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REMOVAL |
Extraction |
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EXTREAT |
Extraction. |
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EXTRACT |
Extraction; descent. |
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BREEDING |
Descent; pedigree; extraction. |
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BIRTHLESS |
Of mean extraction. |
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GENTILITY |
Good extraction; dignity of birth. |
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NOBLY |
Of noble extraction; as, nobly born or descended. |
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NEPHROTOMY |
Extraction of stone from the kidney by cutting. |
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EVOLUTION |
The extraction of roots; -- the reverse of involution. |
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BIRTH |
Lineage; extraction; descent; sometimes, high birth; noble
extraction. |
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INGENUOUS |
Of honorable extraction; freeborn; noble; as, ingenuous
blood of birth. |
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DESCENT |
Derivation, as from an ancestor; procedure by generation;
lineage; birth; extraction. |
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NEW |
Not of ancient extraction, or of a family of ancient
descent; not previously kniwn or famous. |
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PART |
To separate by a process of extraction, elimination, or
secretion; as, to part gold from silver. |
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CROTCHET |
An instrument of a hooked form, used in certain cases in
the extraction of a fetus. |
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DELIVERY |
The act of giving birth; parturition; the expulsion or
extraction of a fetus and its membranes. |
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DAMSEL |
A young person, either male or female, of noble or gentle
extraction; as, Damsel Pepin; Damsel Richard, Prince of Wales. |
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CYSTOTOMY |
The act or practice of opening cysts; esp., the
operation of cutting into the bladder, as for the extraction of a
calculus. |
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PARENTAGE |
Descent from parents or ancestors; parents or ancestors
considered with respect to their rank or character; extraction; birth;
as, a man of noble parentage. |
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EXTRACTIVE |
Any one of a large class of substances obtained by
extraction, and consisting largely of nitrogenous hydrocarbons, such as
xanthin, hypoxanthin, and creatin extractives from muscle tissue. |
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CHLORINATION |
The act or process of subjecting anything to the
action of chlorine; especially, a process for the extraction of gold by
exposure of the auriferous material to chlorine gas. |
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WET |
Employing, or done by means of, water or some other
liquid; as, the wet extraction of copper, in distinction from dry
extraction in which dry heat or fusion is employed. |
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PERIOD |
One of several similar sets of figures or terms usually
marked by points or commas placed at regular intervals, as in
numeration, in the extraction of roots, and in circulating decimals. |
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EXTRACTION |
The act of extracting, or drawing out; as, the
extraction of a tooth, of a bone or an arrow from the body, of a stump
from earth, of a passage from a book, of an essence or tincture. |
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CEREBRIN |
A nonphosphorized, nitrogenous substance, obtained from
brain and nerve tissue by extraction with boiling alcohol. It is
uncertain whether it e... |