|
BALANCE |
Remainder |
|
EXCESS |
Remainder |
|
RESIDUAL |
Remainder |
|
REST |
Remainder |
|
|
RESIDUE |
Remainder |
|
RELIC |
Historic remainder |
|
ODDMENT |
Curious remainder |
|
REMAINDER-MEN |
Of Remainder-man |
|
|
LAVE |
The remainder; others. |
|
RESTINPEACE |
Epitaph for remainder in end of war |
|
CLEAN |
Without limitation or remainder; quite; perfectly; wholly;
entirely. |
|
REMAIN |
That which is left; relic; remainder; -- chiefly in the
plural. |
|
MULTIPLE |
A quantity containing another quantity a number of times
without a remainder. |
|
BIPARTIENT |
A number that divides another into two equal parts
without a remainder. |
|
REMAINDER-MAN |
One who has an estate after a particular estate is
determined. See Remainder, n., 3. |
|
SQUARE |
To make even, so as leave no remainder of difference; to
balance; as, to square accounts. |
|
SURRENDER |
The yielding of a particular estate to him who has an
immediate estate in remainder or reversion. |
|
PARTICULAR |
Containing a part only; limited; as, a particular
estate, or one precedent to an estate in remainder. |
|
UNEVEN |
Not divisible by two without a remainder; odd; -- said of
numbers; as, 3, 7, and 11 are uneven numbers. |
|
EVEN |
Not odd; capable of division by two without a remainder; --
said of numbers; as, 4 and 10 are even numbers. |
|
ARTIAD |
Even; not odd; -- said of elementary substances and of
radicals the valence of which is divisible by two without a remainder. |
|
DIFFERENCE |
The quantity by which one quantity differs from
another, or the remainder left after subtracting the one from the
other. |
|
SUBTRACT |
To withdraw, or take away, as a part from the whole;
to deduct; as, subtract 5 from 9, and the remainder is 4. |
|
PERISSAD |
Odd; not even; -- said of elementary substances and of
radicals whose valence is not divisible by two without a remainder.
Contrasted with artiad. |
|
QUADRILLE |
A game played by four persons with forty cards, being
the remainder of an ordinary pack after the tens, nines, and eights are
discarded. |