ACCURSED | • accursed adj. (Prenominal) Hateful; detestable, loathsome. • accursed adj. (Archaic, theology) Doomed to destruction or misery; cursed; anathematized. • accursed v. Simple past tense and past participle of accurse. |
ACCURSES | • accurses v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of accurse. • ACCURSE v. to make cursed. |
BECURSED | • becursed v. Simple past tense and past participle of becurse. • BECURSE v. to put a curse on. |
BECURSES | • becurses v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of becurse. • BECURSE v. to put a curse on. |
CURSEDER | • curseder adj. Comparative form of cursed: more cursed. • CURSED adj. wicked. |
CURSEDLY | • cursedly adv. In a cursed manner; miserably. • CURSED adv. wicked. |
CURSILLO | • CURSILLO n. (tradename) a type of spiritual retreat. |
CURSINGS | • cursings n. Plural of cursing. • CURSING n. the act of wishing evil upon. |
CURSITOR | • cursitor n. A courier or runner. • cursitor n. (Britain, law, obsolete) A clerk in the Court of Chancery whose business is to make out original writs. • CURSITOR n. (obsolete) a clerk or officer in the Court of Chancery, who made out writs de cursu. |
CURSIVES | • cursives n. Plural of cursive. • CURSIVE n. a flowing script. |
CURSORES | • Cursores prop.n. (Obsolete) A taxonomic order within the class Aves – a polyphyletic taxon including various ratites… • CURSORES n. (Latin) in old classifications, running birds. |
EXCURSED | • excursed v. Simple past tense and past participle of excurse. • EXCURSE v. (archaic) to digress. |
EXCURSES | • excurses v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of excurse. • EXCURSE v. (archaic) to digress. |
EXCURSUS | • excursus n. A fuller treatment (in a separate section) of a particular part of the text of a book, especially a classic. • excursus n. A narrative digression, especially to discuss a particular issue. • EXCURSUS n. (Latin) a dissertation or discussion on some particular matter appended to the main body of a book or chapter. |
OUTCURSE | • outcurse v. (Transitive) To surpass in cursing or swearing. • OUTCURSE v. to surpass in cursing. |
PRECURSE | • precurse v. (Transitive) To forerun or precede. • precurse n. (Archaic) A prediction, a prognostication. • PRECURSE v. to foreshadow or be a precursor of, to herald. |
REINCURS | • reincurs v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of reincur. • REINCUR v. to incur again. |
REOCCURS | • reoccurs v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of reoccur. • re-occurs v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of re-occur. • REOCCUR v. to occur again. |
UNCURSED | • uncursed adj. Not cursed. • uncursed v. Simple past tense and past participle of uncurse. • UNCURSE v. to free from a curse. |
UNCURSES | • uncurses v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of uncurse. • UNCURSE v. to free from a curse. |