- American legislator - Arm or leg - Constituent, component - Elected politician is part of club - Fellow from Camembert loses cat - Limb - One belonging to a club
- Decide to do puzzle again? - Firmness of purpose - Fixed purpose - Settle a dispute - To separate the component parts of; to reduce to the
constituent elements; -- said of compound substances; hence, sometimes,
to melt, or dissolve. - To reduce to simple or intelligible notions; -- said of
complex ideas or obscure questions; to make clear or certain; to free
from doubt; to disentangle; to unravel; to explain; hence, to clear up,
or dispel, as doubt; as, to resolve a riddle. - To cause to perceive or understand; to acquaint; to
inform; to convince; to assure; to make certain.
- In most branches of science bi- in composition denotes two,
twice, or doubly; as, bidentate, two-toothed; biternate, doubly
ternate, etc. - In the composition of chemical names bi- denotes two atoms,
parts, or equivalents of that constituent to the name of which it is
prefixed, to one of the other component, or that such constituent is
present in double the ordinary proportion; as, bichromate, bisulphide.
Be- and di- are often used interchangeably.
- Part of speech - Promise - Sentence component - Unit of language - The spoken sign of a conception or an idea; an articulate or
vocal sound, or a combination of articulate and vocal sounds, uttered
by the human voice, and by custom expressing an idea or ideas; a single
component part of human speech or language; a constituent part of a
sentence; a term; a vocable. - Hence, the written or printed character, or combination of
characters, expressing such a term; as, the words on a page. - Talk; discourse; speech; language.
- Close study - Critical study - Says Al in false assessment - scientific evaluation - A resolution of anything, whether an object of the senses
or of the intellect, into its constituent or original elements; an
examination of the component parts of a subject, each separately, as
the words which compose a sentence, the tones of a tune, or the simple
propositions which enter into an argument. It is opposed to synthesis. - The separation of a compound substance, by chemical
processes, into its constituents, with a view to ascertain either (a)
what elements it contains, or (b) how much of each element is present.
The former is called qualitative, and the latter quantitative analysis. - The tracing of things to their source, and the resolving
of knowledge into its original principles.