|
KNEW |
Believed |
|
SEEN |
Believed |
|
ESTEEMED |
Believed |
|
SUSPECTED |
Believed |
|
|
CREDULOUS |
Believed too readily. |
|
UNBELIEVED |
Not believed; disbelieved. |
|
ACCEPTED |
Believed to be true |
|
PRESUMED |
Believed party leader started again |
|
|
REPUTED |
Believed to be the case |
|
BELIEVABLE |
Capable of being believed; credible. |
|
INCREDULOUS |
Incredible; not easy to be believed. |
|
BELIEF |
The thing believed; the object of belief. |
|
INCUBUS |
Demon believed to have sex with sleeping women |
|
THUNDERSTONE |
A thunderbolt, -- formerly believed to be a stone. |
|
ANTIPYRINE |
An artificial alkaloid, believed to be efficient in
abating fever. |
|
COCTION |
The change which the humorists believed morbific matter
undergoes before elimination. |
|
CURRENTLY |
In a current manner; generally; commonly; as, it is
currently believed. |
|
CARMOT |
The matter of which the philosopher's stone was believed to
be composed. |
|
CREDIBLE |
Capable of being credited or believed; worthy of belief;
entitled to confidence; trustworthy. |
|
BOWSSEN |
To drench; to soak; especially, to immerse (in water
believed to have curative properties). |
|
DELUSION |
That which is falsely or delusively believed or
propagated; false belief; error in belief. |
|
DEPURATIVE |
A depurative remedy or agent; or a disease which is
believed to be depurative. |
|
STIGMATIST |
One believed to be supernaturally impressed with the
marks of Christ's wounds. See Stigma, 8. |
|
ANTISPASTIC |
Believed to cause a revulsion of fluids or of humors
from one part to another. |
|
ZYMOSIS |
A fermentation; hence, an analogous process by which an
infectious disease is believed to be developed. |