| CECUTIENCY | • cecutiency n. (Obsolete) Partial blindness, or a tendency toward blindness. • CECUTIENCY n. a tendency to blindness. |
| ELOQUENTLY | • eloquently adv. In an eloquent manner; stated well. • ELOQUENT adv. fluent in speech. |
| ESURIENTLY | • esuriently adv. In an esurient manner. • ESURIENT adv. hungry, greedy. |
| EVENTFULLY | • eventfully adv. In a eventful manner; with much activity. • EVENTFUL adv. momentous. |
| EVENTUALLY | • eventually adv. In the end; at some later time, especially after a long time, a series of problems, struggles, delays or setbacks. • eventually adv. (Mathematics, of a sequence) For some tail; for all terms beyond some term; with only finitely many exceptions. • eventually adv. (Proscribed, non-native speakers’ English) Possibly, potentially, perhaps. |
| EXECUTANCY | • executancy n. Execution; performance. • EXECUTANCY n. technique in music. |
| FREQUENTLY | • frequently adv. At frequent intervals. • frequently adv. (Mathematics, of a sequence) For infinitely many terms of the sequence. • FREQUENT adv. occurring often. |
| HYPOTENUSE | • hypotenuse n. (Geometry) The side of a right triangle opposite the right angle. • HYPOTENUSE n. the longest side of a right-angled triangle, also HYPOTHENUSE. |
| NEURECTOMY | • neurectomy n. (Surgery) The surgical excision of a nerve. • NEURECTOMY n. the surgical excision of part of a nerve. |
| TEMULENTLY | • temulently adv. In a temulent manner. • TEMULENT adv. pertaining to temulence. |
| TOURNEYERS | • tourneyers n. Plural of tourneyer. • TOURNEYER n. one who takes part in a tourney. |
| TUNELESSLY | • tunelessly adv. In a tuneless manner. • TUNELESS adv. without a tune. |
| UNBETRAYED | • unbetrayed adj. Not betrayed. • unbetrayed v. Simple past tense and past participle of unbetray. • UNBETRAYED adj. not betrayed. |
| UNTENDERLY | • untenderly adv. Without tenderness. • UNTENDER adv. not tender. |
| UNTYREABLE | • untyreable adj. Obsolete spelling of untirable. • UNTYREABLE adj. (Shakespeare) untirable. |
| YTHUNDERED | • ythundered adj. (Archaic) Struck by a thunderbolt. • YTHUNDERED adj. (Spenser) struck by a thunderbolt. |