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Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary (late 1800's)
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6 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
va·por
/ˈvepɚ/
水汽,水蒸氣(vi.)蒸發(vt.)使蒸發
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Medical Dictionary 英漢醫學字典
va·por
/ˈvepɚ/
名詞
(拉)蒸汽,吸劑,吸入劑
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Va·por
,
v. t.
To
send
off
in
vapor
,
or
as
if
in
vapor
;
as
,
to
vapor
away
a
heated
fluid
. [
Written
also
vapour
.]
He'd
laugh
to
see
one
throw
his
heart
away
,
Another
,
sighing
,
vapor
forth
his
soul
. --
B
.
Jonson
.
◄
►
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Va·por
n.
[
Written
also
vapour
.]
1.
Physics
Any
substance
in
the
gaseous
,
or
aeriform
,
state
,
the
condition
of
which
is
ordinarily
that
of
a
liquid
or
solid
.
Note:
☞
The
term
vapor
is
sometimes
used
in
a
more
extended
sense
,
as
identical
with
gas
;
and
the
difference
between
the
two
is
not
so
much
one
of
kind
as
of
degree
,
the
latter
being
applied
to
all
permanently
elastic
fluids
except
atmospheric
air
,
the
former
to
those
elastic
fluids
which
lose
that
condition
at
ordinary
temperatures
.
The
atmosphere
contains
more
or
less
vapor
of
water
,
a
portion
of
which
,
on
a
reduction
of
temperature
,
becomes
condensed
into
liquid
water
in
the
form
of
rain
or
dew
.
The
vapor
of
water
produced
by
boiling
,
especially
in
its
economic
relations
,
is
called
steam
.
Vapor
is
any
substance
in
the
gaseous
condition
at
the
maximum
of
density
consistent
with
that
condition
.
This
is
the
strict
and
proper
meaning
of
the
word
vapor
.
--
Nichol
.
2.
In
a
loose
and
popular
sense
,
any
visible
diffused
substance
floating
in
the
atmosphere
and
impairing
its
transparency
,
as
smoke
,
fog
,
etc
.
The
vapour
which
that
fro
the
earth
glood
[glided].
--
Chaucer
.
Fire
and
hail
;
snow
and
vapors
;
stormy
wind
fulfilling
his
word
.
--
Ps
.
cxlviii
. 8.
3.
Wind
;
flatulence
. [
Obs
.]
4.
Something
unsubstantial
,
fleeting
,
or
transitory
;
unreal
fancy
;
vain
imagination
;
idle
talk
;
boasting
.
For
what
is
your
life
?
It
is
even
a
vapor
,
that
appeareth
for
a
little
time
,
and
then
vanisheth
away
.
--
James
iv
. 14.
5.
pl.
An
old
name
for
hypochondria
,
or
melancholy
;
the
blues
.
“A
fit
of
vapors
.”
6.
Pharm.
A
medicinal
agent
designed
for
administration
in
the
form
of
inhaled
vapor
.
Vapor bath
.
(a)
A
bath
in
vapor
;
the
application
of
vapor
to
the
body
,
or
part
of
it
,
in
a
close
place
;
also
,
the
place
itself
.
(b)
Chem.
A
small
metallic
drying
oven
,
usually
of
copper
,
for
drying
and
heating
filter
papers
,
precipitates
,
etc
.; --
called
also
air bath
.
A
modified
form
is
provided
with
a
jacket
in
the
outside
partition
for
holding
water
,
or
other
volatile
liquid
,
by
which
the
temperature
may
be
limited
exactly
to
the
required
degree
.
Vapor burner
,
a
burner
for
burning
a
vaporized
hydrocarbon
.
Vapor density
Chem.
,
the
relative
weight
of
gases
and
vapors
as
compared
with
some
specific
standard
,
usually
hydrogen
,
but
sometimes
air
.
The
vapor
density
of
gases
and
vaporizable
substances
as
compared
with
hydrogen
,
when
multiplied
by
two
,
or
when
compared
with
air
and
multiplied
by
28.8,
gives
the
molecular
weight
.
Vapor engine
,
an
engine
worked
by
the
expansive
force
of
a
vapor
,
esp
.
a
vapor
other
than
steam
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Va·por
,
v. i.
[
imp. &
p
. p.
Vapored
p.
pr
. &
vb
. n.
Vaporing
.] [
Written
also
vapour
.]
1.
To
pass
off
in
fumes
,
or
as
a
moist
,
floating
substance
,
whether
visible
or
invisible
,
to
steam
;
to
be
exhaled
;
to
evaporate
.
2.
To
emit
vapor
or
fumes
. [
R
.]
Running
waters
vapor
not
so
much
as
standing
waters
.
--
Bacon
.
3.
To
talk
idly
;
to
boast
or
vaunt
;
to
brag
.
Poets
used
to
vapor
much
after
this
manner
.
--
Milton
.
We
vapor
and
say
,
By
this
time
Matthews
has
beaten
them
.
--
Walpole
.
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
vapor
n
1:
a
visible
suspension
in
the
air
of
particles
of
some
substance
[
syn
:
vapour
]
2:
the
process
of
becoming
a
vapor
[
syn
:
vaporization
,
vaporisation
,
vapour
,
evaporation
]
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