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Definition of disci
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 disci is as below...
Disci (pl. ) of
Discu.
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Exercise
::
Exercise
(v. t.) To exert for the sake of
training
or
improvement;
to
practice
in order to
develop;
hence,
also, to
improve
by
practice;
to
discipline,
and to use or to for the
purpose
of
training;
as, to
exercise
arms; to
exercise
one's self in
music;
to
exercise
troops..
Plotinist
::
Plotinist
(n.) A
disciple
of
Plotinus,
a
celebrated
Platonic
philosopher
of the third
century,
who
taught
that the human soul
emanates
from the
divine
Being,
to whom it
reunited
at
death..
Discipline
::
Discipline
(n.)
Severe
training,
corrective
of
faults;
instruction
by means of
misfortune,
suffering,
punishment,
etc..
Christophany
::
Christophany
(n.) An
appearance
of
Christ,
as to his
disciples
after the
crucifixion..
Condisciple
::
Condisciple
(n.) A
schoolfellow;
a
fellow-student.
Disciform
::
Disciform
(a.)
Discoid.
Peripatetic
::
Peripatetic
(n.) A
disciple
of
Aristotle;
an
Aristotelian.
Disciplinarian
::
Disciplinarian
(n.) One who
disciplines;
one who
excels
in
training,
especially
with
training,
especially
with
regard
to order and
obedience;
one who
enforces
rigid
discipline;
a
stickler
for the
observance
of rules and
methods
of
training;
as, he is a
better
disciplinarian
than
scholar..
Indiscipline
::
Indiscipline
(n.) Want of
discipline
or
instruction.
Military
::
Military
(a.) Of or
pertaining
to
soldiers,
to arms, or to war;
belonging
to,
engaged
in, or
appropriate
to, the
affairs
of war; as, a
military
parade;
military
discipline;
military
bravery;
military
conduct;
military
renown..
Lyopomata
::
Lyopomata
(n. pl.) An order of
brachiopods,
in which the
valves
of shell are not
articulated
by a
hinge.
It
includes
the
Lingula,
Discina,
and
allied
forms..
Discipline
::
Discipline
(v. t.) To
accustom
to
regular
and
systematic
action;
to bring under
control
so as to act
systematically;
to train to act
together
under
orders;
to teach
subordination
to; to form a habit of
obedience
in; to
drill.
Relax
::
Relax (n.) To make less
severe
or
rigorous;
to abate the
stringency
of; to remit in
respect
to
strenuousness,
earnestness,
or
effort;
as, to relax
discipline;
to relax one's
attention
or
endeavors..
Indisciplinable
::
Indisciplinable
(a.) Not
disciplinable;
undisciplinable.
Discipline
::
Discipline
(n.)
Self-inflicted
and
voluntary
corporal
punishment,
as
penance,
or
otherwise;
specifically,
a
penitential
scourge..
Sergeant
::
Sergeant
(n.) In a
company,
battery,
or
troop,
a
noncommissioned
officer
next in rank above a
corporal,
whose duty is to
instruct
recruits
in
discipline,
to form the
ranks,
etc..
Glassite
::
Glassite
(n.) A
member
of a
Scottish
sect,
founded
in the 18th
century
by John
Glass,
a
minister
of the
Established
Church
of
Scotland,
who
taught
that
justifying
faith is no more than a
simple
assent
to the
divine
testimone
passively
recived
by the
understanding.
The
English
and
American
adherents
of this faith are
called
Sandemanians,
after
Robert
Sandeman,
the
son-in-law
and
disciple
of
Glass..
Senate
::
Senate
(n.) In some
American
colleges,
a
council
of
elected
students,
presided
over by the
president
of the
college,
to which are
referred
cases of
discipline
and
matters
of
general
concern
affecting
the
students..
Praxis
::
Praxis
(n.) Use;
practice;
especially,
exercise
or
discipline
for a
specific
purpose
or
object..
Discipling
::
Discipling
(p. pr. & vb. n.) of
Discipl.
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