|
RARELY |
Seldom |
|
SELDEN |
Seldom. |
|
RARE |
Occurring seldom |
|
SCARCE |
Seldom seen |
|
|
SELD |
Rarely; seldom. |
|
SELDSEEN |
Seldom seen. |
|
UNSELDOM |
Not seldom; frequently. |
|
DIESEL |
Roadie seldom uses fuel |
|
|
MORSEL |
Tremor seldom holds any bite |
|
OFTEN |
Frequently; many times; not seldom. |
|
DOMINGO |
Placido seldom in goggles when inside |
|
INFREQUENT |
Seldom happening or occurring; rare; uncommon; unusual. |
|
TASSEL |
Qantas seldom holds loose threads in a tuft |
|
MODES |
Fashions, for the most part, seldom make a comeback |
|
DIAMOND |
The smallest kind of type in English printing, except that
called brilliant, which is seldom seen. |
|
UNFREQUENTED |
Rarely visited; seldom or never resorted to by human
beings; as, an unfrequented place or forest. |
|
COMMA |
A small interval (the difference between a major and minor
half step), seldom used except by tuners. |
|
MISS |
To omit; to fail to have or to do; to get without; to
dispense with; -- now seldom applied to persons. |
|
SAGAPENUM |
A fetid gum resin obtained from a species of Ferula. It
has been used in hysteria, etc., but is now seldom met with. |
|
REFORM |
To return to a good state; to amend or correct one's own
character or habits; as, a man of settled habits of vice will seldom
reform. |
|
RETALIATE |
To return the like for; to repay or requite by an act
of the same kind; to return evil for (evil). [Now seldom used except in
a bad sense.] |
|
GALLERY |
A frame, like a balcony, projecting from the stern or
quarter of a ship, and hence called stern gallery or quarter gallery,
-- seldom found in vessels built since 1850. |
|
CATCHWORD |
The first word of any page of a book after the first,
inserted at the right hand bottom corner of the preceding page for the
assistance of the reader. It is seldom used in modern printing. |
|
UNCIAL |
...ed
as early as the 1st century b. c., and were seldom used after the 10th
century a. d., being superseded by the cursive style. ... |
|
ARMADILLO |
...liar to
America. The body and head are incased in an armor composed of small
bony plates. The armadillos burrow in the earth, seldom going abroa... |