|
LOCAL |
Provincial |
|
REGIONAL |
Provincial, local |
|
PROVINCIALIZE |
To render provincial. |
|
SATRAP |
Ancient Persian provincial governor |
|
|
PROVINCIALLY |
In a provincial manner. |
|
HILLBILLY |
Mountain goat of the provincial type |
|
PROVINCIALIST |
One who lives in a province; a provincial. |
|
SYNODAL |
A constitution made in a provincial or diocesan synod. |
|
|
DEPROVINCIALIZE |
To divest of provincial quality or
characteristics. |
|
PROVINCIAL |
A person belonging to a province; one who is
provincial. |
|
PATOIS |
A dialect peculiar to the illiterate classes; a provincial
form of speech. |
|
PROVINCIALITY |
The quality or state of being provincial;
peculiarity of language characteristic of a province. |
|
COSMOPOLITE |
Having no fixed residence; at home in any place; free
from local attachments or prejudices; not provincial; liberal. |
|
ARCHIMANDRITE |
A superintendent of several monasteries,
corresponding to superior abbot, or father provincial, in the Roman
Catholic church. |
|
HEAVE |
To throw; to cast; -- obsolete, provincial, or
colloquial, except in certain nautical phrases; as, to heave the lead;
to heave the log. |
|
TIFFIN |
A lunch, or slight repast between breakfast and dinner; --
originally, a Provincial English word, but introduced into India, and
brought back to England in a special sense. |
|
PATAVINITY |
The use of local or provincial words, as in the
peculiar style or diction of Livy, the Roman historian; -- so called
from Patavium, now Padua, the place of Livy's nativity. |
|
PROVINCIALISM |
A word, or a manner of speaking, peculiar to a
province or a district remote from the mother country or from the
metropolis; a provincial characteristic; hence, narrowness;
illiberality. |
|
UN- |
Those which are anomalous, provincial, or, for some other
reason, not desirable to be used, and are so indicated; as, unpure for
impure, unsati... |
|
WHINSTONE |
A provincial name given in England to basaltic rocks,
and applied by miners to other kind of dark-colored unstratified rocks
which resist the p... |
|
PRESBYTERY |
...he churches
under its care, and next below the provincial synod in authority. ... |