Search:interruption -> INTERRUPTION
interruption
i n t e r r u p t i o n hex:#105;#110;#116;#101;#114;#114;#117;#112;#116;#105;#111;#110;
The Salt of the World?
- Interruption - n. - The act of interrupting, or breaking in upon.
- Interruption - n. - The state of being interrupted; a breach or break, caused by the abrupt intervention of something foreign; intervention; interposition.
- Interruption - n. - Obstruction caused by breaking in upon course, current, progress, or motion; stop; hindrance; as, the author has met with many interruptions in the execution of his work; the speaker or the argument proceeds without interruption.
- Interruption - n. - Temporary cessation; intermission; suspension.
- Jump - n. - An abrupt interruption of level in a piece of brickwork or masonry.
- Haw - v. i. - To stop, in speaking, with a sound like haw; to speak with interruption and hesitation.
- Stasimon - n. - In the Greek tragedy, a song of the chorus, continued without the interruption of dialogue or anapaestics.
- Continual - a. - Proceeding without interruption or cesstaion; continuous; unceasing; lasting; abiding.
- Vacancy - n. - An open or unoccupied space between bodies or things; an interruption of continuity; chasm; gap; as, a vacancy between buildings; a vacancy between sentences or thoughts.
- Discontinuance - n. - A breaking off or interruption of an estate, which happened when an alienation was made by a tenant in tail, or other tenant, seized in right of another, of a larger estate than the tenant was entitled to, whereby the party ousted or injured was driven to his real action, and could not enter. This effect of such alienation is now obviated by statute in both England and the United States.
- Disturbance - n. - An interruption of a state of peace or quiet; derangement of the regular course of things; disquiet; disorder; as, a disturbance of religious exercises; a disturbance of the galvanic current.
- Successive - a. - Following in order or in uninterrupted course; coming after without interruption or interval; following one after another in a line or series; consecutive; as, the successive revolution of years; the successive kings of Egypt; successive strokes of a hammer.
- Course - n. - Progress from point to point without change of direction; any part of a progress from one place to another, which is in a straight line, or on one direction; as, a ship in a long voyage makes many courses; a course measured by a surveyor between two stations; also, a progress without interruption or rest; a heat; as, one course of a race.
- Asphyxy - n. - Apparent death, or suspended animation; the condition which results from interruption of respiration, as in suffocation or drowning, or the inhalation of irrespirable gases.
- Trouble - v. t. - A fault or interruption in a stratum.
- On - prep. - In continuance; without interruption or ceasing; as, sleep on, take your ease; say on; sing on.
- Break - v. t. - An interruption in continuity in writing or printing, as where there is an omission, an unfilled line, etc.
- Stammer - n. - Defective utterance, or involuntary interruption of utterance; a stutter.
- Suspensive - a. - Tending to suspend, or to keep in suspense; causing interruption or delay; uncertain; doubtful.
- Inoffensive - a. - Not obstructing; presenting no interruption bindrance.
- Break - v. t. - An interruption of continuity; change of direction; as, a break in a wall; a break in the deck of a ship.
- Rupture - n. - Breach of peace or concord between individuals; open hostility or war between nations; interruption of friendly relations; as, the parties came to a rupture.
- Discontinuance - n. - That technical interruption of the proceedings in pleading in an action, which follows where a defendant does not answer the whole of the plaintiff's declaration, and the plaintiff omits to take judgment for the part unanswered.
- Disturbance - n. - The hindering or disquieting of a person in the lawful and peaceable enjoyment of his right; the interruption of a right; as, the disturbance of a franchise, of common, of ways, and the like.
- Discontinuation - n. - Breach or interruption of continuity; separation of parts in a connected series; discontinuance.
strongscsv:description
- G1456 ἐγκαίνια - 1456 ἐγκαίνια - ἘΓΚΑΊΝΙΑ - - enkaínia - eng-kah'-ee-nee-ah - neuter plural of a presumed compound from ἐν and καινός; innovatives, i.e. (specially) renewal (of religious services after the Antiochian interruption):--dedication. - Noun Neuter - greek
- H7674 שֶׁבֶת - 7674 שֶׁבֶת - שֶׁבֶת - - shebeth - sheh'-beth - from שָׁבַת; rest, interruption, cessation; cease, sit still, loss of time. - Noun Feminine - heb