cantatrice |
(Italian and French) a professional female singer. |
canteen |
a small portable container, usu. for water; flask. [3 definitions] |
canter |
a horse's gait between a trot and a gallop. [2 definitions] |
Canterbury bells |
(used with a sing. or pl. verb) a plant of the bellflower family, cultivated for its blue, pink, or white flowers. |
cantharides |
see "Spanish fly." |
cant hook |
a blunt-tipped wooden lever with a movable metal hook near the lower end, used in handling logs; peavey. |
canthus |
the angle formed at either side of the eye at the juncture of the upper and lower eyelids. |
canticle |
a song or chant, esp. a nonmetrical hymn of worship with words taken from a Biblical text. |
Canticle of Canticles |
in the Douay Bible, the Song of Songs; Song of Solomon. |
cantilena |
a simple lyrical passage in vocal or instrumental music. |
cantilever |
a rigid structural member, as of a bridge, fastened at or near one of its ends to a vertical support and projecting horizontally, usu. a great length, from it. [4 definitions] |
cantilever bridge |
a bridge consisting of two beams or cantilevers that project toward each other and are joined to form a span. |
cantina |
in Mexico and the southwestern United States, a saloon or bar. |
cantle |
the rear supporting part of a saddle, usu. curved upward. [2 definitions] |
canto |
a main division of a long poem. |
Canton |
see "Guangzhou." |
canton |
a political division of a country, such as one of the states of Switzerland or a subdivision of an arrondissement in France. [3 definitions] |
Cantonese |
the Chinese language spoken in the region of Guangzhou and in Hong Kong. [3 definitions] |
cantonment |
a military encampment or station, sometimes used as winter quarters. [2 definitions] |
cantor |
the synagogue official who chants in solo or leads the congregation in chanting prayers. [2 definitions] |
can't stand |
(informal) to hate something. |