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FATIGUE |
Exhaustion |
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EXHAUSTURE |
Exhaustion. |
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EXHAUSTMENT |
Exhaustion; drain. |
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INEXHAUSTEDLY |
Without exhaustion. |
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EXHAUSTING |
Producing exhaustion; as, exhausting labors. |
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EXANTLATION |
Act of drawing out ; exhaustion. |
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EXINANITION |
An emptying; an enfeebling; exhaustion; humiliation. |
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COLLIQUATIVE |
Causing rapid waste or exhaustion; melting; as,
colliquative sweats. |
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GONENESS |
A state of exhaustion; faintness, especially as resulting
from hunger. |
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LANGUID |
Drooping or flagging from exhaustion; indisposed to
exertion; without animation; weak; weary; heavy; dull. |
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WEARINESS |
The quality or state of being weary or tried; lassitude;
exhaustion of strength; fatigue. |
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ZERO |
Fig.: The lowest point; the point of exhaustion; as, his
patience had nearly reached zero. |
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VIRILITY |
The quality or state of being virile; developed manhood;
manliness; specif., the power of procreation; as, exhaustion. |
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SEEDINESS |
The quality or state of being seedy, shabby, or worn
out; a state of wretchedness or exhaustion. |
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DRAIN |
To draw off by degrees; to cause to flow gradually out or
off; hence, to cause the exhaustion of. |
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LANGUOR |
A state of the body or mind which is caused by exhaustion
of strength and characterized by a languid feeling; feebleness;
lassitude; laxity. |
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LAST |
To endure use, or continue in existence, without
impairment or exhaustion; as, this cloth lasts better than that; the
fuel will last through the winter. |
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DROOP |
To hang bending downward; to sink or hang down, as an
animal, plant, etc., from physical inability or exhaustion, want of
nourishment, or the like. |
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OUT |
Beyond the limit of existence, continuance, or supply; to the
end; completely; hence, in, or into, a condition of extinction,
exhaustion, completion; as, the fuel, or the fire, has burned out. |
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REACTION |
An action induced by vital resistance to some other
action; depression or exhaustion of vital force consequent on
overexertion or overstimulati... |
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SPRENGEL PUMP |
A form of air pump in which exhaustion is produced by
a stream of mercury running down a narrow tube, in the manner of an
aspirator; -- named from the inventor. |
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CROOKES TUBE |
A vacuum tube in which the exhaustion is carried to a
very high degree, with the production of a distinct class of effects;
-- so called from W. Crookes who introduced it. |
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SIGH |
...d
immediately expel it; to make a deep single audible respiration,
especially as the result or involuntary expression of fatigue,
exhaustion,... |
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LICHEN |
...end to spread and produce great and even
fatal exhaustion. ... |
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INANITION |
... fullness, as in the vessels of the body; hence, specifically,
exhaustion from want of food, either from partial or complete
starvation, or fr... |