outward+part

  • 21periphery — 1. The part of a body away from the center; the outer part or surface. 2. SYN: denture border. [G. periphereia, fr. peri, around, + phero, to carry] * * * pe·riph·ery pə rif (ə )rē n, pl er·ies 1) the outward bou …

    Medical dictionary

  • 22fa|çade — fa|cade or fa|çade «fuh SAHD», noun. 1. the front part of a building: »... by the justice symbol on the courthouse façade (Esquire). 2. any side of a building that faces a street or other open space: »... the colored spotlights at night playing… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 23fa|cade — or fa|çade «fuh SAHD», noun. 1. the front part of a building: »... by the justice symbol on the courthouse façade (Esquire). 2. any side of a building that faces a street or other open space: »... the colored spotlights at night playing on its… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 24úteweard — 1. adj external, outward, outside, extreme, last; 2. noun outward part, exterior; on úteweardan on the outside, outwardly …

    Old to modern English dictionary

  • 25Bressummer — A bressummer, or breastsummer, in timber building, is a beam in the outward part of the building, and the middle floors, (not in the garrets or ground floors) into which the girders are framed. In the inner parts of a building, such beams are… …

    Wikipedia

  • 26Sonnet 46 — Sonnet|46 Mine eye and heart are at a mortal war, How to divide the conquest of thy sight; Mine eye my heart thy picture s sight would bar, My heart mine eye the freedom of that right. My heart doth plead that thou in him dost lie, A closet never …

    Wikipedia

  • 27External — Ex*ter nal, n. Something external or without; outward part; that which makes a show, rather than that which is intrinsic; visible form; usually in the plural. [1913 Webster] Adam was then no less glorious in his externals South. [1913 Webster]… …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 28Innermost — In ner*most ([i^]n n[ e]r*m[=o]st ), a. [A corruption of inmost due to influence of inner. See {Inmost}.] Farthest inward; most remote from the outward part; inmost; deepest within. Prov. xviii. 8. [1913 Webster] …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 29John Wilbye — (7 March 1574 (baptized) ndash; September 1638), was an English madrigal composer. He was born at Brome, Suffolk, near Diss, the son of a tanner, and received the patronage of the Cornwallis family. It is thought that he accompanied Elizabeth… …

    Wikipedia

  • 30Madrigal (poetry) — Madrigal (Italian: madrigale) is the name of a form of poetry, the exact nature of which has never been decided in English.[1] The definition given in the New English Dictionary, a short lyrical poem of amatory character, offers no distinctive… …

    Wikipedia