(intransitive) To be current, widespread or predominant; to have currency or prevalence.
(intransitive) To be superior in strength, dominance, influence or frequency; to have or gain the advantage over others; to have the upper hand; to outnumber others.
(intransitive) To succeed in persuading or inducing.
(transitive, obsolete) To avail.
previde
previdi
preview
preview
noun
(colloquial) An advance showing of a film, exhibition etc.
(computing) a facility for seeing and checking a document or photo, or changes to it, before saving and/or printing it.
An experience of something in advance.
Something seen in advance.
verb
(computing) To show something in advance, a facility for seeing and checking a document or photo, or changes to it, before saving and/or printing it.
To show or watch something, or part of it, before it is complete.
previse
previse
verb
To foresee.
To forewarn.
previze
prevoid
prevoid
adj
Before the voiding of the bladder.
pristav
privacy
privacy
noun
(countable, obsolete) A place of seclusion.
(countable, obsolete) A private matter.
(obsolete) Secrecy.
(obsolete, law) A relationship between parties seen as being a result of their mutual interest or participation in a given transaction, contract etc.
(uncountable) Freedom from damaging publicity, public scrutiny, surveillance, and disclosure of personal information, usually by a government or a private organization.
(uncountable) Freedom from unwanted or undue disturbance of one's private life.
(uncountable) The state of being secluded from the presence, sight, or knowledge of others.
privado
privado
noun
(obsolete) A private friend; a confidant.
privant
privata
private
private
adj
(US, of a room in a medical facility) Not shared with another patient.
(not comparable, object-oriented programming) Accessible only to the class itself or instances of it, and not to other classes or even subclasses.
Belonging to, concerning, or accessible only to an individual person or a specific group.
Not accessible by the public.
Not in governmental office or employment.
Not publicly known; not open; secret.
Not traded by the public.
Protected from view or disturbance by others; secluded.
Secretive; reserved.
noun
(euphemistic, in the plural) The genitals.
(obsolete) A secret message; a personal unofficial communication.
(obsolete) One not invested with a public office.
(obsolete) Personal interest; particular business.
(obsolete) Privacy; retirement.
(usually in the plural) A private lesson.
A doctor working in privately rather than publicly funded health care.
A soldier of the lowest rank in the army.
verb
(Internet, transitive) To make something hidden from the public (without deleting it permanently).
privets
privets
noun
plural of privet
privier
privies
privies
noun
plural of privy
privily
privily
adv
(archaic) Secretly, in secret; in a private manner; privately.
privity
privity
noun
(archaic, in the plural) The genitals.
(law) A relationship between parties seen as being a result of their mutual interest or participation in a given transaction, e.g. contract, estate, etc.
(now rare, archaic) Privacy, secrecy.
(obsolete) A divine mystery; something known only to God, or revealed only in holy scriptures.
(obsolete) A private matter, a secret.
The fact of being privy to something; knowledge, compliance.
proavis
provide
provide
verb
(obsolete, Latinism) To foresee, to consider in advance.
To act to prepare for something.
To appoint to an ecclesiastical benefice before it is vacant. See provisor.
To establish as a previous condition; to stipulate.
To furnish (with), cause to be present.
To give what is needed or desired, especially basic needs.
To make a living; earn money for necessities.
To make possible or attainable.
provine
provine
verb
(obsolete) To lay a stock or branch of a vine in the ground for propagation.
proving
proving
noun
(homeopathy) Experimentation to determine which substances cause which effects when ingested.
verb
present participle of prove
proviso
proviso
noun
A conditional provision to an agreement.
pursive
pursive
adj
Obsolete form of pursy.
purview
purview
noun
(law) The enacting part of a statute.
(law) The scope of a statute.
Range of understanding.
Scope or range of interest or control.
pyruvic
pyruvic
adj
(biochemistry) Of or pertaining to pyruvic acid or its derivatives.
pyruvil
pyruvil
noun
(chemistry, archaic) A complex nitrogenous compound obtained by heating together pyruvic acid and urea.
pyvuril
ruptive
ruptive
adj
(obsolete) disruptive
spivery
spivery
noun
Alternative spelling of spivvery
upriver
upriver
adv
Against the current.
Towards the source of a river.
vampire
vampire
noun
(US naval jargon) Synonym of anti-ship missile (ASM), particularly an incoming hostile one.
(US, slang) A medical technician who works with patients' blood.
(colloquial) A person with the medical condition systemic lupus erythematosus, colloquially known as vampirism, with effects such as photosensitivity and brownish-red stained teeth.
(dated) A vamp: a seductive woman who exploits men.
(figurative, derogatory) A person who drains one's time, energy, money, etc.
A blood-sucking bat; vampire bat (Desmodus rotundus)
A mythological undead creature said to feed on the blood of the living.
verb
(transitive, figurative) To drain of energy or resources.
viipuri
viperan
viperid
viperid
noun
(zoology) Any member of the family Viperidae; a viper.