Updates
Your unread post, follow, and push notifications will appear here.
DIARY, n. [L., a day.] An account of daily events or transactions; a journal; a ...
DIASCHISM, n. [Gr., a piece cut off; to cut off.] In music, the difference betwe...
DIASPORE, n. [Gr., to disperse.] A mineral occurring in lamellar concretions, of...
DIASTALTIC, a. [Gr., dilating.] Dilated; noble; bold; an epithet given by the Gr...
DIASTEM, n. [Gr.] In music, a simple interval.
DIASTOLE, DIASTOLY, n. [Gr., to set or send from.]
DIASTOLE, DIASTOLY, n. [Gr., to set or send from.] 1. Among physicians, a dilati...
DIASTYLE, n. [Gr.] An edifice in which three diameters of the columns are allowe...
DIATESSARON, n. [Gr., four.] Among musicians, a concord or harmonic interval, co...
DIATONIC, a. [Gr., by or through, sound.] Ascending or descending, as in sound, ...
DIATRIBE, n. [Gr.] A continued discourse or disputation.
DIAZEUTIC, a. [Gr., to disjoin.] A diazeutic tone, in ancient Greek music, disjo...
DIBBLE, n. [probably from the root of top, tip, a point, and denoting a little s...
DIBSTONE, n. A little stone which children throw at another stone.
DICACITY, n. [L.] Pertness. [Little used.]
DICAST, n. [Gr., to judge; justice.] In ancient Greece, an officer answering nea...