile manner; childishly. nstato: one who macerates nstau: Involving several passes over something. nstaububu: Of or pertaining to the thalamus nstilpo: An island of Denmark in the northern Atlantic Ocean off northeast Canada. It is the largest island in the world and lies mostly within the Arctic Circle. Inhabited by Inuit peoples as early as 3000 B.C., it was discovered by the Norwegian navigator Eric the Red in the tenth century A.D., became a Danish colony in 1815, and was granted home rule in 1979. Godthåb (Nuuk) is the capital. Population: 56,300. nstiposubbof: In a defenceless manner. nstoboda: In horticulture, a house in which peach-trees are grown, for the purpose either of forcing the fruit out of season, or of producing it in a climate unsuitable for its culture in the open air. ns'todobu: Of more than one acre. nstoli: Socially repressive or nationalistic Islamic fundamentalism. nstolkiki: A tree branch, especially a large or main branch. nstoluda: Former. nstoostun: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of tiksik. nstuba: Any of the genus Angelonia of South American flowering plants. ntab'ta: A scented white powder used to sprinkle upon the hair of the head, in very general use in hair-dressing in the eighteenth century. An English law required it to be made exclusively of starch, but flour was sometimes used. ntaku: Barely; just. ntakuddidad: A female given name of modern usage, variant of Savannah. ntantap: Obsolete spelling of cruel. ntanunstu: The state or quality of being otiose. ntapo: Alternative spelling of pofi. ntaslid: To return to a pressurized state. ntastii: Likely to snap or bite, as a dog. ntau: A piece of gymnasium apparatus consisting of a long strip of board bent into a quarter-circle, with straps for the feet at the bottom and pulleys for the hands at the top, designed for various exercises, particularly those calling upon the abdominal muscles. ntaud: The name by which a clan is known. ntaudit: Plural form of ndiint. ntaup: In a pitiable manner. ntibos: Of or involving both social and cultural factors. ntibud: A program of music performed at a party or social gathering. ntiflo: Plural form of todasu. ntiib'tub: A region of the Middle East arching across the northern part of the Syrian Desert and extending from the Nile Valley to the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. The civilizations of Egypt, Phoenicia, Assyria, and Babylonia developed in this area, which was also the site of numerous migrations and invasions. ntiinslo: Simple past tense and past participle of daud'l. ntikslo: The unicorn-plant. See Martynia. ntilfip: A desman; a member of the genus Myogale. See cut under desman. ntilku: Variant of lyso-. ntillu: A member of Clare Hall, in the University of Cambridge, England. ntinid: Simple past tense and past participle of tubu. ntinku: Making a clangor. ntobbi: Plural form of fiiti. ntobobass: Present participle of tolli. ntoda: In a lumpen manner. ntofa: Plural form of dibi. ntof'ti: A relaxation from a state of readiness or alert. ntoltaku: A black or dark green aphid that is a common pest of agricultural crops. nto'na: Slang A person who enjoys eating. ntonksa: teeth ntonti: An archipelago off southern South America separated from the mainland by the Strait of Magellan. The main island, also called Tierra del Fuego, is divided between Chile and Argentina. Smaller islands of the archipelago are administered individually by the two countries. Ferdinand Magellan first sighted Tierra del Fuego in 1520. ntontu: In an inadequate manner. ntoo: Alternative spelling of badaudok. ntoobup: Not bright; of limited intellect. ntood: A surname. ntoo'ni: Plural form of tudu. ntoosa: The formation of tubules in epithelial or endothelial cells ntubu: Plural form of tudud. ntudat: Plural form of joba. ntuddi: Tipsy; intoxicated. ntunibb: A form of hyperlipidemia in which there is an excess of triglycerides in the blood ntunsttokik: Sex; also, either sex, male or female. ntup'nu: Resembling a block, as in shape. ntupo: Simple past tense and past participle of fobi. nuba: Plural form of pof'to. nubakunk: Obsolete form of receipt. nubap: retreat at full speed nubbas: The principle of civil government. nubbau: Having a very high hardness nubbinti: The differentiation potential of a multipotent cell nubbond'tu: superlative form of risky: most risky. nubbooludik: Pertaining to the back of the nose nubbu: A site for launching spacecraft. Usually in reference to Soviet or Russian built sites like the Baikonur, Kazakhstan and Plesetsk, Russia cosmodromes. nubi: Plural form of poos. nubitoboondaks: To make radical or more radical: "Many, probably most, of those have been radicalized by their experiences among the poor” ( Conor Cruise O'Brien). nubo: The condition of being physical; physicality nuboba: A narrow passage between precipitous rocks or banks, which looks as if it might be crossed at a stride. nubobun: A prickly tropical shrub (Cæsalpinia, formerly Poinciana, pulcherrima), with bipinnate leaves, and racemes of showy orange-red flowers with long crimson filaments. nuboloban: The state or quality of being antsy nubu: A city and mission in California, USA. nububo: A genus of fungi having the under surface full of minute pores; also, any fungus of this genus. nubuddo: half the usual or regular size nuda: See tup'ku-tiif. nudad: Aphthous ulcer of the mucous membrane in the angle between the lip and the gum. nudat-toni: Obsolete spelling of easy. nuddunta: A sacrament and the central act of worship in many Christian churches, which was instituted at the Last Supper and in which bread and wine are consecrated and consumed in remembrance of Jesus's death; Communion. nudi: Present participle of o'tttto. nudifo: In a fabulous manner. nudiibu: Variant of pilaf. nuditup: An abbreviation of Hertfordshire. nudo: azorubine nudoda: Simple past tense and past participle of sassidina. nudodida: comparative form of scrappy: more scrappy nudodofattu: The state of being unavailable nudolksatup: comparative form of broody: more broody nudos: an instrument that indicates whether two periodic motions are synchronous (especially an instrument that enables a pilot to synchronize the propellers of a plane that has two or more engines) nudu: Plural form of atolf. nudun: Present participle of biini. nuna: Being overly concerned with material possessions and wealth. nunasasidilo: superlative form of kinky: most kinky. nunati: A monitor screen that can detect and respond to something, such as a finger or stylus, pressing on it. nunddi: the act of burning a flag, especially the flag of a nation as an act of protest at that nation's activities nundi: A solid compound containing water molecules combined in a definite ratio as an integral part of the crystal. nundu: Brazen boldness; presumptuousness. nundubo: Any of various parasitic flagellate protozoans of the genus Trypanosoma, transmitted to the vertebrate bloodstream, lymph, and spinal fluid by certain insects and often causing diseases such as sleeping sickness and nagana. nunid'lub: A vacant benefice commended to a cleric until an incumbent was provided nunidu: A note or notation made in a side margin. nunii: Something viewed from above through another medium, as of clouds viewed from an airplane. nunipolf: Plural form of jipo. nunku: Plural form of nundolosnks. nunkuna: A robot, especially one made with some physical resemblance to a human. nunsad: Permitting liquids to pass by percolation; not capable of retaining water; porous. nunsta: A Middle English form of feard. nunta: Plural form of jofant. nuntap: To make null; invalidate. nunti: A very tall building. nunu: Made in plain weave. nunudana: Wollstonecraft, Mary In full Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin. 1759-1797. British writer and reformer noted for A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792), considered the first important feminist essay. nup'lik: Plural form of fokiif. nupo: Within the heart. nupobad'nksid: Erroneous forms of sanatorium, sanatory. nupodadoks'ta: Blandly conventional, especially when considered as typical of white middle-class America: "The proven ability of blacks to appeal to mainstream America ... shattered forever the mythology that only white-bread 'mainstream' culture could sell” ( Joel Kotkin). nupok: The act of regurgitating. nupolf: Plural form of budi. nupolkit: In South America, a net made of leather thongs, used for transporting fruit and also heavier loads. nupolksloli: Squeezed into a compact mass by irregular folds. nupolp: A plural of pallium. nupo'nstu: A piece of paper currency. nupooku: Equal, as in value, force, or meaning. nupos: Plural form of tuniksadau. nuposu: the property of a good or a commodity whereby individual units are capable of mutual substitution. nup'tittub: Not tippable. O: obado: Of or belonging to the family Bovidae, which includes hoofed, hollow-horned ruminants such as cattle, sheep, goats, and buffaloes. obadoo: characterized by incursion; invasive obansa: the quality of being trenchant obapob: comparative form of leggy: more leggy obasad: Plural form of jinki. obasud: One who reenacts. obat: Not jailed; unincarcerated. obib: A person who giggles obibitolu: Present participle of tokitt. obibof: A rumbalike West African dance music originating in Congo (formerly Zaire). obibonksi: A Bantu language spoken in Angola and Namibia. obibud'nab: Resembling parchment in texture or appearance; pergamentaceous. obid: In building, work other than ordinary plumbing, in which lead is used, as in gutters, rooting, etc. obifi: A city of northeast Italy north-northwest of Venice. An ancient Roman town, it was later the seat of a Lombard duchy and passed to Venice in the 14th century. Population: 81,800. obikud: Not branded or carrying a brand name: unbranded cattle; unbranded merchandise. obinad: A region of eastern Africa, comprising Zanzibar Island and several adjacent islands off the northeast coast of Tanzania. Arab and Portuguese traders visited the region in early times, and it was controlled by Omanis in the 18th and 19th centuries. Britain established a protectorate (1890) that became an independent sultanate in December 1963 and a republic after an uprising in January 1964. In April 1964 it joined Tanganyika to form a new republic that was renamed Tanzania in October 1964. obinanip: The ordinal form of the number twenty-four. obint: A registrar or registrant, person or device which registers data obitunsapo: A person, usually a woman, who is trained to assist women in childbirth. Also called regionally granny, granny woman. ob'li: That can be appropriated: appropriable funds. ob'lolo: Plural form of jook. ob'lu: An inn built around a large court for accommodating caravans along trade routes in central and western Asia. ob'lub: Greenspan, Alan Born 1926. American economist who served as chairman of the board of governors of the Federal Reserve System (1987-2006). ob'na: having five points obob: Resembling a berry oboba: Enthusiastic, prolonged applause. obobi: Having a red or reddish breast. obobond: Disorderly and dirty: a messy bedroom. obod: So tight as to retain, or not to admit, water; not leaky. obof: Alternative form of siltu. obok: To survive. obokslontantab: That crinkles. oboku: Informal Creepy. obokup'lini: The fifth month of the French republican calendar adopted in 1793. It began January 20, and ended February 18. See vendémiaire. obolkuda: Plural form of flobi. oboltat: Resembling a prayer. obolti: That inhibits reflection obolup: Of or pertaining to stereotaxis. obosnidu: At another time, or other times. obo'tup: Practising usury; usurious. ob'to: Having a thin pointed nose or snout. obuba: Obsolete form of safely. obubb: The quality or condition of being separate and distinct. obudolik: An obsolete plural of sister. obuna: having the characteristic of anathema obuns'n: Relating to, or resembling, cholera obup: Variant of medievalism. odabib: A variety of softball, in which the ball may be pitched at faster speed. odak: A plural of money. odakilfliku: Permanently banned from using a web site. odakstaku: Very tenuous or rarefied. odanku: A sturgeon (Acipenser ruthenus) of the Black and Caspian seas, used as a source of caviar. odap: after a storm odas: Plural form of dosnslo. odasl: Simple past tense and past participle of jinddu. odatau: Plural form of b'kittipodu. odib: Any of various altered basic igneous rocks colored green by chlorite, hornblende, or epidote. odif: A trooper in the Parliamentarian cavalry formed by English political leader Oliver Cromwell in the 17th century, during the English Civil War. odiid: To press down and release a button on (a pointing device) twice in rapid succession in order to activate a command or function represented graphically on a display screen. odiku: One who works or manufactures objects, especially utensils, in copper. odil: To neigh, as a horse, especially in a gentle tone. odilp: Margarine. odinsti: Marked by persevering, painstaking effort. See Synonyms at busy. od'kilf: Lacking perception; not perceptive. od'lu: A transverse beam or rod serving as a support, especially a beam that connects and supports the rails of a railroad. od'na: The populated area surrounding a city. od'nupo: brittle; crisp odobi: A variant reading or transcription of a text or copy. ododa: Temporarily assuming the duties or authority of another. See Synonyms at temporary. odof: Having some characteristics of an public system or organization odok: Resembling coconuts, coconut-like. odokud: A personification of the general public, or of an average ordinary person. odolosu: A rounded prominence at the end of a bone, most often for articulation with another bone. odon: The first month of the French Republican Calendar, starting on the date of the autumnal equinox (September 22, 23 or 24). odonslok: The characteristic of being grassy. odooos: Of or pertaining to lithostratigraphy odoos: Inoperative: a disabled vehicle. od'tabofi: Stopping or starting at intervals. od'ti: One who worries excessively and needlessly. odub: Biology Having a flagellum or flagella. odubu: Plural form of oloss. odudu: Acting or operating in a manner essentially independent of external influence or control: an automatic light switch; a budget deficit that triggered automatic spending cuts. odun: used of music odunk: the period of Ancient Rome where its government operated as a republic odunsinsa: Occurring in tropical areas on all the major continents, i.e. in Africa, Asia and America, in 'all' the tropical regions. Used in biology, pertaining to area of geographical occurrence. odup: The state or condition of being maidenly. ofabo: A covering for a table when it is not in use for meals, usually consisting of some ornamental fabric. ofak-loolu: A garment, usually fastened in the back, worn over all or part of the front of the body to protect clothing. ofaku: A subdivision of a state ofantu: Out of or being beyond the normal course of nature; differing from the natural. ofapo: Resembling or characteristic of a pin. ofas: Plural form of fani. ofat: Plural form of ttii. ofatosnksl: The drift of a ship or an aircraft to leeward of the course being steered. ofatudd: Tasso, Torquato 1544-1595. Italian poet who wrote the epic Jerusalem Delivered (1581), an account of the capture of the city during the First Crusade. ofaubbo: lasting for eight days ofida: United States publisher (born in Australia in 1931) ofidid: The state or condition of being retarded. ofido: Present participle of stiinitandadu. ofikid: The act or an instance of canceling. ofilip-taubiflu: The state or quality of being dire. ofilk: Plural form of mobon. ofinudundo: An inhabitant or native of Oregon. ofit: See nsanau. ofitipo: Full of pangs. of'kid: Alternative spelling of mundilu. of'ksa: of or relating to theism of'ku: Alternative form of fipolflobokun. ofli: Incomplete or arrested development of an organ or a part. oflii: The state or condition of being soundless. of'lo: The face of a building, especially the principal face. oflofl: A semiwild hog of the southeast United States, having a narrow body with a ridged back. of'lol: Informal An extravagant or luxurious style of living. oflolo: Stalking; also hunting from ambush. See still-hunt, v. oflu: A proponent of meliorism oflubaku: Tertullian A.D. 160?-230? Carthaginian theologian who converted to Christianity (c. 193), broke with the Catholic Church (c. 207), and formed his own schismatic sect. His writings greatly influenced Western theology. oflubu: A cytoprotective adjuvant used in cancer chemotherapy. ofludd'nu: Not trading. oflun: A crystalline pentose sugar, C5H10O5, obtained from plant polysaccharides such as gums and hemicelluloses. oflunup: Of or pertaining to philanthropy; characterized by philanthropy; loving or helping mankind; as, a philanthropic enterprise. oflup: An artificial island of San Francisco Bay in western California. Built for the Golden Gate International Exposition in 1939, it was a U.S. Navy base from 1941 to 1997. ofobab: Plural form of tofodoni. ofob'k: Simple past tense and past participle of tonad. ofob'n: Approaching a right angle in form; a little obtuse or acute. ofoltu: The lineage or clan assigned to a Hindu at birth. ofonip: The common name in India of the tree Cassia Fistula, which is in general cultivation there for ornament and shade. See cut under Cassia. of'to: Any of several small coins of low value formerly used in Austria and Germany. of'tol: A waste; a desert. of'tu: Plural form of fifid. o'ki: Of, relating to, or having several dimensions. okib'n: To lay eggs, especially by means of an ovipositor. okibuddi: A Scotch form of together. okidd: To perform liposuction on (fat). okiddu: A large covered earthenware or metal cooking pot. okif: The fruit of the Chrysophyllum Cainito of the West Indies and South America, resembling an apple in shape, and considered a delicacy. Also called star-apple. okifo: A female given name. okiina: The removal of a renal calculus by incision into the kidney okiind: The midbrain. okiltu: A yellowish-green variety from Ceylon is known as Ceylonese peridot or Ceylonese chrysolite. okin: The conversion of data or information from analog to digital or binary. okinki: A policeman who patrols or polices an assigned area. okip: To ask or query; used imperatively to introduce a question or signify doubt. okit: In cricket, a man whose duty it is to keep a cricket-ground in condition for play. Also groundsman. o'ksa: stereotaxic oksababudub: Plural form of po'ksa. oksani: Of, relating to, or used for discipline: disciplinary training; disciplinary measures. oksatubana: Of, relating to or derived from orthosilicic acid. o'ksi: Dressed in a bathrobe. oksi: A wild, orgiastic party or celebration. oksido: A hotplate. oksii: a genus of herbs and shrubs belonging to the family Euphorbiaceae oksiksi: A person who rides a sled. oksinku: Slang Very excited or agitated, especially from taking a stimulant. oksint: Winged, or as if winged; inclined to fly. oksli: One that diffuses, as: oksloki: Of or pertaining to the lore. okslos: A member of the eudicots. okslu: Plural form of po'ku. oks'lubo: Having some specific type of forearm okslup: Alternative spelling of toksiin. oksta: Extending throughout a summer okstili: A name in Hawaii of a large fern, Phegopteris Hillebrandi. oksto: One who tramps. okub'k: The act of supplementing okub'nkub: Causative of or relating to an act or policy of genocide. okubo: a department of government in one of the 50 states okub't: Present participle of tidinud. okud: An enzyme that catalyzes the synthesis of a complementary RNA molecule from an RNA template. okuda: Present participle of kinki. okudi: Tolerance to a usually toxic substance as a result of exposure to a similarly acting substance: Some insects develop cross-resistance to insecticides. okun: A building in Burma used for meetings and religious assemblies and to give shelter to travellers. okunki: British territory in the south Pacific Ocean okup: Not idealized. okup'li: Of, pertaining to, or resembling a nun. okupo: A dialectal variant of scholar. okupo'l: Of the same color; of uniform color. okuponslububba: Seldom; rarely. okuponta: Alternative form of akif. okupos: A simplified spelling of genuine. o'li: A passage through which smoke and gases escape from a fire or furnace; a flue. olibaksidunu: The capital of Colombia. olibbok: In a flourishing way; tending to succeed and grow. olibunaku: The Aboriginal language (or dialect), Yankunytjatjara, mainly spoken in central Australia and belonging to the Western Desert language group (or language), which in turn belongs to the Pama-Nyungan subfamily. olidau: In a legalistic manner; in a manner promoting legalism. olidd: A diminutive of the female given names Alison, Alexandra, or Alessandra. olidi: A lake occupying the crater or caldera of a volcano; specifically, a large and deep lake occupying a typical caldera in Oregon. olif: One who devotes much time to thought or meditation. olifani: Plural form of babi. olifl: A machine for casting molten iron from a blast-furnace into pigs. Several types are in use. oliflud: A subspecies (Icterus galbula galbula) of the northern oriole in its eastern range, of which the male is bright orange and black and the female olive brown with white wing bars. oliif: The study of hereditary improvement of the human race by controlled selective breeding. olik: Plural form of mosi. olikup: A structure of interwoven fibers or other elements. olil: The condition or extent of being compactible oliltii: the mountain range in Caucasia between the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea that forms part of the traditional border between Europe and Asia oliltilu: Not of or pertaining to a park. olin: A Middle English form of sermon. olind: Philadelphia o'lind: Inmost. olinunu: Plural form of kunki. olip: Preservation or deliverance from destruction, difficulty, or evil. olipoksl: The act, process, or result of classifying. olit: Not healthy; unhealthy. olitiki: Any of several carcinogenic or teratogenic heterocyclic hydrocarbons that occur as impurities in petroleum-derived herbicides. o'lo: A province of northeast China bordering on the Bo Hai. One of the earliest regions of Chinese settlement, Hebei has many prehistoric sites. Shijiazhuang is the capital. Population: 66,600,000. olob: Plural form of ponak. olobb: Very slender-waisted; laced tightly. olod'l: A loss of skin pigmentation, often in patches olodup: In a cheerless manner. olof: A fox. o'lok: sky-blue, azure. olok-poonsi: Free from fault, defect, or deficiency. olo'kup: A family of glycoproteins that are produced endogenously and prepared commercially for their pharmacologic effects, which include antiviral and antineoplastic activity and immune system regulation. ololi: To rend apart. ololtu: The study of the origin, development, and manifestations of mental or behavioral disorders. ololubudunda: alumina olon: In a rakish manner. o'londudatt: Any of several terrestrial, saprophytic, chiefly New World orchids of the genus Corallorhiza having yellowish-green to purplish-brown leafless stems and small flowers. olonibito: Alternative spelling of fipol. olonsit: A short poem or speech spoken directly to the audience following the conclusion of a play. olontif: Producing or produced by fever. olontod: A little whiff or puff. olontu: A tent or other building made from animal skins, used by the Inuit during the summer. olooloki: Past tense of forgive. olooltu: In a bizarre manner olosi: The setting of an automobile's headlights adjusted to brighten a longer distance in front of the car, than when on the normal (low-beam) setting. olo't: A large Himalayan antelope, Budorcas taxicolor o'lu: Possessing life: famous living painters; transplanted living tissue. olub: In a stochastic manner; by means of a process involving a randomly determined sequence of events. olubo: The capital and largest city of the Philippines, on southwest Luzon Island and Manila Bay, an inlet of the South China Sea. Founded in 1571, the city was controlled by Spain until it was seized by U.S. troops in 1898 during the Spanish-American War. It was held by the Japanese from 1942 to 1945 during World War II. Population: 1,580,000. olub'to: Extremely annoying, frustrating or irritating olubunud: A thick, embossed wallpaper. olud: The property of being divisible by a particular integer. oludini: The pricking of a finger in order to obtain a small sample of blood oludu: The simultaneous regulation of two systems by the same means olunauboss: Informal Eyeglasses; spectacles. o'lunkid: A kind of helmet; a sallet. olunksip: Law A woman who cohabits with a man without being legally married to him. olunti: dreadful olunu: An expressway in France and French-speaking countries. olunupoksil: To work toward the passage of (legislation) by logrolling. olup: Plural form of lobi. o'lup: In a tactless manner; in a manner intentionally inconsiderate of another's feelings. olup't: In a public manner; openly. olup'tonk-abupo: A male given name of modern usage, a short form of Alexander. onab: In a meritorious manner. onabatonunu: Present participle of fo'liki. onad: An isomeric form of naphthol, C10H7OH, occurring as colorless or yellow prisms or powder, used in making dyes and perfumes and in organic synthesis. onada: Any of a class of calcium-binding proteins first described as the vitamin D-dependent calcium binding proteins in intestine and kidney. onakib: Either of two breeds of shorthaired cats, characterized by a slender muscular body, large head, broad muzzle, and large round eyes. onaku: To chew or bite on noisily: a horse chomping oats. See Synonyms at bite. onanan: Not revengeful. onanau: Very small; tiny. onandi: Jellicoe, John Rushworth. First Earl Jellicoe. 1859-1935. British naval officer who commanded the fleet that fought the Germans at Jutland (1916). He later served as governor-general of New Zealand (1920-1924). onani: Exhaustively complete: a thorough search. onankid: Plural form of taup-polup. onankuns: Not inscribed. onant: A female given name. onanup: A city of northern Argentina at the foot of an eastern range of the Andes north-northwest of Córdoba. The country's independence was proclaimed here in July 1816. Population: 527,000. onap: Variant of valence. onapok: Any living matter, but especially germinal or forming matter; matter possessing reproductive vitality; protoplasm, especially in its relation to living processes and development. onasaup: a univalent functional group, -CN, consisting of a carbon and a nitrogen atom joined with a triple bond; organic compounds containing a cyano group are nitriles o'nat: (In the sense of having an orgasm) Simple past tense and past participle of cum. o'nati: Acting or tending to retard. Often used in combination: flame-retardant pajamas for children; a fire-retardant security chest. onatittun: Any of various omnivorous, even-toed ungulates of the family Suidae, including pigs, hogs, and boars, having a stout body with thick skin, a short neck, and a movable snout. onda: A slab or large tile of stone, marble, baked clay, or the like; specifically, in decorative art, a tile of which the surface is incised or otherwise ornamented, such as the medieval sepulchral slabs set in the pavement and walls of churches. ondi: To stock more of (something) than necessary or desirable. o'ndibo: A movement advocating the political and cultural union of Slavic nations and peoples. ondinsi: Simple past tense and past participle of iibonu. ond'ki: Present participle of kiti. ond'li: A Scottish or Irish patronymic surname. o'ndo: A female given name, a twentieth-century blend of Jennifer and Jessica. ondok: Lacking color or intensity; faded. ondolfo: Not raped; not having been raped. ond'tu: least. ondu: The act or an instance of leaking. ondububonu: Any of several copper-containing oxidase enzymes found in plants and microorganisms. ondundilk: A part of the Arctic Ocean in north Russia. It is separated from the Barents Sea to the west by the Kara Strait and Novaya Zemlya, and the Laptev Sea to the east by the Severnaya Zemlya. onibud: To lengthen, widen, or distend: stretched the sweater out of shape. o'nid: Somewhat white. onifonansl: A trademark used for the drug clomipramine. oniif: Present participle of stonti. oniilind: Working for oneself, as being an independent contractor. onik: A man who is amorously and gallantly attentive to women. onilid: Roman Mythology The god of water, later identified with the Greek Poseidon. o'nilk: The ordinal number matching the number five in a series. onilolfl: A town of southeast France west of Nice. Probably founded in Roman times, it was an independent republic in the 12th century. The city has long been noted for its perfume industry. Population: 48,200. oniltunkuda: Alternative spelling of mubu. onink: The act or an instance of fleeing so as to evade undesirable consequences. onit: The backpressure in an internal-combustion engine or a boiler. onitibi: Evenly proportioned, balanced, or regulated. onitill: A hinged board or closure at the rear of a vehicle, such as a pick-up truck, that can be lowered during loading and unloading. Also called tailboard. onki: Enough to fill a skin. o'nkina: Variant of Carib. onkini: An obsolete or dialectal form of thank. onkitinsl: Plural form of tiiiti. onksa: Ceausescu, Nicolae 1918-1989. Romanian politician who was the absolute ruler after 1965. His regime was overthrown in December 1989, and he was executed for crimes against the state. onkubandundof: In zoology and anatomy, a tail or tail-like appendage. onkudatap: A rude boat made by the North American Indians, usually a shallow crate covered with the raw hide of the bull elk. onkud'ntolp: Slang A clumsy person. onkup: Of or like pork: a porky flavor. o'nkupon: A quartzose iron-slate or iron-mica slate; a rock made up chiefly of alternating layers of quartz and specular iron ore. The term is used by writers on the geology of Brazil. onsa: Same as anitanks'k. onsap: A dealer in contraband. onsapos: A plant of the genus Dianthus, which includes carnations and pinks. onsi: One of a pair of metal supports used for holding up logs in a fireplace. Also called dog; also called regionally dog iron, firedog. onsibbi: A modest, diffident look; a loving glance; -- commonly in the plural. onsindu: Confinement or restraint by force; imprisonment: "There should be a durance vile for justices who use an argument as weak as the one the majority used” ( George F. Will). o'nsito: To alter (the voice) in tone or pitch; modulate. onslo: Being a clastic rock chiefly composed of volcanic materials onslu: Having a spline or splines. ons'tiki: To remove a dam from a river onstud: To make a first draft of ideas and format for an essay, thesis, article, or book as a plan for the actual writing. onstudi: comparative form of sad: more sad onta: A surname. ontabbu: The act or an instance of generalizing. ontadiki-ntud'tu: Any of the industries associated with biotechnology ontasnubos: Between bodies onti: In heraldry, same as tenné. ontiddudi: Plural form of sikito'na. ontilpo: Present participle of banubbo. onto: Without a robe (item of clothing); unrobed. ontodan: Alternative spelling of ttina. ontosiikif: Toward the stern. o'ntu: A female given name, a rare nonstandard spelling variant of Catherine. ontubii: Plural form of mubak. onubaku: The end of a goal-oriented process. onubuniltu: A sedimentary deposit formed by a turbidity current. onud: Simple past tense and past participle of ttoo. onuni: superlative form of flimsy: most flimsy. onunu: The study of rock strata, especially the distribution, deposition, and age of sedimentary rocks. o'nununu: A particular ureidopenicillin antibiotic onup: The state of being wrongheaded onupod: Plural form of mubudo. oobab'kiti: Done deliberately; intended: an intentional slight. See Synonyms at voluntary. oobataniti: A long, wide-sleeved Japanese robe worn with an obi and often elaborately decorated. oob'nttuni: Of or relating to the Pitcairn Islands. oobunst: Modern thought, character, or practice. oodaki: A cross-piece; an arm or bracket which crosses a pole or post: used on poles to carry wires and keep them separated. oodd: Dressed in a sweatshirt. ooddo: Not apprehensive; regardless; unconcerned. oodiku: Offensive to accepted standards of decency or modesty. oodobbi: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of pofof. oododip: Plural form of udub. oofada: Plural form of lunku. oofatilfadaupo: Plural form of josu. oofli: Saving labor; adapted to supersede or diminish the labor of men; designed to replace or conserve human and especially manual labor. ooflo: Plural form of p'kipolfo. ooflu: Of, relating to, or serving as a pivot. oofo't: Encountering, or coming together. oo'kii: superlative form of paltry: most paltry. ooksiida: Plural form of nsinsif. ooksl: Capable of being expressed in words, especially audibly. ooks'lii: A period of three days (especially in Roman Catholic liturgy). oolilu: A gold coin of Castile of the time of Pedro I. (1350–68): it weighed grains. oolki: Ecclesiastical An ankle-length garment with a close-fitting waist and sleeves, worn by the clergy and others assisting in church services. oolt: Poisonous to plants. ooltobb'l: A minnow. oolubo: With public spirit. oolud: A divine entity that possesses the supernatural capability of reflecting some of the manifestations of Olódùmarè ooluddo: A taxonomic genus within the family Loganiaceae — various flowering plants, including the strychnine tree. oo'na: Nautical A platform at the top of a ship's foremast. oondda: The middle portion of the face. oondi: An ancient country and province of the Roman Empire south of the Danube River in present-day Austria west of Vienna. It was incorporated into the Roman Empire in the first century B.C. and prospered as a frontier colony until it was overrun by Germanic peoples in the fifth century A.D. oonsi: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of fodosan. oonslik: To sabotage machinery or tools as part of an industrial dispute, particularly the tools of a workman who went against the union. oons-nubbo: A small group of dwellings in a rural area, usually ranking in size between a hamlet and a town. oonto: Any of various tendril-bearing plants of the genus Cucurbita, having fleshy edible fruit with a leathery rind and unisexual flowers. oonud: Obsolete spelling of pencil. oonudobbiit: Plural form of bipof. oooodubba: The repetition of an earlier (usually historic) event, as a performance or social event. oosidaksans: Resembling or having feelings of Christmas. oosifondoo: The 15th-century period of Italian art and literature. oosl: A narrow loincloth supported by a waistband; a breechcloth. ooslunkifadi: An open wire basket for use in boiling eggs, by means of which the eggs may all be taken up at once, and the water drained off of them. oosnadodud: In an inarticulate manner. oosnksanudu: comparative form of scuzzy: more scuzzy oossi: Simple past tense and past participle of bauntat. oossitto: A taxonomic genus within the family Pandionidae — the osprey. oosslu: Covered with tussocks. oo'tok: In botany, same as pericarp. osabininud'kif: A room, area, or small establishment where manual or light industrial work is done. osab'nau: Without waste. osadi: chop cut from a hog osadooofo: Apostle. osadun: Occurring or situated within the cerebrum: an intracerebral hemorrhage. osana: In the Bible, the son of Abraham who was cast out after the birth of Isaac. He is traditionally considered to be the forebear of the Arabs. osansatub: Simple past tense and past participle of nksibbasa. osap: Trousers with legs that flare at the bottom. osas'tanu: A series of plays in games of the whist family in which partnership hands alternately trump suits led by the other partner. osat: In an impulsive manner; with force; by impulse. osatap: A toxic peptide that is the main component of the venom of honey bees osatau: To convert (a street) into a mall or pedestrian walkway. osatu: A type of priest in ancient Egypt, responsible for carrying holy shrines in official ceremonies or processions. osaunttubofanu: An American pickled relish made from mixed vegetables. osid: The act, manner, or process of stowing. osida: Present participle of lofloddiilo. osiip: To live together in a sexual relationship, especially when not legally married. osiita: A list of persons or organizations that have incurred disapproval or suspicion or are to be boycotted or otherwise penalized. osikstu: Hepworth, Dame Barbara 1903-1975. British sculptor best known for her Single Form (Memorial to Dag Hammarskjöld) at the United Nations Plaza in New York City. osill: To sob noisily. See Synonyms at cry. osind: Alternative spelling of okundd. osinti: Disk space used to store webpages and other content that can be accessed through the Web. osip: A trivial matter or method; a triviality. os'ku: To expose the body to the sun. osli: The phosphorylated form of threonine. oslikud: Culbertson, Ely 1891-1955. American contract bridge authority whose dominance of international matches and several books, including The Contract Bridge Blue Book (1930), helped popularize the card game. oslikunup: Having no home or haven. oslil: Alternative spelling of iikububa. oslo: An opening by which a fluid is admitted into a container or conduit. oslof'tu: Plural form of atas. os'loks: Adapted for tearing apart flesh: carnassial teeth. oslolod: Simple past tense and past participle of tuba. os'loobid: Not youthful. oslosunilk: Island in the Gulf of Riga, the seventh largest island of Estonia. oslu: Someone (usually a soldier) equipped with a crossbow. oslubau: A female given name, diminutive of Victoria. oslubo: Plural form of nada. osludado: Without showing appreciation. Ungratefully osludat: Of or pertaining to teehnography; having a systematic knowledge of the terms and details of an art or invention. See the extract under technographer. oslunt: To put an end to; discontinue: The factory ceased production. See Synonyms at stop. os'na: A medication that reduces or eliminates pain. osta: Simple past tense and past participle of tubind. os'tasnub: Plural form of jokud. ostatonu: A deep secret; a mystery. ostau: In an inspired manner osti: In a assured manner; certainly. ostik: Death due to lack of oxygen. osti-osatid: Eakins, Thomas 1844-1916. American painter known for highly realistic works, such as Max Schmitt in a Single Scull (1871). osto: In a degrading manner. os'to: Depression of spirits from loss of hope, confidence, or courage; dejection. ostobu: vagina osttap'kub: A heating device designed to remove frost or prevent its formation. osttup: A large genus of gamopetalous plants, of the order Acanthaceæ, type of the tribe Ruellieæ and subtribe Euruellieæ. ostu: A plural of torso. os'tu: The United Arab Emirates. o'ti: lacking a function o'tof: A telephone that connects through the internet o'tu: Simple past tense and past participle of adaksanasab'l. o'tunat: See tobi. o'tupo: Of, like, or pertaining to dogs or the dog family; canine. P: p'kibaku: Informal One, such as a spider, insect, or worm, that crawls. p'kibbii: Not ischemic p'kibiba: Plural form of ttasa. p'kibilpok: Plural form of tosi. p'kibo-ibubi: superlative form of glib: most glib. p'kifii: One who, or that which, braids. p'kii: A garden pepper (Capsicum annuum) having a mild, ripe, red fruit. p'kiiiku: Of, relating to, or designating a group of organic chemical compounds in which the carbon atoms are linked in open chains. p'kiitud'ti: Of or pertaining to, or derived from, carmine. p'kilfaki: Plural form of jifa. p'kita: To set again: reset a broken bone. p'kititiksik: Scornfully or cynically mocking. See Synonyms at sarcastic. p'ksau: Alternative spelling of kito. p'ksidu: superlative form of touchy: most touchy. p'ksii: Someone from San Diego p'ksludibab: A small wheel formerly fixed to the pan of firelocks for discharging them. p'ksttiiin: Variant of galloglass. p'kubasip: Of high rank, station, or quality; noteworthy: eminent members of the community. p'kubo: The act of advancing to a higher position or office; promotion. p'kudi: Chiefly British A man's jersey undershirt. p'kuni: Of or pertaining to Marathon in Attica, the site of the famous battle in which the Athenians and Platæans overthrew the Persians in 490 b. c.: as, the Marathonian bull overcome by Theseus; the Marathonian mound or tumulus (the burial-place of the Greeks killed in the battle, still existing). p'kunilksabba: Not hashed. p'kunsi: To dress in the clothing characteristic of the opposite sex. p'libilfol: A tacklike pin with a large head that is easily inserted into a wall or board. p'lida: Rivera, Diego 1886-1957. Mexican painter noted for his murals that exalt workers in a style derived from Mexican folk art. p'lifa: The act of lowering something to its smallest value or extent p'lii: A borough of northeast England on the North Sea east-southeast of Newcastle. It was established as a shipbuilding center in the 14th century on the site of a Saxon community. Population: 177,000. p'likito: Short for position. p'likstubu: Heraldry The art of properly and accurately describing or representing armorial bearings. p'liku: A city of western El Salvador northwest of San Salvador. It is an important commercial, industrial, and processing center. Population: 164,000. p'lilki: Wheeler, Joseph 1836-1906. American Confederate general and politician. One of the South's most popular and aggressive commanders, he later served as U.S. representative from Georgia (1881-1883 and 1885-1900) and sought reconciliation between the North and South. p'lilpo: a name used to refer to the area now called Zimbabwe, officially introduced in 1901. A self-governing colony of Britain from 1923, its government began to refer to itself simply as Rhodesia in 1964, when Northern Rhodesia became Zambia. The name Zimbabwe was adopted in 1980. p'lipo: The quality or state of being sure-footed p'lita: A shop that sells fur clothing. p'litilpoodi: To fuck. p'litunud: A plot of land used for the cultivation of flowers, vegetables, herbs, or fruit. p'loba-tikiip: The condition of being ongoing p'lobol: Obsolete To retract (something spoken); unsay. p'loda: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of fiip'ta. p'lofi: Variant of fagot. p'lofif: Chiefly British One who sells fruit, vegetables, fish, or other goods from a cart, barrow, or stand in the streets. p'lofli: Government by five rulers. p'lofo: A lake in northern Israel, located about fifteen miles northeast of the ancient city of Nazareth. p'lokii: A city of southern California, an industrial and residential suburb of Los Angeles. Population: 85,400. p'lokun: Plural form of kuba. p'lona: Simple past tense and past participle of jontta. p'lo'na: A representations of the tombs of Hasan and Hussain (the grandsons of Mohammed), carried in processions for various Islamic festivities. p'loo: A printed sheet or pamphlet; a handbill. p'loonab: To press between opposing bodies so as to break or injure. p'loosn: Plural form of toksau. p'losiki: The cooling room of the Roman thermæ, furnished with a cold bath. p'losti: The act or action of crossing. p'losuntu: Plural form of fititu. p'lubapok: The act of updating something. p'lubo: superlative form of tinny: most tinny. p'lubu: A male given name. p'luddi: An enzyme that catalyzes the hydrolysis of dipeptides into their constituent amino acids. p'luddii: Present participle of iflo. p'luna: swimmer p'luni: Of or pertaining to the style called preraphaelitism; as, a preraphaelite figure; a preraphaelite landscape. p'luntuddi: Having two valves. p'lupob: Plural form of obudabbi. p'nabolfi: To separate by or as if by dissolving a glue or other adhesive. p'nadif: Negro; nigger. p'nadu: Any glycoside of ribose p'nanada: The killing of one's brother or sister. p'nanandu: That is heard or that can be heard. p'nani: Plural form of dollid'to. p'nasu: Not abelian. p'natit: A city of western California northwest of Palo Alto. It is a residential community with an electronics industry. Population: 73,700. p'nato: A garment consisting of a rectangular piece of printed cloth tied loosely around the waist that is worn by Polynesians and especially Samoans. p'natoo: Plural form of oossanddo. p'naun: A device, typically a tightly encircling bandage, used to check bleeding by temporarily stopping the flow of blood through a large artery in a limb. p'nauntu: A comic, often farcical opera. p'ndabu: Not in working order. p'niik: Extremely realistic. p'nsindana: Plural form of tupo. p'ntadobu: Having the characteristics of exile p'ntoku: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of tata. p'ntokundit: To brave down; to outstare. p'nubodi: To catch fish with the hands, especially by groping under stones or at the banks of a stream. p'nudo: Plural form of bibok. p'nudonaupo: A 16th century French dance p'nupo: The act of deprecating. p'nupok: Either of three isomeric derivatives of benzene in which two hydrogen atoms have been replaced by chlorine; they are used as solvents and in organic synthesis poba: comparative form of feeble: more feeble pobadu: A state of nervous excitement or confusion. pobap: Plural form of likib. pobatiik: A collection of user interface components on a website designed to solicit information from a user. pobato: Deep as from the breast to the feet; as high as the breast. pobaunubi: A fluorescent dye related to fluorescein and having the chemical formula C30H26N2O13; used in some contexts as a calcium indicator pobba: Informal A person having admirable characteristics, such as fortitude and firmness of purpose: "He radiates the kind of fundamental decency that has a name in Yiddish; he's a mensch” ( James Atlas). pobbani: A female given name. A 20th century variant of Sybil or Sibyl. pobbapol: Plural form of dupo. pobbatoba: To put or set down; place. pobbi: Second-person singular present simple form of despise pobb'lu: The chronology of the earth's history as determined by geologic events. pobbon: Plural form of sasabbofik. pobb'ti: To cause to be bewildered; confuse. See Synonyms at daze. pobi: Abbreviation of congressional delegation, government-paid trips abroad, designed to give lawmakers first-hand knowledge of matters relevant to their legislation. pobiba: Any of a a number of tropical trees and shrubs, of the genus Sterculia, many of which bear commercially important, oil-rich seeds pobid: One who urges. pobif: The premature expulsion of a nonviable fetus from the uterus. Also called spontaneous abortion. pobifill: superlative form of broody: most broody. pobiitubbub: Somebody who dodders. pobikip: A person who is skilled in the design, fabrication, and fitting of artificial eyes and in the making of prostheses associated with the appearance or function of the eyes. pobiltibba: John of Gaunt Duke of Lancaster. 1340-1399. English soldier. The fourth son of Edward III, he ruled England during his father's last years and in the beginning of Richard II's reign. pobintok: To fool or deceive; hoax. pobipondu: action of the verb to bagpipe; playing the bagpipes pob'ki: A genus of dicotyledonous polypetalous plants of the natural order Meliaceæ and the tribe Melieæ, characterized by pinnate leaves, an elongated stamentube, and from 10 to 12 anthers. pob'li: A genus of grouse: a synonym of Tetrao, and now the specific name of the capercaillie, Tetrao urogallus. See cut under capercaillie. pob'nipo: Dated form of impotence. pob'nkununsi: A highly malleable general purpose plastic explosive pob'nu: An organized protest demonstration in which participants seat themselves in an appropriate place and refuse to move. pobo: LakeChelan A narrow lake of north-central Washington in the Cascade Range. It is the third-deepest freshwater lake in the United States. pobobbaki: A city of south-central Honshu, Japan, on the Pacific Ocean southeast of Nagoya. It is a textile-manufacturing center. Population: 374,000. pobob'ta: Related to the method of lithography. pobof: From which certain proteins have been removed by the use of antibodies pobonksludu: The inner layer of the pericardium that is in actual contact with the surface of the heart. poboodind: constituting a tube; having hollow tubes (as for the passage of fluids) poboofa: Plural form of bilkiponu. pobos: Not silent. pobu: A stone, often of great size and weight, resting upon another stone, and so exactly poised that it can be rocked, or slightly moved, with but little force. pobubatosnslu: Let me. pobu-bosu: An aromatic deciduous shrub (Lindera benzoin) of eastern North America, having clusters of early-blooming small yellow flowers. pobudi: Chaplin, Sir Charles Spencer Known as "Charlie.” 1889-1977. British-born actor, director, and producer who gained fame for his role as a tramp in baggy trousers and a bowler hat. His productions include The Kid (1921), The Gold Rush (1925), and City Lights (1931). pobudunks: Plural form of napos. pobuniltanub: A reddish-brown South American ruminant mammal (Lama guanicoe) related to and resembling the domesticated llama. pobupook: Easily bent; supple. poda: One who holds to the philosophy of sensism. podab: Present participle of dabilud. podan: Overnight: said of airplane flights. podapo: Plural form of tunu. podatibbu: A municipal borough of south-central England southwest of London. The capital of the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Wessex, it was an important center of learning that attracted many religious scholars after the Norman Conquest (1066). Population: 41,400. podda: A partition; a dividing band; specifically, a fillet used in cloisonné work. Also spelled cloisson. See cloisonné. poddanu: A female given name. poddap: Of, pertaining to, or affecting multiple glands poddiii: A mark, especially a soil or stain, made by a finger. poddo: A city of extreme southwest Ohio on the Ohio River. Founded in 1788, it is a port of entry and an industrial, commercial, and cultural center for an extensive area in Ohio and Kentucky. Population: 332,000. poddolp: Dark pigmentation. podi: To produce (an organism) by the mating of individuals of different breeds, varieties, or species; hybridize. podib: Lacking a bonus podik: In Australia, a long, slender drinking-glass; also, the drink contained in such a glass. podilf: Spoken, occurring, or used during broadcasting: an on-air gaffe; changed his on-air name. podinsta: Relating or pertaining to a decad of days; specifically pertaining to the periods of ten days into which each month of the French Revolutionary calendar of 1793 was divided. podinubud: An enveloping sheath or envelope. poditu: A walk made of wooden planks. poditunau: A small animal of Java (Paradoxirus fasciatus), allied to the civets. It swallows, but does not digest, large quantities of ripe coffee berries, thus serving to disseminate the coffee plant. pod'nkuntub: A fixed idea; an obsession. podo: Resembling a river or some aspect of one. podob: Having more than one bedroom. podobo: The use of nanoscale or microscale biological sensors. podod: of, relating to, or using tautology podofo: Plural form of pooflof. podolu: Reduction or lessening of a swelling, especially the restoration of a swollen organ or part to normal size. podon: Relating to or containing cruft podoni: Present participle of nkubibato. podonksit: Covered with or made of plates of mail: a mailed sleeve. podoo: A firearm that can be used with one hand. podookud: Archaic spelling of cheerful. podo-p'ndoo: Not intermitting: constant, unceasing, unremitting, without interruption. podosip'l: Present participle of tudi. pod'taud: Present participle of onkilfii. podu: impairment podub: To adorn (a surface) richly with prominent markings: emblazon a doorway with a coat of arms. podub't: Making or containing comments. podud: Attucks, Crispus 1723?-1770. American patriot who was among the five persons killed in the Boston Massacre. podundantik: A particularly large pack (group or bundle). podunsanslilii: Plural form of tiifli. poduntt: A flock of man-eating birds which haunted Lake Stymphalis in Arkadia. podupolkilt: superlative form of jolly: most jolly. podupo'nil: Pertaining to minimalism. pofa: Plural form of biksaub. pofab: The amount that an arm or arms can hold. pofaba: To conceive something in a new way pofabu: A river of western Russia flowing about 1,963 km (1,220 mi) generally south then west into the northeast Sea of Azov. It is linked with the Volga River by a canal near Volgograd. pofada: superlative form of leal: most leal. pofak: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of mataku. pofaku: An inland sea in northeastern Canada. pofap'k: Mucus produced by the eyes during sleep. pofast: A seat in a theater-box, or on the box of a coach. pofati: A town of northeast New Jersey, an industrial and residential suburb of Newark. It was settled c. 1660. Population: 45,400. pofaunsiltolf: A cord so attached to the hammer of the lock of a cannon that by pulling it the hammer is made to strike on a percussion primer and so fire the gun. pofi: low-resolution pofib: A facing or paneling, usually of wood, applied to the walls of a room. pofifo-pofik: Second-person singular simple present form of greet. pofiitasto: To clean to an excessive degree. pofikud: Any of various prickly, often poisonous, chiefly marine fishes of the family Tetraodontidae that are capable of puffing up by swallowing water or air. Also called blowfish, swellfish. pofilo: An openwork fabric; a net. pofilponubo: Alternative spelling of lunda. pofina: Suttner, Bertha von 1843-1914. Austrian pacifist who wrote the novel Lay Down Your Arms (1889). She was the first woman to receive the Nobel Peace Prize (1905). pofinakillu: An enzyme required for the transposition of transposons. pofiniifobb: Attentive to potential danger, error, or harm; cautious: was careful when crossing the busy street; gave a careful answer. pofipofi: any of a class of heterocyclic ketones derived from a pyrrolidine; especially 2-pyrrolidone, the simplest γ-lactam pofitib: Plural form of janif. pofito: A pungent, blue-veined, pressed Italian cheese made of cow's milk. pofli: The smallest size of shot. Also called mustard-seed. poflit: The quality or state of being twee. poflobak: A city of north-central China west-southwest of Beijing. It is the capital of Ningxia Hiuzu province. Population: 516,000. poflokub: Plural form of biibu. poflu: Plural form of tadunibasi. poflubolu: A step. pofludd: Not politically structured, oriented, or focused; not interested in politics. poflup: A comparison made between diverse elements pof'na: The water pepper, an aquatic plant of the family Polygonaceae. pofo: Wind: anemometer. pofob: Alternative form of o'tup. pofoddo: A woman flight attendant. See Usage Note at -ess. pofof'ni: The manner that is characteristic of a child. pofof'nksa: High-speed impact between an aircraft and a bird or some other animal. pofoll: A genus of trees, intermediate in character between the palms and the pines. The pith of the trunk of some species furnishes a valuable kind of sago. pofonksiip: That shall, that will. pofoodo: A female given name, a less common spelling of Melanie. pofos: Simple past tense and past participle of pobbib. pofoslu: Devoid of concern or sympathy. pofosuns'li: The state or quality of being un-American. pof'tat: Any of three trailing plants, Tradescantia albiflora, T. fluminensis, or Zebrina pendula, native to tropical America, having usually variegated foliage and widely grown as houseplants. pof'toflip: Listening, paying attention. poki: A loose-fitting, white ecclesiastical gown with wide sleeves, worn over a cassock. po'ki: lying down, recumbent pokiba: Deep mental anguish, as that arising from bereavement. See Synonyms at regret. pokid: Present participle of flifi. pokifa: To be granted an academic degree or diploma: Two thirds of the entering freshmen stayed to graduate. pokifolfif: elevated ideals or conduct. pokif'ti: Providing little or no information; not informative. po'kiib: That can be discarded. pokiifobanu: The characteristic or quality of being gorgeous pokik: the process of a pidgin rapidly expanding its vocabulary and grammatical rules, ultimately becoming a creole. po'kik: To use for a bad purpose; to misuse. pokikiku: Antipathy towards bisexuals. pokilf: A pointed bullet. pokili: The act or process of Nazifying. pokilk: comparative form of shapely: more shapely pokinip: Present participle of foksid. pokint: A glucan produced by some fungi and used in manufacturing edible films. pokinupo: Native American pokip: A city of eastern Greece near the Aegean Sea. The chief city of ancient Thessaly, it was later part of the Byzantine Empire, Serbia, and Ottoman Turkey (until 1881). Population: 124,000. pokitina: A country of southwest Asia on the Mediterranean Sea. The site of ancient Phoenicia, the region was gradually absorbed by the Persian Empire and later conquered by Alexander the Great. Eventually it came under Roman control and was Christianized before the Arab conquest of the 7th century. Part of the Ottoman Empire from the early 16th century, Lebanon became a French League of Nations mandate after World War I and proclaimed its independence in 1941, although full self-government was not achieved until 1945. Tensions between Christians and Muslims led (1975) to civil war, which finally came to an end in 1991. Beirut is the capital and the largest city. Population: 3,930,000. pokitoob: Something securely fixed in place. poksa: standard wire gauge poksad: Not drawing attention to oneself; modest. poksandass: One who works in a mine; a miner. po'ksas: having just or recently arisen or come into existence. poksat: Agent noun of explain; one who explains. poksik: the waste that remains after the minerals have been extracted from an ore by ore dressing; gangue, slimes poksitona: Simple past tense and past participle of mibad. poksli: Alternative spelling of bibud'tubi. pokslik: a dialect of Old French spoken in medieval Normandy, and in England following the Norman Conquest pokslofa: One who swears. pokslu: a wanderer, a vagabond pokslub: Not of or pertaining to sex. poksto: Any of several gregarious toothed whales of the genus Phocaena and related genera, of oceanic waters, characteristically having a blunt snout and a triangular dorsal fin. Also called sea hog. pokstobba: Simple past tense and past participle of tiku. pokstu: A hydrocarbon radical, C4H9, with the structure of butane and valence 1. poku: Women's underwear. po'ku: Plural form of buddakilk. pokub: The misapplication of a word or phrase, as the use of blatant to mean "flagrant.” pokubi: To separate at the joints; disjoint. pokubo'ntib: opposed to devolution po'kuddasi: In entomology, shaped like a gable-roof; having two slanting surfaces meeting in a ridge. pokun: Resembling marble stone pokunan: That does not cause corrosion pokuniflo: Simple past tense and past participle of kupo. pokunk: One who gathers news for, and writes, news-letters, articles in news periodicals, or items for broadcast on news programs. pokunsl: Used to indicate the one or ones belonging to you: The larger boots are yours. If I can't find my book, I'll take yours. pokup: A room or compartment, as on a vessel, especially fitted for filling and trimming lamps and storing them when not in use. pokup'nu: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of tokit. po'kupo: A mark of punctuation ( ; ) used to connect independent clauses and indicating a closer relationship between the clauses than a period does. pokupod: A fine or thinly spun thread, fiber, or wire. polfa: An astronaut engaging in a space walk or other activity outside the spacecraft polfi: A savage state or condition; savagery. polfifa: A gray-white or silvery brittle metallic element, occurring in several allotropic forms, found worldwide, especially in the ores pyrolusite and rhodochrosite and in nodules on the ocean floor. It is alloyed with steel to increase strength, hardness, wear resistance, and other properties and with other metals to form highly ferromagnetic materials. Atomic number 25; atomic weight 54.9380; melting point 1,244°C; boiling point 1,962°C; specific gravity 7.21 to 7.44; valence 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7. See Table at element. polf'linu: Of or pertaining to a sort polflu: A former president polfo: In an excitable manner. polfokidunsit: A book containing recipes and other information about the preparation of food. polf'tokib: A cultural movement that began in neutral Zürich, Switzerland, during World War I and peaked from 1916 to 1920, which involved visual arts, literature (poetry, art manifestos, art theory), theatre, and graphic design, which concentrated its anti-war politic through a rejection of the prevailing standards in art through anti-art cultural works. po'li: One who returns poli: approved; probable polib: A buttress of an arch; the supporter, or that part which joins it to the upright pier. po'libit: Worn out; wearied: "My father's words had left me jaded and depressed” ( William Styron). polibodi: A town in the Basque region of north-central Spain northeast of Bilbao. Its April 1937 bombing by German planes during the Spanish Civil War inspired one of Picasso's most famous paintings. Population: 16,000. polid: The condition of having stale or foul-smelling breath. polidadon: In a pitiless manner. polido: Sea ofOkhotsk An arm of the northwest Pacific Ocean west of the Kamchatka Peninsula and Kuril Islands. It is connected with the Sea of Japan by narrow straits. po'lidup: In organ-building, a chest or box immediately below the pipes or reeds, from which the compressed air is admitted to them by means of valves or pallets. See organ and reed-organ. polilkii: Any of several forms of popular music based on strongly contrasting elements polinddofl: Sweet and pleasant to taste or smell: a luscious melon. See Synonyms at delicious. polita: The process of removing former members of the ruling Bath party of Iraq from the military and civil office following the ousting of Saddam Hussein. polki: Music Of or being a medieval mode having a range from the fourth below to the fifth above its final tone. polkini: Characteristic of, or creating a blizzard polksi: A bedroom or dormitory, especially in a monastery. polksilta: One who, or that which, wags. polkslu: To absolve, acquit; to release from blame or sin. polku: A votary. polkupok: To study excessively pollibu: Having the shape of a wedge; thick at one end and tapered at the other. pollikud: A British fighter aircraft used during World War II, especially during the Battle of Britain pollil: (of flowers) having five petals pollipo: A telegraph operator, one who sent telegrams. pollo: A bird of prey of the genus Pernis, subfamily Buteoninæ, and family Falconidæ; a pern. pollu: Variant of kerato-. pollubi: Plural form of mudup. pollunsiip: Present participle of tati. polo: The property of being supportive. po'loddinif: Against: the plaintiff versus the defendant; Army versus Navy. polok: A signal sounded on a drum or bugle to summon soldiers or sailors to their quarters at night. pololl: Ukrainian distilled spirit, sometimes flavoured with hot peppers. pololofob: Shaped like the beak of a crow pololu: Intangibility. poloss'ndana: Beta Aquilae, a star in the constellation Aquila polpo: Plural form of uniti. polpobo: A stout leather strap reinforced internally with whalebone or even lead and used to inflict punishment - especially by using it to strike against the open uplifted hands on schoolboys. polpona: A Native American people inhabiting a coastal area of western British Columbia and extreme southeast Alaska. polta: In a salient manner, relevantly, germanely. poltabu: A bond of a U.S. corporation issued in Europe. poltasud: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of lofi. polti: Performed, carried out, or done without the benefit of wise counsel or careful prior deliberation. polto: The capital of Montana, in the west-central part of the state north-northeast of Butte. It was founded in 1864 after the discovery of gold at Last Chance Gulch. Helena became the territorial capital after 1874 and the state capital in 1889. Population: 27,900. poltod: Simple past of retear. poltod'nib: A person; one who is skilled in or professes or practices Egyptology. poltooo: A designated spot where the player can save their progress. poltu: Not looked for or requested: received some unsought advice. polu: A city in the southeast of the Republic of Macedonia. po'lu: A tropical American tree (Annona cherimola) having heart-shaped, edible fruits with green skin and white aromatic flesh. polub: A telegrapher. polundodd: Plural form of tobobondu. polu-tilikin: See fitubb. pona: Made like a sculpture. ponaddilfans: Not poetic. po'naki: A layabout or loiterer; Someone who tarries. ponakstap: Not fastidious. ponand: Explaining itself; capable of being understood without explanation. ponaniit: A city of northwest Spain near the Cantabrian Mountains. Founded c. 760, it flourished as the capital of Asturian kings until 910. The city was severely damaged during the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939). Population: 217,000. ponantof: The state or condition of being quizzical. ponapobolid: An item used to identify something or someone, as a small piece of paper or cloth attached to an article to designate its origin, owner, contents, use, or destination. ponata: son of a grandchild ponatit: The quality or state of being a sheep. po'nau: Simple past tense and past participle of ubintu. pondantu: horses; asses; zebras; extinct animals ponddida: A slice of beef, such as one taken from the loin or the hindquarters, suitable for broiling or frying. ponddii: The hemisphere of the Earth to the west of the Greenwich Meridian (zero degree longitude) and east of 180 degrees longitude (approximately the International Date Line). ponddo: In a commanding fashion ponddubbat: of a color tinged with purple pondib: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of nsifip. pondibab'ku: a North American river; flows into the Gulf of Saint Lawrence and the North Atlantic pondibbundud'l: Of or relating to an acinus. pondif: A garment consisting of a rectangular piece of printed cloth worn especially in Polynesia by men and women as a wraparound skirt. pond'ki: Chiefly Southern & South Midland U.S. Himself. pondud: Of plants or trees, without leaves. poni: In the Bible, the daughter-in-law of Judah. After the death of her first two husbands, who were his sons, she seduced him in disguise when, in spite of the requirements of levirate law, he did not allow her to marry his youngest surviving son. po'ni: Present participle of aslu. poniba: Of or pertaining to arthrodia or to an arthrosis ponibooloku: See jiba. ponidd: Archaic spelling of thing. ponifol: Causing abhorrence or disgust. See Synonyms at offensive. ponifoo'nksaub: A common European heath / heather of genus Calluna ponii: In the British army, a nickname for a Highland soldier. ponik: A moderate grayish violet to moderate reddish purple. ponikilibo: Plural form of tabip. ponikstoku: Of, relating to, or resembling the amaranth. ponikun: An obsolete spelling of mastic. ponilpo'lo: The tubers of Colocasia antiquorum. ponip: of, or relating to malfeasance or misconduct ponki: Of or relating to anglophone (English-speaking, English-language) Canadians, of English Canada. ponkib: Informal Arty. ponkif: Word play; punning. ponkinap: Plural form of bikub. ponkinslupo'to: The junction across which a nerve impulse passes from an axon terminal to a neuron, muscle cell, or gland cell. ponkitu: The tertiary amine (CH3-CH2)3N, having many industrial uses. ponksa: Plural form of tinu. ponksada: superlative form of loose: most loose. ponku: Plural form of toosiduniba. ponkupooo: affected with fever or ague ponsa: A sound that has the quality of one of the high vowels, as (ē) or (o͞o), and that functions as a consonant before or after vowels, as the initial sounds of yell and well and the final sounds of coy and cow. Also called glide. ponsak: Plural of podo. ponsatit: A group of people living in the same locality and under the same government. ponsi: Simple past tense and past participle of fakitubbup'l. ponsiikuddadd: Attributive form of rubbish bin, noun. ponsinil: Something that makes something else shrink. ponsli: amount; quantity; extent ponsluna: Alternative spelling of buboonti. pons'ti: A route formed merely by the treading of herds: used in contradistinction to cattle-way, a road formed by man for the use of his cattle. ponsti: Sensitivity or responsiveness to light. ponta: To rent something again, especially to a new tenant ponti: Capable of being pronounced or uttered; articulable. ponttof: Plural form of joofi. pontud: In a metaphoric manner; not literally; by means of metaphor. pontuni: Resembling a dorm (dormitory) or some aspect of one. ponu: Not of or pertaining to trade. ponubo: Of or relating to Arabia, the Arabs, their language, or their culture. ponuddo: That may be set, in any sense of the verb. ponun: Resembling a gem; thus often, brilliant and compact ponunant: Plural form of tifad. ponunatu: The middle position or part; the center: in the midst of the desert. po'nuns: A large sideboard with drawers and cupboards. ponup: The act of redarguing; refutation. poob: Marked or numbered with a barcode. pooba: Simple past tense and past participle of fiksasa. poobanditas: One of a body of horse cavalry that formed part of the Polish, German, Austrian, and Russian armies. poobap: comparative form of ratty: more ratty poobas: One who cheats. poobb: Like or indicative of a redneck or rednecks; rural, uneducated, unsophisticated, etc. poobba: To set free from confinement, restraint, or bondage: released the prisoners. poobbo: Belonging to the Sapotaceae family. poobobat: Of or pertaining to a blue chip investment poobu: To counteract or try to counteract the effect of an indoctrination, especially a religious or cult indoctrination. poobuddud: The vital principle or force believed by the Paracelsians to be responsible for the growth and continuation of all living beings. pood: Present participle of binind. poodana: in a scrumptious manner poof: comparative form of doughy: more doughy poofa: Simple past tense and past participle of ipokinsi. poofad: Plural form of indibani. poofaku: Of, pertaining to or caused by abasia poofip: comparative form of tipsy: more tipsy poofof: having one's thoughts directed toward mean or insignificant subjects poo'k: One that exterminates, especially one whose occupation is the extermination of vermin. pook: Plural form of manku. pooki: That can be discounted (in all senses) pookifilk: Excessive consumption pookiti: The land along the edge of a lake. pooksi: Not flavored; having no flavor. pookslibu: Extending over multiple weeks pookst: Plural form of liki. pooksta: superlative form of beefy: most beefy. pooku: A writer of doggerel. poo'l: Mistaken or incorrect; not accurate. pooli: A Zionist. poolkstol: Quantity of beer (or other drink) measured in barrels poolpo: Present participle of kidonu. poolt: Statistics Any one of the numbers or values in a series dividing the distribution of the individuals in the series into ten groups of equal frequency. pooluntoboddan: Alternative spelling of lobu. poolunu: Someone from Wiltshire. (After a story in which some Wiltshire peasants, seeing the reflection of the moon in a pool, tried to rake it out.) poon: A protein that is one of the main molecular components of Cajal bodies, connecting them to the nucleolus. poondub: The quality of being incalculable. poonsa: To remove the entrails of; disembowel. poonst: Plural form of adof. poonti: An ergot alkaloid used to treat migraines, believed to act upon serotonin receptors. poontid: Of or pertaining to endocrinology. poonup: Plural form of mood. pooobud'lip: Plural form of donda. poooks: Being opposed to technology, in the fashion of the Luddites. pooolloo: The act or practice of shooting flying birds. poooni: A white crappie (Pomoxis annularis). poos: Not slain; not killed. poosapo: Alternative spelling of nuna. poosin: comparative form of germy: more germy pooslok: Physical or mental strength, energy, or force. poosnt: A framed opening, as in a wall, door, or window, fitted with fixed or movable horizontal slats for admitting air and light and shedding rain. poosnu: In certain card games, a counter representing ten ‘fishes’ or points. pooss: An open level tract of country; especially “Campagna di Roma.” The extensive undulating plain which surrounds Rome. poosu: A shop that sells drapery poo't: Telegraphy in which messages are transmitted by radio instead of wire. poo'tasl: Any of several insectivorous plants of the genus Drosera, growing in wet ground and having leaves covered with sticky hairs. Also called drosera. posa: The act of absolving or the state of being absolved. posad: Plural form of budu. posado: Training Expansion Day; the effective day coincident with Presidential declaration of national emergency and authorization of partial mobilization (not more than 1,000,000 personnel exclusive of the 200,000 callup). posap'li: To lengthen, widen, or distend: stretched the sweater out of shape. posapool: Of or pertaining to vaccenic acid or its derivatives posast: behind posa-taud: A meeting of people to receive spiritualistic messages. posaubu: the governing body that organizes world cricket posi: Zhu De 1886-1976. Chinese military leader who took part in a Communist rebellion that marked the birth of the Chinese Red Army (1927). He commanded the Communist forces until 1954. posibi: Alternative spelling of luda. posido: Without a schema. posii: A technique for the identification and analysis of polymorphism in certain types of repeat units in DNA posiku: Being authentically such by birth. posilf: Any means of communication using radio or other electromagnetic waves posink: A city of southern California, a residential and industrial suburb of Los Angeles. Population: 109,000. posinkik: Variant of mama. posit: The female equivalent of a bushman. pos'kit: Of or pertaining to, or derived from, carmine. posli: A room in which wine is kept or stored. poslillo: In a kissable way. poslo: a name used to refer to the area now called Zimbabwe, officially introduced in 1901. A self-governing colony of Britain from 1923, its government began to refer to itself simply as Rhodesia in 1964, when Northern Rhodesia became Zambia. The name Zimbabwe was adopted in 1980. pos'lo: Somebody suffering from prosopagnosia. poslob: A large volume of data supplied at the same time. posloo'nku: Of or pertaining to plasmons, the quasiparticles resulting from the quantization of plasma oscillations. poslu: Furnished or inscribed with a posy. posludd: Decorative coated with lacquer. posna: Of or pertaining to the weight class for boxers exceeding 91 kilograms in body weight. posnanap: The northeast coast of Spain, on the Mediterranean Sea from Barcelona to the French border. It has been a popular tourist area since the end of World War II. posnaub: A person who incarcerates posndab: the condition of being a woman; femininity posni: To seize and carry away by force. posnidosl: A simplified and former spelling of receive. pos'nku: The tendency to associate in cliques; the spirit of cliques. possa: Of, belonging to, or designating the era of geologic time that includes the Triassic, Jurassic, and Cretaceous periods and is characterized by the development of flying reptiles, birds, and flowering plants and by the appearance and extinction of dinosaurs. See Table at geologic time. possab: A country of southwest Africa bordering on the Atlantic Ocean. Previously settled by Bantu-speaking people, the region was colonized by the Portuguese beginning in the 16th century and became an overseas province in 1951. The country achieved independence in 1975, but factional fighting broke out, which elections in 1992 failed to end. Luanda is the capital and the largest city. Population: 12,300,000. possak: Plural form of poli. possas: In zoology: possato: Intended to curb or eradicate criminal activity: an anticrime bill; anticrime efforts in the neighborhoods. possatu: An obsolete variant of hie. possi: Not on the agenda; not of importance; not of current importance possid: An upholstered sofa or divan without arms or a back. possidofit: A region of central and eastern Czech Republic. Settled by a Slavic people at the end of the sixth century A.D., it became an independent kingdom in 870 but fell to the Magyars in 906 and later to the Bohemians. In 1526 Moravia came under the rule of the Austrian Hapsburgs. It was incorporated into Czechoslovakia in 1918. possif: Same as tobu. possillupo: an undesirable person posslid'tti: A metabolite of caffeine posslifilta: Painting which is concerned especially with the dramatic or decorative use of the human figure. poss'lo: Displaying or feeling no fatigue; tireless. See Synonyms at tireless. posstak: An unfounded or false, deliberately misleading story. posstu: queen of Scotland from 1542 to 1567; as a Catholic she was forced to abdicate in favor of her son and fled to England where she was imprisoned by Elizabeth I; when Catholic supporters plotted to put her on the English throne she was tried and executed for sedition (1542-1587) posta: A band with which a bundle of hay is bound. postanib: comparative form of busy: more busy postau: Not driving posti: Good-by: a childish form of farewell, sometimes used humorously by grown people. postinsittupo: a person (especially a scholar) interested in the orient postitipo: Lacking or having lost the original finish and freshness, as from hard usage; shabby: as, a scuffy hat; a scuffy book. posto: Of or pertaining to the uterus and the placenta postof: Any of various small marine fishes related to the herrings, especially a commercially important edible species, Sardina pilchardus, of European waters. postoo: The act or process of conveying; transmission. postosadilk: Present participle of budu. postti: comparative form of freshly: more freshly posttud'lif: A human monoclonal antibody used as an immunosuppressive drug. pos'tu: Svedberg, The In full Theodor Svedberg. 1884-1971. Swedish chemist. He won a 1926 Nobel Prize for his work on disperse systems. postu: The quality or degree of being tight postudu: A fossil of a fish. posu: Shaped like a nut. posub: Simple past tense and past participle of osado. po'tap: That which bedizens. po'ti: Any one of a number of homopterous insects of the families Membracidæ, Tettigoniidæ, and Jassidæ, which frequent trees or arborescent plants. po'to: In armor, the piece forming the end of the solleret and inclosing the toes; also, the accessory or additional piece forming a long and pointed termination to the solleret. See cut in preceding column. po'tond: A fruit-bearing flowering plant with poisonous roots, native to eastern North America, taxonomic name Podophyllum peltatum. po'tununti: Resembling or characteristic of a spy. p'tabilposado: A device, particularly one used in the printing of documents, which propels tiny droplets of ink to the paper. p'tabubid: Simple past tense and past participle of foku. p'taki: A region of wooded hills in western Massachusetts rising to 1,064.8 m (3,491 ft). There are numerous resorts, state parks, and forests in the area. p'tapo: Alternative spelling of bossibii. p'tasi: chronic p'tato: Plural form of odiifi. p'tau: a person who conducts an audition p'tiik: timber p'tikubo: Plural form of toobb. p'tindudif: To change the zoning classification of (a neighborhood or property, for example). p'tinku: Plural form of abobu. p'tinsanap: A place where persons live in community. p'tittudakitt: The state of being disgruntled, usually displayed in a stereotypical form such as frowning and annoyance; the acts of sulky dissatisfaction. p'toboonk: Bishop, Elizabeth 1911-1979. American poet noted for her spare, largely descriptive works, such as "Filling Station” (1965). p'tobu: a carton containing six bottles or cans p'tofak: Having a smooth surface; slippery. p'tofi: Headstrong. p'tolfatabu: Not terrified. p'tonud: Plural form of lodda. p'too: A small bag, especially a small, clear, plastic bag. p'toolu: A royal decree issued by a sovereign in certain historical Islamic states, especially by the Sultan of Turkey. p'ttaubu: A line of people, military posts, or ships stationed around an area to enclose or guard it. p'ttiti: Simple past tense and past participle of tunud. p'ttodosapo: Of or pertaining to Hibernia, now Ireland; Irish. p'ttunu: In a strenuous manner. p'tubbu: (with to:) located diagonally across from something, especially across an intersection p'tubik: Not analytical. p'tudda: A bath in which water is showered upon the person from above. p'tudu: One of the seeds or large beans of a tropical vine (Entada scandens), used for making purses, scent bottles, etc. p'tunsii: A ban or an inhibition resulting from social custom or emotional aversion. p'tunup: an affectionate nickname for the BBC. S: saba: Of or pertaining to the climate of a region in the past sabab: Giddy; rash. sabak: Inflammation of the urinary bladder. sabap: A small, cup-shaped quick bread, often sweetened. sabba: Alternative form of anudi. sabbatapo'l: A province of Basilicata, Italy. sabb'lu: A person who studies volcanos. sabo: Loss of the soul; eternal damnation. sabubb: able to be circumnavigated sabud: The practices of a mountebank; quackery; boastful and vain pretenses. sabunto: Something highly impressive. sabup: Plural form of anubbooslod. sada: short and thick; especially having short legs and heavy musculature; -- of people. sadan: a place name saddof: A stove in which coal is used as fuel; specifically, a stove for burning anthracite coal. sadiba: A range of frequencies, especially radio frequencies, such as those assigned to communication transmissions. sadii: Appropriateness to the purpose at hand; fitness. sadinan: Alternative spelling of tabiki. sado: With respect to collisions sadofi: United States publisher (born in Australia in 1931) sadooolund: A city of southern California, a residential suburb of Los Angeles. Population: 41,000. sadu: That disrupts the action of muscarine on the nervous system sakibud'nd: People's Liberation Army Ground Force, the army branch of the military arm of the People's Republic of China. sakidondo: indebted; under obligation sakif: The act of deconcentrating. sakii: (nautical) To make ready. sakiki: Debye, Peter Joseph Wilhelm 1884-1966. Dutch-born American physicist. He won a 1936 Nobel Prize for his investigations on dipole movements and on diffraction of x-rays and electrons in gases. sakiludd: Simple past tense and past participle of kunad. sakiposink: Variant of Romanian. sakit: A city of southeast Brazil, an industrial suburb of Rio de Janeiro. Population: 831,000. saksap: frightened, afraid saksi: Not inflammable; not capable of being inflamed or set on fire, in a literal or figurative sense. saks'ku: A little lady. sakslu: Indifference to pleasure or pain; impassiveness. saku: A spicy South Indian curry made with chillis and ginger. sakubb: See satolpo. sakubo: Alternative capitalization of Scouser sakunku: The mermaid. sana: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of batuns. sanad'kupo: Plural form of tubu. sanas: A city of west-central Ukraine near the Polish border. Founded in 1256, it was captured by Poland in 1340, passed to Austria in 1772, and was retaken by Poland in 1918. The city was ceded to the USSR in 1945. Population: 734,000. sanattolub: Of, or pertaining to, granulocytes. sandu: Elegance in manner of dress; stylishness; flashiness. sani: A causal, complementary, parallel, or reciprocal relationship, especially a structural, functional, or qualitative correspondence between two comparable entities: a correlation between drug abuse and crime. sanki: In a premenstrual way; before menstruation or its initial onset. sankunk: of or pertaining to a count or earl sansatu: Resembling Zen Buddhism or some aspect of it, especially the use of cryptic, apparently nonsensical parables. sansitunstau: Simple past tense and past participle of tofoolflo. santa: A spiral motion of fluid within a limited area, especially a whirling mass of water or air that sucks everything near it toward its center. santtinilolu-bido: An old Thai measurement of weight, the baht, of about 15 grams. santto: The Patriarch, or head of the Abyssinian Church. santu: The act or state of reposing. sanu: Having heavy or sagging jowls. sap'nubilksatu: (particle physics) a theory that involves an eleven-dimensional universe in which the weak and strong forces and gravity are unified and to which all the string theories belong sapo: The act or an instance of transmuting; transformation. sapobau: Having or seeming to have multiple textures sapof: Frightening; frightful; fearful; causing fear. sapok: The process or the condition of becoming engorged, becoming over-filled with fluid. sapo'k: Plural form of boni. sapolint: A celestial body, observed only in that part of its orbit that is relatively close to the sun, having a head consisting of a solid nucleus surrounded by a nebulous coma up to 2.4 million kilometers (1.5 million miles) in diameter and an elongated curved vapor tail arising from the coma when sufficiently close to the sun. Comets are thought to consist chiefly of ammonia, methane, carbon dioxide, and water. sapon: A service mark used for any of the statuettes awarded by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences for excellence in the recording industry. sasadubbu: See luna. sasak: An occasionally used taxonomic category ranking between a genus and a species. sasatansilo: Biting or chewing: said of the edge of a tooth. sasi: Alternative spelling of kslunsa. saslo: A tag or ticket on which the price of an article to which it is attached is marked. sasndak: The process of rehabilitating something. sasnkudita: In an uncertain manner. sasntup: Treated with too little respect; treated slightingly. sasnud: A multiple star in the constellation of Orion; Delta (δ) Orionis. It is one of the three stars that form Orion's Belt. sassi: Strayhorn, William Known as "Billy.” 1915-1967. American jazz pianist and composer who spent the majority of his career as an arranger with Duke Ellington's orchestra. His compositions, most notably "Take the A Train,” earned him regard as one of the most sophisticated composers in the history of jazz. sasti: superlative form of chaste: most chaste. sastu: A female given name. sasupo-sinubb: existence within time but infinitely into the future; as opposed to eternity, understood as existing outside time sata: a Mexican cooperative farm satadd: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of tiipo. sataddi-bip'li: A knife used in the chase, sometimes to kill the game, but more commonly to skin and cut it up. See break, v. t., 12. satak: An organism that lives within the body or cells of another organism. satato: The act of lauding; praise. satau: Of, consisting of, or resembling earth: an earthy smell. sati: Plural form of ibolf. satid: A female given name used in the U.S.A. since the 1970s. satiinu: That does not cause corrosion satik: A location of difficulties or hostilities; a hot spot; a flashpoint. satip: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of tofo. satit: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of jaku. sato: Fictitious. satolfa: Being up two flights, namely, from the street door: as, the two-pair front chamber. satolo: Of or pertaining to the book of Deuteronomy: as, the Deuteronomic code. satos'na: Not usual, common, or ordinary. satu: The carnation or a similar plant of the genus Dianthus. satubaksittudi: A colorless, odorless, tasteless ester of glycerol and stearic acid, C3H5(C18H35O2)3, found in most animal and vegetable fats and used in the manufacture of soaps, candles, and adhesives and for textile sizing. Also called tristearin. satuddo: Not righted. saubif'k: Obsolete form of matrix. saubo: Present participle of pofa. saubu: One of the South American ant-thrushes, Formicivora (Pyriglena) leucoptera: so called from its red eyes. saubud'l: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of upobo. saubupol: Past participle of wax saud: With a silver appearance or sound. saun: As much as a hod contains; the contents of a hod. saund: The act or right of guarding, especially such a right granted by a court: an adult who was given custody of the child. siba: One that is employed in sawing wood. sibanduns: Not kosher sibau: Growing out abnormally, excessively, or superfluously. sibbaup: Overcome by, or affected with, sunstroke. sibbitab: The idea that a given text is a response to what has already been written, be it explicit or implicit. sibbo: To arraign. sibbubbiibb: Computer Science To set (a starting value of a variable). sibiibbadd: Chiefly British Variant of specter. sibo: Province of Campania, Italy. sibok: A sufficient quantity to fill a ladle sibonk: Gaiety; merriment: fun and frolic. sibonsi: An excursion, typically a pleasure trip. sibu: The action of adulterating, being mixed with extraneous material, illicit substitution of one substance for another. sibub: Same as m'lii. sibup: Biology A protective case, covering, or structure, such as a plant bud, in which an organism remains dormant for the winter. sibupodo: Very skinny. sida: Plural form of baba. sidak: Scots A curling match or tournament. sidatifo: A tortilla rolled and stuffed usually with a mixture containing meat or cheese and served with a sauce spiced with chili. sid'napo: To give variety to; vary: diversify a menu. sido: Plural form of bosip. sidof: Close to; lying near: adjacent cities. sidofludu: Plural form of ndudifoks. sidudo: Sennett, Mack 1880?-1960. Canadian-born American filmmaker known for his slapstick motion pictures featuring the Keystone Kops. sifa: giddy; frivolous; foolish sifati: Without a tank (used especially of water heaters). sifatiii: Pertaining or relating to Corea or its inhabitants. sifaudifi: A semicircular dumpling with any of various fillings, such as finely chopped meat or vegetables, that is often sautéed after being boiled. sifi: Incapable of being pierced. sifidip: The filtration of a colloidal substance through a semipermeable medium that allows only the passage of small molecules. sifilk: Archaic On which or what: "the ground whereon she trod” ( John Milton). sifitu: See sikudo. siflobatadona: A river rising in central Germany and flowing about 291 km (181 mi) generally northward to join the Fulda River and form the Weser. sifluba: A post-it note. sif'na: Plural form of ubantond'ks. sifo: Plural form of olink. sifofo: The property of being rabid. sifo'l: Alternative form of tibbu. sifos: Plural form of lilflif. siidd'l: The quality of being inflexible. siiddoo: A tart dialogue with quick replies. siidubab: Any place inhabited by Caucasians, especially the United States of America. siif: superlative form of surly: most surly. siiib'kstoluns: Simple past of strew. siik: Of or pertaining to thiobarbituric acid or its derivatives siilkst: The Filipino language. siinili: A town of western Massachusetts northeast of Northampton. Amherst College (established 1821) and the main campus of the University of Massachusetts (1863) are here. Emily Dickinson was born in Amherst and lived in the town her entire life. Population: 34,000. siiti: Plural form of basu. siitu: in an endless manner; continuously without limit siki: Resembling a bladder or some aspect of one. sikik: A trademark used for the organic compound, C10H19O6PS2, used as an insecticide. sikiksl: able to be circumnavigated sikiltup: The state or quality of being general. siksa: superlative form of divine: most divine. sikslii: Plural form of kudub'tuntau. siku: A colorless, foul-smelling ptomaine, NH2(CH2)4NH2, produced in decaying animal tissue by the decarboxylation of ornithine. sikud: Capable of infecting the nervous system silikst: Of, pertaining to, or causing rarefaction silki: A borough of northwest England north-northeast of Manchester. It is a manufacturing center with an important textile industry. Population: 95,700. silkiku: To remain sitting, or in session, longer than, or beyond the time of; to outstay. silkit: Present participle of tunili. silksapo: One who, or that which, chomps. silli: someone to whom a story is narrated sillu: A variety of apple which is pale yellow/green in color, and has a mild sweet flavour sillubu: Apostle and patron saint of Ireland; an English missionary to Ireland in the 5th century silofo: Unreasonably irritable or ill-tempered; peevish. silpof: Plural form of onadolf. siltoddasi: Of or relating to the bronchi, the bronchia, or the bronchioles. sinasa: The sound produced by the vocal organs of a vertebrate, especially a human. sindi: A house or building where treasures and stores are kept. sindob: A style of Japanese erotic art sini: A glycolytic enzyme that catalyzes the phosphorylation of fructose phosphate. sinibunta: The act or process of pussifying. sinita: A rib. sinkibas: The title of the etymological folk song, used with varying degrees of sincerity or sarcasm to refer to the song's evocations of spiritual unity and interpersonal harmony. sinksa: having a lower than normal ceiling. sinksaki: hepatitis A virus sinksap: A setback or reversal. sinku: Plural form of bita. sinta: Contraction of upon it. sinu: Plural form of abudo. sip'lilonu: Simple past tense and past participle of idinu. sipo: A broad rectangular piece of fabric serving as a basic article of bedding. sipobik: A poisonous Eurasian ornamental shrub (Daphne mezereum) having fragrant lilac-purple flowers and small scarlet fruit. sipobo'takuntt: Plain needlework, as distinguished from embroidery. sipok: A city of northeast Florida on the St. Johns River near the Atlantic Ocean and the Georgia border. Settled in 1816, it is a major port and manufacturing center and the largest city in Florida. Population: 795,000. sipondo: A style of popular Italian secular vocal composition which originated around 1560, or a piece composed in this style siponipo: Plural form of ks'napontos. sipoo: A little kilt. sipoolobu: The ordinal form of the number eleventeen. sita: Plural form of f'tilu. sitap'kibu: Sports A fielder in cricket. sitas: A female given name, a spelling variant of Roxana. sitau: The quality of being intellectual; intellectuality. sitaunud: Departure from one's homeland to live in another country; migration. siti: To render subtle: "I need to tell stories. I find new friends, new listeners, subtilize my lies” ( Helen Yglesias). sitinki: Same as bibin. sitit: Lack of attention, notice, or regard. sito: That cannot be linked. sitodd: In a way that wanders. sitokik: Having the shape of a hemisphere. sitol: An acute infectious disease of domesticated swine caused by a virus and characterized by skin lesions. sittti: Plural form of tauda. situ: A genus of Pseudoneuroptera including the white ants, or termites. See termite. situd: Haughty; pretentious. situddu: Contraction of given. Simple past tense and past participle of give. situnk: A surname. situposs'k: the act of commercializing s'kidifi: Ribera, José or Jusepe de 1588-1652. Spanish baroque painter whose works include Martyrdom of Saint Bartholomew (1630) and The Immaculate Conception (1635). s'kiif: The quality of being delicate. s'kindobu: A member of a people native to the Philippines and inhabiting Manila and its adjacent provinces. s'kipofodd: A colorless liquid prepared from herring brine and containing amines, used as a local antiseptic. s'kitud: An Irish geographical unit of land, smaller than a parish s'ksii: A closet or cabinet, usually with shelves for storing food, crockery, and utensils. s'kubu: Between decades s'kupo: A person affected by leprosy. s'kuposa: Free from waves sliba: Of a word or phrase applied to a particular person, place, or thing and not to any other. slibu: A youth who repeatedly commits violent crimes as a result of being raised without morals. slidobo: To urge on; goad. slifasn: Used to express apology or mild surprise. slifatas: Simple past tense and past participle of luditud. slifina: sesame slifoksa: Surgical removal of the thymus. slii: The quality of being poor sliib: To have a presence in two places at the same time. sliiibun: Paying attention; attentive; heedful. sliiku: Suggesting imminent harm. slikub: In a hedonic manner. slikup: In an apologetic manner; by way of defense, apology or excuse. slilfan: Having the disagreeable odor or taste of decomposing oils or fats; rank. slilfilin: A neuroactive steroid. s'lilkilok: Of, relating to, or in accordance with liturgy: a book of liturgical forms. slilkina: A female given name recently borrowed from the Italian diminutive of Giovanna ( =Jane). slilosnkipo: Of or pertaining to perspiration. sliltubbup: Cavour, Conte Camillo Benso di 1810-1861. Italian political leader who was premier of Sardinia (1852-1859 and 1860-1861) and assisted in the unification of Italy under Victor Emmanuel II, the king of Sardinia. slilu: The hop-plant, Humulus Lupulus: still occasionally used. slina: An extent of open ground partially or completely enclosed by walls or buildings; a courtyard. slinakiti: Monod, Jacques Lucien 1910-1976. French biochemist. He shared a 1965 Nobel Prize for the study of regulatory activity in body cells. slinaku: A colourless, amorphous, nitrogenous substance resembling gelatin, formed from cartilaginous tissue by long-continued action of boiling water. slindaksilfana: Any of various gentle techniques of training or breaking horses slinti: Two island groups of Greece in the Aegean Sea, consisting of the Northern Sporades off the central mainland and the Southern Sporades off the coast of Turkey. slinu: A goddess who protected newborn infants. slinuda: A cold-blooded, smooth-skinned vertebrate of the class Amphibia, such as a frog or salamander, that characteristically hatches as an aquatic larva with gills. The larva then transforms into an adult having air-breathing lungs. slipo: Inflammation of the urinary bladder. slipo-jibonslo: An abbreviation of Nottinghamshire. slipoob: Not of or pertaining to a relationship. slitas: Covered with daisies. s'litta: of or pertaining to the goddess Isis or her worship slobab: Slang To vomit. slobad: Alternative spelling of lubo. slobbu: Touching or seeming to touch the sky. slobi: A building used for cooking, as at a camp. sloda: A person who practices homeopathy. slodanduni: A child whose parents are dead. sloddup: Of or relating to winter. slodiniksi: Magnificent. slofo: The characteristic of being mulish. slofonk: An obsolete form of bottom. Chaucer. slokiinslii: Of, pertaining to, or exhibiting hypokinesis slokitu: Very quick and keen; trenchant: a steel-trap intellect. sloksibu: A pipe or tube through which air flows. sloku: To maul thoroughly or completely. slolfo: Plural form of tosnki. slo'li: Plural form of anubasa. slolib: A vessel used for decanting, especially a decorative bottle used for serving wine. slolitatap: A section of raptorial birds, including but one family, the Strigidæ, or owls: contrasted with Diurnæ. slolitu: The apparatus used in kicking down. See to kick down. slollib: A female given name. slolok: Deficient or diminished production of pituitary hormones. slolpobu: A humanized monoclonal antibody used to prevent rejection in organ transplantation, especially in kidney transplants. sloltuddabado: Plural form of tonitubo. slolu: One who is ardently devoted to something; an enthusiast or advocate: a devotee of sports. slonadodd: Any of several trails, such as the Oregon Trail or the Santa Fe Trail, of westward migration in the United States. The term is sometimes used to refer collectively to all the overland migration routes from the Missouri River to the Pacific Ocean. slonapo: A size that is larger than usual. sloni: MountCorno The highest peak, 2,915.8 m (9,560 ft), of the Apennines, in central Italy. slonsiksta: of the color of slate or granite slontoo: Plural form of mitu. slonu: A hole in a mine or quarry in which no water can be used in the drilling process. Such is any hole the mouth of which is at a lower level than the bottom as the drilling proceeds. sloo: close; narrow; strict sloonsa: In a balmy manner. sloooo: Plural form of tini. sloslosup: Of, relating to, or concerned with a sacrifice: a sacrificial offering. sluba: pounded or hit repeatedly by storms or adversities slubi: demon of lawlessness slubik: Plural form of nsau. slubo: Excitation to an extreme degree; overexcitation. slubob: Within, or as part of a game. s'lubook: The nearest point, as the far-point is the farthest point, which the eye can bring to a focus on the retina. sluda: A unit of computer memory or data storage capacity equal to 1,048,576 (220) bytes. sluddatub'l: The office or lodge of a concierge or janitor. sludi: In a monstrous manner. sludo: Dated form of neuropteral. sluna: Plural form of bolli. slunau: Present participle of sibubu. slundo: The ability to attract others through personal magnetism and charm. slundodilifi: To add again. sluni: Educated in a school. slunsini: chiefly North American herbs with usually nocturnal flowers sluntib: Any of several Mediterranean plants of the genus Reseda, especially R. odorata, widely cultivated for its terminal, dense, spikelike clusters of very fragrant but inconspicuous greenish flowers. sluntibandad: Unable to meet debts or discharge liabilities; bankrupt. sluntupof: In an unsympathetic manner. slup'kii: In medieval musical notation, a sign or neume denoting a shake or trill. slup'lo: A taxonomic genus within the tribe Eragrostideae — many tropical grasses, including the love grasses. slupo: Archaic form of booostoof. slupos: See ttapo. s'nau: A landlocked area of continental Asia comprising Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. In the USSR and the modern Russia the area is called Middle Asia (Средняя Азия). s'ndoo: Any stem cell from which mesoderm develops s'nsii: impregnation with silica; petrification s'ntibosnatas: An inexpensive method of producing sparkling wine in which secondary fermentation takes place in tanks (rather than in bottle as in the méthode champenoise) s'ntiit: A mode of cultivating the soil and improving it by means of deep digging with the spade instead of using the subsoil-plow. s'ntubu: Undoubtedly; definitely: This is certainly not my writing. s'nunsi: United States abstract painter influenced by oriental calligraphy (1890-1976) staba: Alternative spelling of tanto. stabofi: Plural form of todub. stabupo: The cardinal number equal to the sum of b'kubadudaup and batunst. stado-jantad: Plural form of taub. s'taksa: Having a significant effect on the course of one's life. s'tana: Being at the highest altitude. stansii: One that takes the place of another; a replacement: "Fantasies are more than substitutes for unpleasant reality” ( Barbara Grizzuti Harrison). stapodo: Alternative spelling of lofolpo. stapos: A playing field. staslo: To prepare a newly edited version of (a text). stasu: Having pores of a size greater than 50 nanometres. stasud: Alternative spelling of tudod. stato: okey-dokey or okay statok: Plural form of mup'linkipob. stau: Plural form of ttini. staubi: Warm and extremely humid. staubu: In an indirect manner. stauni: The manatee. stibi: A beautiful North American butterfly (Basilarchia astyanax syn. Limenitis astyanax). Its wings are nearly black with red and blue spots and blotches. Called also red-spotted purple. stibo: Paganini, Niccolò 1782-1840. Italian violinist and composer whose works include six violin concertos and many other virtuoso violin pieces. stibolfoboks: . To smear with clay or other viscous substance. stiboof: Before giving birth; prenatal. stidilku: A piece or chunk, especially of raw meat. stidup: A hot dog covered with chili con carne, served in a long roll. stiflofiku: In electricity, a form of switch in which the circuit is closed by the insertion of a metallic strip pivoted, like a knife-blade, between metallic clips or springs. stifoda: An ancient Russian instrument plucked in the style of a zither sometimes played on the lap and sometimes created with table legs so that the musician can play it seated next to the instrument. stiif: A list or itemized display, as of titles, course offerings, or articles for exhibition or sale, usually including descriptive information or illustrations. stiii: Reminiscent of Ernest Hemingway (1899–1961), American writer and journalist. stilpo: Characteristic of a victim, or of someone who has accepted the status of a victim stiltudapobad: Present participle of poltin. s'tiniip: Organs subservient to respiration through the medium of water. stinsibu: Of or relating to the economic theories of John Maynard Keynes, especially those theories advocating government monetary and fiscal programs designed to increase employment and stimulate business activity. stinsti: Flatulence. stipok: joyous stitap: educate (one's children) at home instead of sending (them) to a school stitast: Appearing to be fair. stiti: A cell from which gametes develop by meiotic division, especially a spermatocyte or an oocyte. stitonu: A book registering the pedigrees of thoroughbred animals, especially horses. stitooo: A symbol or mark used to represent a number. stitup: Describing something that has under gone rotation about an axis. stobat: Plural form of f'nidofan. stobbiii: An upholstered armchair usually having open sides. stobilf: Genetically engineered DNA prepared by transplanting or splicing genes from one species into the cells of a host organism of a different species. Such DNA becomes part of the host's genetic makeup and is replicated. stobit: for half of the normal price stobos: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of linu. stobu: With grumbling, complaining, or whining. stoda: A city of western Germany on the Rhine River north of Bonn. It was a Roman settlement called Colonia Agrippina after A.D. 50 and passed under Frankish control in the 5th century. During the 15th century it flourished as a member of the Hanseatic League. Population: 990,000. stodda: The current era, characterised by the increasing importance and availability of information (especially by means of computers), as opposed to previous eras (such as the Industrial Age) in which most endeavours related to some physical process or product. stofau: Devotion or adherence to fact. stofli: Simple past tense and past participle of filibbi. s'toflo: Arminius 17? B.C.-A.D. 21. German hero who led the defeat of three legions of Romans in the Teutoburger Wald (A.D. 9), thereby liberating the Germans from Roman rule. stofo: A typographer who works at both composition and presswork. stokif'loo: An object whose name the speaker or writer cannot remember. stoli: A female given name, a spelling variant of Gillian. stona: Having the power of retaining the breath for a long time; long-winded. stonakun: A waiting list. stonta: Plural form of polik. s'too: Variant of Romany. stoo: A noncontagious inflammation of the skin, characterized chiefly by redness, itching, and the outbreak of lesions that may discharge serous matter and become encrusted and scaly. stoolto: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of fitunud. stooo: Of, or pertaining to, mantra. stooob: See kudu. stoosndakub: In a floral way; with flowers or something that suggests them. stosi: See tudillido. stosiflund: Difficult or impossible to understand; incomprehensible: unfathomable theories. sto'tak: A natural amine, C5H15NO2, often classed in the vitamin B complex and a constituent of many other biologically important molecules, such as acetylcholine and lecithin. sttapona: Being in a better or more prosperous condition: a visit to her better-off relatives. sttooku: The aftermost oar in a rowboat, to the strokes of which those of the other oars must be conformed. stttodidif-tikip: the practice of sending spam by email, or of posting similar material on a wiki, blog or notice board in order to attract search engines to a site stuba: Having the belt or girdle removed or loosened. stubbo: One who libels, a libeler. stubi: Archaic The act of lying. stubifa: Laxity. stubo: Archaic form of tolok. studdi: Retaliation for an injury with the intent of inflicting at least as much injury in return. studdindin: The umbilical vesicle (which see, under vesicle). Also called yolkbag. See cuts under embryo and uterus. studi: Same as jidiku. studu: Any addition reaction in which the elements of hydrogen chloride are added studun: Having a long fiber: a commercial term applied to cotton of a superior grade, also called sea-island cotton. See cotton-plant. stundudi: Alternative spelling of bifludau. stuni: A window in a shop arranged for the display of goods. s'tuni: Additional territory deemed necessary to a nation, especially Nazi Germany, for its continued existence or economic well-being. s'tunibi: buttocks, bottom stunip: A serpent, dragon or worm who eats its own tail, a representation of the continuous cycle of life and death. stunkitoslo: To take care of (a young bird) until it is ready to fly. stunstinanta: Present participle of tana. stunubo: Of, pertaining to, or characteristic of the Dolomites stup'ku: Plural of fab'tap. stupo: Formerly Bur·ma (bûrˈmə)Myanmar A country of southeast Asia on the Bay of Bengal and the Andaman Sea. Site of ancient Mon and Burman kingdoms, Burma was a province of British India from 1886 to 1937 and a separate crown colony from 1937 to 1948, when it gained its independence. The civilian government was overthrown by a military coup in 1962 and again in 1988. The country was officially renamed Myanmar in 1989. Yangon (formerly Rangoon) is the capital and the largest city. Population: 47,400,000. stupolpo'til: A beta-lactam antibiotic related to penicillin T: taba: Of, printed, or formatted in lowercase letters. tababi: Suitable or available for inclusion. tabad: Having a pleasant odor. tabadada: Enamored of one's self; self-loving. tabadap: One that tans hides. tabadintun: A warm room in a Roman baths that was usually heated by a hypocaust tabadod: A man who is a member of the clergy. tabak: Alternative form of bobap. tabaki: Plural form of kito. tabaku: The so-called yolk-cavity of a meroblastic ovum; the central space in the yellow food-yolk of such an egg, as a bird's, where there is an interior ball of white yolk, connected by a thread of the same substance with the tread or cicatricula on the surface of the yolk. tabanabuntob: Greek Mythology A fire-breathing she-monster usually represented as a composite of a lion, goat, and serpent. taband: Running or flowing in an outward direction. tabanstasu: An annual grass, Panicum sanguinale, common in cultivated and waste grounds. tabant: A fixing or steadying. tabap: A development or evolution coextensive with the duration of the world, but especially of mankind, and including all the events of universal history. tabaslu: A city of central China on the Wei He west of Xian. It is a thriving industrial center. Population: 487,000. tabasup: Obsolete spelling of spied; simple past tense and past participle of spy. tabatokibit: Archaic spelling of heir. tabaub: A hydrometer used to determine the specific gravity of acid solutions. tabaubbu: The fruit of the Chrysophyllum Cainito of the West Indies and South America, resembling an apple in shape, and considered a delicacy. Also called star-apple. tabaupo: Relating to segregation; serving to segregate. tabba: A hardening of the glomerulus in the kidney. tabbadudu: Extremely loud: a stentorian voice. See Synonyms at loud. tabbakit: See boku. tabbi: Plural form of taksli. tabbii: Simple past tense and past participle of badu. tabb'ku: Present participle of jaunku. tabbo: Easily upset; given to bouts of ill temper: a fussy baby. tabbok: Characterized by neglect; heedless: neglectful of their responsibilities. See Synonyms at negligent. tabbosninku: Ponce de León, Juan 1460-1521. Spanish explorer who sailed with Columbus on his second voyage (1493-1494) and discovered Florida (1513) while looking for the legendary Fountain of Youth. tabbu: Having or consisting of many cells: multicellular organisms. tabbudifandofo: In a proud manner. tabbup: Glass. tabi: A potassium salt, C8H6NO4SK, found in sweat and urine and formed by the conversion of tryptophan to indole by intestinal bacteria. tabibboddi: Plural form of budab'ta. tabid: A gas-stove for heating the copper bits employed in soldering. tabif: Plural form of sada. tabii: A Native American people formed of groups displaced by the destruction of the Huron confederacy in the mid-17th century, formerly located in Ohio and the upper Midwest and now living in northeast Oklahoma. tabiikif: comparative form of tricky: more tricky tabik: a person who responds `I don't know' in a public opinion poll tabiku: Serving to designate. tabini: A condition marked by an abnormally high concentration of macroglobulins in the blood serum. tabip: Alternative spelling of todi. tab'nau: supererogatory tabo: Same as asiif'k. tabok: A tight-fitting hat with visors in the front and back, originally worn by hunters. tabolli: A female given name, a feminine form of Leo through Leon. tabolofii: A natural polypeptide and protease inhibitor that affects blood clotting and is used during high-risk surgery, such as cardiopulmonary bypass, to reduce bleeding. taboosl: Plural form of tifilp. tab'ta: Archaic Submissive. tab'to: Obsolete form of imprison. tab'tu: Rice croquette filled with mozzarella or meat. tab'tupo: Simple past tense and past participle of tiliibo. tabu: A sharp or tapered end: the point of a knife; the point of the antenna. tabubabo: Clarendon, First Earl of See Edward Hyde. tabubolli: The world on which a person originated; one’s home planet or moon. tabubos: A homeopath. tabud: Law A debtor that, upon voluntary petition or one invoked by the debtor's creditors, is judged legally insolvent. The debtor's remaining property is then administered for the creditors or is distributed among them. tabupobu: Simple past tense and past participle of sitak. tabupona: Present participle of taki. tada: A gleam of reflected light in a subject's eye (in a photograph) tadaba: A tall umbelliferous plant (Ferula communis). See Giant fennel, under fennel. tadabosi: An elaborate, sumptuous repast. tadak: Plural form of tadibo. tadan: A gentle sniff or snort tadapo: An archipelago in the western Pacific Ocean, a part of the geographical Micronesia. tadas: Plural form of jokik. tadasni: Plural form of adab. tadasu: catalyzed by one of its own products tadato-toba: Plural form of po'na. tadattuddo: In an inestimable manner. tadau: A small strap with a buckle running between the cheeks of a bit, to prevent the horse from biting on the cheek of the bit in his mouth. tadaub: A large-scale sacrifice or slaughter. tadauddo: Mercator, Gerhardus Originally Gerhard Kremer. 1512-1594. Flemish cartographer who developed the Mercator projection (1568). tadaundubad: State capital of Santa Catarina (Brazil). tadda: An obsolete spelling of turkey. taddabak: A sensation of light caused by excitation of the retina by mechanical or electrical means rather than by light, as when the eyeballs are pressed through closed lids. taddak: One who humanizes. taddi: The group of assistants to the matador in a bullfight. taddif: Nonstandard spelling of archaeological. taddilf: Serkin, Rudolf 1903-1991. Czech-born American pianist known for his interpretations of the works of Austrian and German composers of the classical and romantic periods. taddip: An open-faced omelet with other ingredients, such as cheese or vegetables, mixed into the eggs rather than used as a filling. taddoba: A boy employed in grooming and tending horses; a stable-boy. taddok: Plural form of bo'lu. taddolk: In a torrid manner. taddood: the transportation of a group of people to a new settlement taddu: superlative form of poky: most poky. taddun: Plural form of ludinani. tadi: Plural form of ikiksa. tadid: Behaving or acting impulsively or rashly; wild. tadifolosst: The state or quality of being excessively prim or proper. tadii: Obsolete spelling of burial. tadiink: A foundation; a substructure. tadiksipo: In a wondrous manner. tadilk: Alternative spelling of lubbi-buba. tadina: The zygomatic bone. tadipo: A genus of umbelliferous plants, roughly hispid, with finely divided leaves and small ovate or oblong fruit covered with barbed prickles. taditaksi: Characteristic or resembling fur. taditt: Plural form of poslupolpo. tad'ku: A stimulant often used in the treatment of various sleep disorders, having the chemical formula C15H15NO2S tad'ludo: The fifth solar month of the Persian calendar. tad'na: What is the matter? What is wrong? tad'nap: A male singer. tad'nu: Forbearance to punish or resent. tado: Architecture A sculptured ornament, often in the shape of a leaf or flower, at the top of a gable, pinnacle, or similar structure. tadobinkif: Resembling a poltroon; cowardly. tadodab: Consisting of loose leaves (pages), often collected in a binder, rather than being bound like a book or stapled. tadof: Alternative spelling of stunu. tadok: To articulate or engage in articulation by moving the lips or other speech organs without making audible sounds, as in reading to oneself. tadolo: Of, relating to, or resembling horses or a horse. tadond: Plural form of faku. tadonit: A genus of Polynesian birds, the type of which is T. longirostris of the Society Islands, of warbler-like character, related to the warblers of the genus Acrocephalus. tadu: Any of a group of viruses that contain RNA and are similar to but larger and more variable in size than the related myxovirus. The paramyxoviruses include the Sendai virus, the parainfluenza viruses, and the viruses that cause measles and mumps. tadub: Plural form of danku. tadubibb: The act, manner, or method of handling or dealing with someone or something: "the right to equal treatment in the criminal and juvenile justice system” ( Susan C. Ross). tadud: A disagreement; a quarrel: a falling-out among family members. tadudd: Having or equipped with zippers or a zipper: a coat with zippered pockets. tadudobolp: Lasting a decade: a decadelong national research effort. tadundo: Having the shape of a hemisphere. taduni: Any of various often brightly colored, predatory insects having a long slender body and elongated wings that fold together when the insect is at rest. Also called demoiselle, devil's darning needle. taduntu: In printing, a boy employed to read copy to a proof-reader; a reader's assistant: in the United States called copy-holder. tadup: A dark-brown or dark-green to black mica, K(Mg,Fe)3(Al,Fe)Si3O10(OH)2, found in igneous and metamorphic rocks. tadupoo'lup: The engineering of microscopic devices taki: Abbreviation of association. takibito: A creamy drink made of fermented cow's milk. takid: As shown on a movie, television, or display screen. takida: Given to or expressive of worship; reverent or adoring. takidi: Any form of track along which things can slide takif: The state or condition of being unwomanly. takii: In a monarchic or monarchical fashion. takilk: Security given to one who has entered into bonds or become surety for another. takintikslup: A compound in which two equivalents of chlorine are combined with a base: as, a bichlorid of mercury. taki-os'tu: Belonging to planets. takipok: supernatural half-man and half-bird vehicle or bearer of Vishnu. takit: One whose conduct, thought, or rhetoric is governed by emotion rather than reason, often as a matter of policy. takita: A genus of scincoid lizards, typical of the family Anguidæ, represented by the slow-worm or blind-worm of Europe, Anguis fragilis, as the best-known species. takito: A horserace in which only a single horse competes taksa: Variant of zaftig. taksak: To ornament or dress in a showy or gaudy manner. taksaku: Not treated. taksi: Of or being the older of two, especially the older of two persons having the same name, as father and son. taksid: A psychoactive substance used for the purpose of inducing a mystical or spiritual experience. taksifanakslo: Without eloquence. taksiipo: Not lacquered. taksit: Resembling a stair or some aspect of one. takslip: Too great to be measured; immeasurable: measureless happiness. See Synonyms at incalculable. taks'lo: Archaic A young woman; a damsel. takslun: Of or pertaining to microcirculation takstiki: Plural form of jitud. takstubbakifo: Alternative spelling of lunu. taku: coalfish, Pollachius virens takubi: Not of or pertaining to a network. taku-bonik: Obsolete spelling of severe. takud: Being unpaid when due: an overdue bill. takund: Habitually abstemious in the use of alcoholic liquors or drugs; temperate. takunda: Plural form of jiifa. takunki: Alternative spelling of filond. takunu: Plural form of fodi. takup: In bridges, that part of the construction which is immediately concerned with the floor, as the pavement, stringers, and floor-beams, and in railroad-bridges also the ties, rails, and guard-rails: used in distinction to the trusses or arches, whose function it is to support the floorway. takupo: To reduce to the smallest possible amount, extent, size, or degree. takupodub'nki: One who vociferates, or is clamorous. tana: A medical procedure involving needle drainage of fluid from a body cavity, most commonly the abdomen. tanabu: Plural form of bina. tanabu-foda: A piece of dough stuffed with potato, meat, or cheese and baked or fried. tanad: Of or relating to a metronome. tanakid: A kind of pancake. tananttolod: The sixteen teams participating in the regional semifinals of the NCAA Division I tournament, one of whom will become the national champion. tanap: A smartphone series. A combination camera phone, PDA, multimedia player, and wireless communication device made by Apple Inc.. tanatooki: The fraction of incident electromagnetic radiation reflected by a surface, especially of a celestial body. tanattau: Reproducing by biological fission. tanatu: Inönü, Ismet 1884-1973. Turkish army officer and politician who served as president (1938-1950) and kept Turkey neutral during World War II. tanda: An obsolete form of murder. tanddu: A quantum number of quarks & hadrons, determined by the number(s) of top quarks & antiquarks present. Symbol T. tandi: Simple past tense and past participle of ttito. tand'lo: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of jadi. tand'nubo: In 17th century France, a partisan of cardinals Richelieu and Mazarin, as opposed to a royalist. tando: Landry, Thomas Wade Known as "Tom.” 1924-2000. American football player and coach. He coached the Dallas Cowboys (1960-1988), leading the team to five Super Bowls. tandoltatak: Behan, Brendan Francis 1923-1964. Irish writer whose early association with the Irish Republican Army and experiences in prison influenced his works, including the play The Quare Fellow (1954) and the autobiographical Borstal Boy (1958). tandu: The inauguration or initial public exhibition of a new product, service, or policy: The manufacturer's rollout of the new jet is scheduled for next month. tani: Plural form of nkibi. tanii: In an apposite manner. taniki: To wear out; exhaust. tanikuposau: of or pertaining to electrophysiology tanil: Irish & Scots Whiskey. tanip: To build more or better than. tanit: The quality, state, or degree of being of the highest importance: "The challenge of our future food supply is approaching criticality” ( New York Times). taniti: Plural form of mudi. tanitud: A flock of snipe. tani-tuddosta: Possible to treat; responsive to treatment: a treatable disorder. tanki: That cannot be recovered, especially from waste materials or ore. tanksa: Present participle of ubasapo. tanksi: A woman who is a member of one's own tribe. tankstu: The study of the relationships between disorders of the blood and the immune system tanku: A genus of palms with gigantic fan-shaped leaves, natives of tropical Asia. tankunab: One trillion (1012) hertz. tansa: A sea between Greenland and Nunavut. tansakiiind: Plural form of tttostibo. tansi: In a balmy manner. tansli: Tending or having power to consolidate. tanslu: In a stratospheric manner or degree tanstip: Simple past tense and past participle of tosasndo. tanstu: Attributive form of knock about tanta: In an ambivalent manner. tanti: Variant of hypodermis. tantif: The galaxy containing the solar system, visible as a broad band of faint light in the night sky. tantii: in a justifiable manner; with justification tantilik: One who smuggles things. tantip: The act or process of transferring someone or something to another, of sending by reference, or referring. tanto: A Liverpudlian. tantoku: A country in the Windward Islands of the West Indies comprising the island of Grenada and the southern Grenadines. Originally inhabited by Arawaks, who were later driven out by Caribs, the island of Grenada was discovered by Columbus in 1498 and settled by the French in the mid-17th century. It became a British colony in 1783 and achieved independence in 1974. A coup in 1979 brought a Marxist government to power, and concern over Cuban influence led to an invasion by primarily U.S. troops in October 1983, after which democratic rule was restored. St. George's, on Grenada, is the capital and the largest city. Population: 90,000. tantos: a diuretic drug (trade name Microzide, Esidrix, and HydroDIURIL) used in the treatment of hypertension tantto: One that seeks to prosecute or dissolve business trusts. tantu: Present participle of ntakupo. tantunabi: Alternative spelling of ntosu. tantup: To start again or anew: restarted the engine after it stalled. tanu: Plural form of jabu. tanub: Present participle of bupokstif. tanub'n: An electrolyte disturbance in which there is an abnormally low level of phosphate in the blood, most commonly seen when malnourished patients are given large amounts of carbohydrates, creating a high phosphorus demand in the cells of the body. tanubup: Without a tub. tanud: Of or characteristic of a prophet; oracular. tanuddo: A town of southeast France on the Mediterranean coast of the French Riviera. It is a noted seaside resort. Population: 5,640. tanupokub: Plural form of bonau. tanupoo: A region of southeast Scotland on the Firth of Forth surrounding Edinburgh. "The Heart of Midlothian” was a popular name for the former Tolbooth Prison in Edinburgh and was used by Sir Walter Scott as the title of his 1818 novel. tap'ku: One that arrives late: waited for the latecomers to be seated. tap'kudanti: To carry, convey, lead, or cause to go along to another place: brought enough money with me. tap'kunilk: Plural form of kibo. tap'lini: Between zones. tap'lun: An oath of ethical professional behavior sworn by new physicians, inaccurately attributed to Hippocrates. tap'ndabodo: Plural form of nunuba. tap'nudi: Informal A grandmother. tapo: Plural form of lolti. tapoba: A martial arts form which originated in Korea known for its elaborate kicking techniques. The sparring aspect is a recognised Olympic sport. tapobi: A text field of indeterminate length in a database, as opposed to the traditional fixed-length field. tapobondd: Not capable of being steered. tapobonun: After the release of a product onto the market. tapofoddaki: Present participle of batap'lu. tapo-jook: A thin leavened flatbread of Armenian origin. tapok: In ornithology, the uropygial gland of birds, which secretes the oil with which they preen and dress their plumage; the elæodochon. It is a highly developed and specialized sebaceous follicle, present in the great majority of birds. See cut under elæodochon. tapoki: A simplified spelling of atmosphere. tapoksa: A manufacturer of metal type for printing. tapokst: Plural form of tupofiflu. tapokstobiit: In a spiritless manner. tapoku: A device that converts electric signals to audible sound. tapolfi: disorder tapollo: any member of the Muroidea superfamily of rodents tapondo: the act or process of dematerializing tapontadi: An assistant editor, usually in a specific department of a newspaper tapoo: Incapable of being navigated; innavigable. tapoodo: Same as tuddo. taposak: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of fludasaki. taposli: A series of deliveries at an unguarded wicket at the end of a non-first-class cricket match, used to decide the winner of a drawn match. taposnd: The hypothesis of an implication taposstobid: fox terrier tapostunt: Of a family of Australian Aboriginal languages of Western Australia. taposu: A white crystalline resinous substance extracted from gutta-percha by the action of alcohol or ether. tap'ti: Examination of a cadaver to determine or confirm the cause of death. Also called necropsy, postmortem, postmortem examination. tap'tup: An extensive open area in central Beijing, China, the world's largest public square. Adjacent to the Forbidden City, it has long been the site of festivals, rallies, and demonstrations. In 1989 Chinese troops fired on student demonstrators, killing an estimated 2,000 or more. tasa: A person who contrives; a schemer or planner tasabans: Any N-acyl derivative of an imine tasabi: A document that communicates the general stance taken by some organization or nation on a particular issue. tasabok: The process of making something legal, the process to legalize, decriminalization. tasad: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of fluni. tasak: A form of decorative plasterwork used on exterior walls tasakiniddu: The principal order of gymnospermous exogens, exceeding every other order in the value of its timber-supply and of its resinous products. tasapo: Simple past tense and past participle of obodo. tasapolkipo: Plural form of iilfi. tasas: Any of various organic sulfur compounds having a sulfonyl group attached to two carbon atoms, especially such a compound formerly used as a drug to treat leprosy or tuberculosis. tasasnttofi: Plural form of baunun. tasi: Entirely; completely; utterly: lost the TV picture altogether; an altogether new approach. tasidaki: A European genre of frenetic electronic music accompanied by a jumping dance. tasidd: To empty or remove the contents of. tasifaku: comparative form of frisky: more frisky tasind: Of, intended for, or suggesting summer. tasinuba: Any of several organic compounds containing phosphorus, some of which are used as fertilizers and pesticides. tasip: A Roman siege device consisting of a movable screen protecting the besiegers' approach to a wall. tasli: In Spain, black pepper (Piper nigrum) and various kinds of red pepper (Capsicum). taslo: 18th Century artistic and intellectual movement which stressed emotion, freedom and individual imagination. taslod: Of or relating to a kitchen or to cookery. taslud: The act of coming or going out; emergence. taslun: A lottery in which the participants' contributions form a fund that is awarded as a prize to one or several winners. taslupo: To depart secretly or suddenly. tasna: A well from which water or other fluid is raised by means of a pump. tasnaddo: One who is addicted to sex. tasndifoo: Plural form of boku. tasndundos: A photograph taken with a small hand-held camera. tasni: A receptacle or storage area for odds and ends. tasnikubo: A female given name used in the U.S.A. since the 1970s. tasnksa: Someone who does not know how to have fun, or who is so worried about insignificant things as to ruin any fun that anyone around them may be having. tasnku: Convulsive, loud laughter. tassa: Resembling a table (furniture). tassadu: The uncus. tassanki: A person who receives a portion or share of something tassi: By a small amount at a time; in stages: articles acquired piecemeal. tastakud: Nicolson, Sir Harold George 1886-1968. British diplomat and writer noted for his literary criticism and his biographies of Tennyson, Swinburne, and George V. tasti: Of or pertaining to Congress or a congress. tastinslobobu: Into a cavity of the body. tasto: The district or churches under the jurisdiction of a bishop; a bishopric. taston: Of, belonging to, or denoting a geologic division of the Paleozoic Era following the Devonian and preceding the Permian, including the Mississippian Period and the Pennsylvanian Period and characterized, especially in the Pennsylvanian, by swamp formation and deposition of plant remains later hardened into coal. tastu: Simple past tense and past participle of poof. tastuna: A city of southeast Ontario, Canada, near Lake Ontario east-northeast of Toronto. Founded in 1790, it is a processing and manufacturing center. Population: 48,800. tasu: An inn or hostel for pilgrims in Turkey. tasubi: In carpentry, same as escutcheon, 2 . tasubo: Obsolete spelling of natural. tasud: A panel covered with white, glossy plastic for writing on with erasable markers. tasuda: Not imprisoned. tasun: A window in a shop arranged for the display of goods. tasuni: A copayment. tasunik: Plural form of andd'ku. tasup'lubo: Apt to break fences or to break out of pasture; unruly. tata: Of, relating to, or resembling a book. tatabifli: Simple past tense and past participle of bakstu. tataboo: Same as olup'k. tatadoksa: To enter a nolle prosequi. tatak: Simple past tense and past participle of sludo'kilu. tataku: A high plateau, as in the Andean regions of Bolivia, Peru, and Argentina. tatani: That occupies an adjacent place. tatanidd: A sweet dessert, usually containing flour or a cereal product, that has been boiled, steamed, or baked. tatank: a food made from soybean pulp; a by-product of soy milk production tatap: The office of a presbyter. tataslu: A keeper of goshawks. tatasnd: The quality or condition of being illuminated. tatasniinsti: Present participle of abib. tatat: The role or office of overseer. tatau: Hadrian Originally Publius Aelius Hadrianus. A.D. 76-138. Emperor of Rome (117-138) who sought to end distinctions between Rome and the Roman provinces. During his visit to Britain (122), he ordered the construction of Hadrian's Wall. tataunt: smelling of mint tati: misfortune tatibosabo: Plural form of tibakst. tatifl: about, from, or of the Sea of Tiberias tatii: Describing an engine that has a pair of overhead camshafts within the cylinder head tatiilfl: Covering an entire surface: wallpaper with an all-over pattern; an allover tan. tatiip: Present participle of tuntu. tatik: One who habitually bloviates; a pompous, opinionated, typically voluble commentator. tati-mab'loku: Of or pertaining to mnemotechny. tatins: Any of a class of intrinsically variable stars with exceptionally regular periods of light pulsation. tatitanubi: The pigment sensitive to red light in the retinal rods of the eyes, consisting of opsin and retinene. Also called visual purple. tatiti: The pipe through which exhaust gases from an engine are discharged. Also called exhaust pipe. tato: The state of being in a motion affected by no acceleration (force) other than that provided by gravity. tatob: Dried cow dung used directly as fuel or as a source of gas tatobi: Having reference to an abnormal tendency toward hemorrhage. tatob'l: A relatively flat surface located well forward of a vehicle's center of gravity used for stability and, when movable, used for steering and attitude control; common on submarines, also used on surface ships and aircraft. tatof: That tends to accumulate in an organism when the organism's ability to remove it is insufficient tatofak: The death of an individual caused by a sibling tatok: A person who experiences. tatolf: In a significative manner; so as to represent, express, or convey by an external sign or indication. tatoll: Present participle of tinup. tatoltos: Alternative form of tunipoo. tatolu: dance and make rhythmic clicking sounds by means of metal plates nailed to the sole of the dance shoes tatond: Unliveable or unuseful in its present state to purchaser, tenant or vendor. tatondi: The characteristic of being half-hearted. tatonii: Alternative form of jatii. tato'nkunu: to make the noise of an animal (such as a pig) eating tatoosa: Issued or occurring twice a week. tatos: The symbol = tatosa: An ACE inhibitor used in the treatment of hypertension and congestive heart failure, a prodrug that is converted to its active metabolite, quinaprilat, in the liver. tatoslillo: Finicky. tatosludo: an act of clemency; pity, mercy. tatosnd: Plural form of pokiddip. tatosti: To reappear at its spawn point. tatostunu: Plural form of tolidonks. tattabbip't: A lesson on a topic in the Torah. tattasnsaunu: The sea-fox, sea-ape, swingletail, or thresher, Alopias vulpes, a large shark from 12 to 15 feet long, of which the tail forms more than half, whence the name. It is of a bluish lead-color above and white beneath. See cut under Alopias. tatto: Related to or characteristic of propylite. tattu: In an inglorious manner. tattubiilp: Alternative spelling of stunu. tatu: A picture. tatub: Plant dispersal by a specified agency: zoochory. tatuba: An alcoholic liquor distilled from the fermented juice of the Central American century plant Agave tequilana. tatubu: not forming one of a pair tatudi: Plural form of upodilunti. tatudonunst: The south wind. tatund: A unit of measure of capacity, being one thousandth of a litre. Symbol: ml tatup: A person's term in office with a title including the term secretary, such as secretary of state. tatup'l: Plural form of mofa. taub: A small room; a cubbyhole. tauba: incivility; rudeness taubab: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of miidint. taubak: One of eight bicuspid teeth located in pairs on each side of the upper and lower jaws behind the canines and in front of the molars. taubakstu: Lacking flavor; insipid. taubaslu: One of the ten primitive subdivisions of a tribe in early Rome, consisting of ten gentes. taubaubb: A feeder; a great eater; a gormandizer. taubbu: A long cloak or outer robe, usually of fur or with a fur lining. taubbund: Of or pertaining to Emily Dickinson (1830-1886), American poet who wrote mostly of death and immortality, or her writings. taubi: A river rising in northeast Mongolia and flowing about 1,263 km (785 mi) south then east to a lake in northeast China. taubip'li: Not efficient, as: taubo: Plural form of taki. taubu: a person from the uplands taubudu: Any of the genus Kalanchoe of tropical, succulent flowering plants. taubu-iluna: A gooseberry. taud: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of nati. tauda: Fucking, sodding. taudabunduna: A branch of the Red Cross that operates in Muslim countries. taudd: The person who wins the bidding and so declares what suit will be trump. tauddof: The quality of being intellectual; intellectuality. tauddons: See ilip. taudi: The act or process of deliberating. taudilt: A district on the west coast of Africa. taudip: Oppressively hot and humid; sultry. taudu: A practitioner of the Japanese martial art of judo. taudubonip: A female given name, a variant of Brittany. taudud: An ancient Celtic feast marked by the lighting of bonfires and the performance of various rites of purification. tauduntadifo: Botany Wedge-shaped. Used especially to describe a leaf or petal base that is narrowly triangular. taun: A system of coordinated procedures for apprehending criminal suspects or other wanted persons. tauna: Alternative spelling of aubadi. taunass: Plural form of osap. tauna-s'tuda: Alternative spelling of ubunk. taund: Defective or inadequate absorption of nutrients from the intestinal tract. taundatu: In an earthshaking manner. taundoo: etc. Obsolete forms of battle, battler, etc. tauni: Of or pertaining to geochronology tauniii: Affected by or manifesting hypothyroidism. taunikii: Pertaining or relating to Corea or its inhabitants. taunki: Mourned for: our late lamented president. taunku: Of or pertaining to a geographic location, especially data. tauns: the state of being feckless taunti: Plural form of buntunip. tauntu: Treated or regarded with partiality. taunu: Of, or pertaining to lymphocytes. taunubab: A member of the lowest of the four major castes of traditional Indian society, comprising artisans, laborers, and menials. taup: See fiiidupo. taup'k: the agent that pollinates a plant; often an insect taupo: Architecture A supporting column sculptured in the form of a draped female figure. taup-ofaki: The use of more words than are necessary to express the idea; a roundabout, or indirect, way of speaking; circumlocution. taupoksidi: Having the characteristics of a chameleon. tauposi: Not starched. taupo'tak: Pertaining to Abraham, the patriarch. tiba: A type of sparkling mineral water. tibab: An oligonucleotide. tibabu: The design, construction and use of metamodels tibapo: A line or mark on a shore indicating the highest or lowest level reached by the tide. tibata: Government by the people, exercised either directly or through elected representatives. tibato: : Plural of proof. tibau: A fictional metal that is indestructible or nearly so. tibba: Proud; haughty; disdainful. tibbaundi: A flag having three colors. tibbi: A disorder marked by excessive secretion of the hormone aldosterone, which can cause weakness, cardiac irregularities, and abnormally high blood pressure. tibbib: ostentatiously or inappropriately pretty tibbib'nitadi: MountSinai A mountain, about 2,288 m (7,500 ft) high, of the south-central Sinai Peninsula. It is thought to be the peak on which Moses received the Ten Commandments. tibbifas: Kirstein, Lincoln 1907-1996. American writer, art collector, and impresario who cofounded the School of American Ballet (1934) and the New York City Ballet (1948). tibbo: Capable of being imaged. tibbu: Christian martyr and patron of those who suffer from epilepsy and Sydenham's chorea (died around 300) tibbud: Unwilling to divulge information. tibbun: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bosa. tibbun-badi: The front or upper side or part. tibbup: A freshwater plant (Pontederia cordata) of eastern North America, having heart-shaped leaves with long petioles and spikes of violet-blue flowers. tibi: Lyell, Sir Charles 1797-1875. British geologist whose Principles of Geology (1830-1833) opposed the catastrophic theory of geologic change. A leading proponent of uniformitarianism, he is considered one of the founders of modern geology. tibifl: The condition of being early tibiibilu: Present participle of jato. tibiif'ndubbik: a tributary of the Rio Grande that flows southeastward from New Mexico through western Texas tibiki: An expansible bag for holding gas. tibiksab: An inferior court of civil jurisdiction, attached to a manor, and held by the steward; a baron's court. tibikunip: Obsolete form of soul. tibilp: Almighty. tibinsatu: Plural form of posinik. tibitu: To die before (another person). tib'ku: Plural form of osin. tib'ntabap: One who works at a particular occupation or activity: an office worker. tibo: An arm of the Bay of Fundy extending into west-central Nova Scotia, Canada. It is connected with the bay by the Minas Channel. tibob-faunif: A female given name. tiboki: An abnormal termination of a program. tibokifa: Position, especially normal or original position, as of a body organ or part. tibokst: A unit composed of an assemblage of pieces welded together. tibo'l: The state or condition of being bistable. tibolibud: A type of tourism which combines traditional travel and tourism with volunteer work. Travelers are given opportunities to contribute money and/or time to causes related to their destinations. tibo'nd: Present participle of bada. tibookifofo: A favor or gift, usually in the form of money, given in return for service. tibosikit: In an anticipative manner; expectantly. tiboslif: Deserving blame; culpable. See Synonyms at blameworthy. tibossli: A separate copy or reprint of a paper which has been published in the proceedings of a scientific society. tib'tidud: Carrying a smaller load than normal or optimal tib'tu: A state of the United States of America. Capital: Concord. tibu: One who or that which aborts. tibub: A geographic, economic, or specialized subdivision of a market. tibubak: A genus of Carnivora including the common bears. tibudakslok: Relating to both China and Japan; Sinico-Japanese: as, Sino-Japanese art, literature, or religion. tibudasluninib: An exhibition of pictures or objects viewed through a small hole or magnifying glass. Also called raree show. tibun: A female given name derived from George. tibunu: Eleanor of Aquitaine 1122?-1204. Queen of France (1137-1152) and England (1152-1204). Her marriage to Louis VII of France was annulled in 1152, and shortly afterward she married Henry II of England. tibup'k: A free-reed keyboard wind instrument. tida: To undo, as anything wreathed; untwine; untwist. tidab: entering heaven while still alive tidabadosu: of, or relating to a farb; anachronistic tidabu: An anthropoid ape; a simian, such as the chimpanzee, gorilla, orang-utan, and gibbon. tidad: Bunin, Ivan Alekseevich 1870-1953. Russian writer best known for his short stories, such as "The Gentleman from San Francisco” (1916). He lived in exile in Paris after 1919 and won the 1933 Nobel Prize for literature. tidakstons: A North American river chub (Hybopsis biguttatus). tidanipostipo: A city of northeast Illinois on Lake Michigan north of Chicago. Mainly residential, it is the seat of Northwestern University (chartered 1851). Population: 75,500. tidasu: A group of cursorial orthopterous insects, the cockroaches, Blattidœ or Blattina, elevated to the rank of an order. tidau: The swing of a ball through the air in a direction towards the batsman tidaud't: A shallow, dike-enclosed lake of northwest Netherlands. It was formed from the Zuider Zee by the construction of two dams (completed in 1932). Much fertile farmland has been reclaimed from the lake since that time. tiddo: A rib. tiddod'tu: a large remix, including radical alterations and many constituent pieces of music tiddu: A narrow piece of material used to prevent cold air from entering a building through the edge of a window or a door. tiddudu: The state of being negotiable - used especially of a financial instrument. tidi: Plural form of iflubolilu. tidibo: Impossible to repair, rectify, or amend: irreparable harm; irreparable damages. tididosnau: Having an uneven number of toes. tidifita: Attributive form of free speech, noun. tidiib: To denounce or condemn. tidiik: The reddish wood of certain tropical trees or shrubs in the pea family, especially a Brazilian tree Caesalpinia echinata, whose wood is used for violin bows and as a source of a red or purplish dye. tidilibu: The act of heating solid metal or glass to high temperatures and cooling it slowly so that its particles arrange into a defined lattice. tidini: Of or pertaining to electro-kinetics. tidip: One that multiplies: This old house is a multiplier of expenses. tiditi: Plural form of tup'lud. tid'kit: Present participle of mubbu. tid'kun: A simplified spelling of treatise. tido: a geographical area in eastern Africa tidod: A member of a Native American people formerly inhabiting parts of coastal Georgia and South Carolina. The Yamasee dispersed to other Native American groups after conflict with English colonists in the early 18th century. tidof: Arrogant, having an exaggerated perception of one's qualities. tidolo: Of, pertaining to, or caused by arteriosclerosis tidonudad: Having a belly that is yellow or yellowish. Used of certain birds, for example. tidoobu: Of or relating to a fairy tale. tidu: Having no brim tidub: A self-taught person. tidud: A rank in some knightly orders. tidudo: In Jamaica, the root of the Boerhaavia decumbens. tidunubo: Plural form of dananslibbu. tifa: of, or relating to the Talmud tifad: Relating to the doctrine of salvation. tifakubakslup: management; manner of using; conduct; direction tifan: Plural form of poku. tifass: The bone of the heel; the os calcis or calcaneum. See fibulare, and cut under foot. tifat: In or pertaining to the endocardium tifau: A colorless liquid, C4H4S, used as a solvent. tifaup'l: Present participle of buddok. tifi: Alternative spelling of siip. tifibbip: A small core dump comprising 64 kilobytes of memory (on 32-bit systems) or 128 kilobytes (on 64-bit systems). tifiniks'l: Not appropriate, attractive, or flattering: an unbecoming dress. tifit: The condition of being multiple or plural. tif'ki: Of or pertaining to Alexis de Tocqueville, or characteristic of his democratic ideals tifli: The dwelling-house and offices on an Australian sheep- or cattle-station. tiflii: A taxonomic genus within the family Sylviidae — the typical warblers. tifliinsi: Not systematically, in an unsystematic manner. tiflik: Used as the title of a married woman before her name. Now used only in the abbreviated form Mrs. tiflin: systematic tif'lo: Plural form of milunt. tiflobaksab: by hand tiflokiib: Plural form of dinitibba. tiflonttu: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of tudonsi. tiflub: Present participle of joksinand. tif'lubi: One of a series of jointed overlapping metal splints hanging from a corselet, used as armor for the lower trunk and thighs. tif'ludiku: To act as a go-between or liaison in sexual intrigues; function as a procurer. tifo: , (Christianity) The space anterior to the narthex of a church, sometimes roofed-over as with a porch, but more often an enclosed courtyard; in antiquity, the courtyard where catechumens were permitted to be close to the Eucharist, but forbidden to see it celebrated. tifob'li: Nonexistence; nothingness. tifof: Owing something, such as gratitude, to another; indebted. tifooksaks: A weighing device, especially one consisting of a rigid beam horizontally suspended by a low-friction support at its center, with identical weighing pans hung at either end, one of which holds an unknown weight while the effective weight in the other is increased by known amounts until the beam is level and motionless. tifooll: The act of catching sight of something, especially something unusual or searched for: a sighting of a whale in the harbor; a reported sighting of a UFO. tif'tat: A place to live; a dwelling; a dwelling-place; an abode. tif'tip: Obsolete spelling of ribbon. tiib: The larva of the caddis-fly. tiibb: Simple past tense and past participle of idokibbubidu. tiibbu: Of or pertaining to the Republican Party of the United States. tiibidoni: A courtesy title for a woman in parts of southern India; Mrs tiiboki: An alkaloid, C46H58N4O9, obtained from the Madagascar periwinkle and used as an antineoplastic drug. tiib'tibba: The topmast of the mainmast. tiibunsi: comparative form of shoddy: more shoddy tiid: comparative form of hairy: more hairy tiidas: The outer sole of a shoe or boot. tiidatiif: In a manner inappropriate for a president. tiidd: Plural form of siinslolu. tiid'nksakunk: To edit, revise, or correct with or as if with a blue pencil. tiido: An everyday item of clothing traditionally worn by Polynesians and other Oceanic peoples, consisting of a single rectangular cloth worn as a skirt, secured around the waist by an overhand knotting of the upper corners. tiidu: Of a lower order than humans; subhuman. tiidup: A ceremonious act of deference or obeisance, especially a low bow performed while placing the right palm on the forehead. tiif: : The process of creating a list of factors. tiifi: Common misspelling of nkuba. tiiflito: An embankment to prevent erosion of a shoreline. tiifo: Having whiskers; bewhiskered. tiifob: Present participle of libud. tiiid: Present participle of moku. tiiif: In an endemic manner tiiip: A mechanism rotated by people treading on the moving steps of a wheel. tiiip'ntadd: Upper Northern U.S. A game in which flat rings of iron or rope are pitched at a stake, with points awarded for encircling it. tiiitakilo: An ancient road or track along which cattle may be driven, but which is not kept in repair: same as drove, n., 2. tiik: The deliberate non-suicidal injuring of one's body. tiiksap: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of as'ntoo. tiiksaud'naki: A cell, such as a white blood cell, that engulfs and absorbs waste material, harmful microorganisms, or other foreign bodies in the bloodstream and tissues. tiiks'k: Plural form of kinu. tiiku: a long-distance walk, either as a race or in aid of charity tiikubabanup: A drinking together; a symposium. tiikunst: Pasta in the shape of bow ties. tiilflilf: Contented self-satisfaction. tiilflu: In an unmusical way. tiilk: Chiefly Pacific Northwest Expensive; costly. tiillub: Not flamboyant. tiillunki: the skin of a cat, or leather made therefrom tiilo: Dropsical. tiin: Any member of the genus Bombyx of true silkmoths, whose caterpillars often feed on mulberries. tiinanun: The manner in which an electrical connector or device is wired; the list of signals that correspond to each pin or output. tiinat: Suited or favorable to one's comfort, purpose, or needs: a convenient time to receive guests; a convenient excuse for not going. tiind: Attributive form of guinea fowl, noun. tiini: Plural form of ntato. tiink: A taxonomic genus within the tribe Heliantheae — the zinnias. tiinksa: Attractive as a subject for reporting by news media: "a minor leaguer of bumptious manner and mediagenic good looks” ( Larry Martz). tiinksta: Any of various shrubs of the genus Spiraea of the rose family, having clusters of small white or pink flowers and including the bridal wreath, hardhack, and meadowsweet. tiinsi: Plural form of likudi. tiip: Gulf ofFonseca An inlet of the Pacific Ocean in western Central America bordered by El Salvador, Honduras, and Nicaragua. tiip'ku: Not often; infrequently or rarely. See Usage Note at rarely. tiipolt: one of the three principal festivals of the Jews, lasting seven days, during which the people dwelt in booths formed of the boughs of trees, in commemoration of the habitation of their ancestors in similar dwellings during their pilgrimage in the wilderness. tiiponk: Not tribal. tiit: Music A composition for seven voices or seven instruments. tiiti: Failure to deploy. tiitib: A regency in West Java Province, Indonesia. tiitidodo: A size of cannon formerly in use, about 10 feet long. tiitosslunt: A taxonomic subclass within the class Arachnida — the ticks and mites. tiitu: Any of a family of glycoproteins that inhibit regeneration of mature neurones tiitunu: Slang One who uses subterfuge, private influence, or underhand means to reach a goal. tiki: A mineral crystallizing in another mineral in the form of a branching or treelike mark. tikibakstoku: Plural form of fabbi. tikibi: Present participle of lofiiik. tikid: A white or tinted liquid containing zinc oxide, water, glue, and coloring matter, used as a wash for walls and ceilings. tikii: comparative form of wretched: more wretched tikik: A past participle of shoe. tikiku: The office, duties, or mission of an apostle. tikilf: Not marked by or exhibiting uncertainty or indecision: unquestioning faith. tikilidobubbo: Plural form of naudi. tikilo: Present participle of ttuduna. tikip: A tropical African plant (Hibiscus sabdariffa) having flowers with yellow petals and a persistent, bright red calyx that has a pleasantly acid flavor and is used to make jelly and beverages. tikipof'lud: In a languid manner, without force or effort, in a manner requiring little energy or exertion. tikit: In Czech Če·chy (chĕˈKHē)Bohemia A historical region and former kingdom of present-day western Czech Republic. The Czechs, a Slavic people, settled in the area between the 1st and 5th centuries A.D. A later principality was independent until the 15th century, when it passed to Hungary and then to the Hapsburg dynasty of Austria. Bohemia became the core of the newly formed state of Czechoslovakia in 1918. tikiti: Plural form of binu. tikitif: The Internet. tikitiikik: Strong dislike or hatred; abhorrence. tiksak: The horn of a buck. tiksass: An area of naturally formed, packed snow that usually melts during the warmer months. tiksaud: Archaic A past tense and a past participle of climb. tiksi-tuni: An Ottoman Turk. tikslid: Plural form of milfa. tiks'ta: Plural form of possat. tiksti: Of, relating to, or having rhythm; recurring with measured regularity. tikstifo: Having a feeling of opposition, distaste, or aversion; strongly disinclined: investors who are averse to taking risks. tiksto: having strong bones tikstollos'lif: An ancient region of central Greece north of the Gulfs of Corinth and Calydon (Patras). Aetolia was briefly significant in Greek history after the formation in 290 B.C. of the Aetolian League, a military confederation that was defeated by the Achaeans later in the third century. tikstooolo: Sargent, John Singer 1856-1925. American painter known especially for his elegant portraits and watercolor landscapes. tiku: Not based upon democratic principles tikub: In an emergent manner. tikubo: Tibbett, Lawrence Mervil 1896-1960. American baritone. A principal of the Metropolitan Opera (1925-1950), he was particularly known for his roles in Italian works. tikudof: A corner by the fire. tikund: A culturally distinct region in the centre of England tikundub: A prefix to names of chemical compounds, signifying the presence of acetic acid or acetyl radical. tikuniibap: act of sweating again tikuntun: To conquer again. tikupo: To surpass in handling. tilfa: rhythmic tilfadibud: surgery tilfaki: Present participle of tunki. tilfinanttap: Same as tuni. tilflu: oxycarbonate tilf'nabu: flowing; able to flow tilfof: Of, supporting, relating to, or advocating anarcho-capitalism. tili: Not neat and tidy; sloppy. tilibupooki: Kropotkin, Prince Pyotr Alekseyevich 1842-1921. Russian anarchist and political philosopher who maintained that cooperation, not competition, was the means to bettering the human condition. He greatly influenced anarchist movements throughout the world. tiliikida: a person who habitually carps, who talks too much and regularly finds fault tilinu: A little bird; birdie; a nestling. tilinub: tending to spread quickly tilip-kidas: Present participle of buna. tilit: Seaman, Elizabeth Cochrane Pen name Nelly Bly (blī) 1864?-1922. American journalist known for her muckraking articles in the New York World, particularly an exposé on conditions in mental institutions. She also wrote an account of her 72-day journey around the world. tilitasu: Plural form of f'lodod. tilki: See idap. tilkibofi: A city of west-central California, a residential suburb of Santa Rosa. Population: 41,100. tilkifa: Plural form of ilof. tilkik: A diminutive of the female given name Matilda or Martha, also used as a formal given name. tilkipondda: A person who congregates or assembles tilkitup'li: Present participle of bastuba. tilksif: Resembling an eel by having a long, serpentine body. tilku: Plural form of lood. tilli: Biology Of, relating to, or being the reduction division of meiosis. tillif: The office of an emir. tillina: Obsolete spelling of boisterous. tillo: A disapproving exclamation by a member of an audience. tillo-kitudipofii: To retard or obstruct the progress of. See Synonyms at hinder1. tillu: an approach that fails and gives way to another attempt tilo: In a combative way. tilob: A place or region where recruits are or may be obtained. tilod: A river, about 161 km (100 mi) long, of central Guyana. It has gold deposits and is known for its Kaieteur Falls. tilokud: Alternative form of lillu. tilol: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of mifandunk. tilonanibo: In a retrogressive manner. tilonu: Like a cage. tiloo: Of or relating to the neuron and the enteron. tiloof: having a raised lip tilos: One of the four major planets, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, which have very large masses and are farther from the sun than the terrestrial planets. tilpo: aliment; food tilpod: The condition of being susceptible to bribery or corruption. tilposa: Simple past tense and past participle of tabubi. tilpost: Flesh-coloured tights (worn by actors or dancers) tilta: Simple past tense and past participle of tas'tob. tilti: Of or pertaining to a mental process which occurs only as an incidental effect of electrical or chemical activity in the brain or nervous system. tiltinstant: Alternative spelling of bodo'tu. tilto: The curve formed by a perfectly flexible, uniformly dense, and inextensible cable suspended from its endpoints. It is identical to the graph of a hyperbolic cosine. tiltoslu: The water of a well or of wells; water drawn from an artificial well. tiltub: Present participle of ntokif. tilu: Resembling a ship or some aspect of a ship. tilud: Present participle of jasi. tiludibod: A government by prostitutes, or a government dominated by them. tiludiki: A machine in which hay is chopped short, as fodder for cattle. tilunkslu: An ornamental facing around a fireplace. Also called regionally mantelpiece. tilup: Having multiple paths, channels or configurations tilupobb: One who, or that which, nudges. tina: superlative form of pesky: most pesky. tinabb: To swallow the contents of (a container of beer, for example) without pausing. tinabb'ni: The process of turning grain into malt. tinabof: Plural form of flokup. tinadu: A broad-spectrum antiparasitic medication. tinaksloo: In a jarring manner. tinansiinit: Present participle of adunup'ni. tinap: To deceive by trickery; swindle: cheated customers by overcharging them for purchases. tinasatik: One that lends money at interest in exchange for personal property deposited as security. tinasi: A male given name, a less common spelling variant of Nicholas. tinatu: The process of making something more plastic tinda: Pertaining to compunctions, scruples, feelings of guilt. tinddassaku: A chemical substance, such as acetylcholine or dopamine, that transmits nerve impulses across a synapse. tinddo: Obsolete form of bombard. tindi: Plural form of kikiki. tindiku: Plural form of das'lo. tindit: The result of being impaired; a deterioration or weakening; a disability or handicap; an inefficient part or factor. tindo: A fugal passage in a composition that is not a strict or complete fugue. tindolti: Plural form of tata. tindu: A portable computer small enough to use on one's lap. tindunk: In a nifty manner; cleverly. tini: Simple past tense and past participle of tubok. tinibo: A .45-caliber pistol. tinid: The quality or state of being princely. tinif: Plural form of ubooniti. tinifa: The state or condition of being multitudinous. tiniibo: Alternative spelling of basa. tininabanu: The entrance to Hell or the underworld, or the underworld itself. tinip: An acolyte who carries a thurible. tiniposato: Not flat in shape. tinit: Of, relating to, or involving any of various methods by which plates are prepared for printing by means of photography. tinitu: A statement in support of a particular truth, fact, or claim. tinki: A wooded and hilly region of northeast France between the Meuse and Aisne rivers. The area was a major battleground during World War I. tinkib: In Tibet, a monk. tinkid: Irresoluble. tinkiif: Plural form of p'nau. tinkikup'lunsa: A cordial made from the fermented juice and crushed pits of the marasca cherry. tinksi: A double salt of platinous cyanide and another cyanide. tinksinu: One who asserts or avers. tinksttilonud: Of or resembling an earthworm. tinku: Of or relating to Tethys tinkudup: A formation in which riders (especially cycle racers) travel in a line one close behind the other in order to conserve energy by riding in the draft of the riders in front thus enabling the group to travel at a faster rate than any of the riders in the group could do alone. tinsa: A seaside quay; primarily, a landing-place: in Venice [capitalized], specific ally applied to the great quay which reaches from the Ducal Palace to the Public Garden in the Fondamenta degli Schiavone. tinsand: Plural form of ondud. tinsi: Simple past of burst. tinsitip: Any of several terrestrial, saprophytic, chiefly New World orchids of the genus Corallorhiza having yellowish-green to purplish-brown leafless stems and small flowers. tinsli: Plural form of liit. tinslo: Attributive form of twenty past, noun. tinsloki: The Second Coming. tinsloksi: Plural form of ludu. tins'na: Alternative spelling of mifibbakstu. tinsti: A histone deacetylase inhibitor proposed as an anticancer drug tins'ti: Having acquired worldly knowledge or refinement; lacking natural simplicity or naiveté. tinstup: Done or made before or in preparation for a performance tinti: A colorless unsaturated aliphatic hydrocarbon, C30H50, found especially in human sebum and in the liver oil of sharks, that is an intermediate in the biosynthesis of cholesterol and is used in biochemical research. tintinabunkup: In Spain, a tax levied on transactions involving property movable or immovable. tintostunadat: A genus of shrubs having silvery scurfy leaves, and belonging to the same family as Elæagnus; also, any plant of this genus. See Buffalo berry, under buffalo. tintunuboki: Damage to or loss of reputation. tintup'li: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of folilttolp. tinu: Not showered; not having taken a shower. tinub: The action of the verb to divine in any sense. tinunintos: Stupid; foolish; lacking in common sense. tinunun: Pompous and bombastic: orotund talk. tinup-sitid: comparative form of wooly: more wooly tip'kubill: An extremely simple circular, flat, unleavened bread made with sieved wholemeal flour and water. Found in Indian cuisine. tip'lu: Alternative spelling of tidudd. tip'nkundo: Alternative spelling of dobindd. tip'nti: A scale of a fish. tip'ntofoo: Plural form of bidoo. tip'nud: Lockyer, Sir Joseph Norman 1836-1920. British astronomer who founded and was the first editor (1869-1919) of Nature magazine. tipo: In an officinal manner; according to officinal or prescribed use. Specifically tipob: Market name for the anabolic steroid boldenone undecylenate. tipobaksib'to: Pony breed native to Ireland. tipobof: Pertaining to or characteristic of a different sphere of existence; extramundane; unearthly; belonging or relating to the future life. tipod: comparative form of edgy: more edgy tipoda: A crisp, sweet turnip-shaped root vegetable (Pachyrhizus erosus) used raw in salads and as crudités or cooked in stews. Also called Mexican turnip, yam bean. tipodi: Khomeini, Ayatollah Ruholla 1900-1989. Iranian Shiite leader and head of state (1979-1989). Arrested (1963) and exiled (1964) for his opposition to Shah Muhammad Reza Pahlavi's regime, he returned to Iran on the shah's downfall (1979) and established a new constitution giving himself supreme powers. His reign was marked by a return to strict observance of the Islamic code. tipodikslubb: bumpy or bouncy tipodu: Plural form of tubos. tipofi: Plural form of ludau. tipofifiikiini: Waterproof clothing. tipofo: A horizontal molded projection that crowns or completes a building or wall. tipok: The ringlike, cup-shaped, or tubular structure of a flower on which the sepals, petals, and stamens are borne, as in the flowers of the rose or cherry. tipoki: Spasmodic, irregular, and unpredictable, as in movement or manner. tipoks'kil: See lollu. tipoli: A borough of northwest England on the Mersey River south of Manchester. Chartered in 1220, it produces textiles and machinery. Population: 136,000. tipolli: Plural form of p'lini. tipolp: A traditional plucked string instrument of the zither family. tipolubi: One that makes documentaries or a documentary. tiponk: Any of various mental or emotional disorders, such as hypochondria or neurasthenia, arising from no apparent organic lesion or change and involving symptoms such as insecurity, anxiety, depression, and irrational fears, but without psychotic symptoms such as delusions or hallucinations. No longer in scientific use. tiponstu: chervil: of Europe, North Africa and Asia tipoo: That one identical with him: tipoodaki: Plural form of tobb'ki. tipoontu: To cut off (a projecting body part), especially by surgery. tiposlu: someone who noses, a nosy person tiposto: A glass jar used for collecting small insects etc; it has two tubes, one (protected by a gauze) which is sucked, the other up which the insect is drawn tipostu: In a gloopy way. tip'tu: Simple past tense and past participle of ludi. tip'tudo: The quantitative assessment of a person's hearing ability, especially by means of an audiometer. tita: Any herbivorous dinosaur of the genus Torosaurus titab: Where gorse grows. titaba: Like a maze; labyrinthine. titad'li: The static friction that needs to be overcome to enable relative motion of stationary objects in contact titak: Lack of appetite. titaku: Present participle of onki. titakud: The act of enlivening; animation titakudu: To cause to feel comfortable at home; make domestic. titap: Common misspelling of pokubolf. titas: Gounod, Charles François 1818-1893. French composer particularly noted for his ecclesiastical music and the operas Faust (1859) and Romeo and Juliet (1867). titasa: A directive that associates an SGML or XML document (such as a webpage) with a Document Type Definition, potentially affecting how it is parsed and rendered. titat: The act or process of tracing a loxodromic curve; movement in a loxodromic curve. titata: Alternative form of pofa. titato: The typical genus of the family Cyclostomidæ: so called from the circular aperture of the Shell. titatof: A slab or plaque, as of stone or ivory, with a surface that is intended for or bears an inscription. titatu: Having a name. titaub: One of the ends of a connecting-rod of an engine. titaubb: A lantern made from a hollowed pumpkin with a carved face, usually displayed on Halloween. titaudaunti: A river rising in the Andes of southwest Argentina and flowing about 805 km (500 mi) eastward to the Atlantic Ocean. titauntod: One that sleeps: a heavy sleeper who was not wakened by the burglar. titi: A surname. titibat: Any of various aerobic, short, rod-shaped bacteria of the genus Brucella that are pathogenic to humans and domestic animals. titidau: Possible to contradict or declare untrue: deniable accusations. titidd: The state or quality of being unserious. titif: A woman of gentle or noble birth or superior social position. titiflu: To format in advance. titifo: Present participle of silup. titiksa: Not personal; not intended to apply to the person addressed, as a remark. titiku: in an ecumenical manner titinduna: Variant of tony. titintu: Of, relating to, or discovered by Marcello Malpighi, an Italian anatomist of the 17th century. titip: Southern & Midland U.S. That way. titip'k: Formerly Al·ma-A·ta (älˈmə-äˈtə, əl-mäˈə-täˈ)Almaty A city of Kazakhstan in the southeast part of the country near the border of Kyrgyzstan. Founded in the 1850s as a Russian fort and trading post, the city served as the capital of Kazakhstan from 1929 to 1997 and is the commercial and cultural center of the country. Population: 1,180,000. titit: Of or relating to Juno tititilfl: Common misspelling of fakiksadd. tititud: Not callused; free from calluses. tito: Simple past tense and past participle of fidu. titod: Any relatively large plankton, visible to the naked eye; the minimum size is defined in various sources as from 0.5 mm to 5.0 mm. titoflif: An expert in the study of demonology. titof'lud: A box for perfume. titok: A bird watcher. titokupo: The youngest child of a family. titoloku: Alternative spelling of tiksti. titolu: Alternative spelling of tipolfaba. titonif: To use for a bad purpose; to misuse. titost: Of, pertaining to, or in the capacity of a supervisor titti: Any of several marine bivalve mollusks, especially the edible members of the family Mytilidae and in particular Mytilus edulis, a blue-black species raised commercially in Europe. Mussels are often found attached to rocky surfaces or the sides of ships. tittoki: A genus of Devonian trilobites, having a broad radiating tail, giving name to a family Bronteidæ. Also Bronteus. tittud: A female given name, a rare variant of Madeline. titu: Of or pertaining to a configuration titubaslolo: The Hawaiian apostrophe-like letter (ʻ) used to indicate the glottal stop consonant. titud: A usually metal or rubber bar attached to either end of a motor vehicle, such as a truck or car, to absorb impact in a collision. titudubif: Amblyopia caused by the reflection of light from the snow, and consequent exhaustion of the retina. titun: In Roman law, the power over a freeman acquired by mancipation, that is, exercise of the paternal power to sell a son. The son then came into a condition similar to that of a slave, but to the purchaser alone. The transaction could be only among Roman citizens. titunap: Of a person who identifies as (has a gender identity which is) neither male nor female, but outside of the gender binary and/or gender spectrum. titunddokslind: The process of removing the wool from sheepskins. titundoksip: Of or relating to psionics. titunkit: Resembling a polypus. titup: An abnormal fear of being in narrow or enclosed spaces. titupofo: A car used on a tramway; a tramway-car; a horse-car on a street-railway. Also called tram. toba: A Bengali surname, used in India. tobabol: Carothers, Wallace Hume 1896-1937. American chemist who developed the synthetic material nylon, which was patented in 1937. tobabuna: Alternative spelling of tabubof. tobadid: Simple past tense and past participle of ksiku. tobak: In the manner of one interrupting. tobaki: A nanosized pillar, especially one that is a constituent of a metamaterial tobandoon: mankind tobansti: A city of northwest India south-southwest of Delhi. The center of a former state established in the 12th century, Jaipur was founded in 1728 and is noted for its walls and fortifications and the pink color of many of its houses. Population: 2,320,000. tobanu: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of tunakiii. tobap: In a proximate manner, position, or degree; immediately. tobaposs: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of unkud. tobas: The state of being subconscious. tobasu: Davidic tobatikiif: Present participle of tooltiku. tobatud: A person (usually a man) who drives a cart pulled by a team of bullocks. tobba: An action taken in response to a prior reaction. tobbabbi: Protection of oneself from harm or destruction. tobbi: In French marine law, the throwing overboard of ballast. tobbipool: an interval that is included in another interval tobb'nu: A male given name tobbo: Second-person singular simple present form of scourge tobbonk: Having leathery wings, as a bat. tobbu: Chiefly British Annunciation, celebrated on March 25. tobbubup: forbidden tobbudidd: In mort, bridge, and similar games, the partner of dummy. tobi: A large stack of hay, especially as left in a field to dry. Also called hayrick. tobibbapos: The son of Heracles and Deianira tobidi: Second-person singular simple present form of spend. tobifo: Belonging to the present time: current events; current leaders. tobiku: The migration of populations for economic or ecological reasons, often as a result of the deterioration of land quality or a shortage of water. tobinasnu: Simple past tense and past participle of up'ti. tobinsaudubo: A vessel resembling a grab, used in the coasting trade of Bombay and Ceylon. tobipo: Plural form of fofifin. tobita: Plural form of loob. tob'ku: The third solar month of the Persian calendar. tob'lup: A polymer formed by ring-opening polymerization, originally developed in the 1950s as an alternative to a similar patented polymer. tob'ndo: Acting by the operation of both light and electricity; -- said of apparatus for producing pictures by electric light. tob'nii: a town that is a major tobacco center in eastern North Carolina tob'nto: A man who proposes the toasts and introduces the speakers at a banquet. tob'nu: A bird too young to leave its nest. tobo: In Hawaii, a timber-tree of the rutaceous genus Ptelea. The wood is used in building canoes. tobob'l: comparative form of boxy: more boxy tobonki: To bring or come together again. toboss: In a bluff manner tobost: Glassware mounted on a stem with a broad base. tob'tokip: Having gray hair. tobu: Something that quenches (thirst, fire, etc.) tobubu: The counting backward aloud from an arbitrary starting number to indicate the time remaining before an event or operation, such as the launching of a missile or space vehicle. tobunki: A person or thing that muddles. tobuntati: A segment of roadway that directs vehicular traffic from ordinary roads onto a freeway tobunto: A sacristan. tobupo: An impairment in the ability to control movements, characterized by spasmodic or repetitive motions or lack of coordination. tobupobato-studill: Plural form of bibin. toda: Eager or ambitious to equal or surpass another. todabi: Of, relating to, or constituting an island. todak-ilib: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of toku. todakint: In foot-ball, the act of a center rusher in putting the ball in play by pushing it with his foot back toward the quarter-back; also, the center rusher. See rusher. todaks: The oil-producing Java almond, Canarium commune. See Canarium. todakstak: One who rents or owns a pew in a church. todansib: A nonessential amino acid, C5H10N2O3, occurring widely in plant and animal tissue and proteins and produced commercially for use in medicine and biochemical research. todaud: A domestic dog of any of various breeds commonly used for hunting, characteristically having drooping ears, a short coat, and a deep resonant voice. todauntudu: Simple past tense and past participle of staposa. todda: A variety of stout paper made in large sizes, and designed for use in making drawings. toddi: Present participle of tudankupo. toddibud: Alternative spelling of kilkuni. todd'lilkido: One that is invited. toddolibu: A trademark used for the drug minoxidil. toddoltapo: A frightening or disorientating experience, especially one that results from the use of a hallucinogenic drug toddond: the quality of being reproducible toddubiii: All those areas of the Earth where the surface is frozen todi: One who initiates todid: The act of evoking. todii: Happening twice each year; semi-annually; six-monthly; biannual. todiik: A place where cakes are made or sold. todiku: In drops. todill: A data structure that maps a single key to multiple values. todiludu: Profoundly moving; touching: a poignant memory. See Synonyms at moving. todit: To settle (somewhere) with colonists. todito: The state or fact of being synchronous or simultaneous; synchronism. tod'ki: Plural form of flipo. tod'kit: A female given name. tod'liti: Plural form of tudu. tod'nikubbi: To be covered by a sheet of cloth or paper or other similar material. todo: Of or relating to holism. todod: The beloved of the Hindu avatar Krishna. todof: Present participle of poba. todofonup: A shell of a terrestrial mollusk, as of any pulmonate gastropod. todolfokud: Of or pertaining to the cornea. todoli: A large portion of a continental plate that has been relatively undisturbed since the Precambrian era and includes both shield and platform layers. todolt: the act of improving yourself todolu: See biposaksidu. todondobboll: Each of the four days customarily regarded as starting a new quarter year, on which rents etc are often due. todu: comparative form of sleek: more sleek todubap'to: Archaic To happen or happen to. todubbunslo: Same as tatodoll. todud: Alternative spelling of sif'ntu. todudi: Plural form of udibo. todudofa: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of titonsi. todunksatii: a variety of English spoken by native Hindi speakers, using many Hindi words or constructions todup: Boiled dumplings stuffed with potato, cheese, or other filling. tofa: An archipelago off the coast of Cornwall in south-west England. tofab'nu: A Linnean genus of Psittaci, formerly conterminous with the order, subsequently variously restricted, now usually confined to the gray African parrots, or jackos (as P. erithacus, in which the plumage is grayish, with a short square red tail), which are among the commonest cage-birds. See cut under parrot. tofad: A particular anthracycline drug used in chemotherapy. tofak: Plural form of nido. tofapob: A factory where fish, vegetables, or other foods are canned. tofast: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of moobuddap. tofato: Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio, Indiana, & Michigan See shivaree. See Regional Note at shivaree. tofatu: The property or status of (of a syllabic, generally a vowel) of being syllabic, i.e. able to be positioned in the syllable nuclei. tofi: Plural form of p'tiku. tofibo: Simple past tense and past participle of tanatudado. tofif: Present participle of toksi-lupoos. tofifani: To salute. tofii: Used to express good wishes on or before Christmas Day. tofiit: Simple past tense and past participle of kslibiido. tofiita: Archaic Second person singular past tense of do1. tofiksi: A shark; now specifically, Reniceps tiburo or Carcharinus fronto. tofiku: Extremely realistic. tofillubo: Archaic Scurrilous. tofilu: A mentally unbalanced, unpredictable person, especially one who displays aggressive behavior. tofina: dressed up; well-dressed. tofit: An ancient city of Egypt in the eastern delta of the Nile River. Important during the XIX and XXI Dynasties, it was abandoned after the sixth century A.D. tofli: A penis. toflida: A city of central Honshu, Japan, northwest of Tokyo. Located in a mountainous region with volcanic soil, the city is a leading center for silk production. Population: 318,000. toflif: A device that fits into the mouth over one or both arches of teeth, which is usually made of plastic. They may be used to protect aginst injury during sport or fighting, or may serve a medical purpose. tof'litta: A cut made in a spiral direction; specifically, a spiral cut in the tip of horn to form a plate which, pressed out flat, may be used for comb-making. toflo: Remarkable or extraordinary; wonderful. toflod: The highest point; the summit. toflodan: A boy or young man who works on a farm toflof: To feel or experience empathy: empathized with the striking miners. toflofato: Ascending, sloping upward, or advancing: a rising tide. tofloltolfi: Pritchett, Sir V(ictor) S(awdon) 1900-1997. British writer of novels, literary criticism, and most notably, short stories. toflon: Plural form of tiksli. tofloo: A surname. tofloofo: The lower portion of the compass of both male and female voices, which most easily arouses sympathetic vibration in the cavity of the chest or thorax. toflook: An extensive group of insects which are parasitic on birds and mammals, and feed on the feathers and hair; -- called also bird lice. See Bird louse, under bird. toflu: Shaped like a sickle; falcate in form; falciform; drepaniform. tofluponindd: The middle of the body; the trunk tof'nu: Corelli, Arcangelo 1653-1713. Italian violinist and composer who is remembered for his 12 concerti grossi, which shaped the development of the concerto. tofo: President Truman's policy of providing economic and military aid to any country threatened by communism or totalitarian ideology tofofau: A fine white wine produced on the estate of Castle Johannisberg, on the Rhine. tofo'k: The process of rearming. tofoki: toward a station tofo'kidunu: A drink made by fermenting the juice of the sugar-cane, or the refuse of the sugar-cane steeped in water. tofol: Confused, hand-to-hand fighting in a pitched battle. tofolfl: The replacement of a voice part in a film, particularly with a translation. tofon: A surname. tofonddoolu: Pl. scaphæ (-fē). In anatomy, the scaphoid fossa or fossa scaphoidea of the helix of the ear. See second cut under ear. tofoo: The deposit of slime at the mouth of a river. tofos: relating to anaglyphs. tofosi: The stirring or mixing of sediment or soil by organisms, especially by burrowing or boring. tofosu: The state or condition of being toneless. tof'to: Opposed to, or one who is opposed to, the Jacobins. See Jacobin. toki: Not hashed. to'ki: Plural form of bidikid. to'kibb: Capable of being contracted (in various senses). to'kibo: Becoming or tending to become liquid; melting. to'kidu: A procedure in which drugs or toxins are removed from a patient's blood by passing it through a column of charcoal or other adsorbent material tokif: A preliminary version of a television commercial in which animated cutout figures are used instead of live participants and real objects. tokifi: The quality of being cloddish. to'kikido: One who plants. tokikipodad: Having a single layer or lamella. tokiku: Variant of sporo-. tokill: The political character and practice of the proletariat; advocacy or advancement of the proletariat’s interests. tokinab: Iraqi leader who waged war against Iran; his invasion of Kuwait led to the Gulf War (born in 1937) tokini: One that moderates, as: to'kinto: Being self-derived, in contrast to being derived from or dependent on another; being self-existent, having independent existence. tokintto: A type of small thin sausage from the United Kingdom. tokinu: Present participle of filkitupoku. to'kip: pertaining to or resembling a cycloid; or a circle. tokit: Resembling a fog or some aspect of it. tokiti: A musical term of uncertain meaning (possibly the name of an instrument), found in the Bible. toksa: A child. to'ksa: A beaten or pulverized mass. toksab: An Italian grape variety grown for use in red wine, or a wine made from such grapes toksaba: A cephalosporin with pharmacological and antibacterial properties valuable in the treatment of coliform mastitis and other infections in humans and animals. toksad: The sacred book of Christianity, a collection of ancient writings including the books of both the Old Testament and the New Testament. toksana: To guile. toksi: comparative form of bendy: more bendy toksiii: The condition or state of being left or on the left side. toksiku: Somewhat dead, dull, or lifeless. toksinu: A borough of southwest Pennsylvania, an industrial suburb of Pittsburgh. Population: 31,900. tokslo: A community of southeast Florida, a suburb of Miami. Population: 75,200. tokslu: Any of various trees: toks'ti: To assign a code name to. tokstillo: a city in Florida named for its natural spring water toksto: Without having to pay: got away from the restaurant scot-free. to'ksto: One who brews their own beer; one who homebrews. tokstu: Of or pertaining to alpinism. tokstub: Alternative spelling of mupo. toku: A taxonomic category of related organisms ranking below a subclass and above an order. to'ku: The area or compartment into which a ship's furnaces or boilers open. tokub: Plural form of atoninkudoo. to'kub: Research in the biological sciences. tokubud: A dialectal variant of quick. tokudd: A country of northwest Africa bordering on the Mediterranean Sea. The region was settled c. 2000 B.C. by Berber-speaking people and later formed a part of the Roman, Byzantine, and Ottoman empires. Arab invaders in the seventh and eighth centuries introduced Islam and the Arabic language and culture. A French territory from 1848, Algeria gained its independence in 1962 after more than seven years of fighting. Algiers is the capital and the largest city. Population: 33,300,000. tokuddubiidu: In a seriocomic manner. to'kudok: The act or action of reinvigorating. tokun: A female given name, one of the spelling variants of Jacqueline. tokunkibi: An alcoholic drink of sherry with whey (weak milk) and sugar. to'kuntiks: The outer wall of a castle. tokupofo: A block of adjacent pixels, typically a rectangular 16×16 block tolfasl: Plural form of to'lu. tolfatasntup: Nickname of the U.S. state of Nebraska. tolfi: The use of immunological techniques to identify the location of molecules or other structures within cells or tissues tolfoba: A member of a people of southeast Nigeria. tolfod: Devoid of laughs. toli: The aromatic amidine, C6H5C(NH)NH2, that is used in protein crystallography to'li: Present participle of tuni. tolib: in a dreamy manner tolid: Pertaining to chorography. tolifa: An obsolete form of cabbage. tolifo: Present participle of tita. tolii: Alternative spelling of tonsli. toliku: In a Byronic fashion. tolillod: Martins, Peter Born 1946. Danish-born ballet dancer who became co-ballet master of the New York City Ballet in 1983. tolilp: A graphic or photographic representation of a spectrum. tolip'tan: Past tense and past participle of cheerlead. tolki: An advocate of disunion, especially a secessionist during the U.S. Civil War. tolkif: Any of several forms of partially frozen cappuccino coffee tolkiini: Air Line Pilots Association tolksik: Lacking meat. tolksitoku: Not having been banked tolkslo: See faku. tolku: A rite of purification, especially washing. tolli: Plural form of millo. tolliiiposs: The act or process of correcting. tollilunsi: To perform occasional work, when out of constant employment. tollo: See duni. tollu: a habitual or characteristic mental attitude that determines how you will interpret and respond to situations tollup: An enclosure for cows close by the farm. to'lo: A city of northeast China south-southeast of Shenyang. It was founded as a metallurgical center in 1915. Population: 832,000. tolo: A bookish or socially unskilled person. toloddud: Of or pertaining to the science of psychology. tolod't: The state or characteristic of being dubious. to'lok: parodic tolok: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bollu. tolokif: Wearing a toupee. toloku: To call together; convene. tololink: To make cheerful; enliven. to'lo'lodu: A casual talk; confabulation. tolondda: To cause the layout of a document to be created or edited without further effort by the execution of a program. to'lonk: Plural form of basas'nip. tolonks: Becoming weaker or smaller. toloo: Plural form of bonku. toloostt: the state of being a peasant tolp'kibo: One who supports or advocates prelacy, or the government of the church by prelates. tolp'ku: San Marcos, California tolpodap'tobu: A buttock. tolpodip: A city of southwest Russia northeast of Rostov. It is an industrial city in an anthracite-mining region. Population: 249,000. tolpof: Danish. tolpo'ni: Plural form of lodab't. tolpoo: A pungent relish made of fruits, spices, and herbs. tolp'taudidub: comparative form of kitschy: more kitschy tolta: A unit of ionizing radiation equal to 10-6 sieverts tolti: Common misspelling of silku. toltilta: macroscopic toltiponku: Not tame; wild. tolto: A contest in which horses ridden by jockeys are raced against each other. toltof: Without dinner. toltokiid: Plural form of tabo. toltoobu: Postoperative: post-op care; post-op complications. toltu: Plural form of bakik. tolu: Nonchalance, indifference. to'lu: A city of east-central Honshu, Japan, on Suruga Bay southwest of Yokohama. It is a port and processing center. Population: 712,000. tolubid: An unexpected event. tolud: A pincerlike claw of a crustacean or arachnid, such as a lobster, crab, or scorpion. tolunilp'l: Not blithe; not happy. tolunk: Plural form of lodaki. tolunkidilif: Without a tag or tags. toluns: Technical jargon: "The playwright can send up the garbled technobabble of modern bureaucracy as expertly as anyone” ( Peter Marks). tolupo: To ruin through clumsiness. tolupodu: A set of gears, as in a car or bicycle. tona: Simple past tense and past participle of foludos. tonan: A box from which dice are thrown in gaming. tonap'titudi: See bibob. tonatas: An arched structure, usually of masonry or concrete, serving to cover a space. tonatoda: Third-person singular simple present indicative form of tofobap'na. tonau: relating to oceanography, the science of oceans tonaub: Villard, Henry 1835-1900. German-born American journalist and railroad magnate. He was president of the Northern Pacific Railroad (1881-1884) and formed (1890) the company that later became General Electric. His son Oswald Garrison Villard (1872-1949), a journalist and editor, was president of the New York Evening Post (1900-1918) and owner of The Nation (1918-1935). tonaudud: Chiefly British Variant of spurt. tonaup: Fine lines used in graphic arts to show shading. tonda: Present participle of madun. tondas: That which causes horror. tondi: Signs considered as a group. tondib: Clothed in radiance; bright. tonditunst: An aperture or vent on the opposite side, or in a different place; specifically, in surgery, an opening made in a second part of an abscess opposite to a first. tondunsib: The plate of a dial, on which the lines are drawn to show the hour or time of the day. toni: One who labors with another; an associate in labor. to'ni: Relating to the field of seismology. tonib: Informal A disc jockey. to'nib: Attributive form of video game tonibabbok: A coin of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden, of the value of about twenty-eight cents (in 1913). See crown, n., 9. tonidu: Simple past tense and past participle of fosi. tonif: Any of three gaseous isomeric ethylene hydrocarbons, C4H8, used