|
INSIDEOUT |
Inverted |
|
UPTURNED |
Inverted |
|
INSIDE OUT |
Inverted (6,3) |
|
HEADSTAND |
Inverted balancing feat |
|
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INVERT |
An inverted arch. |
|
ATROPOUS |
Not inverted; orthotropous. |
|
INVERTEDLY |
In an inverted order. |
|
HEMITROPOUS |
Turned half round; half inverted. |
|
|
INVERTIBLE |
Capable of being inverted or turned. |
|
HYPERBATIC |
Of or pertaining to an hyperbaton; transposed;
inverted. |
|
DEBASED |
Turned upside down from its proper position; inverted;
reversed. |
|
HEMITROPE |
Half turned round; half inverted; (Crystallog.) having a
twinned structure. |
|
PREPOSTEROUS |
Having that first which ought to be last; inverted in
order. |
|
WAGON-ROOFED |
Having a roof, or top, shaped like an inverted U;
wagon-headed. |
|
BASIHYAL |
Noting two small bones, forming the body of the inverted
hyoid arch. |
|
INVERSE |
Opposite in order, relation, or effect; reversed;
inverted; reciprocal; -- opposed to direct. |
|
INVERSION |
A change by inverted order; a reversed position or
arrangement of things; transposition. |
|
REVERTENT |
A remedy which restores the natural order of the
inverted irritative motions in the animal system. |
|
AMPHITROPOUS |
Having the ovule inverted, but with the attachment
near the middle of one side; half anatropous. |
|
ANTIPERISTALTIC |
Opposed to, or checking motion; acting upward; --
applied to an inverted action of the intestinal tube. |
|
ERECT |
Upright, or having a vertical position; not inverted; not
leaning or bent; not prone; as, to stand erect. |
|
ERECTOR |
An attachment to a microscope, telescope, or other optical
instrument, for making the image erect instead of inverted. |
|
TOPSY-TURVY |
In an inverted posture; with the top or head
downward; upside down; as, to turn a carriage topsy-turvy. |
|
MORTAR |
A strong vessel, commonly in form of an inverted bell, in
which substances are pounded or rubbed with a pestle. |
|
ANTITROPOUS |
At the extremity most remote from the hilum, as the
embryo, or inverted with respect to the seed, as the radicle. |