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Interlinked
Dictionary© based on
Merriam-Webster's
Collegiate® Dictionary (m-w.com)
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monovalent.adjective
Chemistry:.in
chemistry,
having
a valence of 1; univalent;
having only one site of attachment
monovalence
or monovalency.noun
maunder,
maundered,
maundering,
maunders.intransitive
verbs
to move or act aimlessly
or vaguely (the cats, never having
been out of the house, took off one day when the door was opened, but we
found them down the street, still afraid of the outdoors as they maundered
about); to wander; to talk incoherently
or aimlessly; what is the Maunder
minimum?
milieu.noun,.plural.milieus.or.milieux
an environment or a setting;
your milieu is the group of people or activities that you live among or
are familiar with (they spent
much time within their own social milieu); from Old
French 'center', 'mi' meaning 'middle' and 'lieu' meaning 'place'
megaphone.noun,.plural.megaphones
a funnel-shaped device
used to direct and amplify the
voice; used for making your voice sound louder in the open air; a megaphone
is a piece of equipment like
a large horn which you talk through
to make your voice sound louder, when you are speaking to a crowd; a loudspeaker
megaphone,
megaphoned,
megaphoning,
megaphones.intransitive
and.transitive
verbs
to transmit
a message or speak through or as if through a funnel-shaped voice amplification
device
megaphonic.adjective
megaphonically.adverb
muscle in.phrasal
verb
if someone muscles in on
something, they force their way into a situation where they have no right
to be and where they are not welcome, in order to gain some advantage for
themselves
muscle.noun,.plural.muscles
a muscle is a piece of tissue.composed
of fibers inside your body which
connects two bones and which you use when you make a movement (the muscles
of the arm)
muscle,
muscled,
muscling,
muscles.intransitive
verbs
to make one's way by or
as if by force (muscled into the conversation)
muscly.adjective
to be built in such as way
as one's muscles show prominently
muscular.adjective
of,
relating.to.or.consisting
of muscle (muscular contraction occurs when you are lifting something);
having well-developed muscles a (a muscular build); muscular reasoning
that does not take into
account the details
muscularity.noun
muscularly.adverb
mattock.noun,.plural.mattocks
a heavy garden tool with
a long handle and a metal head, used for breaking up soil, cutting roots,
etc.; a mattock resembles the
modern hoe but with a stone or wooden
blade.rather
than a metal one, set at right
angles to a long wooden handle; today for larger agricultural.farming,
plows,
harrows
and rotary hoes that open many
rows of a field simultaneously
are used; home gardeners and horticulturists
may still use mattocks to loosen dirt and to chop weeds
mainland.noun,.plural.mainlands
the principal landmass of
a continent
mainlander.noun,.plural.mainlanders
one who resides
on the mainland (the mainlander and the islander.were
talking about slight.differences
in weather where each of them lived)
miss,
missed,
missing,
misses.verbs
transitive verb use.to
fail to hit, reach, catch, meet or otherwise make contact with; to fail
to perceive, understand or experience (lower consciousness often miss what
is easily grasped by those of higher consciousness); to leave out; omit
(he missed spelling a few words correctly); to let go by (he stopped most
of the soccer balls and just missed a few); let slip (watch what you say
or you could miss a chance to be a friend:.Proverbs
15:1,2)
intransitive verb use.to
fail to hit or otherwise make contact with something;
to be unsuccessful; fail (three times he climbed the mountain and succeeded
the third time); to misfire, as an internal-combustion engine (because
the spark plugs were old the car's engine often would start, make some
strange noises and then stop)
missing.adjective
if a part of something is
missing, it has been removed or has come off and has not been replaced
(three buttons were missing from his shirt); if you say that something
is missing, you mean that it has not been included and you think that it
should have been
miss.noun,.plural.misses
a failure to hit, succeed
or find (he seemed to most always miss batting the ball far and he missed
getting high marks in math, but strangely
enough, he loved physics which
has math as its main component
and now he's world renown); the
misfiring of an engine
misfire,
misfired,
misfiring,
misfires.intransitive
verbs
to fail to ignite
when expected (today both the wood and the truck's engine misfired); to
fail to discharge, used when
referring to a firearm)
misfire.noun,.plural.misfires
(after three misfires on
that engine, it was time to see a mechanic)
miss out on.idiom
to lose a chance for (missed
out on the promotion because I was late due to traffic)
miss the boat.idiom
to fail to avail
oneself of an opportunity (biology
and medicine lack knowledge necessary for them to no longer miss the boat)
Mrs..noun,.plural.Mmes.
used as a courtesy title
for a married or widowed woman
before the surname or full name of her husband
Miss.noun,.plural.Misses
used as a courtesy.title
before the surname or full name
of a girl or single woman; a young unmarried woman
Ms.
(pronounced miz).noun,.plural.Mses.
used as a form of polite.address
for a girl or young woman
misses.noun
a series
of clothing sizes for women and girls of average height and figure
morning.noun,.plural.mornings
the first or early part
of the day, lasting from midnight to noon or from sunrise to noon; the
dawn;
the first or early part; the beginning (the morning of my new life); from
Middle
English 'morn'
morn.noun,.plural.morns
the morning; the dawn; from
Old
English 'morgen'
moraine.noun,.plural.moraines
an accumulation
of boulders, stones or other
debris
carried and deposited by a glacier
morainal.or.morainic.adjective
minion.noun,.plural.minions
a minion is one who unquestionably
follows what someone above him or her tells him to do and is like this
in order to get and stay in favor for some kind of reward or continuous
benefit; an obsequious follower
or dependent; one who looks to others for his authority in life, trusting
in them (Luke 6:39), rather than looking
to God (he or she never researched information from those who are considered
authorities and thus his life was in shreds);
a dominated minion is one of the slaves in a dominion;
a sycophant; a subordinate.official
(bureaucrats such as the 'healthcrats'
who think they possess authority to override true lawful
health principles, having instead decided to follow destructive philosophy
dictates
of those they are lackey to; see
Rockefeller
medicine)
mortgage.noun,.plural.mortgages
a mortgage is a loan of
money which you get from a bank or building society or some other lending
institution in order to buy a house for approximately three times the agreed
upon selling price of the house, because the contract you entered into
sets payment terms with not just varying interest rates adjusted every
so many years, but in addition, uses compounding interest rates on the
money you created unnecessarily
by your signature (why
unnecessarily?), but the form you signed was made by the lending institution
you went to and states in effect, 'thank you for creating the money you
need for your house and for paying us three times what you borrowed for
the work we do in processing the form', which by the way, doesn't take
long to do, hardly fair to a family starting out or to anyone for
that matter; a mortgage is a legal
arrangement by which you borrow money from a bank or similar organization
in order to buy a house and pay back approximately three times the money,
depending on how many years the mortage contract was for; a mortage puts
you in a war where if you win, you've killed the mortage and it you lose,
it just might kill you, when they take your house and all the equity you
have paid into it, effectively leaving you and your family destitute, similar
to kicking you when your down; it's a satanic trick to 'keep you a slave';
the term mortgage comes from the Old
French words 'mort' meaning 'dead' and 'gage' meaning 'pledge', whereas
if the individual purchasing the property cannot pay, then the property
is taken from him for ever and so dead to him upon condition and if he
does pay the money, then the pledge is dead, this etymology
being first recorded in Middle
English before 1393 A.D. See David
Lester Straght's videos
mortgager.or.mortgagor.noun,.plural.mortgagers.or.mortgagors
the one obligated
by agreement to repay an amount of a selling price of the property he or
she is purchasing with the tacked on extra charges for interest
mortgagee.noun,.plural.mortgagees
the entity
to which is paid a usually monthly payment on the loan facilitated
man-made
or manmade.adjective
made by human beings rather
than occurring in nature; synthetic
(man-made fibers; a manmade lake)
Dwight Lyman Moody,
born Feb. 5, 1837, East Northfield, Mass., U.S.A., died Dec. 22, 1899,
Northfield, Mass. American evangelist.
Moody left his mother's farm
at 17 to work in Boston and there was converted from Unitarianism to fundamentalist
evangelicalism. In 1856 he moved to Chicago from his mother's farm, which
he left at age 17. In Chicago he prospered as a shoe salesman and in 1860
gave up the business for missionary
work. He worked with the Young Men's Christian Association, the YMCA, 1861–73
and was president of the Chicago YMCA. He founded the Moody Church there
and engaged in slum mission work.
In 1870 he met Ira D. Sankey,
a hymn writer and with him became noted for contributing to the growth
of gospel hymns. They made evangelical tours in Great Britain in 1873–75
and 1881–84. Moody emphasized a literal interpretation of the Bible.
Moody's efforts were financed
by prominent businessmen toward alleviating hardships of the poor. Moody
himself ardently supported various charities but felt that social problems
could be solved only by the divine regeneration of individuals. In 1889
he founded the Chicago Bible Institute, now the Moody Bible Institute.
A
quote of his.
.
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