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club
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- Club - n. - A heavy staff of wood, usually tapering, and wielded the hand; a weapon; a cudgel.
- Club - n. - Any card of the suit of cards having a figure like the trefoil or clover leaf. (pl.) The suit of cards having such figure.
- Club - n. - An association of persons for the promotion of some common object, as literature, science, politics, good fellowship, etc.; esp. an association supported by equal assessments or contributions of the members.
- Club - n. - A joint charge of expense, or any person's share of it; a contribution to a common fund.
- Club - v. t. - To beat with a club.
- Club - v. t. - To throw, or allow to fall, into confusion.
- Club - v. t. - To unite, or contribute, for the accomplishment of a common end; as, to club exertions.
- Club - v. t. - To raise, or defray, by a proportional assesment; as, to club the expense.
- Club - v. i. - To form a club; to combine for the promotion of some common object; to unite.
- Club - v. i. - To pay on equal or proportionate share of a common charge or expense; to pay for something by contribution.
- Club - v. i. - To drift in a current with an anchor out.
- Club-rush - n. - A rushlike plant, the reed mace or cat-tail, or some species of the genus Scirpus. See Bulrush.
- Club-shaped - a. - Enlarged gradually at the end, as the antennae of certain insects.
- Clubbable - a. - Suitable for membership in a club; sociable.
- Clubbed - imp. & p. p. - of Club
- Clubbed - a. - Shaped like a club; grasped like, or used as, a club.
- Clubber - n. - One who clubs.
- Clubber - n. - A member of a club.
- Clubbing - p. pr. & vb. n. - of Club
- Clubbish - a. - Rude; clownish.
- Clubbish - a. - Disposed to club together; as, a clubbish set.
- Clubbist - n. - A member of a club; a frequenter of clubs.
- Clubfist - n. - A large, heavy fist.
- Clubfist - n. - A coarse, brutal fellow.
- Clubfisted - a. - Having a large fist.
- Clavigerous - a. - Bearing a club or a key.
- Lycopodiaceous - a. - Belonging, or relating, to the Lycopodiaceae, an order of cryptogamous plants (called also club mosses) with branching stems, and small, crowded, one-nerved, and usually pointed leaves.
- Club - v. t. - To unite, or contribute, for the accomplishment of a common end; as, to club exertions.
- Wolf's-claw - n. - A kind of club moss. See Lycopodium.
- Lepidodendrid - n. - One of an extinct family of trees allied to the modern club mosses, and including Lepidodendron and its allies.
- Club - v. t. - To raise, or defray, by a proportional assesment; as, to club the expense.
- Golf - n. - A game played with a small ball and a bat or club crooked at the lower end. He who drives the ball into each of a series of small holes in the ground and brings it into the last hole with the fewest strokes is the winner.
- Eleven - n. - The eleven men selected to play on one side in a match, as the representatives of a club or a locality; as, the all-England eleven.
- Shinty - n. - A Scotch game resembling hockey; also, the club used in the game.
- Kitcat - a. - Designating a club in London, to which Addison and Steele belonged; -- so called from Christopher Cat, a pastry cook, who served the club with mutton pies.
- Cordelier - n. - A member of a French political club of the time of the first Revolution, of which Danton and Marat were members, and which met in an old Cordelier convent in Paris.
- Bandy - n. - A club bent at the lower part for striking a ball at play; a hockey stick.
- Methodist - n. - One of a sect of Christians, the outgrowth of a small association called the "Holy Club," formed at Oxford University, A.D. 1729, of which the most conspicuous members were John Wesley and his brother Charles; -- originally so called from the methodical strictness of members of the club in all religious duties.
- Mace - n. - A heavy staff or club of metal; a spiked club; -- used as weapon in war before the general use of firearms, especially in the Middle Ages, for breaking metal armor.
- Attribute - n. - A conventional symbol of office, character, or identity, added to any particular figure; as, a club is the attribute of Hercules.
- Rota - n. - A short-lived political club established in 1659 by J.Harrington to inculcate the democratic doctrine of election of the principal officers of the state by ballot, and the annual retirement of a portion of Parliament.
- Lycopodite - n. - An old name for a fossil club moss.
- Bang - v. t. - To beat, as with a club or cudgel; to treat with violence; to handle roughly.
- Lycopodium - n. - A genus of mosslike plants, the type of the order Lycopodiaceae; club moss.
- Assess - v. - To determine and impose a tax or fine upon (a person, community, estate, or income); to tax; as, the club assessed each member twenty-five cents.
- Clubroom - n. - The apartment in which a club meets.
- Pteridophyta - n. pl. - A class of flowerless plants, embracing ferns, horsetails, club mosses, quillworts, and other like plants. See the Note under Cryptogamia.
- Claviger - n. - One who carries a club; a club bearer.
- Clubbish - a. - Disposed to club together; as, a clubbish set.
- Commons - n. pl. - A club or association for boarding at a common table, as in a college, the members sharing the expenses equally; as, to board in commons.
strongscsv:description
- H3597 כֵּילַף - 3597 כֵּילַף - כֵּילַף - - kêylaph - kay-laf' - from an unused root meaning to clap or strike with noise; a club or sledge-hammer; hammer. - Noun Feminine - heb
- H4661 מַפֵּץ - 4661 מַפֵּץ - מַפֵּץ - - mappêts - map-pates' - from נָפַץ; a smiter, i.e. a war club; battle ax. - Noun Masculine - heb
- H8455 תּוֹתָח - 8455 תּוֹתָח - תּוֹתָח - - tôwthâch - to-thawkh' - from an unused root meaning to smite; a club; darts. - Noun Masculine - heb
- G3586 ξύλον - 3586 ξύλον - ΞΎΛΟΝ - - xýlon - xoo'-lon - from another form of the base of ξέστης; timber (as fuel or material); by implication, a stick, club or tree or other wooden article or substance:--staff, stocks, tree, wood. - Noun Neuter - greek