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RECLINING |
Lying down |
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RECUMBENT |
Lying down |
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PRONE |
Lying down |
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ABJECT |
Cast down; low-lying. |
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CUMBENT |
Lying down; recumbent. |
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CUBATORY |
Lying down; recumbent. |
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DECUMBENT |
Lying down; prostrate; recumbent. |
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DECUBATION |
Act of lying down; decumbence. |
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COUCHANT |
Lying down with head erect; squatting. |
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COUCHANCY |
State of lying down for repose. |
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CUBATION |
The act of lying down; a reclining. |
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DECUMBENCY |
The act or posture of lying down. |
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PROCUMBENT |
Lying down, or on the face; prone. |
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SUPINE |
Sue, having knocked back a shot of whisky, is lying down |
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ACCIDENTPRONE |
More likely than others to get hurt lying down behind pile-up |
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LIE |
To be still or quiet, like one lying down to rest. |
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DECUBITUS |
An attitude assumed in lying down; as, the dorsal
decubitus. |
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PRONENESS |
The state of lying with the face down; -- opposed to
supineness. |
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LODGED |
Lying down; -- used of beasts of the chase, as couchant is
of beasts of prey. |
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ROLL |
To turn over, or from side to side, while lying down; to
wallow; as, a horse rolls. |
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SPRAWL |
To move, when lying down, with awkward extension and
motions of the limbs; to scramble in creeping. |
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COUNTER-COUCHANT |
Lying down, with their heads in opposite
directions; -- said of animals borne in a coat of arms. |
|
CAPELLET |
A swelling, like a wen, on the point of the elbow (or the
heel of the hock) of a horse, caused probably by bruises in lying down. |
|
NETHER |
Situated down or below; lying beneath, or in the lower
part; having a lower position; belonging to the region below; lower;
under; -- opposed to upper. |
|
NAP |
... etc.; an
external covering of down, of short fine hairs or fibers forming part
of the substance of anything, and lying smoothly in one directio... |