-
advertise
0
v 1: call attention to; "Please don't advertise the fact that he
has AIDS" [syn: advertise, publicize, advertize,
publicise]
2: make publicity for; try to sell (a product); "The salesman is
aggressively pushing the new computer model"; "The company is
heavily advertizing their new laptops" [syn: advertise,
advertize, promote, push]
-
advise
0
v 1: give advice to; "The teacher counsels troubled students";
"The lawyer counselled me when I was accused of tax fraud"
[syn: rede, advise, counsel]
2: inform (somebody) of something; "I advised him that the rent
was due" [syn: advise, notify, give notice, send
word, apprise, apprize]
3: make a proposal, declare a plan for something; "the senator
proposed to abolish the sales tax" [syn: propose,
suggest, advise]
-
allies
0
n 1: the alliance of nations that fought the Axis in World War
II and which (with subsequent additions) signed the charter
of the United Nations in 1945
2: in World War I the alliance of Great Britain and France and
Russia and all the other nations that became allied with them
in opposing the Central Powers
3: an alliance of nations joining together to fight a common
enemy
-
amortise
0
v 1: liquidate gradually [syn: amortize, amortise]
-
apprise
0
v 1: inform (somebody) of something; "I advised him that the
rent was due" [syn: advise, notify, give notice,
send word, apprise, apprize]
2: make aware of; "Have the students been apprised of the
tuition hike?" [syn: instruct, apprise, apprize]
3: gain in value; "The yen appreciated again!" [syn:
appreciate, apprize, apprise, revalue] [ant:
depreciate, devaluate, devalue, undervalue]
4: increase the value of; "The Germans want to appreciate the
Deutsche Mark" [syn: appreciate, apprize, apprise]
[ant: depreciate]
-
arise
0
v 1: come into existence; take on form or shape; "A new
religious movement originated in that country"; "a love
that sprang up from friendship"; "the idea for the book
grew out of a short story"; "An interesting phenomenon
uprose" [syn: originate, arise, rise, develop,
uprise, spring up, grow]
2: originate or come into being; "a question arose" [syn:
arise, come up, bob up]
3: rise to one's feet; "The audience got up and applauded" [syn:
arise, rise, uprise, get up, stand up] [ant: lie,
lie down, sit, sit down]
4: result or issue; "A slight unpleasantness arose from this
discussion" [syn: arise, come up]
5: move upward; "The fog lifted"; "The smoke arose from the
forest fire"; "The mist uprose from the meadows" [syn:
rise, lift, arise, move up, go up, come up,
uprise] [ant: come down, descend, fall, go down]
6: take part in a rebellion; renounce a former allegiance [syn:
rebel, arise, rise, rise up]
7: get up and out of bed; "I get up at 7 A.M. every day"; "They
rose early"; "He uprose at night" [syn: get up, turn out,
arise, uprise, rise] [ant: bed, crawl in, go to
bed, go to sleep, hit the hay, hit the sack, kip
down, retire, sack out, turn in]
-
assize
0
n 1: the regulation of weights and measures of articles offered
for sale
2: an ancient writ issued by a court of assize to the sheriff
for the recovery of property
-
capitalise
0
v 1: supply with capital, as of a business by using a
combination of capital used by investors and debt capital
provided by lenders [syn: capitalize, capitalise]
2: draw advantages from; "he is capitalizing on her mistake";
"she took advantage of his absence to meet her lover" [syn:
capitalize, capitalise, take advantage]
3: write in capital letters [syn: capitalize, capitalise]
4: compute the present value of a business or an income [syn:
capitalize, capitalise]
5: consider expenditures as capital assets rather than expenses
[syn: capitalize, capitalise]
6: convert (a company's reserve funds) into capital [syn:
capitalize, capitalise]
-
capsize
0
v 1: overturn accidentally; "Don't rock the boat or it will
capsize!" [syn: capsize, turtle, turn turtle]
-
chastise
0
v 1: censure severely; "She chastised him for his insensitive
remarks" [syn: chastise, castigate, objurgate,
chasten, correct]
-
circumcise
0
v 1: cut the skin over the clitoris
2: cut the foreskin off male babies or teenage boys; "During the
bris, the baby boy is circumcised"
-
clockwise
0
adv 1: in the direction that the hands of a clock move; "please
move clockwise in a circle" [ant: anticlockwise,
counterclockwise]
adj 1: in the same direction as the rotating hands of a clock
[ant: anticlockwise, contraclockwise,
counterclockwise]
-
coastwise
0
adv 1: by way of, or along the coast; "we were travelling
coastwise"
adj 1: along or following a coast; "coastal shipping";
"coastwise winds contributed to the storm"
-
comprise
0
v 1: be composed of; "The land he conquered comprised several
provinces"; "What does this dish consist of?" [syn:
consist, comprise]
2: include or contain; have as a component; "A totally new idea
is comprised in this paper"; "The record contains many old
songs from the 1930's" [syn: incorporate, contain,
comprise]
3: form or compose; "This money is my only income"; "The stone
wall was the backdrop for the performance"; "These constitute
my entire belonging"; "The children made up the chorus";
"This sum represents my entire income for a year"; "These few
men comprise his entire army" [syn: constitute,
represent, make up, comprise, be]
-
compromise
0
n 1: a middle way between two extremes [syn: compromise, via
media]
2: an accommodation in which both sides make concessions; "the
newly elected congressmen rejected a compromise because they
considered it `business as usual'"
v 1: make a compromise; arrive at a compromise; "nobody will get
everything he wants; we all must compromise"
2: settle by concession
3: expose or make liable to danger, suspicion, or disrepute;
"The nuclear secrets of the state were compromised by the
spy"
-
contrariwise
0
adv 1: in a contrary disobedient manner [syn: perversely,
contrarily, contrariwise]
2: with the order reversed; "she hates him and vice versa" [syn:
vice versa, the other way around, contrariwise]
3: contrary to expectations; "he didn't stay home; on the
contrary, he went out with his friends" [syn: contrarily,
to the contrary, contrariwise, on the contrary]
-
crosswise
0
adv 1: not in the intended manner; "things are going crosswise"
2: transversely; "the marble slabs were cut across" [syn:
across, crosswise, crossways]
adj 1: lying or extending across the length of a thing or in a
cross direction; "a crosswise street"; "the crosswise
dimension" [ant: lengthways, lengthwise]
2: in the shape of (a horizontal piece on) a cross
-
demise
0
n 1: the time when something ends; "it was the death of all his
plans"; "a dying of old hopes" [syn: death, dying,
demise] [ant: birth]
v 1: transfer by a lease or by a will
-
despise
0
v 1: look down on with disdain; "He despises the people he has
to work for"; "The professor scorns the students who don't
catch on immediately" [syn: contemn, despise, scorn,
disdain]
-
devise
0
n 1: a will disposing of real property
2: (law) a gift of real property by will
v 1: come up with (an idea, plan, explanation, theory, or
principle) after a mental effort; "excogitate a way to
measure the speed of light" [syn: invent, contrive,
devise, excogitate, formulate, forge]
2: arrange by systematic planning and united effort; "machinate
a plot"; "organize a strike"; "devise a plan to take over the
director's office" [syn: organize, organise, prepare,
devise, get up, machinate]
3: give by will, especially real property
-
disguise
0
n 1: an outward semblance that misrepresents the true nature of
something; "the theatrical notion of disguise is always
associated with catastrophe in his stories" [syn:
disguise, camouflage]
2: any attire that modifies the appearance in order to conceal
the wearer's identity
3: the act of concealing the identity of something by modifying
its appearance; "he is a master of disguise" [syn:
disguise, camouflage]
v 1: make unrecognizable; "The herb masks the garlic taste"; "We
disguised our faces before robbing the bank" [syn:
disguise, mask]
-
disorganize
0
v 1: remove the organization from [syn: disorganize,
disorganise] [ant: organise, organize]
-
edgewise
0
adv 1: with the edge forward or on, by, or toward the edge; "he
sawed the board edgeways"; "held it edgewise" [syn:
edgeways, edgewise]
2: as if by an edge; barely; "I could not get a word in
edgewise" [syn: edgewise, edgeways]
-
endwise
0
adv 1: on end or upright; "sticks leaning against the wall
endways" [syn: endways, endwise]
2: in or toward the direction of the ends; lengthwise; "endways
pressure" [syn: endways, endwise]
3: with the end forward or toward the observer; "houses built
endways" [syn: endways, endwise, end on]
-
excise
0
n 1: a tax that is measured by the amount of business done (not
on property or income from real estate) [syn: excise,
excise tax]
v 1: remove by erasing or crossing out or as if by drawing a
line; "Please strike this remark from the record"; "scratch
that remark" [syn: strike, scratch, expunge,
excise]
2: levy an excise tax on
3: remove by cutting; "The surgeon excised the tumor"
-
eyes
0
n 1: opinion or judgment; "in the eyes of the law"; "I was wrong
in her eyes"
-
flies
0
n 1: (theater) the space over the stage (out of view of the
audience) used to store scenery (drop curtains)
-
franchise
0
n 1: an authorization to sell a company's goods or services in a
particular place
2: a business established or operated under an authorization to
sell or distribute a company's goods or services in a
particular area [syn: franchise, dealership]
3: a statutory right or privilege granted to a person or group
by a government (especially the rights of citizenship and the
right to vote) [syn: franchise, enfranchisement]
v 1: grant a franchise to
-
fries
0
n 1: strips of potato fried in deep fat [syn: french fries,
french-fried potatoes, fries, chips]
-
guise
0
n 1: an artful or simulated semblance; "under the guise of
friendship he betrayed them" [syn: guise, pretense,
pretence, pretext]
-
improvise
0
v 1: perform without preparation; "he extemporized a speech at
the wedding" [syn: improvise, improvize, ad-lib,
extemporize, extemporise]
2: manage in a makeshift way; do with whatever is at hand;
"after the hurricane destroyed our house, we had to improvise
for weeks" [syn: improvise, extemporize]
-
incise
0
v 1: make an incision into by carving or cutting
-
leastwise
0
adv 1: if nothing else (`leastwise' is informal and `leastways'
is colloquial); "at least he survived"; "they felt--at
any rate Jim felt--relieved though still wary"; "the
influence of economists--or at any rate of economics--is
far-reaching" [syn: at least, leastways, leastwise,
at any rate]
-
lengthwise
0
adv 1: in the direction of the length; "He cut the paper
lengthwise" [syn: lengthways, lengthwise, longwise,
longways, longitudinally]
adj 1: running or extending in the direction of the length of a
thing; "the lengthwise dimension" [syn: lengthwise,
lengthways] [ant: crosswise]
-
likewise
0
adv 1: in like or similar manner; "He was similarly affected";
"some people have little power to do good, and have
likewise little strength to resist evil"- Samuel Johnson
[syn: similarly, likewise]
2: in addition; "he has a Mercedes, too" [syn: besides, too,
also, likewise, as well]
3: equally; "parents and teachers alike demanded reforms" [syn:
alike, likewise]
-
nowise
0
adv 1: in no manner; "they are nowise different" [syn: nowise,
to no degree]
-
otherwise
0
adv 1: in other respects or ways; "he is otherwise normal"; "the
funds are not otherwise available"; "an otherwise
hopeless situation"
2: in another and different manner; "very soon you will know
differently"; "she thought otherwise"; "there is no way out
other than the fire escape"; [syn: differently,
otherwise, other than]
adj 1: other than as supposed or expected; "the outcome was
otherwise"
-
outsize
0
adj 1: larger than normal for its kind [syn: outsize,
outsized, oversize, oversized]
n 1: an unusual garment size (especially one that is very large)
-
oversize
0
adj 1: larger than normal for its kind [syn: outsize,
outsized, oversize, oversized]
-
prise
0
v 1: to move or force, especially in an effort to get something
open; "The burglar jimmied the lock": "Raccoons managed to
pry the lid off the garbage pail" [syn: pry, prise,
prize, lever, jimmy]
2: make an uninvited or presumptuous inquiry; "They pried the
information out of him" [syn: pry, prise]
3: regard highly; think much of; "I respect his judgement"; "We
prize his creativity" [syn: respect, esteem, value,
prize, prise] [ant: disesteem, disrespect]
-
prize
0
adj 1: of superior grade; "choice wines"; "prime beef"; "prize
carnations"; "quality paper"; "select peaches" [syn:
choice, prime(a), prize, quality, select]
n 1: something given for victory or superiority in a contest or
competition or for winning a lottery; "the prize was a free
trip to Europe" [syn: prize, award]
2: goods or money obtained illegally [syn: loot, booty,
pillage, plunder, prize, swag, dirty money]
3: something given as a token of victory [syn: trophy,
prize]
v 1: hold dear; "I prize these old photographs" [syn: prize,
value, treasure, appreciate]
2: to move or force, especially in an effort to get something
open; "The burglar jimmied the lock": "Raccoons managed to
pry the lid off the garbage pail" [syn: pry, prise,
prize, lever, jimmy]
3: regard highly; think much of; "I respect his judgement"; "We
prize his creativity" [syn: respect, esteem, value,
prize, prise] [ant: disesteem, disrespect]
-
remise
0
n 1: an expensive or high-class hackney
2: a small building for housing coaches and carriages and other
vehicles [syn: coach house, carriage house, remise]
3: (fencing) a second thrust made on the same lunge (as when
your opponent fails to riposte)
-
reprise
0
v 1: repeat an earlier theme of a composition [syn: reprise,
reprize, repeat, recapitulate]
-
revise
0
n 1: the act of rewriting something [syn: revision, revisal,
revise, rescript]
v 1: make revisions in; "revise a thesis"
2: revise or reorganize, especially for the purpose of updating
and improving; "We must retool the town's economy" [syn:
retool, revise]
-
rise
0
n 1: a growth in strength or number or importance [ant:
downfall, fall]
2: the act of changing location in an upward direction [syn:
rise, ascent, ascension, ascending]
3: an upward slope or grade (as in a road); "the car couldn't
make it up the rise" [syn: ascent, acclivity, rise,
raise, climb, upgrade] [ant: declension,
declination, decline, declivity, descent,
downslope, fall]
4: a movement upward; "they cheered the rise of the hot-air
balloon" [syn: rise, rising, ascent, ascension] [ant:
fall]
5: the amount a salary is increased; "he got a 3% raise"; "he
got a wage hike" [syn: raise, rise, wage hike, hike,
wage increase, salary increase]
6: the property possessed by a slope or surface that rises [syn:
upgrade, rise, rising slope]
7: a wave that lifts the surface of the water or ground [syn:
lift, rise]
8: (theology) the origination of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost;
"the emanation of the Holy Spirit"; "the rising of the Holy
Ghost"; "the doctrine of the procession of the Holy Spirit
from the Father and the Son" [syn: emanation, rise,
procession]
9: an increase in cost; "they asked for a 10% rise in rates"
[syn: rise, boost, hike, cost increase]
10: increase in price or value; "the news caused a general
advance on the stock market" [syn: advance, rise]
v 1: move upward; "The fog lifted"; "The smoke arose from the
forest fire"; "The mist uprose from the meadows" [syn:
rise, lift, arise, move up, go up, come up,
uprise] [ant: come down, descend, fall, go down]
2: increase in value or to a higher point; "prices climbed
steeply"; "the value of our house rose sharply last year"
[syn: rise, go up, climb]
3: rise to one's feet; "The audience got up and applauded" [syn:
arise, rise, uprise, get up, stand up] [ant: lie,
lie down, sit, sit down]
4: rise up; "The building rose before them" [syn: rise,
lift, rear]
5: come to the surface [syn: surface, come up, rise up,
rise]
6: come into existence; take on form or shape; "A new religious
movement originated in that country"; "a love that sprang up
from friendship"; "the idea for the book grew out of a short
story"; "An interesting phenomenon uprose" [syn: originate,
arise, rise, develop, uprise, spring up, grow]
7: move to a better position in life or to a better job; "She
ascended from a life of poverty to one of great [syn:
ascend, move up, rise]
8: go up or advance; "Sales were climbing after prices were
lowered" [syn: wax, mount, climb, rise] [ant: wane]
9: become more extreme; "The tension heightened" [syn:
heighten, rise]
10: get up and out of bed; "I get up at 7 A.M. every day"; "They
rose early"; "He uprose at night" [syn: get up, turn
out, arise, uprise, rise] [ant: bed, crawl in,
go to bed, go to sleep, hit the hay, hit the sack,
kip down, retire, sack out, turn in]
11: rise in rank or status; "Her new novel jumped high on the
bestseller list" [syn: rise, jump, climb up]
12: become heartened or elated; "Her spirits rose when she heard
the good news"
13: exert oneself to meet a challenge; "rise to a challenge";
"rise to the occasion"
14: take part in a rebellion; renounce a former allegiance [syn:
rebel, arise, rise, rise up]
15: increase in volume; "the dough rose slowly in the warm room"
[syn: rise, prove]
16: come up, of celestial bodies; "The sun also rises"; "The sun
uprising sees the dusk night fled..."; "Jupiter ascends"
[syn: rise, come up, uprise, ascend] [ant: go
down, go under, set]
17: return from the dead; "Christ is risen!"; "The dead are to
uprise" [syn: resurrect, rise, uprise]
-
size
0
adj 1: (used in combination) sized; "the economy-size package";
"average-size house"
n 1: the physical magnitude of something (how big it is); "a
wolf is about the size of a large dog"
2: the property resulting from being one of a series of
graduated measurements (as of clothing); "he wears a size 13
shoe"
3: any glutinous material used to fill pores in surfaces or to
stiffen fabrics; "size gives body to a fabric" [syn: size,
sizing]
4: the actual state of affairs; "that's the size of the
situation"; "she hates me, that's about the size of it" [syn:
size, size of it]
5: a large magnitude; "he blanched when he saw the size of the
bill"; "the only city of any size in that area"
v 1: cover or stiffen or glaze a porous material with size or
sizing (a glutinous substance)
2: sort according to size
3: make to a size; bring to a suitable size
-
sunrise
0
adj 1: of an industry or technology; new and developing; "high-
technology sunrise industries"
n 1: the first light of day; "we got up before dawn"; "they
talked until morning" [syn: dawn, dawning, morning,
aurora, first light, daybreak, break of day, break
of the day, dayspring, sunrise, sunup, cockcrow]
[ant: sundown, sunset]
2: atmospheric phenomena accompanying the daily appearance of
the sun
3: the daily event of the sun rising above the horizon
-
surmise
0
n 1: a message expressing an opinion based on incomplete
evidence [syn: guess, conjecture, supposition,
surmise, surmisal, speculation, hypothesis]
v 1: infer from incomplete evidence
2: imagine to be the case or true or probable; "I suspect he is
a fugitive"; "I surmised that the butler did it" [syn:
suspect, surmise]
-
surprise
0
n 1: the astonishment you feel when something totally unexpected
happens to you
2: a sudden unexpected event
3: the act of surprising someone [syn: surprise, surprisal]
v 1: cause to be surprised; "The news really surprised me"
2: come upon or take unawares; "She surprised the couple"; "He
surprised an interesting scene"
3: attack by storm; attack suddenly [syn: storm, surprise]
-
unwise
0
adj 1: showing or resulting from lack of judgment or wisdom; "an
unwise investor is soon impoverished"
2: not appropriate to the purpose [syn: inexpedient, unwise]
-
wise
0
adj 1: having or prompted by wisdom or discernment; "a wise
leader"; "a wise and perceptive comment" [ant: foolish]
2: marked by the exercise of good judgment or common sense in
practical matters; "judicious use of one's money"; "a wise
decision" [syn: judicious, wise, heady]
3: evidencing the possession of inside information [syn:
knowing, wise(p), wise to(p)]
4: improperly forward or bold; "don't be fresh with me";
"impertinent of a child to lecture a grownup"; "an impudent
boy given to insulting strangers"; "Don't get wise with me!"
[syn: fresh, impertinent, impudent, overbold,
smart, saucy, sassy, wise]
n 1: a way of doing or being; "in no wise"; "in this wise"
2: United States Jewish leader (born in Hungary) (1874-1949)
[syn: Wise, Stephen Samuel Wise]
3: United States religious leader (born in Bohemia) who united
reform Jewish organizations in the United States (1819-1900)
[syn: Wise, Isaac Mayer Wise]
-
bise
0
n 1: a dry cold north wind in southeastern France [syn: bise,
bize]
-
baptize
0
v 1: administer baptism to; "The parents had the child baptized"
[syn: baptize, baptise, christen]
-
marseilles
0
n 1: a port city in southeastern France on the Mediterranean
[syn: Marseille, Marseilles]
-
actualize
0
v 1: make real or concrete; give reality or substance to; "our
ideas must be substantiated into actions" [syn: realize,
realise, actualize, actualise, substantiate]
2: represent or describe realistically [syn: actualize,
actualise]
-
digitize
0
v 1: put into digital form, as for use in a computer; "he bought
a device to digitize the data" [syn: digitize,
digitise, digitalize, digitalise]
-
analyze
0
v 1: consider in detail and subject to an analysis in order to
discover essential features or meaning; "analyze a sonnet
by Shakespeare"; "analyze the evidence in a criminal
trial"; "analyze your real motives" [syn: analyze,
analyse, study, examine, canvass, canvas]
2: make a mathematical, chemical, or grammatical analysis of;
break down into components or essential features; "analyze a
specimen"; "analyze a sentence"; "analyze a chemical
compound" [syn: analyze, analyse, break down,
dissect, take apart] [ant: synthesise, synthesize]
3: break down into components or essential features; "analyze
today's financial market" [syn: analyze, analyse]
4: subject to psychoanalytic treatment; "I was analyzed in
Vienna by a famous psychiatrist" [syn: analyze, analyse,
psychoanalyze, psychoanalyse]
-
apprize
0
v 1: inform (somebody) of something; "I advised him that the
rent was due" [syn: advise, notify, give notice,
send word, apprise, apprize]
2: make aware of; "Have the students been apprised of the
tuition hike?" [syn: instruct, apprise, apprize]
3: gain in value; "The yen appreciated again!" [syn:
appreciate, apprize, apprise, revalue] [ant:
depreciate, devaluate, devalue, undervalue]
4: increase the value of; "The Germans want to appreciate the
Deutsche Mark" [syn: appreciate, apprize, apprise]
[ant: depreciate]
-
brutalize
0
v 1: treat brutally [syn: brutalize, brutalise]
2: make brutal, unfeeling, or inhuman; "Life in the camps had
brutalized him" [syn: brutalize, brutalise, animalize,
animalise]
3: become brutal or insensitive and unfeeling [syn: brutalize,
brutalise, animalize, animalise]
-
catalyze
0
v 1: change by catalysis or cause to catalyze [syn: catalyze,
catalyse]
-
channelize
0
v 1: direct the course; determine the direction of travelling
[syn: steer, maneuver, manoeuver, manoeuvre,
direct, point, head, guide, channelize,
channelise]
2: make a channel for; provide with a channel; "channelize the
country for better transportation" [syn: channelize,
channelise]
3: send from one person or place to another; "transmit a
message" [syn: transmit, transfer, transport,
channel, channelize, channelise]
4: cause to form a channel; "channelize a stream" [syn:
channelize, channelise]
-
crystallize
0
v 1: cause to take on a definite and clear shape; "He tried to
crystallize his thoughts" [syn: crystallize,
crystallise, crystalise, crystalize]
2: make free from confusion or ambiguity; make clear; "Could you
clarify these remarks?"; "Clear up the question of who is at
fault" [syn: clear, clear up, shed light on,
crystallize, crystallise, crystalize, crystalise,
straighten out, sort out, enlighten, illuminate,
elucidate]
3: cause to form crystals or assume crystalline form;
"crystallize minerals" [syn: crystallize, crystallise,
crystalize, crystalise]
4: assume crystalline form; become crystallized [syn:
crystallize, crystalize, crystalise, effloresce]
-
downsize
0
v 1: dismiss from work; "three secretaries were downsized during
the financial crisis"
2: make in a smaller size; "the car makers downsized the SUVs
when fuel became very expensive"
3: reduce in size or number; "the company downsized its research
staff"
-
levis
0
n 1: a popular brand of jeans [syn: Levi's, levis]
-
streetwise
0
adj 1: having the shrewd resourcefulness needed to survive in an
urban environment [syn: streetwise, street smart,
with-it]
-
stylize
0
v 1: represent according to a conventional style; "a stylized
female head" [syn: stylize, stylise, conventionalize]
-
advertize
0
v 1: make publicity for; try to sell (a product); "The salesman
is aggressively pushing the new computer model"; "The
company is heavily advertizing their new laptops" [syn:
advertise, advertize, promote, push]
2: call attention to; "Please don't advertise the fact that he
has AIDS" [syn: advertise, publicize, advertize,
publicise]
-
aggrandize
0
v 1: add details to [syn: embroider, pad, lard,
embellish, aggrandize, aggrandise, blow up,
dramatize, dramatise]
-
agonize
0
v 1: cause to agonize [syn: agonize, agonise]
2: suffer agony or anguish [syn: agonize, agonise]
-
alkalize
0
v 1: turn basic and less acidic; "the solution alkalized" [syn:
alkalize, alkalise, alkalify, basify] [ant:
acetify, acidify]
-
amortize
0
v 1: liquidate gradually [syn: amortize, amortise]
-
anglicize
0
v 1: make English in appearance; "She anglicised her name after
moving from Paris to London" [syn: anglicise,
anglicize]
-
anodize
0
v 1: coat a metal with an oxide coat [syn: anodize, anodise]
-
atomize
0
v 1: spray very finely; "atomize perfume" [syn: atomize,
atomise]
2: strike at with firepower or bombs; "zap the enemy" [syn:
nuke, atomize, atomise, zap]
3: break up into small particles; "the fine powder had been
atomized by air" [syn: atomize, atomise]
-
authorize
0
v 1: grant authorization or clearance for; "Clear the manuscript
for publication"; "The rock star never authorized this
slanderous biography" [syn: authorize, authorise,
pass, clear]
2: give or delegate power or authority to; "She authorized her
assistant to sign the papers" [syn: empower, authorise,
authorize]
-
barbarize
0
v 1: become crude or savage or barbaric in behavior or language
[syn: barbarize, barbarise]
2: make crude or savage in behavior or speech; "his years in
prison have barbarized the young man" [syn: barbarize,
barbarise]
-
bastardize
0
v 1: change something so that its value declines; for example,
art forms [syn: bastardize, bastardise]
2: declare a child to be illegitimate [syn: bastardize,
bastardise]
-
burglarize
0
v 1: commit a burglary; enter and rob a dwelling [syn:
burglarize, burglarise, burgle, heist]
-
canonize
0
v 1: declare (a dead person) to be a saint; "After he was shown
to have performed a miracle, the priest was canonized"
[syn: canonize, canonise, saint]
2: treat as a sacred person; "He canonizes women" [syn:
canonize, canonise]
-
capitalize
0
v 1: draw advantages from; "he is capitalizing on her mistake";
"she took advantage of his absence to meet her lover" [syn:
capitalize, capitalise, take advantage]
2: supply with capital, as of a business by using a combination
of capital used by investors and debt capital provided by
lenders [syn: capitalize, capitalise]
3: write in capital letters [syn: capitalize, capitalise]
4: compute the present value of a business or an income [syn:
capitalize, capitalise]
5: consider expenditures as capital assets rather than expenses
[syn: capitalize, capitalise]
6: convert (a company's reserve funds) into capital [syn:
capitalize, capitalise]
-
capsulize
0
v 1: enclose in a capsule [syn: capsule, capsulate,
capsulize, capsulise]
2: put in a short or concise form; reduce in volume; "capsulize
the news" [syn: encapsulate, capsule, capsulize,
capsulise]
-
carbonize
0
v 1: unite with carbon; "carburize metal" [syn: carbonize,
carbonise, carburize, carburise]
2: turn into carbon, as by burning; "carbonize coal" [syn:
carbonize, carbonise]
-
cauterize
0
v 1: burn, sear, or freeze (tissue) using a hot iron or electric
current or a caustic agent; "The surgeon cauterized the
wart" [syn: cauterize, cauterise, burn]
2: make insensitive or callous; deaden feelings or morals [syn:
callous, cauterize, cauterise]
-
centralize
0
v 1: make central; "The Russian government centralized the
distribution of food" [syn: centralize, centralise,
concentrate] [ant: decentralise, decentralize,
deconcentrate]
-
christianize
0
v 1: adapt in the name of Christianity; "some people want to
Christianize ancient pagan sites"
2: convert to Christianity; "missionaries have tried to
Christianize native people all over the world" [syn:
Christianize, Christianise]
-
civilize
0
v 1: teach or refine to be discriminative in taste or judgment;
"Cultivate your musical taste"; "Train your tastebuds";
"She is well schooled in poetry" [syn: educate, school,
train, cultivate, civilize, civilise]
2: raise from a barbaric to a civilized state; "The wild child
found wandering in the forest was gradually civilized" [syn:
civilize, civilise]
-
colonize
0
v 1: settle as a colony; of countries in the developing world;
"Europeans colonized Africa in the 17th century" [syn:
colonize, colonise] [ant: decolonise, decolonize]
2: settle as colonists or establish a colony (in); "The British
colonized the East Coast" [syn: colonize, colonise]
-
communalize
0
v 1: make something the property of the commune or community
[syn: communalize, communalise]
-
criticize
0
v 1: find fault with; express criticism of; point out real or
perceived flaws; "The paper criticized the new movie";
"Don't knock the food--it's free" [syn: knock,
criticize, criticise, pick apart] [ant: praise]
2: act as a critic; "Those who criticize others often are not
perfect, either" [syn: criticize, criticise]
-
customize
0
v 1: make to specifications; "I had this desk custom-made for
me" [syn: custom-make, customize, customise, tailor-
make]
2: make according to requirements; "customize a car" [syn:
customize, customise]
-
deputize
0
v 1: act as a substitute; "She stood in for the soprano who
suffered from a cold" [syn: substitute, deputize,
deputise, step in]
2: appoint as a substitute [syn: depute, deputize,
deputise]
-
devitalize
0
v 1: sap of life or energy; "The recession devitalized the
economy" [syn: devitalize, devitalise] [ant:
vitalise, vitalize]
-
digitalize
0
v 1: put into digital form, as for use in a computer; "he bought
a device to digitize the data" [syn: digitize,
digitise, digitalize, digitalise]
2: administer digitalis such that the patient benefits maximally
without getting adverse effects
-
dramatize
0
v 1: put into dramatic form; "adopt a book for a screenplay"
[syn: dramatize, dramatise, adopt]
2: represent something in a dramatic manner; "These events
dramatize the lack of social responsibility among today's
youth" [syn: dramatize, dramatise]
3: add details to [syn: embroider, pad, lard, embellish,
aggrandize, aggrandise, blow up, dramatize,
dramatise]
-
theorize
0
v 1: to believe especially on uncertain or tentative grounds;
"Scientists supposed that large dinosaurs lived in swamps"
[syn: speculate, theorize, theorise, conjecture,
hypothesize, hypothesise, hypothecate, suppose]
2: construct a theory about; "Galileo theorized the motion of
the stars"
3: form or construct theories; "he thinks and theorizes all day"
-
alkalinize
0
v 1: become alkaline [syn: alkalinize, alkalinise]
2: make (a substance) alkaline; "The oxide is alkalized" [syn:
alkalinize, alkalinise]
-
alphabetize
0
v 1: arrange in alphabetical order; "Alphabetize the list" [syn:
alphabetize, alphabetise]
2: provide with an alphabet; "Cyril and Method alphabetized the
Slavic languages"
-
anaesthetize
0
v 1: administer an anesthetic drug to; "The patient must be
anesthetized before the operation"; "anesthetize the gum
before extracting the teeth" [syn: anesthetize,
anaesthetize, anesthetise, anaesthetise, put under,
put out] [ant: bring around, bring back, bring
round, bring to]
-
analogize
0
v 1: make an analogy [syn: analogize, analogise]
-
anatomize
0
v 1: dissect in order to analyze; "anatomize the bodies of the
victims of this strange disease" [syn: anatomize,
anatomise]
2: analyze down to the smallest detail; "This writer anatomized
the depth of human behavior"