Matching Words
18696 ResultsBelow are the words that matched your query.
Modals
- noun - an auxiliary verb (such as `can' or `will') that is used to express modality
Models
- noun - a hypothetical description of a complex entity or process; "the computer program was based on a model of the circulatory and respiratory systems"
- a person who poses for a photographer or painter or sculptor; "the president didn't have time to be a model so the artist worked from photos"
- a representative form or pattern; "I profited from his example"
- a type of product; "his car was an old model"
- a woman who wears clothes to display fashions; "she was too fat to be a mannequin"
- assume a posture as for artistic purposes; "We don't know the woman who posed for Leonardo so often"
- construct a model of; "model an airplane"
- create a representation or model of; "The pilots are trained in conditions simulating high-altitude flights"
- display (clothes) as a mannequin; "model the latest fashion"
- form in clay, wax, etc; "model a head with clay"
- plan or create according to a model or models
- r
Modems
- noun - (from a combination of MOdulate and DEModulate) electronic equipment consisting of a device used to connect computers by a telephone line
Modena
- - A certain crimsonlike color.
Modern
- adjective - a contemporary person
- a typeface (based on an 18th century design by Gianbattista Bodoni) distinguished by regular shape and hairline serifs and heavy downstrokes
- ahead of the times; "the advanced teaching methods"; "had advanced views on the subject"; "a forward-looking corporation"; "is British industry innovative enough?"
- belonging to the modern era; since the Middle Ages; "modern art"; "modern furniture"; "modern history"; "totem poles are modern rather than prehistoric"
- characteristic of present-day art and music and literature and architecture
- relating to a recently developed fashion or style; "their offices are in a modern skyscraper"; "tables in modernistic designs";
- used of a living language; being the current stage in its development; "Modern English"; "New Hebrew is Israeli Hebrew"
Modest
- adjective - free from pomp or affectation; "comfortable but modest cottages"; "a simple rectangular brick building"; "a simple man with simple tastes"
- humble in spirit or manner; suggesting retiring mildness or even cowed submissiveness; "meek and self-effacing"
- limited in size or scope; "a small business"; "a newspaper with a modest circulation"; "small-scale plans"; "a pocket-size country"
- low or inferior in station or quality; "a humble cottage"; "a lowly parish priest"; "a modest man of the people"; "small beginnings"
- marked by simplicity; having a humble opinion of yourself; "a modest apartment"; "too modest to wear his medals"
- not large but sufficient in size or amount; "a modest salary"; "modest inflation"; "helped in my own small way"
- not offensive to sexual mores in conduct or appearance
Modify
- verb - add a modifier to a constituent
- alters
- cause to change; make different; cause a transformation; "The advent of the automobile may have altered the growth pattern of the city"; "The discussion has changed my thinking about the issue"
- changes
- make less severe or harsh or extreme; "please modify this letter to make it more polite"; "he modified his views on same-gender marriage"
Modish
- adjective - in the current fashion or style
Modist
- - One who follows the fashion.
Modius
- - A dry measure, containing about a peck.