| EXHORTATIVE | • exhortative adj. (Comparable) Appearing to exhort; in an urging manner. • exhortative adj. (Grammar, not comparable) Inflected hortative verb form that a speaker uses to avidly encourage a listener. • exhortative n. The exhortative mood. |
| EXPATIATIVE | • expatiative adj. Expatiatory; expansive; diffusive. • EXPATIATIVE adj. expansive, also EXPATIATORY. |
| EXPECTATIVE | • expectative adj. Of or pertaining to an expectation. • expectative adj. (Canon law) Of or pertaining to the reversion of a benefice. • expectative n. (Canon law) The anticipatory grant of an ecclesiastical benefice, not vacant at the moment but which… |
| EXTENUATIVE | • extenuative adj. Tending to extenuate. • EXTENUATIVE n. a medicine which causes thinness or emaciation. |
| EXTIRPATIVE | • extirpative adj. Of, relating to, or pertaining to an extirpation. • EXTIRPATIVE adj. serving to extirpate, also EXTIRPATORY. |
| EXTRACTIVES | • extractives n. Plural of extractive. • EXTRACTIVE n. an extract. |
| EXTRAVAGANT | • extravagant adj. Exceeding the bounds of something; roving; hence, foreign. • extravagant adj. Extreme; wild; excessive; unrestrained. • extravagant adj. Exorbitant. |
| EXTRAVAGATE | • extravagate v. (Intransitive) To wander beyond the limits. • extravagate v. (Intransitive) To rove. • EXTRAVAGATE v. (archaic) to wander; to exceed reasonable limits. |
| EXTRAVASATE | • extravasate adj. Outside of a vessel. • extravasate n. That which is outside a vessel (especially blood or other bodily fluids). • extravasate v. To flow (or be forced) from a vessel. |
| EXTRAVERTED | • extraverted adj. Alternative form of extroverted. • extraverted v. Simple past tense and past participle of extravert. • EXTRAVERT v. to turn outwards. |
| EXTRAVERTLY | • EXTRAVERT adv. turning outwards, also EXTROVERT. |
| EXTROVERTED | • extroverted v. Simple past tense and past participle of extrovert. • extroverted adj. Turned or thrust outwards, especially… • EXTROVERT v. to turn outwards. |
| EXTROVERTLY | • EXTROVERT adv. turning outwards, also EXTRAVERT. |