|
LONER |
Independent one |
|
MULTIFARIOUSNESS |
The fault of improperly uniting in one bill
distinct and independent matters, and thereby confounding them. |
|
MESAM/BOID |
One of a class of independent, isolated cells found in
the mesoderm, while the germ layers are undergoing differentiation. |
|
VOTER |
One who votes; one who has a legal right to vote, or give
his suffrage; an elector; a suffragist; as, an independent voter. |
|
|
INDEPENDENT |
One who believes that an organized Christian church is
complete in itself, competent to self-government, and independent of
all ecclesiastical authority. |
|
GUERRILLA |
One who carries on, or assists in carrying on, irregular
warfare; especially, a member of an independent band engaged in
predatory excursions in war time. |
|
CANTON |
A small territorial district; esp. one of the twenty-two
independent states which form the Swiss federal republic; in France, a
subdivision of an arrondissement. See Arrondissement. |
|
PROGLOTTIS |
One of the free, or nearly free, segments of a
tapeworm. It contains both male and female reproductive organs, and is
capable of a brief independent existence. |
|
|
INDEPENDENCE |
The state or quality of being independent; freedom
from dependence; exemption from reliance on, or control by, others;
self-subsistence or main... |
|
PATRIPASSIAN |
One of a body of believers in the early church who
denied the independent preexistent personality of Christ, and who,
accordingly, held that the Father suffered in the Son; a monarchian. |
|
COUNTRY |
A tract of land; a region; the territory of an
independent nation; (as distinguished from any other region, and with a
personal pronoun) the re... |
|
BROWNIST |
...th
century, who taught that every church is complete and independent in
itself when organized, and consists of members meeting in one place,
... |
|
FOLIATION |
...ture or cleavage, though the latter is usually
independent of any mineral constituent, and transverse to the bedding,
it having been produced by... |
|
FACTORIAL |
...t when
the former are derivable from one and the same function F(x) by
successively imparting a constant increment or decrement h to the
inde... |
|
UN- |
Those which have the value of independent words, inasmuch as
the simple words are either not used at all, or are rarely, or at least
much less ... |