JUSTIFY 1175 KAFIR chosen literature for my life ;pursuit " ~they); "He to truth, propriety, accuracy, exactness,or the like; jus­ acteristic of, Juvenal (60?-140? A, D,), the Roman aatlri1 poet, whose style is marked by verve and crude realism. 0 T."n~:h mo.:~ 1 tice; reasonableness; fairness; equity. t3wt!&'in~,}'?n-:u~p~i:1~ ¥l"f ~~jtl:~ I value the satisfaction I had in seeing it represented with all Jn1ve-ne11•cence(joo'v~-nl!s 1~ns; 243), n. A growing or that which maiden modesty doth warrant" (Shak,); "So the Justness and gracefulness of action. Dryden. becoming young ; youth. bred, no wonder if I took the bent that seemed even war­ Syn. -Accuracy, exactness, correctness, propriety, fit­ ranted by thy consent" (Dryden) ; cf. unwarranted confl­ ness, reasonableness, equity, uprightness, justice. Ju've-nes•cent(-lnt), a. [L. juveneacem, p. pr. of juve­ dence~n unwarranted intrusion. See VINDIO.ATB, INSURB. Jut(jllt),v. i.; JUT'TED; JUT'TING. [A corrupt. of jet.] To nescere to grow young again, fr. juvenis young.] Growing f118'11-IJ'(jils'tl-fi), "· i. 1. Law. a To show asufficient law­ shoot ont or forward ; to project beyond the main body ; or becomiug young. fnl reason for an act done. b To qualify as bail or surety to protrude ; - often with out, forth, up, etc. Jn've-nUe(joo•vi-nn ; -nil; 277 : the latter is usual in Brll­ by taking oath to the ownership of sufficient property. In Jutting rock and curved sliore. Wordsworth. ish usage; cf. -ILE), a. [L. juvenilis, fr. ;'utienis young; 2, Theol. To accept and receive those as just or righteous It seems to Jut out of the structure of the poem. Sir 1'. Browne. akin to E. young: cf. F. juvenile, jurenil. See YOUNG.] who believe in Christ, or to make them righteous by infus­ Jut, n. That which projects or juts; a projection. Ruskin. l, Young ; youthful; immature or undeveloped; as, a ing grace into them. Jute(joot; 243,277), n. [Bengalijiit, Skr. ju/a matted hair; juvenile appearance; a juvenile stage. 3. Print. To form an even surface or true line with some-­ cf. ja/a matted hair fibrous roots.] a The glossy fiber of 2. Of, pertaining to, characteristic of, or suitable for, thing else ; to flt exactly ; - said of type. either of two EastIndian tiliaceons plants ( Corchorus oli­ youth ; as, juvenile sports ; a juvenile book. Jua'tl-fy•lng(jlls'tl-fi 1Ing), p. pr. & fib, n. of JUSTil!'Y.- torius and C. capmlari,s). Though somewhat tenacious, it Syn. - Puerile, boyish, child18h. See YOUTHFUL. Jutl1J1Dg ■tick, in some trpesetting machines, an attach~ is injured by moisture, and hence is used chiefly for sack­ ju'Ve-Dile,n. 1. A young person or youth. C. Bronti. ment for justifying the lmes. -J. velocity, Meteor., a wind ~ burlap, and the cheaper varieties of twine; it is also 2. Theater. An actor of youthful parts. velocity so high a to be danierous to navigation and to wooi oi:'!Bkwi~ffl~fcf.3~rTt~tf!ni 0:r~~~~;1lhfsdfit!;~ 3. A book for children. Justify the displ11y of wind signals. This velocity, as de­ (-nll'l-tl), n.; pl. -TIES(-ti'z). [L.juvenilita,.] t.ermined by the United States Weather Bureau, varies at also, any other species of Corchorus. See CoRCHORUS. JU've-nU'i-ty different stations according to the temperature, whether Jute, n. A member of one of the Low German tribes of 1. Youthfulness or youthful manner or character. freezing or not, and the direction of the wind. Usually it Jutland, some of whom settled in Kent, England, in the z. Juveniles as a body; pl., juvenile traits, acts, etc. must exceed twenty~five miles_per hour. 5th century. - Jut'ish (jffiWlsh), a. II Juz'ta (jilks't<i). [L.] Near; near by; in close pro;<­ J118-tln'1-a'Di-an(jii11-tln'l-ii'nl-l1n), a. Of or pertaining Jut'tlng (jiit'lng), p. pr. & ,,b. n. of JUT, Specif. : p. a. imity; - often used as a combining form, j1Utta-; as 1n to Justiuian ( 4ba-5Li5 A, n. ), the Byzantine emperor under Projecting; protruding. -Jut•tlng-ly, adv. Jux•ta-am'pul-la-ry,by the side of an ampulla; JUX'ta­ whom much of the Western Empire was reconquered, Jut'tf (-1), n.; pl. -TIES(-Iz). [See JETTY,JUT, JBT.] A pro­ ma-rlne', by the side of the sea, etc. Santa Sophia was built, and the laws codifled in what is jection in a building; also, a pier or mole; a jetty. Shak. Jux'ta-pose'(jiiks'tti-poz'), v. t.; -POSED'(-pozd 1) ; -i:os'ING called the Jus-tln'i-an (jii11-tln'l-l1n), or, rarely, JUB­ Jn've-nal (joo•vi-nal; 243), a. [L. ju,,enalis youthful, (-pozfJng). [ju.eta+ pose, v.] To place side by side, or tlDiaDian, Oode. See CoRPus JuR1s CivIL1s. juvenile, fr. juvenis young. J Young ; juvenile. Rare. - in juxtaposition. Huxley. J118t'ly(jilst'll), adv. [From JUST, a.] In a just manner; n. A youth. Obs. Jux'ta-:r.io-111.'tlon(-p~-zlsh'iin ), n. [L. juxta near + positio: in conformity to law, justice, or propriety; rightly; fairly; cf. F.Juxtaposition. See JUST, v. i.; POSITION.J A placing accurately; exactly; warrantably. {':i';,"~Jl~um~•ifaf~i':I~~~lumage of a bird imm~t;'lT. or being placed in nearness or contiguity, or side by side; IUt'Desa, n. Quality or state of being jnst; conformlty Ju1ve-na1f-an (-nii'll-iin), a. Of, pertaining to, or char- as, a juxtaposition of words. -Jux 1ta-po-111'tlon-al(-111), a. K (kii: ; formerly a/Jo ki!). 1. The eleventh letter of the which begin with k; as: capacity (Elec.); carat (Aa,ay­ Kaf-fra'rl-a (kl1-frii'rl-<i ; 115), n. Also Cajfrar.ia. [See K English alphabet. It is a voiceless stopped, ormnte, con­ ing, etc.); constant; the (solar) constant (Astron.); cumu­ KAFIR,] Zoopeog. The Sonth African province or sub­ sonant, classed as a guttural although the position of the stop lus (Meteor.). region, includmg Cape of Good Hope, Natal, and adjacent varies somewhat with the following or preceding sound. K, or k (kii:), n.; pl. K's or Ks (kiiz). The letter K, k, or provinces. - Kaf-fra'rl-an(-iin), a. Its form and sound are from the Latin, which used the its sound; also, something of the general shape of the Ka'fir (kii':l\lr) } n. [Ar. kiifir infidel, pagan, fr. kafara to letter but little except in the early period of the language letter, usually of capital K. Kaf'flr (kilf'er) be skeptical in religious matters ; - a (cf. c). It came into the Latin from the Greek, which K, adj. Of the general shape of the letter K; as, a K frame, uame given to certain infldel races by the Mohammedans.] took it from the Phrenician and general Semitic letter 1. An" infidel," that is, a non-Mohammedan. Kaph. See ALPHABET, Illust. Etymologically K is most or K-frame. Ka-byle' (kti-bil'}, n. [Ar. qab'ilah tribe, pl. qabiiil.] A 2. A native of Kafiristan, which is inhabited by the Pre- 0~~~f Berber of Algeria or Tunis. The Kabyles are of two types, 1ungali1, a primitive peaceable race, remarkable for endur­ ~;f1~fil:efi:e:a:a~~r''c~'=!\~hcrS:¼, !fe~~~c!, n°e~~ ance and industry, probably the earliest immigrants, and essary in the derivatives, as cracked, checked, decked, c1·ack- blond and brunet; the former may represent the blond Lib- speaking a language of which practically nothing is fufe.:.n~~r~~f~l !~::J&-:1:: cal:idc!~~s~~~s sgf1£1~~ ::n!gt1~t1l~~a1n ~~~:!n1;fY:~Ye~~~!,m:;I!;l T1~t~ known; the Wa.lgali,a, of different langua~e, but of whom ori!Jin, as in rnusick, publick, republick, where it is now speaking, and, though Mohammedan, have little of the omitted. See Guide to Pron., § 191. Arab fanaticism. See :QERBER, ~~~it~:~~wrn;d~,u~~~~~i!~~a~~ ~~~l~a::rS:~i:: 2. Asasymbol, used to denote or indicate: a The tenth or, Kad'diah (kild'lsh), n. [Aramaic kaddish holy, b,,cause and brave warriors, who were on\ in 1895,after centuries when J is used for the tenth, the eleventh in a series ; tenth the prayer of the ritual begins with the words in Aramaic ~~.;.";l•f:1~:'::•i!:~~~:~f\b;~eff.J~:~~:~1.~'."pelled to ( or eleventh) in order or class ; sometimes, the numeral "extolled and holy be his great name."] Jew. Ritual. The 3. A member of the most intelligent and powerful of the ten (or eleven); as, Company K; quirek. b [cap.] Astron. doxology recited in the synagogue at the close of prayers, Bantu races of South Africa. The country of the Kaflrs A prominent Fraunhofer spectral Jine caused (in part) by having five forms (for scholars, individuals, congregations, firoper,_ including the Xosa, Tembu, and Mpondo tribes, is calcium. c [cap.] Chem. Potassium (Kalium). 4 Math. burials, and mourning), and composed of praise and invoca.­ 1 (1) One of three mutually perpendicular unit vectors, the tion of blessings, esp. the establishment of God's kingdom. oifu~t~de~:£:od'toc:rve~rl~"lut~~!ia~~ta~~!!ae;:;~~: related tribes as well. The Kallrs are among the tallest other two being i and j. (2) A frequent constant coefficient. 4 e Cryst. See MILLERSYMBOLS. f Physics. Centuple calorie ~~!•t.;~~.!:, i~~s':,~ffae~:!j~~;bJ'n°f "l;,ftod1!k lr~~i:!ii~~~ (see CALORIE).g Mech.
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