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Word Meanings - BANGLE - Book Publishers vocabulary database

To waste by little and little; to fritter away.

Related words: (words related to BANGLE)

  • WASTEL
    A kind of white and fine bread or cake; -- called also wastel bread, and wastel cake. Roasted flesh or milk and wasted bread. Chaucer. The simnel bread and wastel cakes, which were only used at the tables of the highest nobility. Sir W. Scott.
  • WASTETHRIFT
    A spendthrift.
  • WASTEBOARD
    See 3
  • LITTLENESS
    The state or quality of being little; as, littleness of size, thought, duration, power, etc. Syn. -- Smallness; slightness; inconsiderableness; narrowness; insignificance; meanness; penuriousness.
  • WASTE
    the kindred German word; cf. OHG. wuosti, G. wüst, OS. w, D. woest, 1. Desolate; devastated; stripped; bare; hence, dreary; dismal; gloomy; cheerless. The dismal situation waste and wild. Milton. His heart became appalled as he gazed forward into
  • WASTEFUL
    1. Full of waste; destructive to property; ruinous; as; wasteful practices or negligence; wasteful expenses. 2. Expending, or tending to expend, property, or that which is valuable, in a needless or useless manner; lavish; prodigal; as, a wasteful
  • LITTLE-EASE
    An old slang name for the pillory, stocks, etc., of a prison. Latimer.
  • WASTER
    1. One who, or that which, wastes; one who squanders; one who consumes or expends extravagantly; a spendthrift; a prodigal. He also that is slothful in his work is brother to him that is a great waster. Prov. xviii. 9. Sconces are great wasters
  • WASTEWEIR
    An overfall, or weir, for the escape, or overflow, of superfluous water from a canal, reservoir, pond, or the like.
  • WASTEBOOK
    A book in which rough entries of transactions are made, previous to their being carried into the journal.
  • FRITTER
    1. A small quantity of batter, fried in boiling lard or in a frying pan. Fritters are of various kinds, named from the substance inclosed in the batter; as, apple fritters, clam fritters, oyster fritters. 2. A fragment; a shred; a small piece.
  • WASTENESS
    1. The quality or state of being waste; a desolate state or condition; desolation. A day of trouble and distress, a day of wasteness. Zeph. i. 15. 2. That which is waste; a desert; a waste. Through woods and wasteness wide him daily sought.
  • WASTEBASKET
    A basket used in offices, libraries, etc., as a receptacle for waste paper.
  • LITTLE
    place being supplied by less, or, rarely, lesser. See Lesser. For the superlative least is used, the regular form, littlest, occurring very rarely, except in some of the English provinces, and occasionally in colloquial language. " Where love is
  • ALKALI WASTE
    Waste material from the manufacture of alkali; specif., soda waste.
  • OVERWASTED
    Wasted or worn out; Drayton.
  • DO-LITTLE
    One who performs little though professing much. Great talkers are commonly dolittles. Bp. Richardson.
  • FOREWASTE
    See GASCOIGNE
  • FORWASTE
    To desolate or lay waste utterly. Spenser.
  • CANDLEWASTER
    One who consumes candles by being up late for study or dissipation. A bookworm, a candlewaster. B. Jonson.
  • MILTWASTE
    A small European fern formerly used in medicine.

 

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