icky |
disagreeably sticky or unpleasant. [2 definitions] |
icon |
an image, representation, or symbol. [4 definitions] |
iconic |
being a clear symbol or representative of something and generally regarded with reverence or high esteem. [3 definitions] |
icono- |
image; likeness. |
iconoclast |
one who attacks and seeks to break down traditional beliefs and institutions or popular ideas and values. [2 definitions] |
iconoclastic |
attacking or breaking away from established traditions, beliefs, or values. |
iconography |
the representation of meanings, esp. conventional ones, by visual symbols or images. [3 definitions] |
iconology |
in art history, the study or interpretation of symbols or icons. [2 definitions] |
icosahedral |
of or having the form of an icosahedron. |
icosahedron |
a solid geometric figure with twenty flat sides of equal area. |
-ics |
the science, study, skill, or art of (such) a subject or activity. [3 definitions] |
ictus |
a metrical or rhythmical stress, as in poetry. [2 definitions] |
icy |
made of, covered with, containing, or resembling ice. [3 definitions] |
-id1 |
belonging to a particular group or zoological family. |
-id2 |
variant of -ide. |
-id3 |
used in adjectives, esp. those describing conditions that affect the senses. |
ID1 |
abbreviation of "Idaho," a northwestern U.S. state south and west of Montana. |
ID2 |
abbreviation of "identification," often used as a shortened form of "identification card." |
I'd |
contracted form of "I would," or contracted form of "I had." |
id |
in Freudian psychoanalysis, the part of the psyche that is associated with instinct and primal drives, and that is subject to moderation by the ego and superego. |
id. |
abbreviation of "idem" (Latin); the same. |