Search:efficient -> EFFICIENT
efficient
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The Salt of the World?
- Efficient - n. - Causing effects; producing results; that makes the effect to be what it is; actively operative; not inactive, slack, or incapable; characterized by energetic and useful activity; as, an efficient officer, power.
- Efficient - n. - An efficient cause; a prime mover.
- Efficiently - adv. - With effect; effectively.
- Heart - n. - Vigorous and efficient activity; power of fertile production; condition of the soil, whether good or bad.
- Author - n. - The beginner, former, or first mover of anything; hence, the efficient cause of a thing; a creator; an originator.
- Mainspring - n. - The principal or most important spring in a piece of mechanism, especially the moving spring of a watch or clock or the spring in a gunlock which impels the hammer. Hence: The chief or most powerful motive; the efficient cause of action.
- Equip - v. t. - To furnish for service, or against a need or exigency; to fit out; to supply with whatever is necessary to efficient action in any way; to provide with arms or an armament, stores, munitions, rigging, etc.; -- said esp. of ships and of troops.
- Antipyrine - n. - An artificial alkaloid, believed to be efficient in abating fever.
- Effete - a. - No longer capable of producing young, as an animal, or fruit, as the earth; hence, worn out with age; exhausted of energy; incapable of efficient action; no longer productive; barren; sterile.
- Heart - n. - The nearest the middle or center; the part most hidden and within; the inmost or most essential part of any body or system; the source of life and motion in any organization; the chief or vital portion; the center of activity, or of energetic or efficient action; as, the heart of a country, of a tree, etc.
- Engineer - n. - One who carries through an enterprise by skillful or artful contrivance; an efficient manager.
- Positivism - n. - A system of philosophy originated by M. Auguste Comte, which deals only with positives. It excludes from philosophy everything but the natural phenomena or properties of knowable things, together with their invariable relations of coexistence and succession, as occurring in time and space. Such relations are denominated laws, which are to be discovered by observation, experiment, and comparison. This philosophy holds all inquiry into causes, both efficient and final, to be useless and unprofitable.
- Equipage - n. - Furniture or outfit, whether useful or ornamental; especially, the furniture and supplies of a vessel, fitting her for a voyage or for warlike purposes, or the furniture and necessaries of an army, a body of troops, or a single soldier, including whatever is necessary for efficient service; equipments; accouterments; habiliments; attire.
- Expedition - n. - The quality of being expedite; efficient promptness; haste; dispatch; speed; quickness; as to carry the mail with expedition.
- Reason - n. - A thought or a consideration offered in support of a determination or an opinion; a just ground for a conclusion or an action; that which is offered or accepted as an explanation; the efficient cause of an occurrence or a phenomenon; a motive for an action or a determination; proof, more or less decisive, for an opinion or a conclusion; principle; efficient cause; final cause; ground of argument.
- Occasion - n. - An occurrence or condition of affairs which brings with it some unlooked-for event; that which incidentally brings to pass an event, without being its efficient cause or sufficient reason; accidental or incidental cause.
- Sanctify - v. t. - To make efficient as the means of holiness; to render productive of holiness or piety.
- Efficient - n. - An efficient cause; a prime mover.
- Efficient - n. - Causing effects; producing results; that makes the effect to be what it is; actively operative; not inactive, slack, or incapable; characterized by energetic and useful activity; as, an efficient officer, power.
- Efficiency - n. - The quality of being efficient or producing an effect or effects; efficient power; effectual agency.
- Tendency - n. - Direction or course toward any place, object, effect, or result; drift; causal or efficient influence to bring about an effect or result.
strongscsv:description
- G890 ἄχρηστος - 890 ἄχρηστος - ἌΧΡΗΣΤΟΣ - - áchrēstos - akh'-race-tos - from Α (as a negative particle) and χρηστός; inefficient, i.e. (by implication) detrimental:--unprofitable. - Adjective - greek
- G1414 δυνατέω - 1414 δυνατέω - ΔΥΝΑΤΈΩ - - dynatéō - doo-nat-eh'-o - from δυνατός; to be efficient (figuratively):--be mighty. - Verb - greek
- G1601 ἐκπίπτω - 1601 ἐκπίπτω - ἘΚΠΊΠΤΩ - - ekpíptō - ek-pip'-to - from ἐκ and πίπτω; to drop away; specially, be driven out of one's course; figuratively, to lose, become inefficient:--be cast, fail, fall (away, off), take none effect. - Verb - greek
- G1754 ἐνεργέω - 1754 ἐνεργέω - ἘΝΕΡΓΈΩ - - energéō - en-erg-eh'-o - from ἐνεργής; to be active, efficient:--do, (be) effectual (fervent), be mighty in, shew forth self, work (effectually in). - Verb - greek