- siled
- (siledan, siledoid)gluds
Vepsä–Lätläine Vajehnik. 2009.
Vepsä–Lätläine Vajehnik. 2009.
Tensiled — Ten siled, a. Made tensile. [R.] [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Sida leprosa (Ortega) K. Schum. var. depauperata (A. Gray) I. Clem. — Symbol MALE2 Synonym Symbol SILED Botanical Family Malvaceae … Scientific plant list
Sida leprosa (Ortega) K. Schum. var. depauperata (A. Gray) I. Clem. — Symbol MALE2 Synonym Symbol SILED Botanical Family Malvaceae … Scientific plant list
Sida leprosa (Ortega) K. Schum. var. depauperata (A. Gray) I. Clem. — Symbol MALE2 Synonym Symbol SILED Botanical Family Malvaceae … Scientific plant list
Sida leprosa (Ortega) K. Schum. var. depauperata (A. Gray) I. Clem. — Symbol MALE2 Synonym Symbol SILED Botanical Family Malvaceae … Scientific plant list
ensile — en•sile [[t]ɛnˈsaɪl, ˈɛn saɪl[/t]] v. t. siled, sil•ing agr. to preserve (green fodder) in a silo • Etymology: 1880–85; < F ensiler < Sp ensilar= en I+ silar, v. der. of silo silo en•si la•bil′i•ty, n … From formal English to slang
resile — re•sile [[t]rɪˈzaɪl[/t]] v. i. siled, sil•ing to spring back to the original form or position, as an elastic body; rebound • Etymology: 1520–30; < MF resilir < L resilīre to spring back; see resilient re•sile′ment, n … From formal English to slang
syle — , sile to pour or run ; the pot siles over, the pot boils over. N. He siled a gallon of ale down his throat, he poured a gallon of ale down his throat … A glossary of provincial and local words used in England
sile — I. ˈsī(ə)l noun ( s) Etymology: Middle English, perhaps from Old English sȳl pillar, column; akin to Old High German sūl pillar, Old Norse sūl, sūla, Gothic sauls Scotland : beam, rafter … Useful english dictionary
en|sile — «ehn SYL, EHN syl», transitive verb, siled, sil|ing. 1. to preserve (green fodder) in a silo. 2. to make into ensilage. ╂[< French ensiler < Spanish ensilar < en in (< Latin in ) + silo silo] … Useful english dictionary
re|sile — «rih ZYL», intransitive verb, siled, sil|ing. 1. to spring back, as an elastic body does. 2. to draw back, as from an agreement or purpose. 3. to shrink back, as in fear or disgust. ╂[< Middle French resiler, learned borrowing from Latin… … Useful english dictionary