| CONJURERS | • conjurers n. Plural of conjurer. • CONJURER n. a person who performs magic tricks, also CONJUROR. |
| CONJURIES | • conjuries n. Plural of conjury. • CONJURY n. conjurors' tricks, magic. |
| CONJURING | • conjuring v. Present participle of conjure. • conjuring n. (Gerund of conjure) An act in which something is conjured. • CONJURING n. the act of conjuring. |
| CONJURORS | • conjurors n. Plural of conjuror. • CONJUROR n. a person who performs magic tricks, also CONJURER. |
| INJURABLE | • injurable adj. Capable of being injured. • INJURABLE adj. that can be injured. |
| INJURIOUS | • injurious adj. Causing physical harm or injury; harmful, hurtful. • injurious adj. Causing harm to one’s reputation; invidious, defamatory, libelous, slanderous. • INJURIOUS adj. causing injury. |
| NONINJURY | • noninjury n. A practice or philosophy of not causing injury to others. • noninjury adj. Not of or pertaining to injury. • NONINJURY adj. relating to something that is not an injury. |
| NONJURIES | • nonjuries n. Plural of nonjury. • NONJURY n. a trial without jury. |
| NONJURING | • nonjuring adj. (Historical, Anglicanism) Describing the bishops, clergy and congregations that refused to swear allegiance… • nonjuring adj. (Historical) Describing the bishops and clergy that refused to take the oath of fidelity to the French… • non-juring adj. Alternative form of nonjuring. |
| NONJURORS | • nonjurors n. Plural of nonjuror. • NONJUROR n. one of those adherents of James II who refused to take the oath of allegiance to William and Mary, or to their successors, after the revolution of 1688; a Jacobite. |
| REINJURED | • reinjured v. Simple past tense and past participle of reinjure. • REINJURE v. to injure again. |
| REINJURES | • reinjures v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of reinjure. • REINJURE v. to injure again. |
| UNINJURED | • uninjured adj. That did not suffer injury. • uninjured n. One or many people or objects that have not suffered injury. • UNINJURED adj. not injured. |