Search:extensive -> EXTENSIVE
extensive
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- Extensive - a. - Having wide extent; of much superficial extent; expanded; large; broad; wide; comprehensive; as, an extensive farm; an extensive lake; an extensive sphere of operations; extensive benevolence; extensive greatness.
- Extensive - a. - Capable of being extended.
- Extensively - adv. - To a great extent; widely; largely; as, a story is extensively circulated.
- Extensiveness - n. - The state of being extensive; wideness; largeness; extent; diffusiveness.
- Foraminifera - n. pl. - An extensive order of rhizopods which generally have a chambered calcareous shell formed by several united zooids. Many of them have perforated walls, whence the name. Some species are covered with sand. See Rhizophoda.
- Plectospondyli - n. pl. - An extensive suborder of fresh-water physostomous fishes having the anterior vertebrae united and much modified; the Eventognathi.
- Leuc- - - A combining form signifying white, colorless; specif. (Chem.), denoting an extensive series of colorless organic compounds, obtained by reduction from certain other colored compounds; as, leucaniline, leucaurin, etc.
- Swell - n. - A gradual ascent, or rounded elevation, of land; as, an extensive plain abounding with little swells.
- Madreporaria - n. pl. - An extensive division of Anthozoa, including most of the species that produce stony corals. See Illust. of Anthozoa.
- Reading - n. - Study of books; literary scholarship; as, a man of extensive reading.
- Master - n. - A male person having another living being so far subject to his will, that he can, in the main, control his or its actions; -- formerly used with much more extensive application than now. (a) The employer of a servant. (b) The owner of a slave. (c) The person to whom an apprentice is articled. (d) A sovereign, prince, or feudal noble; a chief, or one exercising similar authority. (e) The head of a household. (f) The male head of a school or college. (g) A male teacher. (h) The director of a number of persons performing a ceremony or sharing a feast. (i) The owner of a docile brute, -- especially a dog or horse. (j) The controller of a familiar spirit or other supernatural being.
- Chaetopoda - n. pl. - A very extensive order of Annelida, characterized by the presence of lateral setae, or spines, on most or all of the segments. They are divided into two principal groups: Oligochaeta, including the earthworms and allied forms, and Polychaeta, including most of the marine species.
- Struthiones - n. pl. - In a wider sense, an extensive group of birds including the ostriches, cassowaries, emus, moas, and allied birds incapable of flight. In this sense it is equivalent to Ratitae, or Dromaeognathae.
- Pulmonata - n. pl. - An extensive division, or sub-class, of hermaphrodite gastropods, in which the mantle cavity is modified into an air-breathing organ, as in Helix, or land snails, Limax, or garden slugs, and many pond snails, as Limnaea and Planorbis.
- Trichoscolices - n. pl. - An extensive group of wormlike animals characterized by being more or less covered with cilia.
- Deed - v. t. - That which is done or effected by a responsible agent; an act; an action; a thing done; -- a word of extensive application, including, whatever is done, good or bad, great or small.
- Barony - n. - In Ireland, a territorial division, corresponding nearly to the English hundred, and supposed to have been originally the district of a native chief. There are 252 of these baronies. In Scotland, an extensive freehold. It may be held by a commoner.
- Expert - n. - An expert or experienced person; one instructed by experience; one who has skill, experience, or extensive knowledge in his calling or in any special branch of learning.
- Hydrobranchiata - n. pl. - An extensive artificial division of gastropod mollusks, including those that breathe by gills, as contrasted with the Pulmonifera.
- Well-read - a. - Of extensive reading; deeply versed; -- often followed by in.
- Laramie group - - An extensive series of strata, principally developed in the Rocky Mountain region, as in the Laramie Mountains, and formerly supposed to be of the Tertiary age, but now generally regarded as Cretaceous, or of intermediate and transitional character. It contains beds of lignite, often valuable for coal, and is hence also called the lignitic group. See Chart of Geology.
- Sand - n. - Tracts of land consisting of sand, like the deserts of Arabia and Africa; also, extensive tracts of sand exposed by the ebb of the tide.
- Rhizopoda - n. pl. - An extensive class of Protozoa, including those which have pseudopodia, by means of which they move about and take their food. The principal groups are Lobosa (or Am/bea), Helizoa, Radiolaria, and Foraminifera (or Reticularia). See Protozoa.
- Turbellaria - n. pl. - An extensive group of worms which have the body covered externally with vibrating cilia. It includes the Rhabdoc/la and Dendroc/la. Formerly, the nemerteans were also included in this group.
- Moor - n. - An extensive waste covered with patches of heath, and having a poor, light soil, but sometimes marshy, and abounding in peat; a heath.
- Cram - v. i. - To make crude preparation for a special occasion, as an examination, by a hasty and extensive course of memorizing or study.
- Turanians - n. pl. - An extensive division of mankind including the Mongols and allied races of Asia, together with the Malays and Polynesians.
- Proboscidifera - n. pl. - An extensive division of pectinibranchiate gastropods, including those that have a long retractile proboscis, with the mouth at the end, as the cones, whelks, tritons, and cowries. See Illust. of Gastropoda, and of Winkle.
- Thoracostraca - a. - An extensive division of Crustacea, having a dorsal shield or carapec/ //niting all, or nearly all, of the thoracic somites to the head. It includes the crabs, lobsters, shrimps, and similar species.
strongscsv:description
- G5561 χώρα - 5561 χώρα - ΧΏΡΑ - - chṓra - kho'-rah - feminine of a derivative of the base of χάσμα through the idea of empty expanse; room, i.e. a space of territory (more or less extensive; often including its inhabitants):--coast, county, fields, ground, land, region. Compare τόπος. - Noun Feminine - greek
- H1633 גָּרַם - 1633 גָּרַם - גָּרַם - - gâram - gaw-ram' - a primitive root; to be spare or skeleton-like; used only as a denominative from גֶּרֶם; (causative) to bone, i.e. denude (by extensive, craunch) the bones; gnaw the bones, break. - Verb - heb
- H1465 גֵּוָה - 1465 גֵּוָה - גֵּוָה - - gêvâh - gay-vaw' - feminine of גֵּו; the back, i.e. (by extensive) the person; body. - - heb
- H4067 מָדוֹן - 4067 מָדוֹן - מָדוֹן - - mâdôwn - maw-dohn' - from the same as מֶדֶו; extensiveness, i.e. height; stature. - Noun Masculine - heb
- G3624 οἶκος - 3624 οἶκος - ΟἾΚΟΣ - - oîkos - oy'-kos - of uncertain affinity; a dwelling (more or less extensive, literal or figurative); by implication, a family (more or less related, literally or figuratively):--home, house(-hold), temple. - Noun Masculine - greek
- H7458 רָעָב - 7458 רָעָב - רָעָב - - râʻâb - raw-awb' - from רָעֵב; hunger (more or less extensive); dearth, famine, [phrase] famished, hunger. - Noun Masculine - heb
- G4753 στράτευμα - 4753 στράτευμα - ΣΤΡΆΤΕΥΜΑ - - stráteuma - strat'-yoo-mah - from στρατεύομαι; an armament, i.e. (by implication) a body of troops (more or less extensive or systematic):--army, soldier, man of war. - Noun Neuter - greek
- H3497 יִתְנָן - 3497 יִתְנָן - יִתְנָן - - Yithnân - yith-nawn' - lemma יְתְנָן first vowel, corrected to יִתְנָן; from the same as תַּנִּין; extensive; Jithnan, a place in Palestine; Ithnan. - Proper Name Location - x-pn