disarrange

  • 81mess — I. noun Etymology: Middle English mes, from Anglo French, from Late Latin missus course at a meal, from missus, past participle of mittere to put, from Latin, to send more at smite Date: 14th century 1. a quantity of food: a. archaic food set on… …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 82muss — I. noun Etymology: origin unknown Date: 1591 1. obsolete a. a game in which players scramble for small objects thrown to the ground b. scramble 2. slang a confused conflict ; row 3. a state of diso …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 83scramble — I. verb (scrambled; scrambling) Etymology: perhaps alteration of 1scrabble Date: 1568 intransitive verb 1. a. to move with urgency or panic b. to move or climb hastily on all fours 2. a. to strug …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 84disarrangement — noun see disarrange …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 85Henry Jones Ford — (1851 1925) was a political scientist, journalist, university professor, and government official.Ford worked as a managing editor and editorial writer from 1872 to 1905, at six different newspapers in three cities (Baltimore, New York and… …

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  • 86The Adventure of the Red Widow — is a short Sherlock Holmes murder mystery by Adrian Conan Doyle. The story was published in the 1954 collection, The Exploits of Sherlock Holmes. Holmes and Watson are invited by Scotland Yard Inspector Gregson to accompany him to an ancient… …

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  • 87Examples of typical Puerto Rican vocabulary — See Puerto Rican Spanish Expand list|date=August 2008 *Achocao (a)= when someone is deep asleep, out cold . *Ay, Bendito= an oft heard classic expression meaning dear lord! , oh dear , that s too bad, what a shame that s the way things go etc. An …

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  • 88disarrangement — See disarrange. * * * …

    Universalium

  • 89confuse — confusable, adj. confusability, n. confusably, adv. confusedly /keuhn fyooh zid lee, fyoohzd /, adv. confusedness, n. /keuhn fyoohz /, v.t., confused, confusing. 1. to pe …

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  • 90derange — derangeable, adj. deranger, n. /di raynj /, v.t., deranged, deranging. 1. to throw into disorder; disarrange. 2. to disturb the condition, action, or function of. 3. to make insane. [1770 80; < F déranger, OF desrengier, equiv. to des DIS 1 +&#8230; …

    Universalium