|
VESTIGES |
Traces |
|
TRAYS |
Traces. |
|
REMNANTS |
Surviving traces |
|
REACTS |
Traces (anag) |
|
|
TINGES |
Small traces |
|
BLOODSTAINS |
Traces of gore |
|
OBLITERATE |
Remove all traces |
|
MARKS OUT |
Traces boundaries when Viduka’s dismissed |
|
|
CATERS |
Supplies food with nutty traces |
|
ANCESTOR |
No traces, sadly, of distant relative |
|
FORECAST |
Traces of adjustment to forward estimate |
|
TRACER |
One who, or that which, traces. |
|
ICHNOSCOPY |
The search for the traces of anything. |
|
GENEALOGIST |
One who traces genealogies or the descent of persons
or families. |
|
PINITE |
Any fossil wood which exhibits traces of having belonged to
the Pine family. |
|
SWINGTREE |
The bar of a carriage to which the traces are fastened;
the whiffletree. |
|
SINGLETREE |
The pivoted or swinging bar to which the traces of a
harnessed horse are fixed; a whiffletree. |
|
BRICOLE |
A kind of traces with hooks and rings, with which men drag
and maneuver guns where horses can not be used. |
|
CAIRN |
A pile of stones heaped up as a landmark, or to arrest
attention, as in surveying, or in leaving traces of an exploring party,
etc. |
|
TRACK |
To follow the tracks or traces of; to pursue by following
the marks of the feet; to trace; to trail; as, to track a deer in the
snow. |
|
TRACING |
The act of one who traces; especially, the act of copying
by marking on thin paper, or other transparent substance, the lines of
a pattern placed beneath; also, the copy thus producted. |
|
WHIPPLETREE |
The pivoted or swinging bar to which the traces, or
tugs, of a harness are fastened, and by which a carriage, a plow, or
other implement or veh... |
|
HAME |
One of the two curved pieces of wood or metal, in the harness
of a draught horse, to which the traces are fastened. They are fitted
upon the co... |
|
INDICATOR |
...ring. A lever imparts
motion to a pencil which traces the diagram on a card wrapped around a
vertical drum which is turned back and forth by a s... |