silvex |
a toxic herbicide used for controlling weeds and woody plants. |
silviculture |
the care and cultivation of forests; forestry. |
s'il vous plaît |
if it pleases you (French); would you please; please. |
Simeon |
according to the Old Testament, a son of Jacob. [2 definitions] |
Simhath Torah |
a Jewish festival that celebrates the end of the annual round of Torah readings and the beginning of the new cycle. |
simian |
of, pertaining to, or resembling apes and monkeys. [2 definitions] |
similar |
having resemblance or likeness. |
similarity |
the state or quality of being similar; resemblance. [2 definitions] |
similarly |
in the same way or in the same amount. [2 definitions] |
simile |
a figure of speech in which two dissimilar things are likened, often linked by "like" or "as," as in, "March comes in like a lion and goes out like a lamb". (Cf. metaphor.) |
similitude |
similarity or resemblance; likeness. [2 definitions] |
simmer |
to undergo steady cooking near the boiling point. [4 definitions] |
simmer down |
to reduce (a liquid) in volume by simmering. [2 definitions] |
Simon |
a Hebrew name for the apostle Peter. [2 definitions] |
simoniac |
one who is guilty of buying or selling ecclesiastic preferments, benefices, or sacraments. |
Simon Legree |
in the mid-nineteenth-century novel Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe, a cruel overseer and slave dealer. [2 definitions] |
simon-pure |
genuinely pure; authentic. |
simony |
the purchase or sale of pardons, benefits, or the like, considered a sin. |
simoom |
a hot turbulent wind carrying much sand, in the Arabian and Sahara deserts. |
simpatico |
alike in temperament, tastes, or the like; compatible; congenial. |
simper |
to smile in a silly or affected manner. [3 definitions] |