vulcanize |
to treat (rubber or plastics) with sulfur or sulfur compounds under heat and pressure to increase hardness and elasticity. |
vulgar |
lacking in taste, propriety, or refinement; coarse; crude. [4 definitions] |
vulgarian |
an obscene, unrefined, or pretentious person, esp. a rich one who displays a lack of taste, culture, or restraint. |
vulgarism |
an instance of coarse, unrefined, or obscene behavior; vulgarity. [2 definitions] |
vulgarity |
an act, utterance, condition, or quality that offends good taste, manners, and propriety. |
vulgarize |
to make unrefined, base, or obscene. [2 definitions] |
Vulgar Latin |
the common, spoken language of the ancient Romans, from which the Romance languages developed; popular Latin as distinct from literary Latin. |
Vulgate |
the Latin translation of the Bible prepared by St. Jerome in the late fourth century and used by the Roman Catholic Church as its official biblical text. [3 definitions] |
vulnerability |
the state of being vulnerable. [2 definitions] |
vulnerable |
being capable of being hurt or injured; having weakness. [3 definitions] |
vulpine |
of, pertaining to, or characteristic of a fox. [2 definitions] |
vulture |
any of various large hawklike birds that feed on dead animals and usu. have dark feathers and a naked head. [2 definitions] |
vulva |
the external female genital organs of mammals. |
vying |
that competes or contends; that vies. [2 definitions] |
W1 |
symbol of the chemical element tungsten. |
W2 |
abbreviation of "west." [2 definitions] |
W3 |
abbreviation of "work." |
W4 |
abbreviation of "watt," or "watts," a unit of electrical power equal to the current of one ampere produced by the electromotive force of one volt, or to one joule per second. |
w |
the twenty-third letter of the English alphabet. |
w.1 |
abbreviation of "with." |
w.2 |
abbreviation of "width," the length or extent of something from one side to the other; breadth. |