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macerate,
macerated,
macerating,
macerates.verbs
transitive
verb use.to make soft by soaking or
steeping in a liquid; to separate into constituents
by soaking; to cause to become lean, usually by starvation; emaciate
intransitive
verb use.to become soft or separated
into constituents by soaking; macerate.noun-a
substance prepared or produced by macerating
maceration, macerator
or macerater.nouns
material.noun
the substance
or substances out of which a thing is or can be made; something, such as
an idea or information, that is to be refined and made or incorporated
into a finished effort (material for a comedy); materials - tools or apparatus
for the performance of a given task (writing materials)
material.adjective
of, relating
to, or composed of matter;
of, relating to, or affecting physical well-being; of or concerned with
the physical as distinct from
the intellectual or spiritual ("Great men are they
who see that spiritual is stronger than any material force, that thoughts
rule the world"....Ralph Waldo Emerson);
being both relevant and consequential;
crucial
materialness.noun
materialism,
materialist.nouns
Philosophy-–-the
theory that physical matter is the only reality and that everything, including
thought, feeling, mind and will, can be explained in terms of matter and
physical phenomena; the theory or doctrine that physical well-being and
worldly possessions constitute
the greatest good and highest value in life
materialistic.adjective
materialistically.adverb
mis-1.pref
bad; badly; wrong; wrongly: misconduct; failure;
lack: misfire; used as an intensive.(misdoubt)
mortal.adjective
liable or subject to death; of or relating to
humankind; causing death; fatal (a mortal wound)
mortally.adverb
masturbate,
masturbated,
masturbating,
masturbates.verbs
intransitive verb use.to
perform an act of masturbation
transitive verb use.to
perform an act of masturbation on
masturbation.noun
excitation of one's own or another's genital organs,
usually to orgasm, by manual contact
or means other than sexual intercourse
masturbational or
masturbatory.adjective
masturbator.noun
miseducate,
miseducated,
miseducating,
miseducates.transitive
verbs
to educate improperly
miseducation.noun
manor.noun
a landed (on land) estate; the main house on an
estate; a mansion (a large stately
house); a tract of land in certain
North American colonies with hereditary
rights granted to the proprietor
by royal charter; the district over which a lord had domain and could exercise
certain rights and privileges in medieval western Europe; the lord's residence
in such a district
manorial.adjective
magnate.noun
a powerful or influential person, especially in
business or industry
mantle.noun
a loose, sleeveless coat worn over outer garments;
a cloak; something that covers, envelops,
or conceals; the layer of the earth
between the crust and the core; a shelf above a fireplace on which are
usually displayed bric-a-bracs;
the outer covering of a wall; a zone of hot gases around a flame; the wings,
shoulder feathers and back of a bird when differently colored from the
rest of the body
Anatomy.-.the
cerebral
cortex
Geology.-.the
layer of the earth between the crust and the core
mantle, mantled,
mantling,
mantles.verbs
transitive verb use.to
cover with or as if with a mantle; conceal; clothe
intransitive verb use.to
spread or become extended over a surface; to become covered with a coating,
as scum or froth on the surface of a liquid; to be overspread by blushes
or colors (a face that was mantled in joy); an ornamental facing around
a fireplace; the protruding
shelf over a fireplace
manumit, manumitted,
manumitting,
manumits.transitive
verbs
to free from slavery or bondage; emancipate
manumission, manumitter.noun
memento.noun,.plural.mementos
a reminder of the past; a keepsake
mental.adjective
of or relating to the mind; intellectual (mental
ability); existing in the mind (mental images of happy times)
mentally.adverb
ministration.noun
the act or process of serving or aiding
ministrative.adjective
meter.noun
the measured arrangement of words in poetry, as
by accentual rhythm, syllabic
quantity, or the number of syllables in a line; a particular arrangement
of words in poetry, such as iambic pentameter, determined by the kind and
number of metrical units in a line; the rhythmic pattern of a stanza, determined
by the kind and number of lines
Music.-.division
into measures or bars; a specific rhythm determined by the number of beats
and the time value assigned to each note in a measure. See Synonyms at
rhythm
meter.noun
the international standard unit of length, approximately
equivalent to 39.37 inches. It was redefined in 1983 as the distance traveled
by light in a vacuum in 1/299,792,458 of a second]
meter.noun
any of various devices designed to measure time,
distance, speed, or intensity or indicate and record or regulate the amount
or volume, as of the flow of a gas or an electric current (a postage meter;
a parking meter)
meter, metered,
metering,
meters.transitive
verbs
to measure with a meter (meter a flow of gas);
to supply in a measured or regulated amount (metered the gasoline to each
vehicle); to imprint with postage by means of a postage meter or similar
device (metering bulk mail)
Mongol Tartars (Tatars).noun
a member of any of the Turkic and Mongolian peoples
of central Asia who invaded western Asia and eastern Europe in the Middle
Ages (13th century); they were also known as Tartars; the Mongol leader
originally was Genghis Khan; under Genghis' grandson Batu Khan eastern
Europe was overtaken; the Tatars (as the Europeans came to call them) crossed
the Ural River reaching into Russia, taking Moscow, Kyiv and other cities;
they passed into Hungary and Poland; the Tatars imposed a control of people
bureaucratic system which included methods of tax collection; communications
helped the Mongols maintain their vast and diverse empire, common lineage
also played an important role; the great khan was always selected by a
convocation of the nobles of the whole empire and, in general, all four
khanates shared in the plunder of each; it is understood that Ashkenazic
Jews are native to, or have antecedents
in eastern and central Europe; their standard native language, Yiddish,
is spoken in the Baltic countries and in the northwestern areas of Russia
and by Jewish immigrants or descendants from those areas; a southern branch
having central and southeastern subgroups includes the dialects spoken
in Poland, Romania and Ukraine. It seems to have always been in the heart
of these people to become rich and powerful and to manipulate in order
to gain and maintain advantage over others by any and all means:.Isaiah
10:1-8.
Ashkenazi.(last
4 letters of the name is 'nazi') is one of the two major groupings of Jews
(Ashkenazis & Sephardic) by geographical origin and the corresponding
cultural tradition
The term distinguishes the medieval Jewish communities
of central and eastern Europe and their descendants from those of the Iberian
Peninsula and North Africa, known as Sephardim. In the 10th century, the
biblical eponym Ashkenaz (see Genesis
10:3) was used by Jews as the Hebrew name for Germany, where a distinctive
Jewish community was emerging; from the Rhineland (a region along the Rhine
River in western Germany including noted vineyards and highly industrial
sections north of the cities of Bonn and Cologne), Ashkenazic Jews moved
eastward into Poland during the 15th and 16th centuries. It's interesting
to note the letters in their name spell out nazi; were these culturally
historical descendents responding as may have been their destiny?.Isaiah
10:5-7,12,24,25; 14:25-27..comprised
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