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DEVELOPMENT |
Expansion |
|
EXTENSION |
Expansion |
|
MULTIPLICATION |
Expansion |
|
GROWTH |
Expansion |
|
|
ENLARGEMENT |
Expansion |
|
POCKETKNIFE |
Expansion |
|
DILATION |
Expansion |
|
SPREAD |
Expansion of parts. |
|
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NEBRASKA |
1854 expansion of us territory |
|
INEXPANSIBLE |
Incapable of expansion, enlargement, or extension. |
|
DAWN |
First opening or expansion; first appearance; beginning;
rise. |
|
ANTHESIS |
The period or state of full expansion in a flower. |
|
INFLATION |
Undue expansion or increase, from overissue; -- said of
currency. |
|
CHOKE |
To hinder or check, as growth, expansion, progress, etc.;
to stifle. |
|
VAGINA |
The basal expansion of certain leaves, which inwraps the
stem; a sheath. |
|
PYROMETER |
An instrument used for measuring the expansion of solid
bodies by heat. |
|
STYLOPODIUM |
An expansion at the base of the style, as in
umbelliferous plants. |
|
DILATABILITY |
The quality of being dilatable, or admitting
expansion; -- opposed to contractibility. |
|
PITCHER |
A tubular or cuplike appendage or expansion of the leaves
of certain plants. |
|
PYROMETRY |
The art of measuring degrees of heat, or the expansion
of bodies by heat. |
|
EXPAND |
To state in enlarged form; to develop; as, to expand an
equation. See Expansion, 5. |
|
FRONDOSE |
Frond bearing; resembling a frond; having a simple
expansion not separable into stem and leaves. |
|
DILATOMETER |
An instrument for measuring the dilatation or
expansion of a substance, especially of a fluid. |
|
AUGMENTATION |
The act or process of augmenting, or making larger,
by addition, expansion, or dilation; increase. |
|
DIASTOLE |
The rhythmical expansion or dilatation of the heart and
arteries; -- correlative to systole, or contraction. |