What is the meaning of BODI. Phrases containing BODI
See meanings and uses of BODI!BODI
BODI
Chemistry
Dipyrrometheneboron Difluoride
BODI
BODI
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Acronyms & AI meanings
Structure Fitness Sharing
The MacDonald Partnership
AM-1510
: Revolutionary
Longmont Coalition for Women in Crisis
Centre for Achievement in Manufacturing and Management
Elk Valley and South Country Health Care Coalition
Spatial Multiplexing
Back Country Comfort Seeker
: USB (Universal Serial Bus) Flash Drive, Usb Flash Drive
BODI
BODI
BODI
a.
Having a body; -- usually in composition; as, able-bodied.
n.
The art of fashioning solid bodies into cylindrical or other forms by means of a lathe.
a.
Of or pertaining to the vessels of animal and vegetable bodies; as, the vascular functions.
n.
A description or plan of the heavens and the heavenly bodies; the construction of celestial maps, globes, etc.; uranology.
adv.
Corporeally; in bodily form; united with a body or matter; in the body.
a.
Not parliamentary; contrary to the practice of parliamentary bodies.
n.
A medicine or substance that expels worms from animal bodies; an anthelmintic.
n.
One who holds the doctrine that the space between the bodies of the universe, or the molecules and atoms of matter., is a vacuum; -- opposed to plenist.
adv.
In respect to, or so as to affect, the entire body or mass; entirely; all at once; completely; as, to carry away bodily. "Leapt bodily below."
n.
Hence, the middle part of other bodies; especially (Naut.), that part of a vessel's deck, bulwarks, etc., which is between the quarter-deck and the forecastle; the middle part of the ship.
a.
Resembling a utricle or bag, whether large or minute; -- said especially with reference to the condition of certain substances, as sulphur, selenium, etc., when condensed from the vaporous state and deposited upon cold bodies, in which case they assume the form of small globules filled with liquid.
a.
Boding evil; inauspicious; ill-omened.
n.
A discourse or treatise on the heavens and the heavenly bodies; the study of the heavens; uranography.
a.
Wearing a bodice.
n.
A supposed collection of particles of very subtile matter, endowed with a rapid rotary motion around an axis which was also the axis of a sun or a planet. Descartes attempted to account for the formation of the universe, and the movements of the bodies composing it, by a theory of vortices.
n.
A mass of fluid, especially of a liquid, having a whirling or circular motion tending to form a cavity or vacuum in the center of the circle, and to draw in towards the center bodies subject to its action; the form assumed by a fluid in such motion; a whirlpool; an eddy.
n.
Observation of the heavens or heavenly bodies.
n.
An open or unoccupied space between bodies or things; an interruption of continuity; chasm; gap; as, a vacancy between buildings; a vacancy between sentences or thoughts.
n.
One who carried out the dead bodies of the poor at night for burial.
n.
Identity in pitch; coincidence of sounds proceeding from an equality in the number of vibrations made in a given time by two or more sonorous bodies. Parts played or sung in octaves are also said to be in unison, or in octaves.
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