abeyance |
temporary suspension or cessation. [2 definitions] |
abhor |
to regard with intense loathing or horror; detest. |
abhorrence |
a feeling of complete loathing, repulsion, or horror. |
abhorrent |
causing feelings of extreme loathing or horror; abominable. [3 definitions] |
abide |
to stay; remain. [6 definitions] |
abide by |
to comply with; agree to. |
abiding |
unchanging; enduring. |
Abidjan |
the seaport capital of the Ivory Coast. |
-ability |
capacity or fitness for (such) a state, use, or action. |
ability |
the capacity or power to do something; quality of being able. [2 definitions] |
abiogenesis |
the production of living organisms from nonliving matter; spontaneous generation. |
abiotic |
characterized by an absence of living organisms; without life. |
a bit |
somewhat; rather; to a small extent. |
abject |
of the lowest or most wretched kind. [3 definitions] |
abjure |
to repudiate or renounce solemnly, as under oath; forswear. |
ablactation |
the act or process of weaning a baby. |
ablate |
to wear away or otherwise remove (a surface), as by heat or erosion. [2 definitions] |
ablation |
surgical removal of any part of the body. [2 definitions] |
ablative1 |
denoting a grammatical case in some inflected languages that indicates direction or place, time, manner, or agency. [3 definitions] |
ablative2 |
of or pertaining to ablation, the surgical removal of a part of the body. [2 definitions] |
ablaut |
a pattern of changes in sounds, usually vowels, that indicate variations in tense, number, person, or the like, as in "sink," "sank," and "sunk". |