seitan |
a food product made of wheat gluten and added flavoring, often used as a meat substitute. |
sei whale |
a whalebone whale that has a bluish or gray back and appears in most of the world's seas. |
seize |
to take hold of forcibly and quickly. [7 definitions] |
seizure |
a sudden and violent disruption of usual brain activity, such as that which occurs in epilepsy, which affects the nervous system temporarily and renders the body out of control. [3 definitions] |
selachian |
any of the group of fishes that includes sharks, skates, and rays. |
selah |
a Hebrew word of unknown meaning that often occurs at the end of verses in the Psalms and is thought to be a musical or liturgical direction. |
seldom |
rarely; infrequently; occasionally. |
select |
to choose as a preference from among alternatives; pick. [4 definitions] |
selectable |
combined form of select. |
select committee |
a group, formed on a temporary basis and assembled from members of a goverment, whose purpose is to investigate a particular issue. |
selectee |
someone who is chosen, esp. one drafted by the military. |
selection |
an act, instance, or process of selecting, or the condition of being selected. [4 definitions] |
selective |
characterized by careful choice; tending to exercise discrimination. [2 definitions] |
selective service |
a system of compulsory military service, or of selecting those who will serve therein. |
selectivity |
the condition or quality of being selective. |
selectman |
in many New England towns, one of several elected local public officials. |
Selene |
in Greek mythology, the goddess of the moon; Luna. |
selenic acid |
a colorless highly corrosive acid resembling sulfuric acid. |
selenious acid |
a poisonous water-soluble powder used as a reagent. |
selenite |
a clear colorless crystalline form of gypsum. [2 definitions] |
selenium |
a chemical element that has thirty-four protons in each nucleus and that forms compounds with many other elements, but that can be isolated in gray or red crystalline allotropes whose electrical resistance varies with light intensity, leading to extensive use in photoelectric cells, xerographic copying, and the like. (symbol: Se) |