| ABJECTING | • abjecting v. Present participle of abject. • ABJECT v. to throw out, cast away. |
| ABJECTION | • abjection n. A low or downcast condition; meanness of spirit; abasement; degradation. • abjection n. (Obsolete, chiefly figuratively) Something cast off; garbage. • abjection n. (Obsolete) The act of bringing down or humbling; casting down. |
| ABJOINTED | • abjointed v. Simple past tense and past participle of abjoint. • ABJOINT v. to cut off by forming a septum. |
| BANJOISTS | • banjoists n. Plural of banjoist. • BANJOIST n. one who plays the banjo. |
| BEJESUITS | • bejesuits v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bejesuit. • BEJESUIT v. to initiate into Jesuitism. |
| BIJECTION | • bijection n. (Set theory) A one-to-one correspondence, a function which is both a surjection and an injection. • BIJECTION n. in maths, a kind of mapping function. |
| BIJECTIVE | • bijective adj. (Mathematics, of a map) Both injective and surjective. • bijective adj. (Mathematics) Having a component that is (specified to be) a bijective map; that specifies a bijective map. • BIJECTIVE adj. having the properties of a bijection, a kind of mapping function. |
| BOERTJIES | • BOERTJIE n. (South African) friend, as a form of greeting. |
| JAILBAITS | • jailbaits n. Plural of jailbait. • JAILBAIT n. (offensive) a sexually attractive person who is below the age of legal consent. |
| JAWBATION | • jawbation n. Alternative spelling of jobation. • JAWBATION n. a long, tedious rebuke or harangue, also JOBATION. |
| JITTERBUG | • jitterbug n. (Colloquial) A nervous or jittery person. • jitterbug n. (Jazz) A jazz musician or aficionado. • jitterbug n. (Dance) An uptempo jazz or swing dance which embellishes on the two-step pattern and frequently incorporates… |
| JOBATIONS | • jobations n. Plural of jobation. • JOBATION n. a long, tedious rebuke or harangue, also JAWBATION. |
| JUBILATED | • jubilated v. Simple past tense and past participle of jubilate. • JUBILATE v. to rejoice. |
| JUBILATES | • jubilates v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of jubilate. • JUBILATE v. to rejoice. |
| JUMBLIEST | • JUMBLY adj. in a jumble. |
| OBJECTIFY | • objectify v. To make (something, such as an abstract idea) possible to be perceived by the senses. • objectify v. To treat (something) as objectively real. • objectify v. To treat (someone) as a mere object, denying (their) dignity. |
| OBJECTING | • objecting v. Present participle of object. • OBJECT v. to argue in opposition. |
| OBJECTION | • objection n. The act of objecting. • objection n. A statement expressing opposition, or a reason or cause for expressing opposition (generally followed… • objection n. (Law) An official protest raised in a court of law during a legal trial over a violation of the rules… |
| OBJECTIVE | • objective adj. Of or relating to a material object, actual existence or reality. • objective adj. Not influenced by the emotions or prejudices. • objective adj. Based on observed facts; without subjective assessment. |