contrasted (verb)
101idle — adj 1 *vain, nugatory, otiose, empty, hollow Analogous words: fruitless, bootless, *futile, vain: *ineffective, ineffectual, inefficacious: trivial, paltry, *petty, trifling Contrasted words: significant, pregnant, meaningful (see …
102leave — vb 1 *will, bequeath, devise, legate Analogous words: *commit, entrust, confide, consign: assign, *allot, apportion 2 *relinquish, resign, surrender, abandon, yield, cede, waive Analogous words: forsake, * …
103note — 1. verb To make a brief written statement; to erjtera memorandum, as to note an exception 2. noun An instrument containing an express and absolute promise of signer (i.e. maker) to pay to a specified person or order, or bearer, a definite sum of… …
104note — 1. verb To make a brief written statement; to erjtera memorandum, as to note an exception 2. noun An instrument containing an express and absolute promise of signer (i.e. maker) to pay to a specified person or order, or bearer, a definite sum of… …
105mo´dal|ly — mo|dal «MOH duhl», adjective. 1. of or having to do with mode, manner, or form, as contrasted with substance. 2. Grammar. a) of or having to do with the mood of a verb. b) denoting manner or modality. 3. Music. of or having to do with a mode,… …
106mo|dal — «MOH duhl», adjective. 1. of or having to do with mode, manner, or form, as contrasted with substance. 2. Grammar. a) of or having to do with the mood of a verb. b) denoting manner or modality. 3. Music. of or having to do with a mode, especially …
107ḤAMEẒ — (Heb. חָמֵץ; fermented dough ; cf. Ex. 12:39). Ḥameẓ is prohibited in Jewish religious usage in two instances, one of which has a purely theoretical application at the present day, while the other is of topical application. The first was the… …
108color — I. noun Usage: often attributive Etymology: Middle English colour, from Anglo French, from Latin color; akin to Latin celare to conceal more at hell Date: 13th century 1. a. a phenomenon of light (as red, brown, pink, or gray) or visual… …
109compare — I. verb (compared; comparing) Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French comparer, from Latin comparare to couple, compare, from compar like, from com + par equal Date: 14th century transitive verb 1. to represent as similar ; liken …
110mass — I. noun Etymology: Middle English, from Old English mæsse, modification of Vulgar Latin *messa, literally, dismissal at the end of a religious service, from Late Latin missa, from Latin, feminine of missus, past participle of mittere to send Date …