Webster's Dictionary, 1913
 
 
Adios     interj.   [ Spanish , from Latin 
 ad to + 
 deus god. Confer  
Adieu .] 
 Adieu; farewell; good-by; -- chiefly used among Spanish-speaking people.  » This word is often pronounced å*dē"os, but the Spanish accent, though weak, is on the final syllable. 
 Adipescent     adjective   [ Latin  adeps ,  adipis , fat +  -escent .]  Becoming fatty. 
Adipic     adjective   [ Latin  adeps ,  adipis , fat.]  (Chemistry)  Pertaining to, or derived from, fatty or oily substances; -- applied to certain acids obtained from fats by the action of nitric acid. 
Adipocerate     transitive verb    To convert into adipocere. 
Adipoceration     noun    The act or process of changing into adipocere. 
Adipocere     noun   [ Latin  adeps ,  adipis , fat +  cera wax: confer French  adipocere .]  A soft, unctuous, or waxy substance, of a light brown color, into which the fat and muscle tissue of dead bodies sometimes are converted, by long immersion in water or by burial in moist places. It is a result of fatty degeneration. 
Adipoceriform     adjective   [  Adipocere +  -form .]  Having the form or appearance of adipocere; as, an  adipoceriform tumor. 
Adipocerous     adjective    Like adipocere. 
Adipogenous     adjective   [ See  
Adipose ;  
-genous .] 
 (Medicine)  Producing fat.  
 Adipolysis     noun   [ New Latin ; Latin  adeps ,  adipis , fat + Greek ... a loosing.]  (Physiol.)  The digestion of fats.  
Adipolytic     adjective   [ Latin  adeps ,  adipis , fat + Greek ... to loose.]  (Chemistry)  Hydrolyzing fats; converting neutral fats into glycerin and free fatty acids, esp. by the action of an enzyme; as,  adipolytic action.  
Adipoma     noun   ; 
 Latin plural   -mata  . [ New Latin See  
Adipose ;  
-oma .] 
 (Medicine)  A mass of fat found internally; also, a fatty tumor. -- 
 Ad`i*pom"a*tous   adjective    
 Adipose     adjective   [ Latin  adeps ,  adipis , fat, grease.]  Of or pertaining to animal fat; fatty.  
  Adipose fin   (Zoology) ,  a soft boneless fin. --   Adipose tissue   (Anat.) ,  that form of animal tissue which forms or contains fat. 
Adipose     noun    (Physiol.)  The fat present in the cells of adipose tissue, composed mainly of varying mixtures of tripalmitin, tristearin, and triolein. It solidifies after death.  
Adiposeness, Adiposity     noun    The state of being fat; fatness. 
Adipous     adjective    Fatty; adipose. [ R.]
Adipsous     adjective   [ Greek ...;  'a priv. + ..., thirst.]  Quenching thirst, as certain fruits. 
Adipsy     noun   [ Greek ... not thirsty;  'a priv. + ... thirst.]  (Medicine)  Absence of thirst. 
Adit     noun   [ Latin 
 aditus , from 
 adire , 
 ...aitum , to go to; 
 ad + 
 ire to go.] 
  1.   An entrance or passage. Specifically: The nearly horizontal opening by which a mine is entered, or by which water and ores are carried away; -- called also  drift and  tunnel .    2.   Admission; approach; access. [ R.] 
 Yourself and yours shall have
 Free  adit .
  Tennyson. 
 
 Adjacence, Adjacency   [ Confer Late Latin  adjacentia .] 
  1.   The state of being adjacent or contiguous; contiguity; as, the  adjacency of lands or buildings.    2.   That which is adjacent. [ R.]  Sir T. Browne. 
Adjacent     adjective   [ Latin 
 adjacens , 
 -centis , present participle of 
 adjacere to lie near; 
 ad + 
 jacēre to lie: confer French 
 adjacent .] 
 Lying near, close, or contiguous; neighboring; bordering on; as, a field  adjacent to the highway. "The 
 adjacent forest." 
 B. Jonson.    Adjacent  or 
  contiguous angle  . 
 (Geom.)  See  Angle .   Syn. -- Adjoining; contiguous; near. --  
Adjacent ,  
Adjoining ,  
Contiguous . Things are 
 adjacent when they lie close each other, not necessary in actual contact; as, 
 adjacent fields, 
 adjacent villages, etc.  
 I find that all Europe with her  adjacent isles is peopled with Christians.
  Howell. 
  Things are 
 adjoining when they meet at some line or point of junction; as, 
 adjoining farms, an 
 adjoining highway. What is spoken of as 
 contiguous should touch with some extent of one side or the whole of it; as, a row of 
 contiguous buildings; a wood 
 contiguous to a plain.
 Adjacent     noun    That which is adjacent. [ R.]  Locke. 
Adjacently     adverb     So as to be adjacent. 
Adject     transitive verb   [ Latin 
 adjectus , past participle of 
 adjicere to throw to, to add to; 
 ad + 
 jacĕre to throw. See  
Jet a shooting forth.] 
 To add or annex; to join.  Leland. 
 Adjection     noun   [ Latin 
 adjectio , from 
 adjicere : confer French 
 adjection . See  
Adject .] 
 The act or mode of adding; also, the thing added. [ R.] 
 B. Jonson. 
 Adjectional     adjective    Pertaining to adjection; that is, or may be, annexed. [ R.]  Earle. 
Adjectitious   [ Latin  adjectitius .]  Added; additional.  Parkhurst. 
Adjectival     adjective    Of or relating to the relating to the adjective; of the nature of an adjective; adjective.  W. Taylor (1797) 
Adjectivally     adverb     As, or in the manner of, an adjective; adjectively. 
Adjective   (ăd"jĕk*tĭv)  
 adjective   [ See  
Adjective ,  
 noun   ] 
  1.   Added to a substantive as an attribute; of the nature of an adjunct; as, an  adjective word or sentence.    2.   Not standing by itself; dependent.    Adjective color  , 
 a color which requires to be fixed by some mordant or base to give it permanency.    3.   Relating to procedure. "The whole English law, substantive and 
 adjective ." 
 Macaulay. 
 Adjective     noun   [ Latin 
 adjectivum (sc. 
 nomen ), neut. of 
 adjectivus that is added, from 
 adjicere : confer French 
 adjectif . See  
Adject .] 
  1.   (Gram.)  A word used with a noun, or substantive, to express a quality of the thing named, or something attributed to it, or to limit or define it, or to specify or describe a thing, as distinct from something else. Thus, in phrase, "a wise ruler,"  wise is the adjective, expressing a property of  ruler .    2.   A dependent; an accessory.  Fuller. 
 Adjective     transitive verb   [  
 imperfect & past participle     Adjectived ;  
 present participle & verbal noun     Adjectiving ] 
 To make an adjective of; to form or change into an adjective. [ R.] 
 Language has as much occasion to  adjective the distinct signification of the verb, and to  adjective also the mood, as it has to  adjective time. It has . . .  adjectived all three.
  Tooke. 
 
 Adjectively     adverb     In the manner of an adjective; as, a word used  adjectively . 
Adjoin     transitive verb   [  
 imperfect & past participle     Adjoined ;  
 present participle & verbal noun     Adjoining .] [ Middle English 
 ajoinen , Old French 
 ajoindre , French 
 adjoindre , from Latin 
 adjungere ; 
 ad + 
 jungere to join. See  
Join , and confer  
Adjunct .] 
 To join or unite to; to lie contiguous to; to be in contact with; to attach; to append.   Corrections . . . should be, as remarks,  adjoined by way of note.
  Watts. 
 
 Adjoin   (ăd*join")  
 intransitive verb     1.   To lie or be next, or in contact; to be contiguous; as, the houses  adjoin .   When one man's land  adjoins to another's.
  Blackstone. 
  » The construction with 
 to , 
 on , or 
 with is obsolete or obsolescent. 
  2.   To join one's self. [ Obsolete] 
 She lightly unto him  adjoined side to side.
  Spenser. 
 
 Adjoinant     adjective    Contiguous. [ Obsolete]  Carew. 
Adjoining     adjective    Joining to; contiguous; adjacent; as, an  adjoining room. "The 
 adjoining fane." 
 Dryden.   Upon the hills  adjoining to the city.
  Shak. 
   Syn. -- Adjacent; contiguous; near; neighboring; abutting; bordering. See  
Adjacent .
 Adjoint     noun    An adjunct; a helper. [ Obsolete]
Adjourn     transitive verb   [  
 imperfect & past participle     Adjourned ;  
 present participle & verbal noun     Adjourning ] [ Middle English 
 ajornen , Old French 
 ajoiner , 
 ajurner , French 
 ajourner ; Old French 
 a (L. 
 ad ) + 
 jor , 
 jur , 
 jorn , French 
 jour , day, from Latin 
 diurnus belonging to the day, from 
 dies day. Confer  
Journal ,  
Journey .] 
 To put off or defer to another day, or indefinitely; to postpone; to close or suspend for the day; -- commonly said of the meeting, or the action, of convened body; as, to  adjourn the meeting; to  adjourn a debate.   It is a common practice to  adjourn the reformation of their lives to a further time.
  Barrow. 
   'Tis a needful fitness
 That we  adjourn this court till further day.
  Shak. 
   Syn. -- To delay; defer; postpone; put off; suspend. -- To  
Adjourn ,  
Prorogue ,  
Dissolve . These words are used in respect to public bodies when they lay aside business and separate. 
 Adjourn , both in Great Britain and this country, is applied to all cases in which such bodies separate for a brief period, with a view to meet again. 
 Prorogue is applied in Great Britain to that act of the executive government, as the sovereign, which brings a session of Parliament to a close. The word is not used in this country, but a legislative body is said, in such a case, to adjourn 
 sine die . To 
 dissolve is to annul the corporate existence of a body. In order to exist again the body must be reconstituted.
 Adjourn     intransitive verb    To suspend business for a time, as from one day to another, or for a longer period, or indefinitely; usually, to suspend public business, as of legislatures and courts, or other convened bodies; as, congress  adjourned at four o'clock; the court  adjourned without day. 
Adjournal     noun    Adjournment; postponement. [ R.] "An  adjournal of the Diet."  Sir W. Scott. 
Adjournment   (-m
 e nt)  
 noun   [ Confer f. 
 adjournement , Old French 
 ajornement . See  
Adjourn .] 
  1.   The act of adjourning; the putting off till another day or time specified, or without day.    2.   The time or interval during which a public body adjourns its sittings or postpones business. 
 Adjudge     transitive verb   [  
 imperfect & past participle     Adjudged ;  
 present participle & verbal noun     Adjudging ] [ Middle English 
 ajugen , Old French 
 ajugier , from Latin 
 adjudicare ; 
 ad + 
 judicare to judge. See  
Judge , and confer  
Adjudicate .] 
  1.   To award judicially in the case of a controverted question; as, the prize was  adjudged to the victor.    2.   To determine in the exercise of judicial power; to decide or award judicially; to adjudicate; as, the case was  adjudged in the November term.    3.   To sentence; to condemn.   Without reprieve,  adjudged to death
 For want of well pronouncing Shibboleth.
  Milton. 
    4.   To regard or hold; to judge; to deem.   He  adjudged him unworthy of his friendship.
  Knolles. 
   Syn. -- To decree; award; determine; adjudicate; ordain; assign.
 Adjudger     noun    One who adjudges. 
Adjudgment   (-m e nt)   noun    The act of adjudging; judicial decision; adjudication.  Sir W. Temple. 
Adjudicate     transitive verb   [  
 imperfect & past participle     Adjudicated ;  
 present participle & verbal noun     Adjudicating ] [ Latin 
 adjudicatus , past participle of 
 adjudicare . See  
Adjudge .] 
 To adjudge; to try and determine, as a court; to settle by judicial decree. 
 Adjudicate     intransitive verb    To come to a judicial decision; as, the court  adjudicated upon the case. 
Adjudication     noun   [ Latin  adjudicatio : confer French  adjudication .] 
  1.   The act of adjudicating; the act or process of trying and determining judicially.    2.   A deliberate determination by the judicial power; a judicial decision or sentence. "An  adjudication in favor of natural rights."  Burke.    3.   (Bankruptcy practice)  The decision upon the question whether the debtor is a bankrupt.  Abbott.    4.   (Scots Law)  A process by which land is attached security or in satisfaction of a debt. 
Adjudicative     adjective    Adjudicating. 
Adjudicator     noun    One who adjudicates.