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Definition of alway
Thanks for using this online dictionary, we have been helping millions of people improve their use of the english language with its free online services. English definition of alway is as below...
Alway
(adv.)
Always.
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Fluorine
::
Fluorine
(n.) A
non-metallic,
gaseous
element,
strongly
acid or
negative,
or
associated
with
chlorine,
bromine,
and
iodine,
in the
halogen
group of which it is the first
member.
It
always
occurs
combined,
is very
active
chemically,
and
possesses
such an
avidity
for most
elements,
and
silicon
especially,
that it can
neither
be
prepared
nor kept in glass
vessels.
If set free it
immediately
attacks
the
containing
material,
so that it was not
isolated
until 1886. It is a
pungent,
corrosive,
colorles
Forever
::
Forever
(adv.)
At all
times;
always.
Phosphorus
::
Phosphorus
(n.) A
poisonous
nonmetallic
element
of the
nitrogen
group,
obtained
as a
white,
or
yellowish,
translucent
waxy
substance,
having
a
characteristic
disagreeable
smell.
It is very
active
chemically,
must be
preserved
under
water,
and
unites
with
oxygen
even at
ordinary
temperatures,
giving
a faint glow, --
whence
its name. It
always
occurs
compined,
usually
in
phosphates,
as in the
mineral
apatite,
in
bones,
etc. It is used in the
composition
on the tips of
friction
matches,
and for man
Hexameter
::
Hexameter
(n.) A verse of six feet, the first four of which may be
either
dactyls
or
spondees,
the fifth must
regularly
be a
dactyl,
and the sixth
always
a
spondee.
In this
species
of verse are
composed
the Iliad of Homer and the
Aeneid
of
Virgil.
In
English
hexameters
accent
takes the place of
quantity..
Silicon
::
Silicon
(n.) A
nonmetalic
element
analogous
to
carbon.
It
always
occurs
combined
in
nature,
and is
artificially
obtained
in the free
state,
usually
as a dark brown
amorphous
powder,
or as a dark
crystalline
substance
with a
meetallic
luster.
Its oxide is
silica,
or
common
quartz,
and in this form, or as
silicates,
it is, next to
oxygen,
the most
abundant
element
of the
earth's
crust.
Silicon
is
characteristically
the
element
of the
mineral
kingdom,
as
carbon
is of the
organic
world.
Symbol
Si. A
Uniform
::
Uniform
(a.)
Having
always
the same form,
manner,
or
degree;
not
varying
or
variable;
unchanging;
consistent;
equable;
homogenous;
as, the dress of the
Asiatics
has been
uniform
from early ages; the
temperature
is
uniform;
a
stratum
of
uniform
clay..
Always
::
Always
(adv.)
Constancy
during
a
certain
period,
or
regularly
at
stated
intervals;
invariably;
uniformly;
--
opposed
to
sometimes
or
occasionally..
Warrantable
::
Warrantable
(a.)
Authorized
by
commission,
precept,
or
right;
justifiable;
defensible;
as, the
seizure
of a thief is
always
warrantable
by law and
justice;
falsehood
is never
warrantable..
Univocal
::
Univocal
(n.)
Having
always
the same drift or
tenor;
uniform;
certain;
regular.
Tower
::
Tower (n.) A mass of
building
standing
alone and
insulated,
usually
higher
than its
diameter,
but when of great size not
always
of that
proportion..
Bullionist
::
Bullionist
(n.) An
advocate
for a
metallic
currency,
or a paper
currency
always
convertible
into
gold..
Empire
::
Empire
(n.) The
dominion
of an
emperor;
the
territory
or
countries
under the
jurisdiction
and
dominion
of an
emperor
(rarely
of a
king),
usually
of
greater
extent
than a
kingdom,
always
comprising
a
variety
in the
nationality
of, or the forms of
administration
in,
constituent
and
subordinate
portions;
as, the
Austrian
empire..
Tenesmus
::
Tenesmus
(n.) An
urgent
and
distressing
sensation,
as if a
discharge
from the
intestines
must take
place,
although
none can be
effected;
--
always
referred
to the lower
extremity
of the
rectum..
C
::
C () C is the third
letter
of the
English
alphabet.
It is from the Latin
letter
C, which in old Latin
represented
the
sounds
of k, and g (in go); its
original
value being the
latter.
In
Anglo-Saxon
words,
or Old
English
before
the
Norman
Conquest,
it
always
has the sound of k. The Latin C was the same
letter
as the Greek /, /, and came from the Greek
alphabet.
The
Greeks
got it from the
Ph/nicians.
The
English
name of C is from the Latin name ce, and was
derived,
probably,
through
the
French.
Et
Frame
::
Frame (n.)
Particular
state or
disposition,
as of the mind;
humor;
temper;
mood; as, to be
always
in a happy
frame..
Momentum
::
Momentum
(n.) The
quantity
of
motion
in a
moving
body, being
always
proportioned
to the
quantity
of
matter
multiplied
into the
velocity;
impetus..
Thy
::
Thy
(pron.)
Of thee, or
belonging
to thee; the more
common
form of
thine,
possessive
case of thou; -- used
always
attributively,
and
chiefly
in the
solemn
or grave
style,
and in
poetry.
Thine is used in the
predicate;
as, the knife is
thine.
See
Thine..
Cycloid
::
Cycloid
(n.) A curve
generated
by a point in the plane of a
circle
when the
circle
is
rolled
along a
straight
line,
keeping
always
in the same
plane..
Assident
::
Assident
(a.)
Usually
attending
a
disease,
but not
always;
as,
assident
signs,
or
symptoms..
Stenostome
::
Stenosis
(n.) A
narrowing
of the
opening
or
hollow
of any
passage,
tube, or
orifice;
as,
stenosis
of the
pylorus.
It
differs
from
stricture
in being
applied
especially
to
diffused
rather
than
localized
contractions,
and in
always
indicating
an
origin
organic
and not
spasmodic..
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