|
NEARS |
Approaches |
|
CREEPS UP |
Approaches stealthily |
|
CREEPSUP |
Approaches stealthily |
|
ACCOSTS |
Approaches boldly |
|
|
DRAWSNEAR |
Approaches radar? News-breaking! |
|
APPROACHER |
One who approaches. |
|
APPROACH |
To take approaches to. |
|
DRIVEWAYS |
Navigate approaches to private roads |
|
|
PRISMOID |
A body that approaches to the form of a prism. |
|
HELP |
To prevent; to hinder; as, the evil approaches, and who
can help it? |
|
WARD |
To fend off; to repel; to turn aside, as anything mischievous
that approaches; -- usually followed by off. |
|
GROIN |
The projecting solid angle formed by the meeting of two
vaults, growing more obtuse as it approaches the summit. |
|
TRENCH |
An excavation made during a siege, for the purpose of
covering the troops as they advance toward the besieged place. The term
includes the parallels and the approaches. |
|
THUG |
One of an association of robbers and murderers in India who
practiced murder by stealthy approaches, and from religious motives.
They have been nearly exterminated by the British government. |
|
CHIMPANZEE |
An african ape (Anthropithecus troglodytes or
Troglodytes niger) which approaches more nearly to man, in most
respects, than any other ape. Whe... |
|
LIMIT |
A determinate quantity, to which a variable one
continually approaches, and may differ from it by less than any given
difference, but to which,... |
|
ASYMPTOTE |
A line which approaches nearer to some curve than
assignable distance, but, though infinitely extended, would never meet
it. Asymptotes may be ... |
|
STOP |
...ecution of a decree, the
progress of vice, the approaches of old age or infirmity. ... |
|
WOOL |
...which grows
on sheep and some other animals, and which in fineness sometimes
approaches to fur; -- chiefly applied to the fleecy coat of the she... |
|
IN |
... or in part. In its
different applications, it approaches some of the meanings of, and
sometimes is interchangeable with, within, into, on, at, ... |