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Based on Merriam-Webster's
Collegiate® Dictionary
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scull.noun
Nautical – long oar mounted over the stern of
a boat and moved from side to side to propel the boat forward; one of a
pair of short handled oars used by a single rower; a small, light racing
boat for one, two, or four rowers
scull, sculled,
sculling,
sculls.verbs
transitive
verb use.to propel (a boat) with a
scull
intransitive
verb use.to use a scull to propel
a boat
sculler.noun
sea anemone.noun
any of numerous flowerlike marine coelenterates-of
the class Anthozoa, having a flexible cylindrical body and tentacles surrounding
a central mouth
sheer,
sheerer,
sheerest.adjective
completely such, without qualification or exception
(sheer stupidity; sheer happiness); thin, fine, and transparent (sheer
curtains; sheer chiffon); free from admixture or adulterants; unmixed (sheer
alcohol)
sheerly-adverb
sheerness.noun
sassy,
sassier,
sassiest.adjectives
lively and spirited; jaunty; stylish; chic (a
sassy little hat or dress)
sassily.adverb
sassiness.noun
self abnegation.noun
the setting aside of self interest for the sake
of others or for a belief or principle
self abnegating.adjective
skittish.adjective
restlessly active or nervous; restive; moving
quickly and lightly; lively; undependably variable; mercurial or fickle;
shy; bashful
skittishly.adverb
skittishness.noun
smart1,
smarter,
smartest.adjective
characterized by sharp, quick thought; bright;
intelligent; amusingly clever; witty (a smart quip; a lively, smart conversation)
smart2,
smarted,
smarting,
smarts.intransitive
verbs
to cause a sharp, usually superficial, stinging
pain (the spanking my dad gave me smarted); to suffer as from mental distress,
wounded feelings, or remorse
smart.noun
sharp pain
smartly.adverb
smartness.noun
sulfuric acid.noun
a highly corrosive, dense, oily liquid, H2SO4,
colorless to dark brown depending on its purity and used to manufacture
a wide variety of chemicals and materials including fertilizers, paints,
detergents, and explosives; also called oil of vitriol, vitriol
sediment.noun
material that settles to the bottom of a liquid;
lees; solid fragments of inorganic or organic
material that come from the weathering of rock and are carried and deposited
by wind, water, or ice
sedimentary-also-sedimental.adjective
of, containing, resembling, or derived
from sediment
Geology – of or relating
to rocks formed by the deposition
of sediment
seismology.noun
the geophysical science of earthquakes and the
mechanical properties of the earth
seismologic-or-seismological.adjective
seismologically.adverb
seismologist.noun
succession.noun
the act or process of following in order or sequence;
a group of people or things arranged or following in order; a sequence;
series
successional.adjective
successionally.adverb
successive.adjective
following in uninterrupted order; consecutive.(on
three successive days); of, characterized by,
or involving succession
successively.adverb
successiveness.noun
succeed,
succeeded,
succeeding,
succeed.verbs
intransitive use-to
come next in time or succession; follow after another, replace another
in an office or a position (she succeeded to the throne); to accomplish
something desired or intended
transitive use-to
come after in time or order; follow; to come after and take the place of;
follow
succedent.adjective
succeeder.noun
sorrow.noun
mental suffering or pain caused by injury, loss,
or despair; regret;
a source or cause of sorrow; a misfortune; expression of sorrow; grieving
sorrow, sorrowed,
sorrowing,
sorrows.intransitive
verbs
to feel or express sorrow; grieve
sorrower.noun
sorrowful.adjective
affected with, marked
by, causing, or expressing sorrow; sad
sorrowfully.adverb
sorrowfulness.noun
scalar.noun
scalar means voltage without current; scalar means
precursor
energy, before its interaction with any charged matter; a scalar wave is
a single 0 (zero) vector wave (a
vector wave summed to 0); a quantity, such as mass, length, or speed, that
is completely specified by its magnitude
and has no direction; a device that yields an output equal to the input
multiplied by a constant, as in a linear amplifier
The standard physics definition of a 'field', such
as an electric field or a magnetic field, includes a necessary term for
mass.
Tom Bearden,
nuclear engineer points out Whittaker's equations (1904) giving a mathematical
model that is apparently very
real in its implications. Two scalar energy components can be beamed to
a remote interaction zone, then real, measurable, transversely-polarized
EM, conventional, register-on-our-instruments type energy arises in the
interaction zone. Or two conventional EM beams can be made to interact
exactly out of phase and time-reversed, so that they exactly cancel each
other out, yet *something* is there in the time/place where the beams are
interacting, maybe think of it as a stress in space-time, that can produce
a voltage. That something is 'scalar'.
scalar.adjective
Mathematics.-.having
only magnitude; used of numbers
or quantities
seize, seized,
seizing,
seizes.verbs
transitive verb use.to
grasp suddenly and forcibly; take or grab; apprehend.(seize
an idea and develop it to the fullest extent);
seize an opportunity
seizable.adjective
seizer.noun
secrete, secreted,
secreting,
secretes.transitive
verbs
to generate and separate (a substance) from cells
or bodily fluids (secrete digestive juices)
snitch, snitched,
snitching,
snitches.verbs
transitive verb use.to
steal (something, usually something of little value); pilfer;
steal
intransitive verb use.to
turn informer; he snitched on his comrades
snitch, snitcher.nouns
a thief; an informer
sound, sounder,
soundest.adjectives
free from defect, decay, or damage; in good condition;
healthy; having a firm basis; unshakable (a sound foundation); free from
logical.flaws.(sound
reasoning)
soundly.adverb
soundness.noun
sound.noun
a long, relatively wide body of water, larger
than a strait or a channel, connecting larger bodies of water; a long,
wide ocean inlet; the air bladder of a fish
sound, sounded,
sounding,
sounds.verbs
transitive verb use.to
measure the depth of (water), especially by means of a weighted line; fathom;
to try to learn the attitudes or opinions of (sounded out her feelings)
intransitive verb use.to
measure depth
soundable.adjective
sound.noun
vibrations transmitted through an elastic material
or a solid, liquid, or gas, with frequencies in the approximate range of
20 to 20,000 hertz, capable of being detected by human organs of hearing
succor.noun.(old
English spelling was succour)
assistance in time of distress; relief; one that
affords assistance or relief
succor, succored,
succoring,
succors.transitive
verbs
to give assistance to in time of want, difficulty,
or distress; help
succorable.adjective
succorer.noun
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