CLASS.
Synonyms:
| association, | circle, | clique, | company, | grade, | rank, |
| caste, | clan, | club, | coterie, | order, | set. |
A class is a number or body of persons or objects having common
pursuits, purposes, attributes, or characteristics. A caste is
hereditary; a class may be independent of lineage or descent;
membership in a caste is supposed to be for life; membership in a
class may be very transient; a religious and ceremonial sacredness
attaches to the caste, as not to the class. The rich and the
poor form separate classes; yet individuals are constantly passing
from each to the other; the classes in a college remain the same,
but their membership changes every year. We speak of rank
among hereditary nobility or military officers; of various orders
of the priesthood; by accommodation, we may refer in a general
way to the higher ranks, the lower orders of any society. Grade
implies some regular scale of valuation, and some inherent qualities
for which a person or thing is placed higher or lower in the
scale; as, the coarser and finer grades of wool; a man of an inferior
grade. A coterie is a small company of persons of similar
tastes, who meet frequently in an informal way, rather for social
enjoyment than for any serious purpose. Clique has always an
unfavorable meaning. A clique is always fractional, implying
some greater gathering of which it is a part; the association breaks
up into cliques. Persons unite in a coterie through simple liking[107]
for one another; they withdraw into a clique largely through aversion
to outsiders. A set, while exclusive, is more extensive than
a clique, and chiefly of persons who are united by common social
station, etc. Circle is similar in meaning to set, but of wider application;
we speak of scientific and religious as well as of social
circles.
Prepositions:
A class of merchants; the senior class at (sometimes of) Harvard;
the classes in college.
CLEANSE.
Synonyms:
| brush, | dust, | purify, | scour, | sponge, | wash, |
| clean, | lave, | rinse, | scrub, | sweep, | wipe. |
| disinfect, | mop, |
To clean is to make clean by removing dirt, impurities, or soil
of any kind. Cleanse implies a worse condition to start from,
and more to do, than clean. Hercules cleansed the Augean stables.
Cleanse is especially applied to purifying processes where liquid is
used, as in the flushing of a street, etc. We brush clothing if
dusty, sponge it, or sponge it off, if soiled; or sponge off a spot.
Furniture, books, etc., are dusted; floors are mopped or scrubbed;
metallic utensils are scoured; a room is swept; soiled garments
are washed; foul air or water is purified. Cleanse and purify
are used extensively in a moral sense; wash in that sense is archaic.
Compare AMEND.
Antonyms:
| befoul, | besmirch, | contaminate, | debase, | deprave, | soil, | stain, | taint, |
| besmear, | bespatter, | corrupt, | defile, | pollute, | spoil, | sully, | vitiate. |
Prepositions:
Cleanse of or from physical or moral defilement; cleanse with
an instrument; by an agent; the room was cleansed by the attendants
with soap and water.
CLEAR.
Synonyms:
| apparent, | intelligible, | pellucid, | transparent, |
| diaphanous, | limpid, | perspicuous, | unadorned, |
| distinct, | lucid, | plain, | unambiguous, |
| evident, | manifest, | straightforward, | unequivocal, |
| explicit, | obvious, | translucent, | unmistakable. |
Clear (L. clarus, bright, brilliant) primarily refers to that
which shines, and impresses the mind through the eye with a[108]
sense of luster or splendor. A substance is said to be clear that
offers no impediment to vision—is not dim, dark, or obscure.
Transparent refers to the medium through which a substance is
seen, clear to the substance itself, without reference to anything
to be seen through it; we speak of a stream as clear when we
think of the water itself; we speak of it as transparent with reference
to the ease with which we see the pebbles at the bottom.
Clear is also said of that which comes to the senses without
dimness, dulness, obstruction, or obscurity, so that there is
no uncertainty as to its exact form, character, or meaning, with
something of the brightness or brilliancy implied in the primary
meaning of the word clear; as, the outlines of the ship were clear
against the sky; a clear view; a clear note; "clear as a bell;" a
clear, frosty air; a clear sky; a clear statement; hence, the word
is used for that which is free from any kind of obstruction; as, a
clear field. Lucid and pellucid refer to a shining clearness, as of
crystal. A transparent body allows the forms and colors of objects
beyond to be seen through it; a translucent body allows
light to pass through, but may not permit forms and colors to be
distinguished; plate glass is transparent, ground glass is translucent.
Limpid refers to a liquid clearness, or that which suggests
it; as, limpid streams. That which is distinct is well defined,
especially in outline, each part or object standing or seeming
apart from any other, not confused, indefinite, or blurred; distinct
enunciation enables the hearer to catch every word or vocal sound
without perplexity or confusion; a distinct statement is free from
indefiniteness or ambiguity; a distinct apprehension of a thought
leaves the mind in no doubt or uncertainty regarding it. That is
plain, in the sense here considered, which is, as it were, level to
the thought, so that one goes straight on without difficulty or
hindrance; as, plain language; a plain statement; a clear explanation.
Perspicuous is often equivalent to plain, but plain
never wholly loses the meaning of unadorned, so that we can say
the style is perspicuous tho highly ornate, when we could not call
it at once ornate and plain. Compare EVIDENT.
Antonyms:
| ambiguous, | dim, | foggy, | mysterious, | opaque, | unintelligible, |
| cloudy, | dubious, | indistinct, | obscure, | turbid, | vague. |
Prepositions:
Clear to the mind; clear in argument; clear of or from
annoyances.
[109]
CLEVER.
Synonyms:
| able, | capable, | happy, | keen, | sharp, |
| adroit, | dexterous, | ingenious, | knowing, | skilful, |
| apt, | expert, | intellectual, | quick, | smart, |
| bright, | gifted, | intelligent, | quick-witted, | talented. |
Clever, as used in England, especially implies an aptitude for
study or learning, and for excellent tho not preeminent mental
achievement. The early New England usage as implying simple
and weak good nature has largely affected the use of the word
throughout the United States, where it has never been much in
favor. Smart, indicating dashing ability, is now coming to have a
suggestion of unscrupulousness, similar to that of the word sharp,
which makes its use a doubtful compliment. The discriminating
use of such words as able, gifted, talented, etc., is greatly preferable
to an excessive use of the word clever. Compare ACUMEN;
ASTUTE; POWER.
Antonyms:
| awkward, | clumsy, | foolish, | ignorant, | slow, | thick-headed, |
| bungling, | dull, | idiotic, | senseless, | stupid, | witless. |
COLLISION.
Synonyms:
| clash, | concussion, | contact, | impact, | opposition, |
| clashing, | conflict, | encounter, | meeting, | shock. |
Collision, the act or fact of striking violently together, is the
result of motion or action, and is sudden and momentary; contact
may be a condition of rest, and be continuous and permanent; collision
is sudden and violent contact. Concussion is often by transmitted
force rather than by direct impact; two railway-trains
come into collision; an explosion of dynamite shatters neighboring
windows by concussion. Impact is the blow given by the
striking body; as, the impact of the cannon-shot upon the target.
An encounter is always violent, and generally hostile. Meeting is
neutral, and may be of the dearest friends or of the bitterest foes;
of objects, of persons, or of opinions; of two or of a multitude.
Shock is the result of collision. In the figurative use, we speak of
clashing of views, collision of persons. Opposition is used chiefly
of persons, more rarely of opinions or interests; conflict is used indifferently
of all.
Antonyms:
| agreement, | coincidence, | concord, | conformity, | unison, |
| amity, | concert, | concurrence, | harmony, | unity. |
Prepositions:
Collision of one object with another; of or between opposing
objects.
[110]
COMFORTABLE.
Synonyms:
| agreeable, | cheery, | genial, | snug, |
| at ease, | commodious, | pleasant, | well-off, |
| at rest, | contented, | satisfactory, | well-provided, |
| cheerful, | convenient, | satisfied, | well-to-do. |
A person is comfortable in mind when contented and measurably
satisfied. A little additional brightness makes him cheerful.
He is comfortable in body when free from pain, quiet, at ease, at
rest. He is comfortable in circumstances, or in comfortable circumstances,
when things about him are generally agreeable and
satisfactory, usually with the suggestion of sufficient means to
secure that result.
Antonyms:
| cheerless, | discontented, | distressed, | forlorn, | uncomfortable, |
| disagreeable, | dissatisfied, | dreary, | miserable, | wretched. |
COMMIT.
Synonyms:
| assign, | confide, | consign, | entrust, | relegate, | trust. |
Commit, in the sense here considered, is to give in charge, put
into care or keeping; to confide or entrust is to commit especially
to one's fidelity, confide being used chiefly of mental or spiritual,
entrust also of material things; we assign a duty, confide a secret,
entrust a treasure; we commit thoughts to writing; commit a paper
to the flames, a body to the earth; a prisoner is committed to
jail. Consign is a formal word in mercantile use; as, to consign
goods to an agent. Religiously, we consign the body to the grave,
commit the soul to God. Compare DO.
Prepositions:
Commit to a friend for safe-keeping; in law, commit to prison;
for trial; without bail; in default of bail; on suspicion.
COMPANY.
Synonyms:
| assemblage, | concourse, | convocation, | host, |
| assembly, | conference, | crowd, | meeting, |
| collection, | congregation, | gathering, | multitude, |
| conclave, | convention, | group, | throng. |
Company, from the Latin cum, with, and panis, bread, denotes
primarily the association of those who eat at a common
table, or the persons so associated, table-companions, messmates,
friends, and hence is widely extended to include any association
of those united permanently or temporarily, for business, pleasure,[111]
festivity, travel, etc., or by sorrow, misfortune, or wrong; company
may denote an indefinite number (ordinarily more than two),
but less than a multitude; in the military sense a company is a
limited and definite number of men; company implies more unity
of feeling and purpose than crowd, and is a less formal and more
familiar word than assemblage or assembly. An assemblage may
be of persons or of objects; an assembly is always of persons. An
assemblage is promiscuous and unorganized; an assembly is organized
and united in some common purpose. A conclave is a secret assembly.
A convocation is an assembly called by authority for a special
purpose; the term convention suggests less dependence upon
any superior authority or summons. A group is small in number
and distinct in outline, clearly marked off from all else in space or
time. Collection, crowd, gathering, group, and multitude have
the unorganized and promiscuous character of the assemblage; the
other terms come under the general idea of assembly. Congregation
is now almost exclusively religious; meeting is often so used,
but is less restricted, as we may speak of a meeting of armed men.
Gathering refers to a coming together, commonly of numbers,
from far and near; as, the gathering of the Scottish clans.
Antonyms:
| dispersion, | loneliness, | privacy, | retirement, | seclusion, | solitude. |
COMPEL.
Synonyms:
| coerce, | drive, | make, | oblige. |
| constrain, | force, | necessitate, |
To compel one to an act is to secure its performance by the use
of irresistible physical or moral force. Force implies primarily an
actual physical process, absolutely subduing all resistance. Coerce
implies the actual or potential use of so much force as may be
necessary to secure the surrender of the will; the American secessionists
contended that the Federal government had no right to
coerce a State. Constrain implies the yielding of judgment and
will, and in some cases of inclination or affection, to an overmastering
power; as, "the love of Christ constraineth us," 2 Cor. v,
14. Compare DRIVE; INFLUENCE.
Antonyms:
See synonyms for HINDER.
Prepositions:
The soldiers were compelled to desertion: preferably with the
infinitive, compelled to desert.
[112]
COMPLAIN.
Synonyms:
| croak, | growl, | grunt, | remonstrate, |
| find fault, | grumble, | murmur, | repine. |
To complain is to give utterance to dissatisfaction or objection,
express a sense of wrong or ill treatment. One complains of a
real or assumed grievance; he may murmur through mere peevishness
or ill temper; he repines, with vain distress, at the irrevocable
or the inevitable. Complaining is by speech or writing;
murmuring is commonly said of half-repressed utterance; repining
of the mental act alone. One may complain of an offense to
the offender or to others; he remonstrates with the offender only.
Complain has a formal and legal meaning, which the other words
have not, signifying to make a formal accusation, present a specific
charge; the same is true of the noun complaint.
Antonyms:
| applaud, | approve, | commend, | eulogize, | laud, | praise. |
Prepositions:
Complain of a thing to a person; of one person to another, of
or against a person for an act; to an officer; before the court;
about a thing.
COMPLEX.
Synonyms:
| abstruse, | confused, | intricate, | mixed, |
| complicated, | conglomerate, | involved, | multiform, |
| composite, | entangled, | manifold, | obscure, |
| compound, | heterogeneous, | mingled, | tangled. |
That is complex which is made up of several connected parts.
That is compound in which the parts are not merely connected,
but fused, or otherwise combined into a single substance. In a
composite object the different parts have less of unity than in that
which is complex or compound, but maintain their distinct individuality.
In a heterogeneous body unlike parts or particles are
intermingled, often without apparent order or plan. Conglomerate
(literally, globed together) is said of a confused mingling of
masses or lumps of various substances. The New England pudding-stone
is a conglomerate rock. In a complex object the arrangement
and relation of parts may be perfectly clear; in a complicated
mechanism the parts are so numerous, or so combined,
that the mind can not readily grasp their mutual relations; in an
intricate arrangement the parts are so intertwined that it is difficult
to follow their windings; things are involved which are rolled[113]
together so as not to be easily separated, either in thought or in
fact; things which are tangled or entangled mutually hold and
draw upon each other. The conception of a material object is
usually complex, involving form, color, size, and other elements;
a clock is a complicated mechanism; the Gordian knot was intricate;
the twining serpents of the Laocoon are involved. We
speak of an abstruse statement, a complex conception, a confused
heap, a heterogeneous mass, a tangled skein, an intricate problem;
of composite architecture, an involved sentence; of the complicated
or intricate accounts of a great business, the entangled accounts
of an incompetent or dishonest bookkeeper.
Antonyms:
| clear, | homogeneous, | plain, | uncombined, | uniform, |
| direct, | obvious, | simple, | uncompounded, | unraveled. |
CONDEMN.
Synonyms:
| blame, | convict, | doom, | reprove, |
| censure, | denounce, | reprobate, | sentence. |
To condemn is to pass judicial sentence or render judgment or
decision against. We may censure silently; we condemn ordinarily
by open and formal utterance. Condemn is more final than
blame or censure; a condemned criminal has had his trial; a condemned
building can not stand; a condemned ship can not sail. A
person is convicted when his guilt is made clearly manifest to
others; in somewhat archaic use, a person is said to be convicted
when guilt is brought clearly home to his own conscience (convict
in this sense being allied with convince, which see under PERSUADE);
in legal usage one is said to be convicted only by the verdict
of a jury. In stating the penalty of an offense, the legal
word sentence is now more common than condemn; as, he was
sentenced to imprisonment; but it is good usage to say, he was
condemned to imprisonment. To denounce is to make public or
official declaration against, especially in a violent and threatening
manner.
From the pulpits in the northern States Burr was denounced as an assassin.
Coffin Building the Nation ch. 10, p. 137. [H. '83.]
To doom is to condemn solemnly and consign to evil or destruction
or to predetermine to an evil destiny; an inferior race in
presence of a superior is doomed to subjugation or extinction.
Compare ARRAIGN; REPROVE.[114]
Antonyms:
| absolve, | applaud, | exonerate, | pardon, |
| acquit, | approve, | justify, | praise. |
Prepositions:
The bandit was condemned to death for his crime.
CONFESS.
Synonyms:
| accept, | allow, | concede, | grant, |
| acknowledge, | avow, | disclose, | own, |
| admit, | certify, | endorse, | recognize. |
We accept another's statement; admit any point made against
us; acknowledge what we have said or done, good or bad; avow
our individual beliefs or feelings; certify to facts within our
knowledge; confess our own faults; endorse a friend's note or
statement; grant a request; own our faults or obligations; recognize
lawful authority; concede a claim. Confess has a high and
sacred use in the religious sense; as, to confess Christ before men.
It may have also a playful sense (often with to); as, one confesses
to a weakness for confectionery. The chief present use of the
word, however, is in the sense of making known to others one's
own wrong-doing; in this sense confess is stronger than acknowledge
or admit, and more specific than own; a person admits a
mistake; acknowledges a fault; confesses sin or crime. Compare
APOLOGY; AVOW.
Antonyms:
| cloak, | deny, | disown, | hide, | screen, |
| conceal, | disavow, | dissemble, | mask, | secrete, |
| cover, | disguise, | dissimulate, | repudiate, | veil. |
CONFIRM.
Synonyms:
| assure, | fix, | sanction, | substantiate, |
| corroborate, | prove, | settle, | sustain, |
| establish, | ratify, | strengthen, | uphold. |
Confirm (L. con, together, and firmus, firm) is to add firmness
or give stability to. Both confirm and corroborate presuppose
something already existing to which the confirmation or corroboration
is added. Testimony is corroborated by concurrent testimony
or by circumstances; confirmed by established facts. That
which is thoroughly proved is said to be established; so is that
which is official and has adequate power behind it; as, the established
government; the established church. The continents are
fixed. A treaty is ratified; an appointment confirmed. An act
is sanctioned by any person or authority that passes upon it[115]
approvingly. A statement is substantiated; a report confirmed;
a controversy settled; the decision of a lower court sustained by
a higher. Just government should be upheld. The beneficent
results of Christianity confirm our faith in it as a divine revelation.
Antonyms:
| abrogate, | cancel, | overthrow, | shatter, | upset, |
| annul, | destroy, | shake, | unsettle, | weaken. |
Prepositions:
Confirm a statement by testimony; confirm a person in a belief.
CONGRATULATE.
Synonym:
To felicitate is to pronounce one happy or wish one joy; to
congratulate is to express hearty sympathy in his joys or hopes.
Felicitate is cold and formal. We say one felicitates himself;
tho to congratulate oneself, which is less natural, is becoming
prevalent.
Antonyms:
Prepositions:
Congratulate one on or upon his success.
CONQUER.
Synonyms:
| beat, | humble, | overthrow, | subject, |
| checkmate, | master, | prevail over, | subjugate, |
| crush, | overcome, | put down, | surmount, |
| defeat, | overmaster, | reduce, | vanquish, |
| discomfit, | overmatch, | rout, | win, |
| down, | overpower, | subdue, | worst. |
To defeat an enemy is to gain an advantage for the time; to
vanquish is to win a signal victory; to conquer is to overcome so
effectually that the victory is regarded as final. Conquer, in
many cases, carries the idea of possession; as, to conquer respect,
affection, peace, etc. A country is conquered when its armies are
defeated and its territory is occupied by the enemy; it may be
subjected to indemnity or to various disabilities; it is subjugated
when it is held helplessly and continuously under military control;
it is subdued when all resistance has died out. An army is defeated
when forcibly driven back; it is routed when it is converted
into a mob of fugitives. Compare BEAT.
Antonyms:
| capitulate, | fail, | fly, | lose, | retire, | submit, | surrender, |
| cede, | fall, | forfeit, | resign, | retreat, | succumb, | yield. |
[116]
CONSCIOUS.
Synonyms:
| advised, | assured, | certain, | cognizant, | sensible, |
| apprised, | aware, | certified, | informed, | sure. |
One is aware of that which exists without him; he is conscious
of the inner workings of his own mind. Sensible may be used in
the exact sense of conscious, or it may partake of both the senses
mentioned above. One may be sensible of his own or another's
error; he is conscious only of his own. A person may feel assured
or sure of something false or non-existent; what he is aware of,
still more what he is conscious of, must be fact. Sensible has
often a reference to the emotions where conscious might apply
only to the intellect; to say a culprit is sensible of his degradation
is more forcible than to say he is conscious of it.
Antonyms:
| cold, | dead, | deaf, | ignorant, | insensible, | unaware, | unconscious. |
Preposition:
On the stormy sea, man is conscious of the limitation of human
power.
CONSEQUENCE.
Synonyms:
| consequent, | end, | issue, | outgrowth, | sequel, |
| effect, | event, | outcome, | result, | upshot. |
Effect is the strongest of these words; it is that which is directly
produced by the action of an efficient cause; we say, "Every
effect must have an adequate cause" (compare CAUSE). In regard
to human actions, effect commonly relates to intention; as,
the shot took effect, i. e., the effect intended. A consequence is
that which follows an act naturally, but less directly than the
effect. The motion of the piston is the effect, and the agitation of
the water under the paddle-wheels a consequence of the expansion
of steam in the cylinder. The result is, literally, the rebound of
an act, depending on many elements; the issue is that which
flows forth directly; we say the issue of a battle, the result of a
campaign. A consequent commonly is that which follows simply
in order of time, or by logical inference. The end is the actual
outcome without determination of its relation to what has gone
before; it is ordinarily viewed as either the necessary, natural, or
logical outcome, any effect, consequence, or result being termed an
end; as, the end of such a course must be ruin. The event (L. e,
out, and venio, come) is primarily exactly the same in meaning as
outcome; but in use it is more nearly equivalent to upshot[117]
signifying the sum and substance of all effects, consequences, and
results of a course of action. Compare ACCIDENT; CAUSE; CIRCUMSTANCE;
END; EVENT.
CONSOLE.
Synonyms:
| comfort, | condole with, | encourage, | sympathize with. |
One condoles with another by the expression of kindly sympathy
in his trouble; he consoles him by considerations adapted to
soothe and sustain the spirit, as by the assurances and promises of
the gospel; he encourages him by the hope of some relief or deliverance;
he comforts him by whatever act or word tends to
bring mind or body to a state of rest and cheer. We sympathize
with others, not only in sorrow, but in joy. Compare ALLEVIATE;
PITY.
Antonyms:
| annoy, | distress, | disturb, | grieve, | hurt, | sadden, | trouble, | wound. |
CONTAGION.
Synonym:
Infection is frequently confused with contagion, even by medical
men. The best usage now limits contagion to diseases that
are transmitted by contact with the diseased person, either directly
by touch or indirectly by use of the same articles, by breath,
effluvia, etc. Infection is applied to diseases produced by no
known or definable influence of one person upon another, but
where common climatic, malarious, or other wide-spread conditions
are believed to be chiefly instrumental.
CONTINUAL.
Synonyms:
| ceaseless, | incessant, | regular, | uninterrupted, |
| constant, | invariable, | unbroken, | unremitting, |
| continuous, | perpetual, | unceasing, | unvarying. |
Continuous describes that which is absolutely without pause
or break; continual, that which often intermits, but as regularly
begins again. A continuous beach is exposed to the continual
beating of the waves. A similar distinction is made between incessant
and ceaseless. The incessant discharge of firearms makes
the ceaseless roar of battle. Constant is sometimes used in the
sense of continual; but its chief uses are mental and moral.
[118]
CONTRACT.
Synonyms:
| agreement, | cartel, | engagement, | pledge, |
| arrangement, | compact, | obligation, | promise, |
| bargain, | covenant, | pact, | stipulation. |
All these words involve at least two parties, tho an engagement
or promise may be the act of but one. A contract is a formal
agreement between two or more parties for the doing or leaving
undone some specified act or acts, and is ordinarily in writing.
Mutual promises may have the force of a contract. A consideration,
or compensation, is essential to convert an agreement into a
contract. A contract may be oral or written. A covenant in law
is a written contract under seal. Covenant is frequent in religious
usage, as contract is in law and business. Compact is essentially
the same as contract, but is applied to international agreements,
treaties, etc. A bargain is a mutual agreement for an exchange
of values, without the formality of a contract. A stipulation is
a single item in an agreement or contract. A cartel is a military
agreement for the exchange of prisoners or the like.
CONTRAST.
Synonyms:
| compare, | differentiate, | discriminate, | oppose. |
To compare (L. con, together, and par, equal) is to place together
in order to show likeness or unlikeness; to contrast (L. contra,
against, and sto, stand) is to set in opposition in order to show
unlikeness. We contrast objects that have been already compared.
We must compare them, at least momentarily, even to know that
they are different. We contrast them when we observe their unlikeness
in a general way; we differentiate them when we note
the difference exactly and point by point. We distinguish objects
when we note a difference that may fall short of contrast; we discriminate
them when we classify or place them according to their
differences.
Preposition:
We contrast one object with another.
CONVERSATION.
Synonyms:
| chat, | communion, | converse, | intercourse, |
| colloquy, | confabulation, | dialogue, | parley, |
| communication, | conference, | discourse, | talk. |
Conversation (Latin con, with) is, etymologically, an interchange
of ideas with some other person or persons. Talk may be[119]
wholly one-sided. Many brilliant talkers have been incapable of
conversation. There may be intercourse without conversation,
as by looks, signs, etc.; communion is of hearts, with or without
words; communication is often by writing, and may be uninvited
and unreciprocated. Talk may denote the mere utterance of
words with little thought; thus, we say idle talk, empty talk,
rather than idle or empty conversation. Discourse is now applied
chiefly to public addresses. A conference is more formal than a
conversation. Dialog denotes ordinarily an artificial or imaginary
conversation, generally of two persons, but sometimes of more.
A colloquy is indefinite as to number, and generally somewhat informal.
Compare BEHAVIOR.
Prepositions:
Conversation with friends; between or among the guests; about
a matter.
CONVERT.
Synonyms:
| disciple, | neophyte, | proselyte. |
The name disciple is given to the follower of a certain faith,
without reference to any previous belief or allegiance; a convert
is a person who has come to one faith from a different belief or
from unbelief. A proselyte is one who has been led to accept a
religious system, whether with or without true faith; a convert is
always understood to be a believer. A neophyte is a new convert,
not yet fully indoctrinated, or not admitted to full privileges.
The antonyms apostate, pervert, and renegade are condemnatory
names applied to the convert by those whose faith he forsakes.
CONVEY.
Synonyms:
| carry, | give, | remove, | shift, | transmit, |
| change, | move, | sell, | transfer, | transport. |
Convey, transmit, and transport all imply delivery at a destination;
as, I will convey the information to your friend; air conveys
sound (to a listener); carry does not necessarily imply delivery, and
often does not admit of it. A man carries an appearance, conveys
an impression, the appearance remaining his own, the impression
being given to another; I will transmit the letter; transport the
goods. A horse carries his mane and tail, but does not convey
them. Transfer may or may not imply delivery to another person;
as, items may be transferred from one account to another[120]
or a word transferred to the following line. In law, real estate,
which can not be moved, is conveyed by simply transferring title
and possession. Transport usually refers to material, transfer,
transmit, and convey may refer to immaterial objects; we transfer
possession, transmit intelligence, convey ideas, but do not
transport them. In the case of convey the figurative sense now
predominates. Compare CARRY.
Antonyms:
| cling to, | hold, | keep, | possess, | preserve, | retain. |
Prepositions:
Convey to a friend, a purchaser, etc.; convey from the house
to the station; convey by express, by hand, etc.
CONVOKE.
Synonyms:
| assemble, | call together, | convene, | muster, |
| call, | collect, | gather, | summon. |
A convention is called by some officer or officers, as by its president,
its executive committee, or some eminent leaders; the delegates
are assembled or convened in a certain place, at a certain
hour. Convoke implies an organized body and a superior authority;
assemble and convene express more independent action; Parliament
is convoked; Congress assembles. Troops are mustered;
witnesses and jurymen are summoned.
Antonyms:
| adjourn, | disband, | dismiss, | dissolve, | scatter, |
| break up, | discharge, | disperse, | prorogue, | separate. |
CRIMINAL.
Synonyms:
| abominable, | flagitious, | immoral, | sinful, | vile, |
| culpable, | guilty, | iniquitous, | unlawful, | wicked, |
| felonious, | illegal, | nefarious, | vicious, | wrong. |
Every criminal act is illegal or unlawful, but illegal or unlawful
acts may not be criminal. Offenses against public law are
criminal; offenses against private rights are merely illegal or unlawful.
As a general rule, all acts punishable by fine or imprisonment
or both, are criminal in view of the law. It is illegal for a
man to trespass on another's land, but it is not criminal; the
trespasser is liable to a civil suit for damages, but not to indictment,
fine, or imprisonment. A felonious act is a criminal act
of an aggravated kind, which is punishable by imprisonment in
the penitentiary or by death. A flagitious crime is one that brings[121]
public odium. Vicious refers to the indulgence of evil appetites,
habits, or passions; vicious acts are not necessarily criminal, or
even illegal; we speak of a vicious horse. That which is iniquitous,
i. e., contrary to equity, may sometimes be done under the
forms of law. Ingratitude is sinful, hypocrisy is wicked, but
neither is punishable by human law; hence, neither is criminal
or illegal. Compare SIN.
Antonyms:
| innocent, | lawful, | meritorious, | right, |
| just, | legal, | moral, | virtuous. |
DAILY.
Synonym:
Daily is the Saxon and popular, diurnal the Latin and scientific
term. In strict usage, daily is the antonym of nightly as
diurnal is of nocturnal. Daily is not, however, held strictly to
this use; a physician makes daily visits if he calls at some time
within each period of twenty-four hours. Diurnal is more exact
in all its uses; a diurnal flower opens or blooms only in daylight;
a diurnal bird or animal flies or ranges only by day: in contradistinction
to nocturnal flowers, birds, etc. A diurnal motion
exactly fills an astronomical day or the time of one rotation of a
planet on its axis, while a daily motion is much less definite.
Antonyms:
DANGER.
Synonyms:
| hazard, | insecurity, | jeopardy, | peril, | risk. |
Danger is exposure to possible evil, which may be either near
and probable or remote and doubtful; peril is exposure to imminent
and sharply threatening evil, especially to such as results from
violence. An invalid may be in danger of consumption; a disarmed
soldier is in peril of death. Jeopardy is nearly the same as
peril, but involves, like risk, more of the element of chance or uncertainty;
a man tried upon a capital charge is said to be put in
jeopardy of life. Insecurity is a feeble word, but exceedingly
broad, applying to the placing of a dish, or the possibilities of a
life, a fortune, or a government. Compare HAZARD.
Antonyms:
| defense, | immunity, | protection, | safeguard, | safety, | security, | shelter. |
[122]
DARK.
Synonyms:
| black, | dusky, | mysterious, | sable, | somber, |
| dim, | gloomy, | obscure, | shadowy, | swart, |
| dismal, | murky, | opaque, | shady, | swarthy. |
Strictly, that which is black is absolutely destitute of color;
that which is dark is absolutely destitute of light. In common
speech, however, a coat is black, tho not optically colorless;
the night is dark, tho the stars shine. That is obscure, shadowy,
or shady from which the light is more or less cut off. Dusky
is applied to objects which appear as if viewed in fading light;
the word is often used, as are swart and swarthy, of the human
skin when quite dark, or even verging toward black. Dim refers
to imperfection of outline, from distance, darkness, mist, etc., or
from some defect of vision. Opaque objects, as smoked glass, are
impervious to light. Murky is said of that which is at once dark,
obscure, and gloomy; as, a murky den; a murky sky. Figuratively,
dark is emblematic of sadness, agreeing with somber, dismal,
gloomy, also of moral evil; as, a dark deed. Of intellectual
matters, dark is now rarely used in the old sense of a dark saying,
etc. See MYSTERIOUS; OBSCURE.
Antonyms:
| bright, | crystalline, | glowing, | lucid, | shining, |
| brilliant, | dazzling, | illumined, | luminous, | transparent, |
| clear, | gleaming, | light, | radiant, | white. |
Compare synonyms for LIGHT.
DECAY.
Synonyms:
| corrupt, | decompose, | molder, | putrefy, | rot, | spoil. |
Rot is a strong word, ordinarily esteemed coarse, but on occasion
capable of approved emphatic use; as, "the name of the
wicked shall rot," Prov. x, 7; decay and decompose are now common
euphemisms. A substance is decomposed when resolved into
its original elements by any process; it is decayed when resolved
into its original elements by natural processes; it decays gradually,
but may be instantly decomposed, as water into oxygen and hydrogen;
to say that a thing is decayed may denote only a partial result,
but to say it is decomposed ordinarily implies that the
change is complete or nearly so. Putrefy and the adjectives
putrid and putrescent, and the nouns putridity and putrescence,
are used almost exclusively of animal matter in a state of decomposition,
the more general word decay being used of either animal
or vegetable substances.
[123]
DECEPTION.
Synonyms:
| craft, | dissimulation, | finesse, | lie, |
| cunning, | double-dealing, | fraud, | lying, |
| deceit, | duplicity, | guile, | prevarication, |
| deceitfulness, | fabrication, | hypocrisy, | trickery, |
| delusion, | falsehood, | imposition, | untruth. |
Deceit is the habit, deception the act; guile applies to the
disposition out of which deceit and deception grow, and also to
their actual practise. A lie, lying, or falsehood, is the uttering of
what one knows to be false with intent to deceive. The novel or
drama is not a lie, because not meant to deceive; the ancient
teaching that the earth was flat was not a lie, because not then
known to be false. Untruth is more than lack of accuracy, implying
always lack of veracity; but it is a somewhat milder and
more dignified word than lie. Falsehood and lying are in utterance;
deceit and deception may be merely in act or implication. Deception
may be innocent, and even unintentional, as in the case of
an optical illusion; deceit always involves injurious intent. Craft
and cunning have not necessarily any moral quality; they are
common traits of animals, but stand rather low in the human
scale. Duplicity is the habitual speaking or acting with intent to
appear to mean what one does not. Dissimulation is rather a
concealing of what is than a pretense of what is not. Finesse is
simply an adroit and delicate management of a matter for one's
own side, not necessarily involving deceit. Compare ARTIFICE;
FICTION; FRAUD; HYPOCRISY.
Antonyms:
| candor, | frankness, | honesty, | simplicity, | truth, |
| fair dealing, | guilelessness, | openness, | sincerity, | veracity. |
DEFENSE.
Synonyms:
| apology, | guard, | rampart, | shelter, |
| bulwark, | justification, | resistance, | shield, |
| fortress, | protection, | safeguard, | vindication. |
The weak may speak or act in defense of the strong; none but
the powerful can assure others of protection. A defense is ordinarily
against actual attack; protection is against possible as well
as actual dangers. We speak of defense against an assault, protection
from the cold. Vindication is a triumphant defense of
character and conduct against charges of error or wrong. Compare
APOLOGY.
Antonyms:
| abandonment, | betrayal, | capitulation, | desertion, | flight, | surrender. |
[124]
Prepositions:
Defense against assault or assailants; in law, defense to an
action, from the testimony.
DEFILE.
Synonyms:
| befoul, | corrupt, | pollute, | spoil, | sully, | tarnish, |
| contaminate, | infect, | soil, | stain, | taint, | vitiate. |
The hand may be defiled by a touch of pitch; swine that have
been wallowing in the mud are befouled. Contaminate and infect
refer to something evil that deeply pervades and permeates,
as the human body or mind. Pollute is used chiefly of liquids; as,
water polluted with sewage. Tainted meat is repulsive; infected
meat contains germs of disease. A soiled garment may be cleansed
by washing; a spoiled garment is beyond cleansing or repair.
Bright metal is tarnished by exposure; a fair sheet is sullied by a
dirty hand. In figurative use, defile may be used merely in the
ceremonial sense; "they themselves went not into the judgment
hall, lest they should be defiled," John xviii, 28; contaminate refers
to deep spiritual injury. Pollute has also a reference to sacrilege;
as, to pollute a sanctuary, an altar, or an ordinance. The
innocent are often contaminated by association with the wicked;
the vicious are more and more corrupted by their own excesses.
We speak of a vitiated taste or style; fraud vitiates a title or a
contract.
Antonyms:
| clean, | cleanse, | disinfect, | hallow, | purify, | sanctify, | wash. |
Prepositions:
The temple was defiled with blood; defiled by sacrilegious
deeds.
DEFINITION.
Synonyms:
| comment, | description, | exposition, | rendering, |
| commentary, | explanation, | interpretation, | translation. |
A definition is exact, an explanation general; a definition is
formal, a description pictorial. A definition must include all that
belongs to the object defined, and exclude all that does not; a
description may include only some general features; an explanation
may simply throw light upon some point of special difficulty.
An exposition undertakes to state more fully what is compactly
given or only implied in the text; as, an exposition of Scripture.
Interpretation is ordinarily from one language into another, or
from the language of one period into that of another; it may also[125]
be a statement giving the doubtful or hidden meaning of that
which is recondite or perplexing; as, the interpretation of a
dream, a riddle, or of some difficult passage. Definition, explanation,
exposition, and interpretation are ordinarily blended in a
commentary, which may also include description. A comment is
upon a single passage; a commentary may be the same, but is
usually understood to be a volume of comments.
DELEGATE.
Synonyms:
| deputy, | legate, | proxy, | representative, | substitute. |
These words agree in designating one who acts in the place of
some other or others. The legate is an ecclesiastical officer representing
the Pope. In strict usage the deputy or delegate is more
limited in functions and more closely bound by instructions than
a representative. A single officer may have a deputy; many persons
combine to choose a delegate or representative. In the United
States informal assemblies send delegates to nominating conventions
with no legislative authority; representatives are legally
elected to Congress and the various legislatures, with lawmaking
power.