-
enormous
0
adj 1: extraordinarily large in size or extent or amount or
power or degree; "an enormous boulder"; "enormous
expenses"; "tremendous sweeping plains"; "a tremendous
fact in human experience; that a whole civilization
should be dependent on technology"- Walter Lippman; "a
plane took off with a tremendous noise" [syn: enormous,
tremendous]
-
thomas
0
n 1: United States clockmaker who introduced mass production
(1785-1859) [syn: Thomas, Seth Thomas]
2: United States socialist who was a candidate for president six
times (1884-1968) [syn: Thomas, Norman Thomas, Norman
Mattoon Thomas]
3: a radio broadcast journalist during World War I and World War
II noted for his nightly new broadcast (1892-1981) [syn:
Thomas, Lowell Thomas, Lowell Jackson Thomas]
4: Welsh poet (1914-1953) [syn: Thomas, Dylan Thomas, Dylan
Marlais Thomas]
5: the Apostle who would not believe the resurrection of Jesus
until he saw Jesus with his own eyes [syn: Thomas, Saint
Thomas, St. Thomas, doubting Thomas, Thomas the
doubting Apostle]
-
trismus
0
n 1: prolonged spasm of the jaw muscles
-
remus
0
n 1: (Roman mythology) the twin brother of Romulus
-
ramus
0
n 1: the posterior part of the mandible that is more or less
vertical
-
brumous
0
adj 1: filled or abounding with fog or mist; "a brumous October
morning" [syn: brumous, foggy, hazy, misty]
-
grumous
0
adj 1: transformed from a liquid into a soft semisolid or solid
mass; "coagulated blood"; "curdled milk"; "grumous blood"
[syn: coagulate, coagulated, curdled, grumous,
grumose]
-
momus
0
n 1: god of blame and mockery [syn: Momus, Momos]
-
lammas
0
n 1: commemorates Saint Peter's miraculous deliverance from
prison; a quarter day in Scotland; a harvest festival in
England [syn: Lammas, Lammas Day, August 1]
-
nostradamus
0
n 1: French astrologer who wrote cryptic predictions whose
interpretations are still being debated (1503-1566) [syn:
Nostradamus, Michel de Notredame]
-
cadmus
0
n 1: (Greek mythology) the brother of Europa and traditional
founder of Thebes in Boeotia
-
anadromous
0
adj 1: migrating from the sea to fresh water to spawn [ant:
catadromous, diadromous]
-
catadromous
0
adj 1: migrating from fresh water to the sea to spawn [ant:
anadromous, diadromous]
-
hummus
0
n 1: a thick spread made from mashed chickpeas, tahini, lemon
juice and garlic; used especially as a dip for pita;
originated in the Middle East [syn: hummus, humus,
hommos, hoummos, humous]
-
erasmus
0
n 1: Dutch humanist and theologian who was the leading
Renaissance scholar of northern Europe; although his
criticisms of the Roman Catholic Church led to the
Reformation, he opposed violence and condemned Martin
Luther (1466-1536) [syn: Erasmus, Desiderius Erasmus,
Gerhard Gerhards, Geert Geerts]
-
marasmus
0
n 1: extreme malnutrition and emaciation (especially in
children); can result from inadequate intake of food or
from malabsorption or metabolic disorders
-
calamus
0
n 1: any tropical Asian palm of the genus Calamus; light tough
stems are a source of rattan canes
2: the aromatic root of the sweet flag used medicinally
3: perennial marsh plant having swordlike leaves and aromatic
roots [syn: sweet flag, calamus, sweet calamus, myrtle
flag, flagroot, Acorus calamus]
4: a genus of Sparidae [syn: Calamus, genus Calamus]
5: the hollow spine of a feather [syn: quill, calamus,
shaft]
-
vaginismus
0
n 1: muscular contraction that causes the vagina to close;
usually an anxiety reaction before coitus or pelvic
examination
-
nicodemus
0
-
polyphemus
0
-
seamus
0
-
lomas
0
-
warmus
0
-
squamous
0
-
gaudeamus
0
-
artemus
0
-
monospermous
0
-
trigamous
0
-
mittimus
0
-
borborygmus
0
-
decimus
0