User:Andrew Sheedy/Redlinks & Missing Senses

Note about the organization of this page: No words are duplicated, so words I have seen while reading that are categorized "By Part of Speech" represent words that don't fit into existing categories, not an alternative organization of words in the other categories.

Feel free to remove words that you can't attest (mention why in your edit summary).

Terms I've come across in everyday life

 * (change clothing, especially iinnanto more casual outfit)
 * (temporary asphalt, used to cover pothole-filled roads)
 * (synonym of "RIP")
 * [Canadian legal definition] (an unincorporated community (of any size))
 * (synonym of "reunion" (planned event at which members of a dispersed group meet together))
 * (broader sense; the general practicalities)
 * (hair elastic) (heard from at least five different people)
 * (canned goods, like canned fruit, pickles, etc.)
 * (the sort of retreat hosted by a corporation, a school board, etc. for the sake of business-related activity)
 * // [slang] [abbreviated form pronounced /ɹɪp/]
 * [pronounced /səˈkɑnd/] (to be transferred to another position/place of employment as a secondary position (while remaining in one's primary position))
 * [slang] (romantic relationship)
 * [slang] (couple name; e.g. "Brangelina" for Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie)
 * [adjective; slang; usually in "I'm (so) shook"] (marker of (often mock) shock)
 * [noun] (related to the "freebies, handouts for the sake of advertising a brand" sense, but applied to non-free items and apparel, like hoodies, t-shirts, cloth bags, water bottles, etc.)
 * The four humours as temperaments/personality types (see and ):
 * [intransitive verb; slang] (to flirt; go after girls/guys)
 * [noun; esp. in "he's/you've got wheels"] (the ability to easily "get" girls)
 * [intransitive verb; slang] (to flirt; go after girls/guys)
 * [noun; esp. in "he's/you've got wheels"] (the ability to easily "get" girls)

Missing terms related to the window covering industry

 * accordion blind
 * 1-inch blind
 * 1″
 * 1-inch
 * 1″ blind
 * 2-inch blind
 * 2″
 * 2-inch
 * 2″ blind
 * bottom rail
 * carrier (on a vertical track)
 * cell shade
 * cellshade
 * duofold
 * fascia (cf. valance (the definition of which also needs revision))
 * faux wood
 * finial
 * horizontal blind
 * light filtering
 * mini blind
 * panel track
 * pleated shade
 * roller shade
 * room darkening
 * Shangri-La
 * solar shade
 * top-down-bottom-up
 * (vertical) track
 * vertical blind (singular alternative to vertical blinds)
 * vertical (entire vertical blind)
 * zebra shade


 * couvre-fenêtre(s)
 * embout (finial)
 * lame (slat)
 * panneaux coulissants
 * recouvrement de fenêtres
 * store à ressort (rollershade)
 * store cellulaire
 * store horizontal
 * store plissé (pleated shade)
 * store romain
 * store solaire
 * store vénitien
 * stores verticaux
 * (bracket)
 * voile (sheer curtain)
 * voile (sheer curtain)

Other

 * (small round marker (not toroidal), typically concrete, used to mark small plots of land)
 * (granite or marble slab that covers a crypt in a mausoleum)
 * [common noun] (mausoleum crypt that can hold two or more caskets, one above the other, bunk-bed style [presumably as in Westminster Abbey?])

These may not be inclusion-worthy
 * debut (possible subdefinition)
 * candle
 * rose
 * treasure

By Type

 * (formerly? called Crepidula fornicata)
 * (bird)
 * (breed of dog)
 * (breed of horse)
 * (formerly? called Crepidula fornicata)
 * (bird)
 * (breed of dog)
 * (breed of horse)
 * (breed of dog)
 * (breed of horse)
 * (breed of horse)
 * (breed of horse)


 * Note: these are often borrowings from Latin or Greek, or literal translations. Many of Latin entries at the same spellings appear to similarly be transliterations of the words from Aristotle, and should probably be defined with the same degree of specificity as the Ancient Greek words they are derived from. If someone wants to attempt that project, they are more than welcome to it, since it is out of my pay grade.
 * [plural form; in Aristotle] (sea-anemones)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird with dull plumage but a musical voice that lives on thistles that donkeys eat (presumably the acanthus); "at war" with the anthus and aegithus)
 * [in Aristotle; probably Translingual] (group of deer with a gall-like fluid in the tail)
 * [in Aristotle] (bass (fish))
 * [in Aristotle] (grasshopper)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird that nests in the furze-bush, has many chicks, and walks "with a limp" (see Ancient Greek ))
 * [in Aristotle] (see aegocephalos; described as having no spleen, and a gall-bladder close to the liver and stomach)
 * , [in Aristotle] (type of owl (see ))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of seabird/shorebird (see ))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of cartilaginous fish)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird; a "diver")
 * [in Aristotle] (fast-growing tunny)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of live-bearing, cartilaginous fish that buries itself in the sand and lures in prey with filaments on its mouth; can change colour like the octopus)
 * ,, [in Aristotle] (type of wasp that lives in the ground, with a notably large "king")
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird; feeds on grubs or grass; has pretty plumage; lives by rivers or in marshes; mimics the whinnying of horses and flies toward horses to drive them off (see Ancient Greek ))
 * [in Aristotle] (bird (see Latin entry))
 * [in Aristotle] (bear-crab)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird (see ))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of hawk)
 * , [in Aristotle] (locust)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of shoal fish that spawns in summer; also called anthias)
 * [in Aristotle] (scordyla; name or nickname for a (certain type of?) fast-growing fish)
 * / [in Aristotle; both spellings used in same work] (fish that spawns in the shallows)
 * [in Aristotle] (rooster; apparently also the chicken as a species)
 * [in Aristotle] (chicken/hen)
 * [in Aristotle] (fishing-frog (i.e. anglerfish))
 * [in Aristotle] (skate; said to breed with the rhina/angel-fish)
 * [in Aristotle] (arctus; lays eggs at the same time as the crawfish)
 * [in Aristotle] (pipefish; breeds in winter)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird; feeds on grubs)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird with large claws that climbs rock faces; steel blue in colour; long, slender beak; short legs (like those of the woodpecker); between the size of the owsel and the chaffinch; common in Nisyros)
 * [in Aristotle] (the laius; presumably the blue rock thrush (Monticola solitarius))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of cartilaginous fish)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of insect with a glow-worm-like larval stage (see ))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of sea bird that has a musical voice)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of hawk; the half-buzzard)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of horned animal (see Ancient Greek ))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of grub that lives in cabbage stalks; the orsodacna)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of animal preyed on by the aegolius and other birds of prey)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish that lives near the shore (see Latin entry))
 * [in Aristotle (current entry is missing a proper sense; says word is the singular form of cantharides, but cantharides is not defined as a plural word)]
 * , cantharus-beetle [in Aristotle; discussed shortly before, but separately from, the cantharis] (scarab beetle)
 * [in Aristotle]
 * [plural form; mentioned by Aristotle] (type of water animal (cf. Italian ))
 * [in Aristotle] (stag beetle)
 * [plural form; mentioned by Aristotle] (type of water animal (cf. Italian and carcinium below)
 * , [in Aristotle] (hermit crab)
 * [in Aristotle] (kind of crustacean (likely a prawn); contrasted with crabs, lobsters, and crawfish)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of water mammal; mentioned alongside beavers)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of sea bird; can dive and stay underwater for a considerable time)
 * [in Aristotle] (the green woodpecker)
 * , [in Aristotle; both spellings used in same work] (type of seabird/shorebird that snaps at foam and has good-smelling flesh (except for the hindquarters) (see ))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of kingfisher (see French ))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of pelagic testacean; breeds at the end of winter)
 * [in Aristotle]
 * [in Aristotle] (type of carnivorous fish that is always pregnant when caught; identified with the )
 * [in Aristotle] (the stone curlew)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of grey mullet; conceives in December and carries spawn for ~30 days (see Latin entry))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish; see Latin entry)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird; likely a cuckoo, given the name of the fish)
 * [in Aristotle] (cuckoo-fish; non-carnivorous (see Latin entry))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of grey mullet)
 * [in Aristotle] (said to be at enmity with the crested lark, woodpecker, and poecilis, because they devour each other's eggs; also kills turtle-doves)
 * [in Aristotle] (gilthead (Sparus aurata))
 * [in Aristotle] (small cicada; tettigonium)
 * [plural; in Lucretius] (cicadas?)
 * [in Aristotle; may be "cicigna" (occurred across line break)] (like a small lizard; same colour as the blind snake; also called "chalcis" or "zignis")
 * [in Aristotle] (type of shorebird; "may be described as" a wagtail (see ))
 * [in Aristotle]
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird of prey; builds nests under roofs or in cliffs (see Ancient Greek ))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish with numerous caeca; maybe the flounder in genus Citharus?)
 * [in Aristotle] (the fieldfare)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish that swims in shoals; related to the mackerel)
 * [in Aristotle] (peristera; larger than a rock pigeon)
 * [pl. or collective; in Aristotle] (see Latin )
 * [in Aristotle] (type of insect, "engendered in the slime of vinegar")
 * [in Aristotle] (crow-fish; type of small fish that breeds in weeds near the shore and isn't caught in winter (see Latin ))
 * [in Aristotle] (coracine)
 * [in Aristotle] (water-newt)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird that injures the young of the eleus-owl, blackbird, and oriole (see Ancient Greek ))
 * [in Aristotle] (coracine)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish that makes a sound like a cuckoo)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of long, slender, black bird that lives in the mountains and is called the "dove-killer" and also the "chalcis")
 *  [in Aristotle] (dog flea)
 * [in Aristotle] (a type of "footless" bird apparently so similar to the swallow that the main difference is that the cypselus has feathers on its shank; perhaps a swallow (see Latin entry))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish that feeds on "mud and offal")
 * [in Aristotle] (apparently a synonym of "hare" (but see ))
 * [in Aristotle] (bird (see Latin entry))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird that is killed by crows)
 * [in Aristotle] [alt spelling of ]
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish that swims in shoals)
 * , [in Aristotle] (type of owl, slightly larger than a chicken, whose young are injured by the crex)
 * [in Aristotle] (see )
 * [in Aristotle] (type of insect)
 * [in Aristotle] (anchovy)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird that feeds on grubs/worms)
 * [in Aristotle] (redbreast (see ))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of deep-sea fish that is always pregnant when caught (see Latin ))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish)
 * [in Herodotus] (bird native to Egypt)
 * [in Aristotle] (the francolin)
 * , [in Aristotle] (type of cartilaginous fish (see Latin entry))
 * [in Aristotle] (sheat-fish (see Latin entry))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish; also called the grey-back (see Latin entry))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird (see ))
 * [in Aristotle] (beetle the size of the sphondyle or knuckle-beetle)
 * [in Aristotle] (most likely the European green woodpecker ; compare French )
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish; also called the glaucus)
 * [in Aristotle] (kind of shellfish? likened to the ceryx and nerites in behaviour and general anatomy)
 * [in Aristotle] (literal translation of bostrychus (see above))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of hawk; the broaded-winged hawk)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of sea bird (see Ancient Greek ))
 * , [in Aristotle] (freshwater turtle)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish with few caeca)
 * [in Aristotle] (animal with a mane on its withers, a beard by the larynx; male has gazelle-like horns, female does not)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish that grows rapidly to a great size (see Latin entry))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of hawk)
 * [in Aristotle; collective noun] (presumably holothurids)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of beetle with antennae in front of its eyes)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of ant that is not found in Sicily (but is presumably found in Greece))
 * [in Aristotle] (nocturnal bird of prey; perhaps the same as the eagle-owl)
 * [in Aristotle] (insect with inchworm-like larval stage)
 * [in Aristotle] (one of the types of birds in whose nests cuckoos lay their eggs; nests on the ground)
 * [in Aristotle] (martin (the bird))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of thrush smaller and with less variegated plumage than the mistle thrush and the song thrush)
 * [in Aristotle] (the sphondyle)
 * [in Aristotle] (bass; fish that breeds twice a year)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird that is "friends" with the green woodpecker)
 * [in Aristotle] (blue-thrush (see Ancient Greek ))
 * , [in Aristotle] (type of cartilaginous fish (see Latin entry))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of rail; mentioned alongside the corncrake)
 * [in Aristotle] (gull)
 * [in Aristotle] (beaver)
 * [in Aristotle] (a winged insect that consumes leeks; the prasocuris)
 * , [pl; in Aristotle] (lagoon oysters)
 * [in Aristotle]
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird with caeca)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird(?) that competes for resources with the green woodpecker)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish that swims in shoals (see Ancient Greek ))
 * [in Aristotle] (see )
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish)
 * , [in Aristotle] (manticore)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of spider)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish that feeds on sea-weed (see Latin entry))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish or stage of a fish's life cycle that comes from the Phaleric fry and develops into the trichis)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird that burrows into the ground; found in Boeotia (see ))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish that lives near the shore (see French ))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird that feeds on grubs/worms)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of shoal fish)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of whale with baleen)
 * [in Aristotle] (eel-like fish (see Latin entry))
 * [in Aristotle] (horsefly)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of grey mullet; conceives in December and carries spawn for ~30 days)
 * [in Aristotle] (a torpedo (electric ray))
 * [in Aristotle] (the nerites)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird (see ))
 * [in Aristotle] (stock dove)
 * [in Aristotle] (large tunny)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish: "sea-perch" (see Latin entry, but Aristotle mentions the gilt-head separately, shortly afterwards))
 * [in Aristotle] (bud-bane; a kind of grub that lives in cabbage stalks)
 * [in Aristotle] (testaceans; shellfish, including snails and oysters)
 * [in Aristotle; Athenian word for "tetrix"] (type of bird; synonym of tetrix)
 * , [in Aristotle] (type of starling-sized bird, with two types: black (with a red beak and like the blue-thrush/laius but slightly larger; found "everywhere"; changes plumage to yellow seasonally, as well as its song) and white (same size as black))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of wrasse; changes colours depending on the season (black in the spring, white thereafter))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of ray)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of ashen-coloured bird that is always seen in flocks; "fleet of foot and strong of wing"; loud, high-pitched song; about the size of shrikes, orioles, etc.)
 * [in Aristotle] (animal with a thin mane going from the head to the withers (hyena?))
 * [in Aristotle] (parrotfish/scarus)
 * [in Aristotle] (young tunny (see Latin entry))
 * [in Aristotle] (young tunny (see Latin entry))
 * [in Aristotle] (rock pigeon)
 * [in Aristotle] (penduline tit)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of water fowl (see Latin entry))
 * [in Aristotle] (insect with inchworm-like larval stage)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish, said to feed at a distance from the shore "on a mucous substance exuding from itself, and consequently is always in a starved condition")
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird of prey with a white head, short wings, long tail, resembling a vulture; lives in groves; clumsy; preys on carrion; called "mountain-stork" or "half-eagle" (see French ))
 * [in Aristotle] (common pigeon)
 * [in Aristotle] (collective name for hairy spiders that spin webs and lay their eggs in a woven "basket")
 * [in Aristotle] (type of spider; see "phalangia" above))
 * [in Aristotle] (ring dove; largest pigeon species known to Aristotle)
 * [in Aristotle] (lammergeier)
 * [in Aristotle] (presumably a fish; emits a mucous secretion that envelops its body)
 * [in Aristotle] (minnow (see Latin entry))
 * [in Aristotle] (black goby)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of hawk)
 * [in Aristotle] (shellfish with a rough, non-ribbed shell; lives in sandy or slimy places; has a symbiotic relationship with a small crustacean)
 * [in Aristotle] (small crustacean which has a symbiotic relationship with the pinna (apparently needed for the survival of the pinna))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird that is "friends" with the harpe and the kite)
 * [noun; in Aristotle]
 * [in Aristotle] (said to be at enmity with the crested lark, woodpecker, and chloreus, because they devour each other's eggs)
 * [in Aristotle] (presumably the type of oyster found in tidal pools)
 * (bird; found in Greece; likely the same as a )
 * [in Aristotle] (a type of bird mentioned alongside herons; prone to pecking out the eyes of its opponents, such as the harpy)
 * [in Aristotle] (a winged insect: leekbane)
 * [in Aristotle] (literally, "old man"; type of bird whose eggs are eaten by weasels and crows; possibly a wren (also called an "old man" elsewhere))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish that hides itself in the mud (apparently for hibernation) with only its eyes exposed)
 * [in Aristotle] (fig wasp)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish that breeds once a year (see Latin entry))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of hawk)
 * [in Aristotle; maybe SOP] (bird)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird(?) that competes for resources with the turtle-dove)
 * [in Aristotle] (also called "angel-fish", but listed as a cartilaginous fish (and see and rhinobatus below))
 * [in Aristotle] (apparently an angel-fish/rhina)
 * [in Aristotle] (cartilaginous fish said to be the offspring of a batus/skate and a rhina, with the front part of the batus and the hind parts of a rhina (see ))
 * [in Aristotle] (larval form of the botfly)
 * [in Aristotle]
 * [in Aristotle] (shoal-fishes; breed in summer)
 * [in Aristotle] (sanguineous animals)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of river fish that is good for eating during its breeding time)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish that swims in shoals)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish that breeds in both spring and fall; conceives in December and carries spawn for 30 days; feeds on what the red mullet leaves behind after foraging)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of freshwater mammal)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of non-carnivorous fish found in sea-estuaries, also called salpe by him; breeds in the fall and feeds on zostera)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of shorebird with ashen-grey, speckled plumage)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of shorebird; "may be described as" a wagtail)
 * [in Aristotle] ("type of scolex" = insect larva)
 * [pl.; in Aristotle] (fast-growing (young) fish)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish (see Latin entry))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish that breeds in open sea)
 * [in Aristotle] (no doubt the same as "cuckoo fish" above; a piper (likely the common European gurnard; cf. sea robin))
 * [in Aristotle] (anemone)
 * [in Aristotle] (flying fish)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird that is "friends" with the lark)
 * [maybe Translingual?] (selachians collectively)
 * [pl. of "sepia"]
 * [in Aristotle] (type of deep-sea fish (see ))
 * [in Aristotle; likely SOP] (group of fish; the ryades)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of insect)
 * [in Aristotle] (nuthatch)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of wrasse; changes colours depending on the season (black in the spring, white thereafter) (see Ancient Greek ))
 * [in Aristotle] (muraena; fish that is "mottled and weakly"; contrasted with similar smyrus ("some" consider them to be male and female of the same species))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish with one uniform colour (like that of a pine tree) and teeth "inside and out" (see Latin entry))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of grey mullet)
 * [in Aristotle] (apparently a type of insect)
 * [in Aristotle] (the shrike)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish (see Latin entry))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of insect/arthropod; also called the "knuckle-beetle" and the same size as the grape-beetle)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish that swims in shoals (see Ancient Greek ))
 * [in Aristotle]
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish with four pairs of gills and a gall-bladder near the gut)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of carnivorous fish that swims in shoals, identified as (but see also ))
 * , [in Aristotle] (ground wasp; speckled and about as broad as a bee)
 * [in Aristotle] (described as being a testacean entirely enveloped in shell, showing no flesh; mentioned both alongside ascidians and as synonymous with them (see ))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird that builds its nests in low-lying shrubs; synonym of ourax)
 * [in Aristotle] (nymph; likely specifically refers to tettigonium (cicada) nymphs)
 * , [in Aristotle] (type of small cicada; cicadelle (see Latin entry))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of squid, including or identical to ; see citation at )
 * [in Aristotle] (civet)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of bird that feeds on thistles (see ))
 * [in Aristotle] (apparently a type of fish)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of wrasse; changes colours depending on the season (black in the spring, white thereafter))
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish that spawns near beaches)
 * , [in Aristotle] (type of fish; perhaps the same as the trichias)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish that breeds twice a year; develops from the trichis)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish or stage of a fish's life cycle that comes from the membras and develops into the trichias)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of fish; apparently the red mullet)
 * [in Herodotus and Aristotle] (Old World bird; identified with the sandpiper in a translation of Aristotle; cleans the teeth of the crocodile)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of deep-sea cartilaginous fish (see Latin entry))
 * [in Aristotle; maybe SOP] (type of fish)


 * [possibly just a transcription of Latin]
 * [possibly just a transcription of Latin]
 * [possibly just a transcription of Latin]
 * [possibly just a transcription of Latin]
 * [possibly just a transcription of Latin]
 * [possibly just a transcription of Latin]


 * [in Hippocratic Corpus]
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (described in one place as being "purged away")
 * [in Aristotle] (disease of pigs involving swelling around the windpipe and jaws, which can also attack the foot and ear, causes the neighbouring parts to rot, and finishes in the lungs (see Ancient Greek ))
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (ardent fever)
 * [in Aristotle] (parasite; disease of a beehive in which small worms proliferate and a sort of cobweb grows over the hive; results in "lassitude on the part of the bees" and a bad odour)
 * [in Aristotle] (two distinct diseases of pigs: one causing pain and heaviness in the head, the other causing diarrhea; also a disease of cattle that attacks the lungs)
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (formed from "defluxions upon the throat)
 * [possibly a calque of Ancient Greek; in the context of diseases that are not externally obvious] (kidney stones?)
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (symptoms include bloating, pain in the sides and loins, and constipation)
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (skin disease)
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (intermittent fever common in warm climates)
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus]
 * [in Aristotle] (a disease of the eye)
 * [in Aristotle; adj.] (having heteroglaucia)
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus]
 * [pl.; in Hippocratic Corpus] (see )
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (state of being leucophlegmatic)
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (see, , etc.}}
 * [in Aristotle] (disease of horses in which a horse stands still and droops its head when it hears flute music, and runs off at a gallop when mounted, displaying "great languor, and heavy breathing")
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (prolapse of the anus)
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus]
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus; seen as squama æris]


 * (type of meter: either one long syllable followed by three short ones, or three short syllables followed by one long one)
 * (parisosis?)
 * (repetition of a word at the end of each section/line of a sentence)


 * [in Hippocratic Corpus]
 * [mentioned multiple times in the Iliad] (material used in armour, a cup)
 * [in Aristotle] (pungent, black substance spread by bees at the entrance of their hives; can be used as a salve for bruises and suppurating sores)
 * (type of stone (mined(?) along the Eastern coast of Africa in the 1st century))
 * (some sort of gold alloy or type of impure gold)
 * [in Aristotle] (greasy substance past the entrance of a beehive)
 * [in Aristotle] (substance of a pale yellow colour that is/was carried into the Hellespont by the Euxine; said to come from the phycus (plant))
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] ("Illyrian spodos" used in treatment of ulcers)
 * (the gum of the tree)
 * [in Aristotle's Meteorology] (non-intoxicating "wine"; contains fat)


 * (twine used for binding [possibly SOP, but construction seems unusual])
 * (something used to keep embers warm)
 * [used when treating milk fever in a cow]
 * [in "...fussing with fire-main connections or dragging red toylike handy-billies toward the hole"]
 * (part of a loom)
 * (part of a loom)
 * (part of a loom)
 * (part of a loom)
 * (part of a loom)


 * (coincides with March)
 * [in "it was unusual for the kings of Macedonia to march with their forces in the month called Dæsius. But Alexander broke through these scruples, telling them they should call it a second Artemisius.", in Plutarch's "Life of Alexander"] (probably a Macedonian spring month)
 * / (fall month, apparently preceding Maimacterion)
 * / (follows immediately after Scirophorion [see Plutarch's Life of Agesilaus])
 * // [first and last spellings used in same work] (fall month)
 * [used in Dryden's translation of Plutarch] (Metageitnion)
 * (Boeotian month, the end of which coincides with the beginning of Boedromion)
 * , (coincides with December to early January)
 * (coincides with June; immediately precedes Hecatombaeon [see Plutarch's Life of Agesilaus])
 * (coincides with May to early June)
 * (coincides with June; immediately precedes Hecatombaeon [see Plutarch's Life of Agesilaus])
 * (coincides with May to early June)
 * (coincides with May to early June)


 * (castor bean?)
 * [lowercase variant]
 * [lowercase variant]
 * [lowercase variant]
 * [lowercase variant]


 * Note: these are often borrowings from Latin or Greek, or literal translations
 * [in Virgil's Georgics] (see Latin entry)
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (see Latin entry)
 * [found in ancient Greece]
 * [in Aristotle] (flowering plant; pollinated by bees)
 * [in Aristotle] (plant with a seed resembling a certain butterfly's egg (see ))
 * [in Plutarch] (cornel)
 * [in Aristotle] (see Latin entry)
 * [in Dryden's translation of Plutarch's "Life of Demetrius"] (poisonous plant; see Latin and it's Greek origin, )
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (leaves used in cataplasms for ulcers)
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (apparently a part of the tithymallus (see below))
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (medicinal; presumably just the seeds of a plant)
 * [in Aristotle] (melilot)
 * [plural; in Rhoades' translation of Virgil: "Fat olives, orchades, and radii / And bitter-berried pausians"] (possibly a flower or a fruit)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of plant poisonous to panthers and lions)
 * [in Rhoades' translation of Virgil: "Fat olives, orchades, and radii / And bitter-berried pausians"]
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (chondrus)
 * (pine cone? used medicinally)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of flower from which rouge was made)
 * [plural; in Rhoades' translation of Virgil: "Fat olives, orchades, and radii / And bitter-berried pausians"]
 * [in Aristotle] (see ; also called "crambe or cabbage")
 * [possibly just a transcription from Latin] (type of "reed"; maybe sugarcane)
 * [in Aristotle] (see Ancient Greek and )
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (see Latin entry)
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus; maybe SOP]
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (likely Ferula)
 * [in Aristotle] (type of spelt fed to pigs)
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (see Latin )
 * (type of sea-plant (see Italian entry and ))

By Subject
[page numbers refer to cites that can be found in 1996, SR-71 Revealed: The Inside Story, by Richard H. Graham, Col. USAF (Ret), Zenith Press.]
 * [p. 155, 178]
 * [p. 61]
 * [p. 63, 94]
 * [p. 48]
 * [p. 163] (here a climb-and-descent flight manoeuvre, but there may be other definitions)
 * [p. 61]
 * [verb; of an aircraft; p. 61]
 * [p. 48]
 * (or just ram air)
 * [noun; p. 56]
 * [p. 79] (computed closing velocity between two aircraft flying towards each other)
 * [p. 52]

[page numbers refer to cites that can be found in 1996, SR-71 Revealed: The Inside Story, by Richard H. Graham, Col. USAF (Ret), Zenith Press; terms may include espionage and reconnaissance acronyms]
 * (Air Combat Command)
 * [p. 56] (aerodynamic disturbances)
 * [p. 73, 85] (attitude director indicator)
 * (advanced development projects)
 * [p. 60, 61] (accessory drive system)
 * [p. 68] (automatic flight control system (autopilot))
 * [p. 92] (Air Force Logistics command)
 * [p. 56, 58, 69] (air inlet computer)
 * (air intercept missile)
 * (Avionics Maintenance Squadron)
 * [p. 65] (astro-inertial navigation system)
 * [p. 65] (automatic pitch warning)
 * (air refueling control point)
 * [p. 150] (air refueling control time)
 * [p. 68] (built-in-test)
 * [p. 82] (capability reconnaissance)
 * [p. 46] (centre of gravity)
 * [p. 195] (Commander In Chief Atlantic)
 * (Commander In Chief SAC)
 * [p. 56] (compressor inlet pressure)
 * [p. 56] (compressor inlet temperature)
 * [p. 186] (combat ready)
 * [p. 63] (constant speed drive)
 * (Center for Strategic and International Studies)
 * [p. 68] (digital automatic flight and inlet control system)
 * [p. 95] (director of central intelligence)
 * [abbreviation; p. 74, 75] (pronounced /dɛf/) (defensive (systems (attitude)))
 * (Director of Intelligence Agency [possibly a mistake for "Defense Intelligence Agency"?])
 * (drips per minute)
 * (duct pressure ratio)
 * [p. 93] (distinguished visitor)
 * [p. 163] (end air refueling (point))
 * [p. 94, 153] (exhaust gas temperature)
 * [p. 84] (EMR Improvement Program)
 * [p. 84] (electro-magnetic reconnaissance; electro-magnetic recorder)
 * (engine nozzle position)
 * [p. 83, 206] (electronic order of battle)
 * (effective performance time)
 * (Fédération Aeronautique Internationale)
 * [p. 214] (functional check flight)
 * [p. 79] (fire control system)
 * [p. 85] (flight reference system)
 * [p. 194] (Foreign Technology Division)
 * (Five Year Defense Plan (budget))
 * (ground-controlled approach)
 * (guy-in-the-back)
 * [p. 73] (horizontal situation indicator)
 * [p. 48] (inlet guide vane)
 * [p. 80] (initial point)
 * (instructor pilot)
 * [p. 83] (inflight processor and display)
 * [p. 181] (initial photo interpretation report)
 * [p. 96] (indications and warning)
 * [p. 95] (Joint Reconnaissance Center)
 * (Kadena officers' open mess)
 * [p. 181] (mobile processing center)
 * [p. 74] (mission recorder (or recording) system)
 * (National Aerospace Plane)
 * [p. 91] (nose wheel steering)
 * [p. 82] (optical bar camera)
 * (officer efficiency report)
 * (operational plan)
 * [p. 193] (Pacific Air Force)
 * [p. 95] (Peacetime Aerial Reconnaissance Program)
 * (permanent change of station)
 * [p. 191] (pronounced /pɪm/ or jokingly /pɪmp/) (program element monitor)
 * [p. 193, 199] (programs and resources)
 * [p. 118, 140, 180] (Physiological Support Division)
 * [p. 180, 184] (peripheral vision device)
 * [p. 82] (recorder correlator display)
 * (runway condition reading)
 * (rapid decompression)
 * (Reconnaissance Systems Officer)
 * (Reconnaissance Wing)
 * (alt. case form of SecDef)
 * [p. 57] (shock expulsion sensor)
 * [p. 74] (selective identification feature)
 * [p. 95] (Single Integrated Operational Plan)
 * [p. 187] (staff judge advocate)
 * [p. 96] (Strategic Reconnaissance Center)
 * (Strategic Reconnaissance Squadron)
 * (Strategic Reconnaissance Wing)
 * (standardization/evaluation)
 * [p. 73] (triple display indicator)
 * [p. 82] (technical objective camera)
 * [p. 64] (transformer rectifier)
 * (urine collection device)
 * [p. 194]
 * [p. 217] (very low observable)


 * [in Aristotle] (sinew in the back)
 * [in Aristotle] (head of the epididymis)
 * [plural form; in Aristotle] ("limb bones", i.e. bones of the thigh and shin)
 * [in Aristotle] (body of the epididymis)
 * [in Aristotle] (body part in a crustacean; perhaps closer to the original Greek word)
 * [in Aristotle] (the omasum: 3rd stomach in a ruminant)
 * [in Aristotle] (the abomasum: 4th stomach in a ruminant)
 * [in Aristotle] (sinew also called the "back-stay")
 * [in Aristotle] (part of the neck near the back; the "shoulder point")
 * [in Aristotle] (the calf)
 * [in Aristotle] (age-indicating teeth shed in the fourth year of a donkey's life)
 * [in Aristotle] (a sort of partial astragalus; found in the lynx)
 * [in Aristotle; in "vein hepatitis"] (referring to a vein in the arm)
 * [in Aristotle] (apparently a more general small, connecting bone)
 * [in Aristotle] (part of the groin outside of the thigh and buttocks)
 * [in Aristotle] (organ for perceiving odours found in insects)
 * [in Aristotle] (organ in various animals, including birds and cartilaginous fish; apparently part of the digestive system; mentioned as being near the uterus of non-viviparous animals (contrasted with animals with a "low" uterus))
 * [in Aristotle] (having insections in its body)
 * [in Galen] (part of the digestive tract)
 * [in Aristotle; seen as plural "keraiae"] (part of the ankle, called "horns")
 * [in Aristotle] (nipple, including that of a man)
 * [in Aristotle; of molluscs] (see )
 * [in Aristotle] (apparently the diaphragm (possibly just a bad translation))
 * [in Aristotle] (coil-like organ in snails and shell-fish; also translated literally as "poppy")
 * [in Aristotle] (organ in a mollusc)
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus; not italicized]
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus; not italicized]
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus; not italicized]
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus; not italicized]
 * [in Aristotle; not italicized]
 * [in Aristotle] (bone in the ankle (possibly the part that sticks out?))
 * [in Aristotle] (having multiple digits (examples of polydactylous animals include humans, dogs, and pigs))
 * [in Aristotle] (see mecon)
 * [in Aristotle] (the fluid contained within/produced by the poppy/mecon)
 * [in Aristotle] (of an animal; having blood)
 * [in Aristotle] (body of a young sepia)
 * [in Aristotle; of an insect] (having shards over its wings)
 * [in Aristotle]
 * [in Aristotle; in "vein splenitis"] (referring to a vein in the arm)
 * [in Aristotle] (apparently something like the vas deferens (carries sperm); found in sharks)
 * [in Aristotle; of an insect] (without shards over its wings)
 * [in Aristotle; of an insect] (without shards over its wings)


 * [English]
 * [in Aristotle] (mentioned alongside "council" as a democratic office of government)
 * [in Plutarch's Life of Agesilaus (see quote at )] (wooden chair or chariot in the shape of a griffin or tragelaphus on which children and young virgins were carried in processions in Sparta)
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (unit of measurement)
 * [in Aristotle's Poetics] (the portion of a Tragedy that comes between two whole choral songs)
 * [could just be code-switching/transliteration of Ancient Greek]
 * (alternative form of )
 * (hipparch)
 * [pl.; in "the legislator should not allow youth to be spectators of iambi or of comedy [...]" with the implication that iambi are inappropriate for the young]
 * [SOP?]
 * [used in translation of Herodotus (not italicized); possibly just a transcription of another language]
 * [plural of presumable "medimn", synonym of ]
 * [alt. plural of "medimnus"]
 * [in Aristotle's Poetics] (the whole first statement of the chorus in a Tragedy)
 * [in Aristotle; in "the Argives, after their army had been cut to pieces [...] were compelled to admit to citizenship some of their perioeci"]
 * [in Plutarch's "Life of Cleomenes" (Spartan context): "he reproved one of his friends for entertaining some strangers with nothing but barley bread and black broth, such diet as they usually had in their phiditia"]
 * (coin minted under Philip of Macedon)
 * (phylarch)
 * [pl.; in Aristotle] (oligarchical institution: "body which convenes the supreme authority in the state")
 * [possible nonce word; used in Aristophanes]
 * [pl. (sing. rhetron?); used twice in Dryden's translation of Plutarch's "Life of Agis"] (some sort of legal proposal)
 * (probably an alt. form of )
 * [in the Iliad] (part of a woman's headwear)
 * [Ancient Greece] (some sort of tripod that goes over a fire, can hold water for boiling)
 * (Greek city)
 * [Ancient Greece] (some sort of tripod that goes over a fire, can hold water for boiling)
 * (Greek city)


 * (one who anoints the body with oil [see Latin entry])
 * (part of a shield)
 * (Persian dry measure)
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus; mentioned alongside wedges and levers] (type of simple tool)
 * ["collected in drops from trees"]
 * (relating to Encratism)
 * (probably ex-praetor?)
 * [attributive; of a chariot]
 * [pl.; singular presumably litra] (Roman measure of weight)
 * (type of Roman stage play) [in Marcus Aurelius]
 * (type of incense)
 * (broad cloth used in ancient times)
 * (type of cloth used in the ancient world)
 * [in Plutarch, "Agesilaus and Pompey Compared"] (see )
 * [in Plutarch's "Life of Antony"] (Troglodytes: apparently a specific people/nation)
 * (another name of the constellation "the Bear" [according to the Odyssey])


 * (successful integration (for the organism in question) into a new habitat, thanks to adaptations from a previous environment)
 * (change in the species composition of an ecological community over time)
 * (more general than current def: anywhere in which an organism may take refuge from a danger)
 * (biological process in which RNA molecules inhibit gene expression or translation, by neutralizing targeted mRNA molecules; syn: post-transcriptional gene silencing)


 * [in Aristotle; "metachoerum" in another text] (runt of a litter of piglets)
 * [in Aristotle; noun and adj.; describing a class of animals}}
 * [pl. noun, in Aristotle; sing. = animalcula?; "animalcule" used in the same work] (animalcula/-um )
 * [in Aristotle; noun] (an analogous organ? (sperm and eggs seem to be considered convolutes of one another))
 * [in Aristotle] (a cloven structure)
 * [in Aristotle; of an animal] (opposite of opisthuretic)
 * [in Aristotle] (the substance/thing from which the philtre is derived: either (a) from a growth on a newborn foal's forehead that is black, broad, and round, and slightly smaller than a dried fig, and which the mother bites off or (b) from excretions from a mare's genitals, both occurring when a mare is "wind-impregnated" and runs to the point of exhaustion)
 * [in Aristotle; see "ambidental" above; also spelled "non-ambidental" in the same work]
 * [in Aristotle; of an animal] (opposite of emprosthuretic; seems to have some relation to mating)
 * [in Galen] (liquidy substance produced in stomach during digestion)
 * [in a hoofed animal]
 * [in Aristotle; in "outlet of the residuum" in fish] (excrement? semen?)
 * (runt of a litter (of pigs))
 * [in Aristotle; in "they have to put the boar to the sow repeatedly owing to her dropping after intercourse what is called the sow-virus"] (likened to a hippomanes (first sense mentioned above))
 * [in Aristotle; in "As the parts [...] are on the point of differentiating they are distended by the spiritus; this is clearer in males in the testes, but appears also about the breasts" and "as to the pleasure which accompanies coition it is due to emission not only of semen, but also of a spiritus, the coming together of which precedes the emission"] (something contained in the semen that conveys the principle of the soul)
 * [in Aristotle] ("knots", such as in a woman's breast, due to a build-up of milk in that spot, according to Aristotle)
 * [in Aristotle] (see )


 * (marking on a flower that direct pollinators to nectaries at the bases of flowers)
 * defense (deterring consumption (of the plant) without impacting the consumer's digestion)
 * (metabolite that is used for something other than plant growth or reproduction (e.g. defense))


 * (Orthodox equivalent of original sin)
 * [from Latin; mentioned alongside "lectio" [divina] in the context of contemplative nuns]
 * (might be able to get away with rewording current defintion)
 * (orthodox doctrine that Christ has two wills (contrast )
 * (manner/form of prayer?)
 * (theological virtue)
 * (definition that includes the four levels of hell: hell, purgatory, limbo of infants, bosom of Abraham)
 * (theological virtue)
 * (property of God the Father)
 * (stage of Catholic seminary formation)
 * [in Eastern Christianity]
 * (as a virtue; opposite vice = irreligion)
 * (the Christian faith specifically; possibly used by other religious groups?)
 * (theological virtue)
 * (definition that includes the four levels of hell: hell, purgatory, limbo of infants, bosom of Abraham)
 * (theological virtue)
 * (property of God the Father)
 * (stage of Catholic seminary formation)
 * [in Eastern Christianity]
 * (as a virtue; opposite vice = irreligion)
 * (the Christian faith specifically; possibly used by other religious groups?)
 * [in Eastern Christianity]
 * (as a virtue; opposite vice = irreligion)
 * (the Christian faith specifically; possibly used by other religious groups?)
 * (the Christian faith specifically; possibly used by other religious groups?)
 * (the Christian faith specifically; possibly used by other religious groups?)
 * (the Christian faith specifically; possibly used by other religious groups?)


 * (gland that produces (in females) lubricants and glues to keep eggs affixed to surface where they are laid and to each other or (in males) lubricants and protection for sperm)
 * (modified extension of the trachia in some insects)
 * (flight muscle paired with another muscle, where when one muscle is contracted the other relaxes, and vice versa, powering flight mechanically rather than through independent nerve impulses)
 * (dorso-ventral abdominal vibration dance)
 * [similar to def 2] (measure of heat units above a lower threshold above which an insect can develop, accumulated over 24 hours)
 * (form of flight in which wing beats are directly controlled by muscles attached to sclerites)
 * (dance used by honey bees, possibly to regulate foraging activities according to seasonal availability)
 * (triggers replication of underlying epidermial cells)
 * [either more specific than current def or another sense] (type of social organization including (1) cooperative brood care (including care of offspring from other individuals), (2) overlapping generations within a colony of adults, and (3) a caste system, involving a division of labor into a small reproductive and large non-reproductive groups)
 * (adaptation of the gut in sap feeders that allows for removal of excess water and sugars, while concentrating other nutrients for digestion)
 * (foremost part of the alimentary canal, where food is ingested, broken down, and sometimes stored; includes mouth, pharynx, crop (sometimes), and proventriculus)
 * (hindmost part of the alimentary canal, where water, salts, and remaining nutrients are reabsorbed; includes the ileum, colon, and rectum)
 * (form of flight in which muscles are attached to the notum and distort the thorax to produce wing strokes)
 * (juvenile hormone)
 * (structure in insect mouthparts like a lower lip; helps hold and manipulate food)
 * (middle part of the alimentary canal, where food is digested and nutrients absorbed)
 * [possibly SOP] (set of behaviours and traits that appear before migration and are designed to offset the strains of migration)
 * (gift such as food or a spermatophylax given by a male insect to win over a female)
 * (flight syndrome in which oogenesis, and sometimes reproductive development, diapauses)
 * [subsense of def 1] (one-way valve allowing hemolymph into the dorsal vessel)
 * [current def might need expansion/splitting] (organ in maxillae and labium that houses smell and taste receptors)
 * (structure in midgut that compartmentalizes food boli and is excreted with them)
 * , [specialized sense]
 * (block that ensures proper spacing of labels of an insect specimen while pinning)
 * (small, triangular piece of cardstock paper used for displaying insects)
 * , ((method of) displaying insects too small to be pinned by gluing them to a point)
 * [of legs] (adapted for holding; in insects, often with enlarged and spiny tibia and femur)
 * (dance performed by honey bees for the purpose of advertizing the presence of food within about 15 metres of the next)
 * [specialized sense] (cross-linking of proteins in the chitin matrix of the exocuticle in tanning)
 * (organ where sperm is stored until mating occurs)
 * (gland that supplies nutrients to the spermatheca)
 * [possibly covered by def 2] (packet of sperm, included in a spermatophylax)
 * (board used for pinning and drying insect specimens in preparation for display)
 * [subdef of last sense] (duration of an instar (i.e. how long it lasts))
 * (ventral side of an insect's body)
 * (foregut)
 * [subdef of zoology sense] (highly modified mandibles and maxillae in the piercing-sucking mouthparts of some insects, mainly (exclusively?) hemipterans)
 * (flight muscle that is stimulated by a nerve impulse for each wing beat)
 * (hardening of the exocuticle after moulting)
 * (insect walking gait, in which a fore and hind leg on one side and middle leg on the other are on the ground at any given time)
 * (main body of a myriapod)
 * [def might need to be modified to be more inclusive of variations in anatomy]
 * [possibly SOP]


 * (transfer of a disease-causing organism after it has developed or reproduced in the vector)
 * (organism that directly causes disease in another organism)
 * (transfer of disease-causing organisms between hosts and vectors, or vectors and other vectors of the same generation)
 * (host in which a disease-causing organism reproduces asexually or does not reproduce)
 * (transfer of disease-causing organisms from a vector to a vertebrate, without the disease-causing organism undergoing any development)
 * (ability of a vector to acquire, maintain, and transmit a disease-causing organism
 * (transfer of disease-causing organisms from one generation of vectors to the next)


 * [Canadian fur trade; in "...whose canots du maitre carried trade goods westward in the summer and supplies westward in the spring and great cargoes of furs on the homeward journey in high summer"] (shorter, 24-27 foot canoe, 50-60 inches wide, holding 4-6 men with provisions and gear; 1.5 ton capacity)
 * [Canadian fur trade; in "The hivernants...made their annual trip from the interior in lighter birch-bark canots du nord..."] (longer, 32-36 foot canoe, 60-66 inches wide, holding 7-12 men with provisions and gear; 3-4 ton capacity)
 * [fur trade; "The Montreal-Fort William run was accomplished with amazing efficiency by the mangeurs du lard whose canots du maitre..."]
 * (canot du maitre)
 * (or "North canoe"?) (canot du nord)


 * [in Plato] (broader sense, referring to a spoken statement in a court defense)
 * [referring to appointments of parish priests] (jointly? in a group?)
 * [secular US law; Catholic use] (for this term)
 * [in "To more faithfully fulfil their propositum [...] consecrated women can form associations"]
 * [Canon Law; in phrases like "within ten useful days [from, e.g., the issuance of a decree]"]


 * [in Euclid, Archimedes; italicized]
 * (in) [of a set of numbers; possibly SOP, but not covered at ]
 * [in translation of Archimedes; italicized]
 * [see "paraboloid of revolution" below; possibly separable as "hyperboloid" + "of revolution"]
 * [of a number] (cf. "plane" and "solid"; likely a number that is not the product of any numbers, and can therefore only produce a line)
 * [technical definition in Euclidean geometry]
 * [possibly separable as "paraboloid" + "of revolution"] (see image at )


 * [of a number]
 * [of a number] (being a product of 2 numbers (and thus producing a plane, or area, of a polygon))
 * [alternate form of "Riemann surface"]
 * [of a number] (probably: divisible by two)
 * [in Euclid, Archimedes; italicized]
 * [noun]
 * [noun]
 * [noun]
 * [noun]
 * [noun]
 * [of a number] (being a product of 3 numbers (and thus producing the volume of a 3-dimensional figure))
 * [noun]
 * [noun]
 * [noun]
 * [noun]
 * [noun]
 * [noun]
 * [noun; geometry] (line in conics)
 * [noun; geometry] (line in conics)


 * [in "deaths from heat prostration" during a time of extreme summer heat]
 * [technical] (deficiency, imbalance, or excess of nutrients in one's diet (so obesity is malnutrition))
 * (postmortem interval)


 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (some sort of bodily process involving the blood; distribution of nutrients throughout the body?)
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (type of medicine)
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (type of alum with various medicinal uses)
 * [noun; in Aristotle] (something that reduces diarrhea/thickens the stool)
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus; intransitive verb; of broken bone]
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (deliquium/fainting?)
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus; urine described as having a "cloudy eneorema"]
 * (obstructed? but most likely synonym of )
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus; of a bone] (being deprived of blood)
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus]
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus; in a human]
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus; as plural "lumbrici"] (see Latin entry)
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (used at least sometimes in dry form, applied to, e.g. a hemorrhoid)
 * [possibly archaic]
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (type of bandaging; listed alongside the "simple," "slightly winding," "rhombus", etc.)
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (some sort of medicinal herb)
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus; Galen] (travels through blood vessels; lightest and thinnest substance in the body; likely a hypothetical vitalist substance)
 * [sing.; in Hippocratic Corpus] (something that "purges upwards")
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus; in "a thin spatula is to be pushed through these holes which have been burned" (in cauterization)]
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (its juice was used medicinally, in ointments)
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus; "if the flesh which surrounds the bone [...] become inflamed and strangled"]
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus; describing people, and their likelihood of being affected by a disease]
 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (warts? found on the glans penis)


 * , (a semi-free peasant in between a serf/servus and a colonus)


 * [military] ("absent on leave" maybe?)
 * [possibly archaic] (armour covering the breast)
 * [in (ancient) military context--though it might be more general: "the mode of grounding and taking up arms"]
 * [late Medieval French army] (a military unit consisting of a heavily armed horseman and his attendants)
 * [from French] (early muzzle-loaded artillery; smaller ones were predecessors of the musket)
 * [adjectival use]
 * [from French] (early muzzle-loaded artillery; smaller ones were predecessors of the musket)
 * [adjectival use]


 * (class of ship?)
 * [intransitive verb; US navy slang] (to be expelled, possibly limited to training)
 * (a department or section of crew on a ship, possibly the engine room crew?)
 * , [in English; seen more than once]
 * [navy]
 * (SOP?) (room on a ship containing ammo clips, etc.)
 * (clipping shack)
 * (probably just bags containing signal/semaphore flags)
 * ["telephone jack-box"; on a ship]
 * [in "The Kohler coughed, backfired, and began to chug like an old Ford"; located on a navy ship] (engine (genericized or brand?))
 * [referring to a ship without sails]
 * [US navy; in "The OTC ordered the Caine to drop out"]
 * [nautical]
 * [in "The engine-room pointer answered"]
 * (in a navy building)
 * [intransitive verb; navy: referring to the deployment of a paravane]
 * [in "...stay fixed in the wheelhouse, where he could hear the TBS and watch the helmsman]
 * [navy; "Title B inventory", "Title B gear"] (some sort of category of equipment; includes things like snatch blocks)
 * [in "Jorgensen yanked the tin wind scoop out of the opening [of the starboard scuttle]"]
 * [in "Jorgensen yanked the tin wind scoop out of the opening [of the starboard scuttle]"]


 * (short-term and often periodic introduction of species to control pests)
 * (pesticide that inhibits ability of a neuron to transmit an action potential)
 * (importation biological control)
 * (biological control involving the conservation and/or enhancement of natural enemies of pests)
 * (manipulation of environmental factors to reduce pest development, survival, and reproduction)
 * (cultural control)
 * (biological control involving the introduction of new species to control pests, with the intent of their becoming established species)
 * [possibly just SOP] (technique of pest control using mass-produced pheromones to disrupt reproductive activities of insects)
 * (sterile insect technique)
 * (pest control technique in which many individuals of a species are raised and sterilized, and then released, diluting the population)
 * (pesticide that causes rapid nerve firing, often by targeting acetylcholine)


 * , [Husserlian phenomenology]
 * [natural philosophy (Calcidius)]
 * [or perhaps just ]
 * [phenomenology]
 * [adj.] (of or relating to emanationism)
 * [either a technical philosophical term or a consistent error; see perhaps "eminationist" above]
 * [possibly an alt form of "epichirema"] ([Aristotle's definition:] dialectical inference)
 * (a fallacy in which one states as cause what is not the cause)
 * [logic; of a syllogism, conclusion, proposition]
 * [or perhaps just ]
 * [in Aristotle] (apparently a synonym of efficient cause)
 * [logic; adj (said of a premise)] (expressing necessity)
 * [in Aristotle; contrasted with dialectic and sophistic] (art of examination)
 * [logic; of a syllogism, conclusion, proposition]
 * [logic] (by proving the impossibility of; defined in the Prior Analytics as "proving something impossible by means of a hypothesis conceded at the beginning")
 * ([Aristotle's definition:] demonstrative inference; syllogism)
 * [in Epictetus] (prejudice? pre-existing assumptions?)
 * [phenomenology] (presentiation)
 * [Husserlian phenomenology]
 * [noun; used in Aristotle's Organon] (prior thing)
 * [in Plato used in conjunction with "quality", in Aristotle used in conjunction with "quantum"]
 * , signate matter [Aquinas's definition]
 * [as in divine simplicity]
 * [in Aristotle] (art of sophistry)
 * [Advaita Vedanta] (mental process of devaluing one perceptual object and replacing it with another, when the first has been contradicted)
 * [various senses: Modern/Cartesian, Aristotelian...]
 * [cosmology] (planetary ruler?)
 * [Advaita Vedanta] (mental process of devaluing one perceptual object and replacing it with another, when the first has been contradicted)
 * [various senses: Modern/Cartesian, Aristotelian...]
 * [cosmology] (planetary ruler?)


 * [in magnetism]
 * (circulation of chemical resources in the environment (e.g. the carbon cycle))
 * (circulation of chemical resources in the environment (e.g. the carbon cycle))

By Word Type

 * (including a meaning other than "before")
 * [alt. spelling of ]
 * [alt. spelling of ]
 * [archaic spelling of ]
 * [alt. form/mispelling of ]
 * [alt/mispelling of ?]
 * [alt-spelling of ]
 * ["hark ye" as one word; probably not a typo]


 * (field? (specifically referring to a battle field))
 * [transitive; in "Out of reverence to Cato, he for a while connived her impurity and immodesty, but at length dismissed her" (in Life of Lucullus, Plutarch, Dryden translation)] (to pretend to be ignorant of in order to escape blame)
 * [more literal sense] (coming together (e.g. of elements))
 * [intransitive? "deprecate for"]
 * (more literal/physical sense: stretched apart?)
 * [in Aristotle] (stones that cannot be melted)
 * (sexual frenzy, agitation/aggression due to being in heat)
 * [verb]
 * [in Life of Cimon, Plutarch, Dryden translation] (apparently an unwillingness/inability to suffer)
 * [in "his intellects" (Life of Lucullus, Plutarch, Dryden translation)] (intellectual faculties; intellect)
 * [in "that which ministered chiefly to the accusation against him", in Plutarch's Life of Cimon] (aggravate?)
 * / (something along the lines of "whole-heartedly")
 * [in Dryden's translation of Plutarch; e.g. "Any speeches, also, that he was present at, he would go over again with himself, and reduce into periods"] (sections? or perhaps "sentences", which is already in the entry)
 * [noun] (apparently synonymous with railer)
 * [with a verb in the infinitive; as in, e.g. "requires to drink"] (to need; same as sense 3, but with a verb)
 * (sure, certain)
 * [in The Way of All Flesh, by Samuel Butler, ch. 11 ("Theobald posed as the most ardent lover imaginable, but, to use the vulgarism for the moment in fashion, it was all “side.”"); archaic slang]
 * [in Aristotle; apparently an adjective; in "the smaller [bee] siren, of a dun colour, the larger siren, black and speckled"]
 * [used in 1924 translation of Aristophanes]
 * [in Aristotle's Meteorology] (made of, or like, spirit (air)]


 * [in the context of animal husbandry]
 * [musical direction]
 * [mentioned alongside and contrasted with typhoons and presters] (weather phenomenon)
 * , [in Plato]
 * [in Aristotle] ("sea-balls" or "seafoam"; apparently resembles the nest of the kingfisher)
 * [from Greek] (patient endurance)
 * [in a South African context] (servant of some sort)
 * (s.o. without equal)
 * [in a South African context] (servant of some sort)
 * (s.o. without equal)
 * (s.o. without equal)


 * [ecclesial legal context]
 * [ecclesial legal context]
 * [canon law] (without the presence of (the accused)?)
 * [italicized; in "[if A is to B what C is to D] it follows alternando that [A is to C what B is to D]"
 * [in Aristotle, discussing causes]
 * (used in discussing ratios in Euclid's geometry)
 * [in footnotes (like other Latin terms like ibid., loc. cit., etc.]
 * [was italicized]
 * [was italicized]


 * [figurative; in "cadenza of obscenity]
 * [figurative use by Ulysses in the Odessey in reference to himself]
 * [figurative, of an ancient military helmet]
 * [figurative; in "elephantine gallantry"]
 * [figurative]
 * [of water] (to roughen the surface of; figurative version of def 1)
 * [in "of his own head"] (initiative)
 * [figurative, non-heraldic sense]
 * [less literal sense; purveyors of immorality, bad ideas, etc.]
 * (leading figure; outstanding representative)
 * [transitive verb; of trees being strewn by a hurricane] (possibly a variant of "strew")
 * [in "sulphurous cursing ensued"]


 * [in Aristotle] (having sheathed wings; mostly overlaps with existing sense)
 * [non legal sense]
 * [more literal sense; in Aristotle: "water, snow, and hail [...] are concretions in the same way as thunder and lightning are discretions"]
 * [more literal/physical, non-linguistic context]

The following were all found in a navy/nautical context, so some may not actually be nonce words:
 * [possibly just a nonce/nonsense word]
 * [possibly just a nonce/nonsense word]
 * [probable nonce word] (thingy; thingamajigger)
 * [possibly just a nonce/nonsense word]
 * [transitive; possible nonce word]
 * [nonce/nonsense word]
 * [in "starboard rath"; possible nonsense word]
 * [possibly just a nonce/nonsense word]
 * [possibly just a nonce/nonsense word]
 * [possibly just a nonce word]


 * [US navy slang] (to sleep)
 * [verb; in "he would have funked it badly"] (possible typo for "flunk", but that doesn't seem to fit in the broader context)
 * [WWII era] (referring to (presumably sexual) fantasies; possibly has some relation to view of Mohammedans being polygamous)
 * [US, slang, mid-20th century] (a type of magazine; examples given are Esquire and the Ladies' Home Journal)

Abbreviations

 * [in Hippocratic Corpus; in "Let there be two parts of the old grease to the fresh, and of the other things, q.s."]
 * [used at the end of letters, immediately preceding the name of the writer; seen in formal correspondence between Church prelates] (possibly "signed")

Adjectives

 * [as in "braided trousers"; noun form "braid" also seems to exist]
 * [possibly not an adjective; of a delirium, in Hippocratic Corpus]
 * [in "gray flash-burn paint"]
 * [of air]
 * [in "twit-hroned"]
 * [in distinction to the current sense] (significant, major)
 * [of pottery] (having lugs (i.e., handles))
 * (adjectival form of ]
 * [see ]
 * [possibly archaic; in "so likewise were that politician extremely out, who, in the choice of a chief magistrate, should inquire, not what the man is, but how descended] (out of order, out of line, not in accordance with good reason)
 * [describing prudence; contrasted with "domestic"] (kingly, monarchical)
 * [in "serried cutting cable"]
 * [describing the colour of flesh for medical purposes]
 * [possibly a verb] (see )
 * [superlative, archaic] (most valient)
 * [describing prudence; contrasted with "domestic"] (kingly, monarchical)
 * [in "serried cutting cable"]
 * [describing the colour of flesh for medical purposes]
 * [possibly a verb] (see )
 * [superlative, archaic] (most valient)
 * [possibly a verb] (see )
 * [superlative, archaic] (most valient)

Interjections

 * [exclamation]
 * (as a more negative exclamation; something like "yikes" or "yeesh")
 * [exclamation]

Nouns

 * [referring to railway workers building Canadian railways] (labourer who carried their blanket-bed on their back when travelling between jobs)
 * (see boon)
 * [in Aristotle; in "If the elephant swallow earth-mould it suffers from relaxation; but if it go on taking it steadily, it will experience no harm."]
 * [in Lucretius; possibly "fire-spit" (split across two lines)]
 * [or maybe : split across line break; in Plutarch's life of Pompey, alongside "herdsmen"]
 * (poor person)
 * [probably archaic]
 * [in "whether in saw-offs at election time or at the bargaining table ]
 * (farming technique involving uprooting weeds early but leaving them on fallow to prevent wind erosion; also called 'stubble mulch')
 * (poor person)
 * [probably archaic]
 * [in "whether in saw-offs at election time or at the bargaining table ]
 * (farming technique involving uprooting weeds early but leaving them on fallow to prevent wind erosion; also called 'stubble mulch')
 * [in "whether in saw-offs at election time or at the bargaining table ]
 * (farming technique involving uprooting weeds early but leaving them on fallow to prevent wind erosion; also called 'stubble mulch')
 * (farming technique involving uprooting weeds early but leaving them on fallow to prevent wind erosion; also called 'stubble mulch')
 * (farming technique involving uprooting weeds early but leaving them on fallow to prevent wind erosion; also called 'stubble mulch')
 * (farming technique involving uprooting weeds early but leaving them on fallow to prevent wind erosion; also called 'stubble mulch')
 * (farming technique involving uprooting weeds early but leaving them on fallow to prevent wind erosion; also called 'stubble mulch')
 * (farming technique involving uprooting weeds early but leaving them on fallow to prevent wind erosion; also called 'stubble mulch')


 * [in Hippocratic Corpus] (plural of athlete?)
 * [in Lucretius; possibly a substantive adjective; in "the black [woman] is a brune", speaking of the defects of various sorts of women]
 * [in Aristotle; possibly just a bad translation] (passive movement of an inanimate object)
 * [pl.?; in Hippocratic Corpus] (type of food; possibly just cereal)
 * [alt. pl. of ]
 * [in Plato]
 * [in an awestruck "what kind of drag do you have?" to an ensign, who gets a special invitation from an admiral]
 * [of fire; in "flame is the ebullition of a dry exhalation" in Aristotle's Meteorology]
 * (possibly synonymous with (and definitely related))
 * (type/genre of musical composition in Renaissance)
 * (the actual land infrastructure is bult on, as opposed to superstructure (see below))
 * (invisibility (because of small size))
 * (normal, non-philosophical sense)
 * (a certain tribe of people)
 * (instinct-driven cleaning, organizing, and protective behaviour exhibited in the third trimester of pregnancy)
 * [apparently an epithet of Venus; in Lucretius]
 * [in "upon some displeasure and pet he had taken upon a childish and frivolous occasion, [he] threw himself headlong from the top of the house"]
 * ["in a pother"] (in a state of disturbance, confusion; extension of current sense)
 * [geographical abbreviation] (promontory?)
 * [mentioned as a group of people alongside indigenous and river peoples in the Amazon]
 * [seen in plural form]
 * (worn out old cow)
 * [in reference to a male SO; heard in "Got Your Back", by T.I.)
 * (state/quality of being spousal)
 * [in "the cutoff tangent on Roi Island is 045"]
 * [in "The Wellerman"] (cutting strips of whale blubber to render into oil)
 * (someone who passes on a tradition?)
 * [in Epictetus: "Do not propose to me such a tropic"; possible misprint]
 * [as in "create value" in business/economics]
 * (worn out old cow)
 * [in reference to a male SO; heard in "Got Your Back", by T.I.)
 * (state/quality of being spousal)
 * [in "the cutoff tangent on Roi Island is 045"]
 * [in "The Wellerman"] (cutting strips of whale blubber to render into oil)
 * (someone who passes on a tradition?)
 * [in Epictetus: "Do not propose to me such a tropic"; possible misprint]
 * [as in "create value" in business/economics]
 * [in Epictetus: "Do not propose to me such a tropic"; possible misprint]
 * [as in "create value" in business/economics]
 * [as in "create value" in business/economics]
 * [as in "create value" in business/economics]

Phrases

 * [in "These officers were required to hold to bail the Prytanes, the Strategi, and the Hipparchi of the preceding year until their accounts had been audited"]

Prepositions

 * [see etym 1 of ]
 * [possibly SOP/could be missing a sense of "list(s)"]
 * [locative/literal sense] (opposite?)

Symbols

 * (comparing pairs of parallels/analogous concepts: (A:B::B:C) = A is to B as B is to C)

Verbs

 * [in Plutarch's "Life of Dion": "the son of Dionysius, in despair of holding out longer for his father, capitulated, and articled with Dion to deliver up the castle with all the garrison soldiers and ammunition"] (either something like "negotiate," or falls under sense 3)
 * [intransitive, in "decocting in the sun"] (something akin to etymological sense of "burn")
 * (out of) [intransitive]
 * [reflexive, with "to"] (possibly a variant of "ensconce")
 * [reflexive, in Plutarch's "Life of Caesar": "it had been agreed that they should each [...] make a thrust at him, and flesh themselves with his blood"]
 * (to be sure; to have certainty; to think that something is or will be certainly the case)
 * [verb; in "what causally putiates the belief or causally sustains it"]
 * (to search all over)
 * [verb; in "their [foggara's] access shafts [were] regularly steined and capped with stone slabs"]
 * [in Rhoades' Aeneid]
 * (past participle of vent)


 * ([transitive use of] to go diligently about in order to get (helpers or participants))
 * (inculcate through constant shouting)
 * (to lamb)


 * [in "coped and crowned"; presumably related to the clerical garb sense of "cope"]
 * (land patent sense)
 * (land patent sense)

Other

 * (something along the lines of companion, friend)
 * [intransitive; with "for"]
 * (branch of biology dealing with the activity of living organisms)
 * (type of plant)
 * (male counterpart of a chanteuse)
 * (cash; change)
 * (advisor/companion to a Roman emperor; a companion star; a blood vessel accompanying another larger one)
 * [music notation; possibly translingual or simply SOP Italian] (sorrowfully)
 * (chamber-fellow)
 * (half moon)
 * (left-handed but capable of writing with the right hand)
 * (copier, mimeograph)
 * (former $10 bill in Louisiana)
 * [Scotland; possibly Scots] (schoolmaster)
 * (code of conduct for duelling)
 * [adj.; of an apartment] (having rooms on two connected floors)
 * [more general usage]
 * [of information] (false; unreliable)
 * (specifically: a fixer in the photography sense)
 * (direction to play music loudly, then softly)
 * (a plant/flower that turns towards the sun; a heliotrope)
 * away (explain away)
 * [figurative] (attraction, movement)
 * (type of plant)
 * (specifically, hermit or recluse who is out of sync with the physical/spiritual world in which they live)
 * (Roman Catholic prayer from the breviary used for a person about to undertake a journey)
 * [British slang] (drink; alcoholic beverage)
 * [adj] (describing the change in employment of a lateral (noun sense 4))
 * (tending to become liquid)
 * (programming language used to teach children how to use computers)
 * (a word game)
 * (distinction between US (inc. justice of the peace, civil officer, police judge) and UK (inc. members of executive government, monarch))
 * (type of plant)
 * (high-speed railway)
 * (moppet, in the sense of rag doll)
 * (self-governing town within the Roman Empire (as opposed to just any municipality))
 * (illigitimate daughter of a clergyman) [used to throw off suspicion of having broken the vow of celibacy)
 * (a neologism)
 * [see "niece" above]
 * [of ancient Mexican calenders] (pertaining to both day and night; based on a sequence of both night and day)
 * (bothersome)
 * (cheaply sensational romance)
 * (condition of being a beginner (in any field))
 * (one who attaches significance to numbers and numerology)
 * (initialism of: "officer of the day", "Old Dutch", "olive drab", or "overdrawn")
 * (ability to give birth)
 * [archaic or obsolete] (pacify (a creditor by satisfying a debt))
 * (someone constantly afraid of sinning)
 * (fabric that resists wrinkles)
 * (dean in a Jesuit college)
 * [generic; countable], (rental car)
 * (public attention; self-advertisement; knack for getting publicity) [from French]
 * (alternate case form of Sybil)
 * (type of plant)
 * [generic; countable], (rental car)
 * (public attention; self-advertisement; knack for getting publicity) [from French]
 * (alternate case form of Sybil)
 * (type of plant)


 * (on a horse)
 * (in rock climbing; see, def. 15)
 * (on a horse)
 * (in rock climbing; see, def. 15)
 * (in rock climbing; see, def. 15)
 * (in rock climbing; see, def. 15)
 * (in rock climbing; see, def. 15)
 * (in rock climbing; see, def. 15)
 * (in rock climbing; see, def. 15)
 * (in rock climbing; see, def. 15)
 * (in rock climbing; see, def. 15)
 * (in rock climbing; see, def. 15)
 * (in rock climbing; see, def. 15)

Non-English

 * [noun]
 * (summer; propitious time)
 * (cheap/false charity)
 * [noun]
 * [adj]
 * [m.] (book of gospels)
 * [anglicism, Québec]
 * (SOP?)
 * [figurative] (multifaceted)
 * se de
 * (Thracian)
 * [Quebec, probably slang; spoken of as a neologism in 1870s] (a toxic person? someone badly behaved?)
 * [noun]
 * (shock troop?)
 * (SOP?)
 * [figurative] (multifaceted)
 * se de
 * (Thracian)
 * [Quebec, probably slang; spoken of as a neologism in 1870s] (a toxic person? someone badly behaved?)
 * [noun]
 * (shock troop?)
 * (Thracian)
 * [Quebec, probably slang; spoken of as a neologism in 1870s] (a toxic person? someone badly behaved?)
 * [noun]
 * (shock troop?)


 * (marginalization?)
 * [interjection] (farewell)
 * (to stake, impale)
 * [onomatopaeia] (represents the twittering of a bird (specifically a swallow))
 * [onomatopaeia] (quack (duck sound)?)
 * (kettle?)
 * (consolation? (see )
 * (abbreviation of "Vers")
 * [interjection?]
 * (kettle?)
 * (consolation? (see )
 * (abbreviation of "Vers")
 * [interjection?]
 * [interjection?]


 * (perceive, discern)


 * [likely Piedmontese (region of Asti); in "a brasa aduerte"]
 * (self-laundering (crime))
 * [likely Piedmontese (region of Asti); in "a brasa aduerte"]
 * , [in a legal document] (maybe referring to chapters)


 * [seen in forms "aptationes", "aptationibus"; Ecclesiastical context] (adaptation?)
 * [Ecclesiastical Latin] (parish)
 * [Ecclesiastical Latin; of a church] (parochial/parish)
 * [as "pérvigil"; Ecclesiastical Latin; related to ]
 * [Vulgate Latin] (see Italian entry)
 * [possibly New or Medieval Latin]
 * [verb form (seen as "sítiit")]
 * (then)
 * (name of a saint)
 * [in "progenies uitiosior" in an English text]
 * [Ecclesiastical Latin]


 * [f. sing.] (gossip?)
 * (honorific for women)
 * (obsolete spelling of igreja)
 * (religious title (see Spanish))
 * [noun]
 * [in reference to the story of Ulysses] (siren)
 * [noun]
 * [in reference to the story of Ulysses] (siren)


 * (something that nature suffers)
 * [modifying a noun]
 * (more literal meaning along the lines of "do something twice" or "repeat a duty")
 * [in "escogí la número 124 que por ser bisiesto correspondería idealmente al día de hoy"]
 * (correspondence? harmony?)
 * [adj.; "un encarecido llamamiento"]
 * [of a religious order] (something like "take care of in a hospital" or "admit into one's hospital")
 * (something more figurative, along the lines of "cause (someone) confusion", such as by giving conflicting information)
 * (literally "scimitar-bearer"; maybe "executioner")
 * ["el recordado [Nombre]"] ((the) late?)
 * [3rd per. pl., present (not sure what the infinitive would be): "algunos católicos de buena posición retaceen su ayuda económica a la Iglesia"] (withdraw)
 * (missing figurative senses)
 * , ["Desde que trascendió que estaba preparando la encíclica..."; "Royal le preguntó si era cierto el trascendido de que estaba preparando la encíclica"]
 * ["el recordado [Nombre]"] ((the) late?)
 * [3rd per. pl., present (not sure what the infinitive would be): "algunos católicos de buena posición retaceen su ayuda económica a la Iglesia"] (withdraw)
 * (missing figurative senses)
 * , ["Desde que trascendió que estaba preparando la encíclica..."; "Royal le preguntó si era cierto el trascendido de que estaba preparando la encíclica"]

Entries with Definitions to be Improved

 * (noun: sense 1 does not distinguish long written documents from brief verbal accounts)
 * (should not be considered an alternative form of, which should in fact be labelled an alternative form of voluntaryism in the relevant sense)
 * (should not be considered an alternative form of, which should in fact be labelled an alternative form of voluntaryism in the relevant sense)