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WEDGED |
Lodged |
|
STAYED |
Lodged (with) |
|
APPLIED |
Lodged request (for job) |
|
NARROWED |
Tapered arrow lodged in Kelly |
|
|
ROOMED |
Kangaroo medication was partially lodged |
|
OAT |
Bit of breakfast lodged in goatee |
|
LODGE |
A collection of objects lodged together. |
|
LODGMENT |
The act of lodging, or the state of being lodged. |
|
|
LOCULAMENT |
The cell of a pericarp in which the seed is lodged. |
|
TOOTHPICK |
A pointed instument for clearing the teeth of substances
lodged between them. |
|
GRAVEL |
To hurt or lame (a horse) by gravel lodged between the
shoe and foot. |
|
OTOCRANE |
The cavity in the skull in which the parts of the
internal ear are lodged. |
|
LAYSTALL |
A place where milch cows are kept, or cattle on the way
to market are lodged. |
|
MONARCHY |
A state or government in which the supreme power is
lodged in the hands of a monarch. |
|
LODGEABLE |
That may be or can be lodged; as, so many persons are
not lodgeable in this village. |
|
INFIRMARY |
A hospital, or place where the infirm or sick are lodged
and nursed gratuitously, or where out-patients are treated. |
|
DEPOSITARY |
One with whom anything is lodged in the trust; one who
receives a deposit; -- the correlative of depositor. |
|
DEPOSIT |
Money lodged with a party as earnest or security for
the performance of a duty assumed by the person depositing. |
|
PRAECIPE |
A paper containing the particulars of a writ, lodged in
the office out of which the writ is to be issued. |
|
PLUTOCRACY |
A form of government in which the supreme power is
lodged in the hands of the wealthy classes; government by the rich;
also, a controlling or influential class of rich men. |
|
COUNTERSCARF |
The exterior slope or wall of the ditch; --
sometimes, the whole covered way, beyond the ditch, with its parapet
and glacis; as, the enemy have lodged themselves on the counterscarp. |
|
CAVEAT |
A description of some invention, designed to be patented,
lodged in the patent office before the patent right is applied for, and
operating as ... |
|
EMBOLUS |
A plug of some substance lodged in a blood vessel, being
brought thither by the blood current. It consists most frequently of a
clot of fibrin,... |
|
SLING |
... a light stick to the other. The
missile being lodged in a hole in the strap, the ends of the string are
taken in the hand, and the whole whirle... |