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1 FAINT: GROW FAINT
[V]DEFETISCOR (-FETISCI -FESSUS SUM)ELANGUESCO (-ERE -GUI) -
2 FAINT
[A]LANGUENS (-ENTIS)LANGUIDULUS (-A -UM)LANGUIDUS (-A -UM)FRIGIDULUS (-A -UM)IAIUNUS (-A -UM)IAJUNUS (-A -UM)IEIUNUS (-A -UM)IEJUNUS (-A -UM)JAIUNUS (-A -UM)JAJUNUS (-A -UM)JEIUNUS (-A -UM)JEJUNUS (-A -UM)FRACTUS (-A -UM)HEBES (-ETIS)PUTER (-TRIS -TRE)PUTRIS (-E)INTERMORTUUS (-A -UM)MORTUUS (-A -UM)SURDUS (-A -UM)[N]SCOTOMA (-AE) (F)EXANIMATIO (-ONIS) (F)[V]STUPEFIO (-FIERI -FACTUS SUM)DEFICIO (-ERE -FECI -FECTUM)LANGUESCO (-ERE LANGUI)RELANGUESCO (-ERE -LANGUI)LINQUO (-ERE LIQUI)MORIOR (MORI MORTUUS SUM)REFRIGESCO (-ERE -FRIXI)RESIDO (-ERE -SEDI -SESSUM)SYNCOPO (-ARE -AVI -ATUS)- BE FAINT- GROW FAINT
См. также в других словарях:
faint — 1. Lose consciousness. Ma ule, ho oma ule, make. ♦ Faint from hunger, make pōloli. ♦ To grow faint, ho omake. ♦ To feign fainting, ho oma ule. ♦ To lie in a dead faint, moe make. 2. Weak, dizzy. Makapōuli, maka pōniuniu, ona ona,… … English-Hawaiian dictionary
Faint — Faint, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Fainted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Fainting}.] 1. To become weak or wanting in vigor; to grow feeble; to lose strength and color, and the control of the bodily or mental functions; to swoon; sometimes with away. See {Fainting} … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
faint — fainter, n. faintingly, adv. faintish, adj. faintishness, n. faintly, adv. faintness, n. /faynt/, adj., fainter, faintest, v., n. adj … Universalium
faint — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} verb ADVERB ▪ almost, nearly VERB + FAINT ▪ be about to, be going to ▪ He was so pale she thought he was going to faint. PRE … Collocations dictionary
faint — [[t]feɪnt[/t]] adj. faint•er, faint•est, v. n. 1) lacking brightness, vividness, clearness, loudness, strength, etc 2) feeble or slight 3) feeling weak, dizzy, or exhausted; about to lose consciousness 4) lacking courage; cowardly; timorous 5)… … From formal English to slang
faint — /feɪnt / (say faynt) adjective 1. lacking brightness, vividness, clearness, loudness, strength, etc.: a faint light; a faint colour; faint resemblance. 2. feeble; half hearted: faint resistance; faint praise. 3. feeling weak, dizzy, or exhausted; …
faint — {{11}}faint (adj.) c.1300, wanting in courage, now mostly in faint hearted (mid 15c.), from O.Fr. feint soft, weak, sluggish, pp. of feindre hesitate, falter, be indolent, show weakness, avoid one s duty by pretending (see FEIGN (Cf. feign)).… … Etymology dictionary
faint — Synonyms and related words: KO, abulic, achromatic, achromic, afraid, ailing, anemic, ashen, ashy, asthenic, bad, balmy, barely audible, below par, black out, blackout, bland, blear, bleared, bleary, bled white, bloodless, blow, blurred, blurry,… … Moby Thesaurus
faint — I. v. n. 1. Swoon, faint away. 2. Languish, fail, fade, grow weak, fail in vigor, lose strength. 3. Be disheartened, be discouraged, be dejected, be depressed, lose courage, be dispirited, be down hearted, sink into dejection. II. a. 1. Swooning … New dictionary of synonyms
faint — adj 1. pale, dim, distant, obscure, faded, weak, feeble, thin, faltering, trembling; low, soft, gentle, dulcet, whispered, muted, stifled, muffled; dull, indistinct, unclear, inaudible, imperceptible. 2. dizzy, Inf. woozy, vertiginous,… … A Note on the Style of the synonym finder
Polis and its culture (The) — The polis and its culture Robin Osborne INTRODUCTION ‘We love wisdom without becoming soft’, Thucydides has the Athenian politician Pericles claim, using the verb philosophein.1 Claims to, and respect for, wisdom in archaic Greece were by no… … History of philosophy