- Supersede - Take another's place - Take the place of worker following endless supply - To trip up. - To remove or displace by stratagem; to displace and take
the place of; to supersede; as, a rival supplants another in the favor
of a mistress or a prince. - To overthrow, undermine, or force away, in order to get a
substitute in place of.
- A bundle of sticks, twigs, or small branches of trees, used
for fuel, for raising batteries, filling ditches, or other purposes in
fortification; a fascine. - A bundle of pieces of wrought iron to be worked over into
bars or other shapes by rolling or hammering at a welding heat; a pile. - A bassoon. See Fagotto. - A person hired to take the place of another at the muster of
a company. - An old shriveled woman. - To make a fagot of; to bind together in a fagot or
bundle; also, to collect promiscuously.
- Take turns - Being or succeeding by turns; one following the other in
succession of time or place; by turns first one and then the other;
hence, reciprocal. - Designating the members in a series, which regularly
intervene between the members of another series, as the odd or even
numbers of the numerals; every other; every second; as, the alternate
members 1, 3, 5, 7, etc. ; read every alternate line. - Distributed, as leaves, singly at different heights of
the stem, and at equal intervals as respects angular divergence. - That which alternates with something else; vicissitude. - A substitute; one designated to take the place of
another, if necessary, in performing some duty. - A proportion derived from another proportion by
interchanging the means.
- Abduct - Abduct baby goat, then snooze - Hold for ransom - Shanghai - Snatch - Take hostage - To take (any one) by force or fear, and against one's
will, with intent to carry to another place.
- The act of transmuting, or the state of being
transmuted; as, the transmutation of metals. - The change or reduction of one figure or body into
another of the same area or solidity, but of a different form, as of a
triangle into a square. - The change of one species into another, which is
assumed to take place in any development theory of life; transformism.
- Alleviate - Alleviate, assuage - Alleviate, palliate - Believe a change of leader will ease burden - Come to the aid of - Dispel worries - Do away with
- To take up into or under, as individual under species,
species under genus, or particular under universal; to place (any one
cognition) under another as belonging to it; to include under something
else.