Matching Words
1094 ResultsBelow are the words that matched your query.
Infancies
- noun - the earliest state of immaturity
- the early stage of growth or development
Infandous
- - Too odious to be expressed or mentioned.
Infantile
- adjective - being or befitting or characteristic of an infant; "infantile games"
- indicating a lack of maturity; "childish tantrums"; "infantile behavior"
- of or relating to infants or infancy; "infantile paralysis"
Infatuate
- verb - arouse unreasoning love or passion in and cause to behave in an irrational way; "His new car has infatuated him"; "love has infatuated her"
Infecting
- verb - affect in a contagious way; "His laughter infects everyone who is in the same room"
- communicate a disease to; "Your children have infected you with this head cold"
- contaminate with a disease or microorganism
- corrupt with ideas or an ideology; "society was infected by racism"
Infection
- noun - (international law) illegality that taints or contaminates a ship or cargo rendering it liable to seizure
- (medicine) the invasion of the body by pathogenic microorganisms and their multiplication which can lead to tissue damage and disease
- (phonetics) the alteration of a speech sound under the influence of a neighboring sound
- an incident in which an infectious disease is transmitted
- moral corruption or contamination; "ambitious men are led astray by an infection that is almost unavoidable"
- the communication of an attitude or emotional state among a number of people; "a contagion of mirth"; "the infection of his enthusiasm for poetry"
- the pathological state resulting from the invasion of the body by pathogenic microorganisms
Infective
- adjective - able to cause disease; "infective agents"; "pathogenic bacteria"
- caused by infection or capable of causing infection; "viruses and other infective agents"; "a carrier remains infective without himself showing signs of the disease"
Inferable
- - Capable of being inferred or deduced from premises.
Inference
- noun - the reasoning involved in drawing a conclusion or making a logical judgment on the basis of circumstantial evidence and prior conclusions rather than on the basis of direct observation