- ject
- (L). Throw
Dictionary of word roots and combining forms . Donald J. Borror. 2013.
Dictionary of word roots and combining forms . Donald J. Borror. 2013.
ject — Ject, Le premier ject, Sylua, id est, id quod velocissimo stylo percurritur, vt postea componatur. B … Thresor de la langue françoyse
ject — ab·ject·ive; ab·ject·ly; ad·ject; de·ject·ed·ly; de·ject·ed·ness; dis·ject; in·ject; in·ter·ject; in·tro·ject; ob·ject·able; ob·ject·ant; ob·ject·ize; ob·ject·less; pro·ject·able; re·ject·able; re·ject·age; re·ject·ee; re·ject·er; ret·ro·ject;… … English syllables
Download.ject — Scob redirects here. For the skating club, see Skating Club of Boston. Toofer redirects here. For the 30 Rock character Toofer , see James Toofer Spurlock. In computing, Download.ject (also known as Toofer and Scob) is a malware program for… … Wikipedia
ab|ject´ly — ab|ject «AB jehkt, ab JEHKT», adjective, noun. –adj. 1. so low or degraded as to be hopeless; wretched; miserable: »Many people still live in abject poverty. 2. deserving contempt; despicable: »abject flattery. Shame on you for your abject fear!… … Useful english dictionary
ab|ject´ness — ab|ject «AB jehkt, ab JEHKT», adjective, noun. –adj. 1. so low or degraded as to be hopeless; wretched; miserable: »Many people still live in abject poverty. 2. deserving contempt; despicable: »abject flattery. Shame on you for your abject fear!… … Useful english dictionary
ab|ject — «AB jehkt, ab JEHKT», adjective, noun. –adj. 1. so low or degraded as to be hopeless; wretched; miserable: »Many people still live in abject poverty. 2. deserving contempt; despicable: »abject flattery. Shame on you for your abject fear!… … Useful english dictionary
de|ject´ed|ness — de|ject|ed «dih JEHK tihd», adjective. 1. in low spirits; sad; discouraged: »She was feeling dejected and unhappy until the good news cheered her up. Today glad tomorrow dejected (Edward Bulwer Lytton). SYNONYM(S): downcast, disheartened. See syn … Useful english dictionary
de|ject´ed|ly — de|ject|ed «dih JEHK tihd», adjective. 1. in low spirits; sad; discouraged: »She was feeling dejected and unhappy until the good news cheered her up. Today glad tomorrow dejected (Edward Bulwer Lytton). SYNONYM(S): downcast, disheartened. See syn … Useful english dictionary
de|ject|ed — «dih JEHK tihd», adjective. 1. in low spirits; sad; discouraged: »She was feeling dejected and unhappy until the good news cheered her up. Today glad tomorrow dejected (Edward Bulwer Lytton). SYNONYM(S): downcast, disheartened. See syn. under sad … Useful english dictionary
in|tro|ject — «IHN truh JEHKT», transitive verb. 1. Psychology. to take in and absorb into the unconscious (the attitudes of other persons or the characteristics of outside objects). 2. to incorporate (any idea, feeling, or belief): »We have introjected an… … Useful english dictionary