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SENT |
Transmitted |
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RELAYED |
Transmitted |
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FAX |
Transmitted copy |
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MALARIA |
Fever transmitted by mosquitoes |
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DISPATCH |
A message transmitted by telegraph. |
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TRALATITIOUS |
Passed along; handed down; transmitted. |
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TRANSMITTIBLE |
Capable of being transmitted; transmissible. |
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INTRANSMISSIBLE |
Not capable of being transmitted. |
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TRANSMISSIVE |
Capable of being transmitted; derived, or handed
down, from one to another. |
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INHERITABLE |
Capable of being transmitted from parent to child; as,
inheritable qualities or infirmities. |
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TRADITIVE |
Transmitted or transmissible from father to son, or from
age, by oral communication; traditional. |
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TRANSMISSIBLE |
Capable of being transmitted from one to another;
capable of being passed through any body or substance. |
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DESCENDIBILITY |
The quality of being descendible; capability of
being transmitted from ancestors; as, the descendibility of an estate. |
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NERVIMOTION |
The movement caused in the sensory organs by external
agents and transmitted to the muscles by the nerves. |
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ASTERISM |
An optical property of some crystals which exhibit a
star-shaped by reflected light, as star sapphire, or by transmitted
light, as some mica. |
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HEREDITARY |
Transmitted, or capable of being transmitted, as a
constitutional quality or condition from a parent to a child; as,
hereditary pride, bravery, disease. |
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LITHOPHANE |
Porcelain impressed with figures which are made
distinct by transmitted light, -- as when hung in a window, or used as
a lamp shade. |
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DICHROISM |
The property of presenting different colors by
transmitted light, when viewed in two different directions, the colors
being unlike in the direction of unlike or unequal axes. |
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ACTION |
The mechanical contrivance by means of which the impulse of
the player's finger is transmitted to the strings of a pianoforte or to
the valve of an organ pipe. |
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TRADITION |
Hence, that which is transmitted orally from father to
son, or from ancestors to posterity; knowledge or belief transmitted
without the aid of ... |
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DIAGOMETER |
A sort of electroscope, invented by Rousseau, in which
the dry pile is employed to measure the amount of electricity
transmitted by different bodies, or to determine their conducting
power. |
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TRADITIONAL |
...tion;
communicated from ancestors to descendants by word only; transmitted
from age to age without writing; as, traditional opinions; traditiona... |
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TELEGRAPH |
...ords or ideas, or
by means of words and signs, transmitted by electrical action. ... |
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EXCITO-MOTORY |
... nervous system concerned in reflex actions, by which impressions are
transmitted to a nerve center and then reflected back so as to produce
mu... |
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MUREXIDE |
...ndid
dichroism, being green by reflected light and garnet-red by transmitted
light. It was formerly used in dyeing calico, and was obtained in a... |