-
abacus
0
n 1: a tablet placed horizontally on top of the capital of a
column as an aid in supporting the architrave
2: a calculator that performs arithmetic functions by manually
sliding counters on rods or in grooves
-
carcass
0
n 1: the dead body of an animal especially one slaughtered and
dressed for food [syn: carcase, carcass]
-
caucus
0
n 1: a closed political meeting
v 1: meet to select a candidate or promote a policy
-
circus
0
n 1: a travelling company of entertainers; including trained
animals; "he ran away from home to join the circus"
2: a performance given by a traveling company of acrobats,
clowns, and trained animals; "the children always love to go
to the circus"
3: a frenetic disorganized (and often comic) disturbance
suggestive of a large public entertainment; "it was so funny
it was a circus"; "the whole occasion had a carnival
atmosphere" [syn: circus, carnival]
4: (antiquity) an open-air stadium for chariot races and
gladiatorial games
5: an arena consisting of an oval or circular area enclosed by
tiers of seats and usually covered by a tent; "they used the
elephants to help put up the circus"
6: a genus of haws comprising the harriers [syn: Circus,
genus Circus]
-
crocus
0
n 1: any of numerous low-growing plants of the genus Crocus
having slender grasslike leaves and white or yellow or
purple flowers; native chiefly to the Mediterranean region
but widely cultivated
-
cuss
0
n 1: a persistently annoying person [syn: pest, blighter,
cuss, pesterer, gadfly]
2: a boy or man; "that chap is your host"; "there's a fellow at
the door"; "he's a likable cuss"; "he's a good bloke" [syn:
chap, fellow, feller, fella, lad, gent,
blighter, cuss, bloke]
3: profane or obscene expression usually of surprise or anger;
"expletives were deleted" [syn: curse, curse word,
expletive, oath, swearing, swearword, cuss]
v 1: utter obscenities or profanities; "The drunken men were
cursing loudly in the street" [syn: curse, cuss,
blaspheme, swear, imprecate]
-
discus
0
n 1: an athletic competition in which a disk-shaped object is
thrown as far as possible
2: a disk used in throwing competitions [syn: discus,
saucer]
-
focus
0
n 1: the concentration of attention or energy on something; "the
focus of activity shifted to molecular biology"; "he had no
direction in his life" [syn: focus, focusing,
focussing, focal point, direction, centering]
2: maximum clarity or distinctness of an image rendered by an
optical system; "in focus"; "out of focus"
3: maximum clarity or distinctness of an idea; "the controversy
brought clearly into focus an important difference of
opinion"
4: a central point or locus of an infection in an organism; "the
focus of infection" [syn: focus, focal point, nidus]
5: special emphasis attached to something; "the stress was more
on accuracy than on speed" [syn: stress, focus]
6: a point of convergence of light (or other radiation) or a
point from which it diverges [syn: focus, focal point]
7: a fixed reference point on the concave side of a conic
section
v 1: direct one's attention on something; "Please focus on your
studies and not on your hobbies" [syn: concentrate,
focus, center, centre, pore, rivet]
2: cause to converge on or toward a central point; "Focus the
light on this image" [ant: blur]
3: bring into focus or alignment; to converge or cause to
converge; of ideas or emotions [syn: concenter,
concentre, focalize, focalise, focus]
4: become focussed or come into focus; "The light focused" [syn:
focus, focalize, focalise] [ant: blur, dim, slur]
5: put (an image) into focus; "Please focus the image; we cannot
enjoy the movie" [syn: focus, focalize, focalise,
sharpen] [ant: blear, blur]
-
locus
0
n 1: the scene of any event or action (especially the place of a
meeting) [syn: venue, locale, locus]
2: the specific site of a particular gene on its chromosome
3: the set of all points or lines that satisfy or are determined
by specific conditions; "the locus of points equidistant from
a given point is a circle"
-
refocus
0
v 1: focus once again; The physicist refocused the light beam"
2: focus anew; "The group needs to refocus its goals"
3: put again into focus or focus more sharply; "refocus the
image until it is very sharp"
-
bacchus
0
n 1: (classical mythology) god of wine; equivalent of Dionysus
-
caracas
0
n 1: the capital and largest city of Venezuela [syn: Caracas,
capital of Venezuela]
-
damascus
0
n 1: an ancient city (widely regarded as the world's oldest) and
present capital and largest city of Syria; according to the
New Testament, the Apostle Paul (then known as Saul)
underwent a dramatic conversion on the road to Damascus
[syn: Dimash, Damascus, capital of Syria]
-
orcus
0
n 1: god of the underworld; counterpart of Greek Pluto [syn:
Dis, Orcus]
-
autofocus
0
n 1: an optical device for focussing a camera or other
instrument automatically
-
copernicus
0
n 1: Polish astronomer who produced a workable model of the
solar system with the sun in the center (1473-1543) [syn:
Copernicus, Nicolaus Copernicus, Mikolaj Kopernik]
2: a conspicuous crater on the Moon
-
hipparchus
0
n 1: Greek astronomer and mathematician who discovered the
precession of the equinoxes and made the first known star
chart and is said to have invented trigonometry (second
century BC)
-
aristarchus
0
n 1: an ancient Greek grammarian remembered for his commentary
on the Iliad and Odyssey (circa 217-145 BC)
2: a bright crater on the Moon
-
diplodocus
0
n 1: a huge quadrupedal herbivore with long neck and tail; of
late Jurassic in western North America
-
leviticus
0
n 1: the third book of the Old Testament; contains Levitical law
and ritual precedents [syn: Leviticus, Book of
Leviticus]
-
hocus
0
-
cus
0
-
cercus
0
-
dorcas
0
-
trochus
0
-
caicos
0
-
verrucous
0
-
antiochus
0
-
callimachus
0
-
ulotrichous
0