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adject
▪ I. † adject, ppl. a. and n. Obs. [ad. L. adject-us pa. pple. of adjic-ĕre to lay to; f. ad to + jac-ĕre to cause to lie, lay, throw.] A. ppl. a. (æˈdʒɛkt). Annexed, joined; adjective.1432–50 Trevisa Higden Rolls Ser. I. 195 By whiche chaunce that londe and see adiecte to hit toke hit name. 1612 Br...
Oxford English Dictionary
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adjectitious
adjectitious, a. (ædʒɛkˈtɪʃəs) [f. L. adjectīci-us, f. adjectus (see adject a.) + -ous. See -itious.] Of the nature of adjection or addition; additional.1652 Urquhart Jewel Wks. 1834, 200 Adjectitious syllabicals annexible to nouns and verbs. 1703 Maundrell Journ. Jerus. (1732) 135 The adjectitious ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Cultus Lake, British Columbia
However, it was named with the Chinook Jargon word meaning primarily bad,<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.cayoosh.net/hiyu/adject.html#engl |title=Chinook Jargon Phrasebook: Adverbs & Adjectives |access-date=2010-03-31 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110514064756/http://www.cayoosh.net/hiyu/adject.html
wikipedia.org
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adjected
adjected, ppl. a. (əˈdʒɛktɪd) [f. adject v. + -ed.] Added on, annexed, appended (to).1538 Leland Itin. III. 26 (R.) Removid from Cairmærdinshire, and adjected to Pembrokeshire. 1609 Skene Rej. Mag. 55 Gif the donator fulfills not the condition adjected to the donation. 1727 Wodrow Corr. (1843) III. ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Lesnoy Prospect (Saint Petersburg)
Lesnoy Prospect or prospekt (, from adject. lesnoy "of forest") is a major longitudinal street (prospekt) of the right-hand Vyborg Side of the river Neva
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adjectament
† aˈdjectament Obs. rare—1. [ad. med.L. adjectāment-um that which is added; f. adjectā-re; see prec. and -ment.] Anything thrown in by way of addition; an addition.1630 Naunton Fragm. Reg. (1870) 44 Sir Christopher Hatton..besides the graces of his person and dancing, had also the adjectaments of a ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Thomas James
Adjectæ sunt notæ ... et vita ipsius ... una cum enumeratione auctorum qui scripserunt contra squalores ... Curiæ Romanæ,' London, 1625.
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cominous
† ˈcominous, a. Obs. rare. [? adject. use of L. cōm(m)inus hand to hand] ? Direct, menacing.1632 Lithgow Trav. x. 488, I Organize the Truth, you Allegate the Sense, Disbending cominous defects, in your absurd pretence.
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Mathurin Jacques Brisson
Supplementum Ornithologiæ sive Citationes, descriptionesque antea omissæ & species de novo adjectæ, ad suaquaque genera redactæ. Paris 1760.
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adjectician
adjectician, a. Rom. Law. (ædʒɛkˈtɪʃən) [f. L. adjectīci-us = adjectitious + -an.] (See quot.)1880 Muirhead Gaius 448 Adjectician actions, The so-called actiones adjecticiæ qualitatis, praetorian actions against a paterfamilias in respect of debt contracted by a filiusfamilias or a slave.
Oxford English Dictionary
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Neural basis of synesthesia
Similarly, lexical → gustatory synesthesia may be due to increased connectivity between adject regions of the insula in the depths of the lateral sulcus
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apposite
apposite, a. (ˈæpəzɪt) [ad. L. apposit-us, pa. pple. of app-, adpōnĕre, f. ad to + -pōnĕre to place, put.] † 1. Put or applied to. Obs. rare—0.1656 in Blount, 1706 in Phillips, etc. 2. Well put or applied; appropriate, suitable (to).1621 Burton Anat. Mel. ii. ii. ii. (1651) 239 A most apposite remed...
Oxford English Dictionary
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how to know the meaning of a adverb? - EnglishChat版 - 未名存档
reading (reading a lot) is key to mastering things like this. 【在 G***G 的大作中提到】: we know exactly the meaning of a adject by looking up in a dictionary.: but how can we know the accurate meaning of the corresponding adverb?: is there a dictionray which can give explanations for adverbs?: if an adjective has four meanings, the corresponding adverb has four: meanings too?
www.weiming.info
adjection
adjection (əˈdʒɛkʃən) Also 4 adieccioun. [ad. L. adjectiōn-em addition, n. of action, f. adjicĕre; see adject ppl. a.] 1. The action of adding, adding on, annexing or appending; addition.c 1374 Chaucer Boeth. (1868) 176 Þe propre nature of it ne makeþ it nauȝt. but þe adieccioun of þe condicioun mak...
Oxford English Dictionary
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adjectival
adjectival, a. (n.) (ædʒɛkˈtaɪvəl) [f. L. adjectīv-us: see adjective + -al1. (A modern formation to provide a more distinctly adjective or adjectival form to the word adjective, this having become commonly a n.)] A. adj. a. Of or belonging to the adjective.1797 W. Taylor in Month. Rev. XXIV. 558 All...
Oxford English Dictionary
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