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Ambidextrously
Ambidextrously Am"bi*dex"trous*ly, adv.
In an ambidextrous manner; cunningly.
Ambidextrousness
Ambidextrousness Am`bi*dex"trous*ness, n.
The quality of being ambidextrous; ambidexterity.
Asymmetrous
Asymmetrous A*sym"me*trous, a. [Gr. ?.]
Asymmetrical. [Obs.] --Barrow.
Atrous
Atrous A"trous, a. [L. ater.]
Coal-black; very black.
Auntrous
Auntrous Aun"trous, a.
Adventurous. [Obs.] --Chaucer.
BarratrousBarratrous Bar"ra*trous, ? (Law)
Tainter with, or constituting, barratry. --
Bar"ra*trous*ly, adv. --Kent. BarratrouslyBarratrous Bar"ra*trous, ? (Law)
Tainter with, or constituting, barratry. --
Bar"ra*trous*ly, adv. --Kent. Blustrous
Blustrous Blus"trous, a.
Blusterous. --Shak.
DartrousDartrous Dar"trous, a. [F. dartreux. See Dartars.] (Med.)
Relating to, or partaking of the nature of, the disease
called tetter; herpetic.
Dartrous diathesis, A morbid condition of the system
predisposing to the development of certain skin diseases,
such as eczema, psoriasis, and pityriasis. Also called
rheumic diathesis, and herpetism. --Piffard. Dartrous diathesisDartrous Dar"trous, a. [F. dartreux. See Dartars.] (Med.)
Relating to, or partaking of the nature of, the disease
called tetter; herpetic.
Dartrous diathesis, A morbid condition of the system
predisposing to the development of certain skin diseases,
such as eczema, psoriasis, and pityriasis. Also called
rheumic diathesis, and herpetism. --Piffard. dextrousDexterous Dex"ter*ous, a. [L. dexter. See Dexter.] [Written
also dextrous.]
1. Ready and expert in the use of the body and limbs;
skillful and active with the hands; handy; ready; as, a
dexterous hand; a dexterous workman.
2. Skillful in contrivance; quick at inventing expedients;
expert; as, a dexterous manager.
Dexterous the craving, fawning crowd to quit.
--Pope.
3. Done with dexterity; skillful; artful; as, dexterous
management. ``Dexterous sleights of hand.' --Trench.
Syn: Adroit; active; expert; skillful; clever; able; ready;
apt; handy; versed. DextrousDextrous Dex"trous, a., Dextrously Dex"trous*ly, adv.,
Dextrousness Dex"trous*ness, n.
Same as Dexterous, Dexterously, etc. DextrouslyDextrous Dex"trous, a., Dextrously Dex"trous*ly, adv.,
Dextrousness Dex"trous*ness, n.
Same as Dexterous, Dexterously, etc. DextrousnessDextrous Dex"trous, a., Dextrously Dex"trous*ly, adv.,
Dextrousness Dex"trous*ness, n.
Same as Dexterous, Dexterously, etc. GoitrousGoitrous Goi"trous, a. [F. go[^i]treux, L. gutturosus. See
Goiter.]
Pertaining to the goiter; affected with the goiter; of the
nature of goiter or bronchocele.
Let me not be understood as insinuating that the
inhabitants in general are either goitrous or idiots.
--W. Coxe. HyponitrousHyponitrous Hy`po*ni"trous, a. [Pref. hypo- + nitrous.]
(Chem.)
Containing or derived from nitrogen having a lower valence
than in nitrous compounds.
Hyponitrous acid (Chem.), an unstable nitrogen acid, NOH,
whose salts are produced by reduction of the nitrates,
although the acid itself is not isolated in the free state
except as a solution in water; -- called also nitrosylic
acid. Hyponitrous acidHyponitrous Hy`po*ni"trous, a. [Pref. hypo- + nitrous.]
(Chem.)
Containing or derived from nitrogen having a lower valence
than in nitrous compounds.
Hyponitrous acid (Chem.), an unstable nitrogen acid, NOH,
whose salts are produced by reduction of the nitrates,
although the acid itself is not isolated in the free state
except as a solution in water; -- called also nitrosylic
acid. hyponitrous oxideProtoxide Pro*tox"ide, n. [Proto- + oxide: cf. F. protoxide.]
(Chem.)
That one of a series of oxides having the lowest proportion
of oxygen. See Proto-, 2
(b) .
protoxide of nitrogen, laughing gas, now called
hyponitrous oxide Idolatrous
Idolatrous I*dol"a*trous, a.
1. Of or pertaining to idolatry; partaking of the nature of
idolatry; given to idolatry or the worship of false gods;
as, idolatrous sacrifices.
[Josiah] put down the idolatrous priests. --2 Kings
xxiii. 5.
2. Consisting in, or partaking of, an excessive attachment or
reverence; as, an idolatrous veneration for antiquity.
Idolatrously
Idolatrously I*dol"a*trous*ly, adv.
In a idolatrous manner.
Illustrous
Illustrous Il*lus"trous, a. [Pref. il- not + lustrous.]
Without luster. [Obs. & R.]
Impostrous
Impostrous Im*pos"trous, n.
Characterized by imposture; deceitful. ``Impostrous pretense
of knowledge.' --Grote.
LatirostrousLatirostral Lat`i*ros"tral, Latirostrous Lat`i*ros"trous, a.
[Cf. F. latirostre. See Latirostres.] (Zo["o]l.)
Having a broad beak. --Sir T. Browne. LustrousLustrous Lus"trous, a. [Cf. F. lustreux. See 3d Luster.]
Bright; shining; luminous. `` Good sparks and lustrous.'
--Shak. -- Lus"trous*ly, adv. LustrouslyLustrous Lus"trous, a. [Cf. F. lustreux. See 3d Luster.]
Bright; shining; luminous. `` Good sparks and lustrous.'
--Shak. -- Lus"trous*ly, adv. MonstrousMonstrous Mon"strous, a. [OE. monstruous, F. monstrueux, fr.
L. monstruosus, fr. monstrum. See Monster.]
1. Marvelous; strange. [Obs.]
2. Having the qualities of a monster; deviating greatly from
the natural form or character; abnormal; as, a monstrous
birth. --Locke.
He, therefore, that refuses to do good to them whom
he is bound to love . . . is unnatural and monstrous
in his affections. --Jer. Taylor.
3. Extraordinary in a way to excite wonder, dislike,
apprehension, etc.; -- said of size, appearance, color,
sound, etc.; as, a monstrous height; a monstrous ox; a
monstrous story.
4. Extraordinary on account of ugliness, viciousness, or
wickedness; hateful; horrible; dreadful.
So bad a death argues a monstrous life. --Shak.
5. Abounding in monsters. [R.]
Where thou, perhaps, under the whelming tide
Visitest the bottom of the monstrous world.
--Milton. Monstrous
Monstrous Mon"strous, adv.
Exceedingly; very; very much. ``A monstrous thick oil on the
top.' --Bacon.
And will be monstrous witty on the poor. --Dryden.
Monstrously
Monstrously Mon"strous*ly, adv.
In a monstrous manner; unnaturally; extraordinarily; as,
monstrously wicked. ``Who with his wife is monstrously in
love.' --Dryden.
Monstrousness
Monstrousness Mon"strous*ness, n.
The state or quality of being monstrous, unusual,
extraordinary. --Shak.
NitrousNitrous Ni"trous, a. [L. nitrosus full of natron: cf. F.
nitreux. See Niter.]
1. Of, pertaining to, or containing, niter; of the quality of
niter, or resembling it.
2. (Chem.) Of, pertaining to, or designating, any one of
those compounds in which nitrogen has a relatively lower
valence as contrasted with nitric compounds.
Nitrous acid (Chem.), a hypothetical acid of nitrogen
HNO2, not known in the free state, but forming a well
known series of salts, viz., the nitrites.
Nitrous oxide. See Laughing gas.
Meaning of Trous from wikipedia
-
medieval fortification, a trou de loup (French for "wolf hole";
plural trous de loup, also
commonly referred to as a
tiger pit in the East) was a type...
-
seigneurie de Tournaisis, as the city's
environs are called. The
stone Pont des
Trous (Bridge of the Holes) [fr] over the Scheldt, with
defensive towers at either...
- coefficients. This
algorithm is more
famously known as "algorithme à
trous" in
French (word
trous means holes in English)
which refers to
inserting zeros in the...
-
musicales a
quatre parties a la
fleuste dallement...et a la
fleuste a neuf
trous (1533)
collects 28 (not 27, as in the title) four-part
instrumental motets...
- Par
Noussss Touss Les
Trous de Vos Crânes! is the
second album of Et Sans. It was
released in
April 2005 by Alien8 Recordings,
their first album on the...
- la
construction des
machines perforatrices utilisées pour le
forage des
trous horizontaux",
issued 1919-07-03 FR492851A, Hughes,
Howard Robard, "Perfectionnements...
- the
prepublication of the new
Johan et
Pirlouit comic book La Flûte à six
trous ("The
Flute with Six Holes"). The
adventure involved their recovery of a...
- part of the
overall European Seine-Scheldt
waterway project. The Pont des
Trous, a
listed fortified bridge in
Tournai that has
already been substantially...
- He was
introduced in Peyo's 1958
Johan and
Peewit story "La Flûte à Six
Trous", the
first appearance of the Smurfs. Don
Messick provided Papa Smurf's...
- product,
while French-speaking
Canadians prefer to use the
generic term "
trous de beigne". In the
francophone Tim
Hortons locations, however, they are...