- Archer’s equipment
- Bend
- Curtsy
- Display obeisance
- Front end of a ship
- Front of boat, on water
- It is seen after rain, but only after rain
- Where the instructor monitors steps taken
- Where to learn what steps should be taken
- You may need one if you have two left feet
- African Bloodsucking Fly
- African disease fly
- African disease insect
- African fly
- Blood-sucking fly
- Bloodsucking African fly
- Bloodsucking fly
- Whether one or another; whether one or the
other; which; that one (of two or more) which; as, whichever road you
take, it will lead you to town.
- What one?
- What?
- Of what sort or kind; what; what a; who.
- A interrogative pronoun, used both substantively and
adjectively, and in direct and indirect questions, to ask for, or refer
to, an individual person or thing among several of a class; as, which
man is it? which woman was it? which is the house? he asked which route
he should take; which is best, to live or to die? See the Note under
What, pron., 1.
- A relative pronoun, used esp. in referring to an
antecedent noun or clause, but sometimes with reference to what is
specified or implied in a sentence, or to a following noun or clause
(generally involving a reference, however, to something which has
preceded). It is used in all numbers and genders, and was formerly used
of persons.
- A compound relative or indefinite pronoun, standing for
any one which, whichever, that which, those which, the . . . which, and
the like; as, take which you will.
- A particle that marks an alternative; as, you may read or
may write, -- that is, you may do one of the things at your pleasure,
but not both. It corresponds to either. You may ride either to London
or to Windsor. It often connects a series of words or propositions,
presenting a choice of either; as, he may study law, or medicine, or
divinity, or he may enter into trade.
- Ere; before; sooner than.
- Yellow or gold color, -- represented in drawing or engraving by
small dots.