"Neoteric" is a word in ENGLISH
One of modern times; a modern.
Alt. of Neoterical
Reality, in its essence, consists not of particles interacting pointlessly in anindependent physical plane, but rather of values, psychological elements ofmind, made real.
WORD SUGGESTIONS
A pilot, Michael Jordon, Bill Gates, the Pope, and a pizza delivery man were all in a plane together traveling through stormy conditions.Suddenly, the pilot came running back to the passengers and announced that lightning had hit the plane, and they were going to crash in a matter of minutes. "There are only enough parachutes for four of the five of us," he announced. "Since I'm the pilot, I get one!" After saying this, the pilot grabbed a parachute and jumped out of the plane."I'm the world's greatest athlete," proclaimed Michael Jordon. "This world needs great athletes, so I must live." Michael Jordon then grabbed a parachute and leaped out of the plane."I'm the smarest man in the world," bragged Bill Gates. "The world needs smart men, so I must also live!" Bill Gates grabbed a parachute and jumped out of the plane.At this point, the Pope began to speak. "I have lived a long life compared to you, and you may take the last parachute. I will go down with the plane.""You don't have to stay here! The world's smartest man jumped out of the plane with my backpack."
A foot of three syllables, the middle one long, the first and last short (~ -- ~); as, h/b/r/. In …
Read the complete definitionTo rise, in a figurative sense; to proceed from an inferior to a superior degree, from mean to noble objects, …
Read the complete definitionbag-u {2} -ng kaláyu, kandílà, túbig blessing of the New Fire, Easter Candle, and Holy Water on the night of …
Read the complete definitionAn abbreviation of the ex-pression "consolidated annuities," and used in modern times as a name of various funds united in …
Read the complete definitionTo entice, to corrupt, and, when used of a woman, to seduce, origl-nally, the term had a limited signification, meaning …
Read the complete definitionThe Greek major third, which comprehend two major tones (the modern major third contains one major and one minor whole …
Read the complete definitionAnciently, one to whom lands were given; in later use, one to whom lands and tenements are given in tail; …
Read the complete definitionIn modern manufacture, a worsted of one color used for window blinds and similar purposes.
Read the complete definitionA province, prefecture, or territory, under the jurisdiction of an eparch or governor; esp., in modern Greece, one of the …
Read the complete definitionThis word (meaning a feud or fee) ls the one most commonly used by the older English law-writers, though its …
Read the complete definitionA row of soldiers ranged one behind another; -- in contradistinction to rank, which designates a row of soldiers standing …
Read the complete definitionA flaming torch, esp. one made by combining together a number of thick wicks invested with a quick-burning substance (anciently, …
Read the complete definitionThis word has had various meanings at different stages of history. In the Roman law, it denoted one who was …
Read the complete definitionOriginaly, a soldier who carried and threw grenades; afterward, one of a company attached to each regiment or battalion, taking …
Read the complete definitionThe dlmlnudve of a sewer. Callis, Sew. (80,) 100. In modern law, an open ditch or conduit designed to allow …
Read the complete definitionIn Norman and old English law, this was the tltle of the officer in a monastery charged with the entertainment …
Read the complete definitionA blending of property for equality of division, as when lands given in frank-marriage to one daughter were, after the …
Read the complete definitionMembers of certain associations in Modern Europe, who combined to promote social reforms, by which they expected to raise men …
Read the complete definitionIn modern civil law. A broker; one who is employed to negotiate a matter between two pnrties, and who for …
Read the complete definitionOne of an extinct family of trees allied to the modern club mosses, and including Lepidodendron and its allies.
Read the complete definition