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Definition of rally
Thanks for using this online dictionary, we have been helping millions of people improve their use of the english language with its free online services. English definition of rally is as below...
Rally (v. i.) To come into
orderly
arrangement;
to renew
order,
or
united
effort,
as
troops
scattered
or put to
flight;
to
assemble;
to
unite..
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Siderite
::
Siderite
(n.)
Carbonate
of iron, an
important
ore of iron
occuring
generally
in
cleavable
masses,
but also in
rhombohedral
crystals.
It is of a light
yellowish
brown
color.
Called
also
sparry
iron,
spathic
iron..
Sorry
::
Sorry (a.)
Grieved
for the loss of some good;
pained
for some evil;
feeling
regret;
-- now
generally
used to
express
light grief or
affliction,
but
formerly
often used to
express
deeper
feeling..
Preponderant
::
Preponderant
(a.)
Preponderating;
outweighing;
overbalancing;
-- used
literally
and
figuratively;
as, a
preponderant
weight;
of
preponderant
importance..
Key
::
Key (n.) The
fundamental
tone of a
movement
to which its
modulations
are
referred,
and with which it
generally
begins
and ends;
keynote..
Diastole
::
Diastole
(n.) A
figure
by which a
syllable
naturally
short is made long.
Brass
::
Brass (n.) A brass plate
engraved
with a
figure
or
device.
Specifically,
one used as a
memorial
to the dead, and
generally
having
the
portrait,
coat of arms, etc..
Cherub
::
Cherub
(n.) One of a order of
angels,
variously
represented
in art. In
European
painting
the
cherubim
have been shown as blue, to
denote
knowledge,
as
distinguished
from the
seraphim
(see
Seraph),
and in later art the
children's
heads with wings are
generally
called
cherubs..
Spectrally
::
Spectrally
(adv.)
In the form or
manner
of a
specter.
Lost
::
Lost (v. t.)
Ruined
or
destroyed,
either
physically
or
morally;
past help or hope; as, a ship lost at sea; a woman lost to
virtue;
a lost
soul..
Distort
::
Distort
(v. t.) To force or put out of the true
posture
or
direction;
to twist aside
mentally
or
morally.
Label
::
Label (n.) The name now
generally
given to the
projecting
molding
by the
sides,
and over the tops, of
openings
in
mediaeval
architecture.
It
always
has a
/quare
form, as in the
illustration..
Prejudice
::
Prejudice
(n.) To
obstruct
or
injure
by
prejudices,
or by
previous
bias of the mind;
hence,
generally,
to hurt; to
damage;
to
injure;
to
impair;
as, to
prejudice
a good
cause..
Hammer
::
Hammer
(v. i.) To
strike
repeated
blows,
literally
or
figuratively..
Social
::
Social
(a.)
Naturally
growing
in
groups
or
masses;
-- said of many
individual
plants
of the same
species.
Ritualism
::
Ritualism
(n.)
Specifically
:(a) The
principles
and
practices
of those in the
Church
of
England,
who in the
development
of the
Oxford
movement,
so-called,
have
insisted
upon a
return
to the use in
church
services
of the
symbolic
ornaments
(altar
cloths,
encharistic
vestments,
candles,
etc.) that were
sanctioned
in the
second
year of
Edward
VI., and
never,
as they
maintain,
forbidden
by
competennt
authority,
although
generally
disused.
Schaff-Herzog
Encyc.
(b) Also, the
principles
and
practices
o
Sunbow
::
Sunbonnet
(n.) A
bonnet,
generally
made of some thin or light
fabric,
projecting
beyond
the face, and
commonly
having
a cape, -- worn by women as a
protection
against
the sun..
Scamillus
::
Scamillus
(n.) A sort of
second
plinth
or
block,
below the bases of Ionic and
Corinthian
columns,
generally
without
moldings,
and of
smaller
size
horizontally
than the
pedestal..
Upright
::
Upright
(a.)
Morally
erect;
having
rectitude;
honest;
just; as, a man
upright
in all his
ways..
Decamp
::
Decamp
(v. i.)
Hence,
to
depart
suddenly;
to run away; --
generally
used
disparagingly..
Reptilia
::
Reptilia
(n. pl.) A class of
air-breathing
oviparous
vertebrates,
usually
covered
with
scales
or bony
plates.
The heart
generally
has two
auricles
and one
ventricle.
The
development
of the young is the same as that of
birds..
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