Search references for CSS PICKENS. Phrases containing CSS PICKENS
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Cushing-class schooner revenue cutter
CSS Pickens (originally known as USRC Robert McClelland) was a Cushing-class schooner revenue cutter that saw service in the navies of the United States
CSS_Pickens
rigged, dismantled CSS Pickens, revenue cutter, schooner rigged CSS Kanawha Valley, stern-wheel river steamer, burned: April 7, 1862 CSS Alert, lighthouse
List of ships of the Confederate States Navy
List_of_ships_of_the_Confederate_States_Navy
Civil War Confederate ironclad
CSS Virginia was the first steam-powered ironclad warship built by the Confederate States Navy during the first year of the American Civil War. She was
CSS_Virginia
1861 battle of the American Civil War
Camp Brown and if possible capture Fort Pickens. He landed on the north beach about four miles east of Fort Pickens and divided his command into three columns
Battle_of_Santa_Rosa_Island
School in Pickens, South Carolina, United States
Pickens High School is a high school in Pickens, South Carolina. It is the second largest high school in the Pickens County School District, after its
Pickens High School (South Carolina)
Pickens_High_School_(South_Carolina)
1862 naval battle in the American Civil War, the first between ironclads
that it was the first combat between ironclad warships, the USS Monitor and CSS Virginia. The Confederate fleet consisted of the ironclad ram Virginia (built
Battle_of_Hampton_Roads
Confederate gunboat from American Civil War
CSS Lady Davis was a gunboat in the Confederate States Navy during the American Civil War. Originally the Richmond iron steam tug James Gray, built at
CSS_Lady_Davis
First of the six original frigates of the U.S. Navy
by the Virginia Navy. She was commissioned into the Confederate navy as CSS United States, but was later scuttled by Confederate forces. The U.S. Navy
USS_United_States_(1797)
Gunboat of the United States Navy
CSS Planter was a steamer taken over by Robert Smalls, a Southern slave and ship's pilot who steered the ship past Confederate defenses and surrendered
USS_Planter_(1860)
1862 Arkansas-class ironclad
CSS Arkansas was the lead ship of her class of two casemate ironclads built for the Confederate States Navy during the American Civil War. Completed in
CSS_Arkansas
Confederate gunboat of American Civil War
CSS Jackson was a gunboat of the Confederate Navy during the American Civil War. Built at Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1849 as Yankee, the fast side-wheel river
CSS_Jackson
CSS Stonewall Jackson was a cottonclad sidewheel ram of the Confederate Navy during the American Civil War. Stonewall Jackson was selected in January
CSS_Stonewall_Jackson
American Civil War she was taken into service by the Confederate Navy as CSS General Sterling Price. On 6 June 1862, she was sunk at the First Battle
Laurent_Millaudon_(steamboat)
American Civil War sidewheel paddle streamer
CSS General Sumter was a sidewheel steamer which was operated by both the Confederate States Army and the Union Navy during the American Civil War. A
CSS_General_Sumter
1862 American Confederate warship
CSS General Earl Van Dorn was a cottonclad warship that was used by the Confederate States of America during the American Civil War. She was purchased
CSS_General_Earl_Van_Dorn
Ram used by the Confederate Navy during the American Civil War
CSS Colonel Lovell was a cottonclad ram operated by the Confederacy during the American Civil War. Built at Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1843 as the towboat Hercules
CSS_Colonel_Lovell
CSS Louisiana was a casemate ironclad of the Confederate States Navy built to aid in defending the lower Mississippi River from invasion by the Union
CSS_Louisiana
Confederate Navy ship
CSS General Beauregard was a cottonclad ram operated by the Confederate States Army as part of the River Defense Fleet during the American Civil War.
CSS_General_Beauregard
First Confederate ironclad warship
CSS Manassas, formerly the steam icebreaker Enoch Train, was built in 1855 by James O. Curtis as a twin-screw towboat at Medford, Massachusetts. A New
CSS_Manassas
Confederate Navy ironclad warship
CSS Mississippi was a projected ironclad warship of the Confederate States Navy, intended to be used on the Mississippi River in the vicinity of New Orleans
CSS_Mississippi
Unincorporated community in South Carolina, United States
Andrew Pickens: South Carolina patriot in the Revolutionary War. McFarland & Company, Inc. ISBN 978-0-7864-6694-8. "Mars Bluff and the CSS Pee Dee"
Mars_Bluff,_South_Carolina
Floating battery of the Confederate States Navy
CSS New Orleans was a floating battery used by the Confederate States Navy during the American Civil War. Converted from a floating drydock in 1861, she
CSS_New_Orleans
Steamboat
CSS Jamestown, originally a side-wheel, passenger steamer, was built at New York City in 1853, and seized at Richmond, Virginia in 1861 for the Virginia
CSS_Jamestown
Historic coastal fortress in South Carolina, United States
needed] In a letter delivered January 31, 1861, South Carolina Governor Pickens demanded of President Buchanan that he surrender Fort Sumter because "I
Fort_Sumter
CSS Ellis (later USS Ellis) was a gunboat in the Confederate States Navy and the United States Navy during the American Civil War. It was lost during
CSS_Ellis
Gunboat of the United States Navy
Hampton Roads, On 29 December 1861, Whitehall and eight other steamers engaged CSS Sea Bird in the roads shortly after the Confederate steamer had captured
USS_Whitehall
Gunboat of the United States Navy
Apr: CSS General Lovell, CSS Governor Moore, CSS Manassas, CSS Stonewall Jackson, Sweepstakes, USS Varuna 25 Apr: CSS Mississippi, CSRC Pickens, Pioneer
USS_Fulton_(1837)
British sailing steamship launched in 1858
Apr: CSS General Lovell, CSS Governor Moore, CSS Manassas, CSS Stonewall Jackson, Sweepstakes, USS Varuna 25 Apr: CSS Mississippi, CSRC Pickens, Pioneer
SS_Great_Eastern
Shipwreck site near Mobile, Alabama
The CSS Huntsville and CSS Tuscaloosa Historic and Archaeological District is a shipwreck site in the Mobile River near Mobile, Alabama, United States
CSS Huntsville and CSS Tuscaloosa Historic and Archaeological District
CSS_Huntsville_and_CSS_Tuscaloosa_Historic_and_Archaeological_District
US Navy sailing frigate, 1842–1862
frigate of the United States Navy. She was the first ship sunk by the ironclad CSS Virginia. Cumberland began in the pages of a Congressional Act. Congress
USS_Cumberland_(1842)
Racing yacht; 1st winner of the America's Cup
signal flares to alert the rest of the fleet. The runner proved to be the CSS Georgiana, which was described as the most powerful Confederate cruiser then
America_(yacht)
Confederate submarine from the American Civil War
Apr: CSS General Lovell, CSS Governor Moore, CSS Manassas, CSS Stonewall Jackson, Sweepstakes, USS Varuna 25 Apr: CSS Mississippi, CSRC Pickens, Pioneer
Pioneer_(submarine)
Confederate warship
CSS General Polk was a sidewheel steamer used as a warship by the Confederate States Navy during the American Civil War. launched in 1852 at New Albany
CSS_General_Polk
US Navy vessel sunk in 1862
warship until the American Civil War, when she was sunk by the ironclad CSS Virginia in the Battle of Hampton Roads, Virginia, in 1862. Congress was
USS_Congress_(1841)
Gunboat of the United States Navy
of the American Civil War. Mexico was pressed into Confederate service as CSS General Bragg at New Orleans, Louisiana 15 January 1862. She was converted
USS_General_Bragg
Gunboat of the United States Navy
Apr: CSS General Lovell, CSS Governor Moore, CSS Manassas, CSS Stonewall Jackson, Sweepstakes, USS Varuna 25 Apr: CSS Mississippi, CSRC Pickens, Pioneer
USS_Cincinnati_(1861)
Hospital steamship of the American Civil War
Apr: CSS General Lovell, CSS Governor Moore, CSS Manassas, CSS Stonewall Jackson, Sweepstakes, USS Varuna 25 Apr: CSS Mississippi, CSRC Pickens, Pioneer
USS_Red_Rover
Steamboat
CSS Sea Bird was a sidewheel steamer in the Confederate States Navy. Sea Bird was built at Keyport, New Jersey in 1854, was purchased by North Carolina
CSS_Sea_Bird
and Florida. After providing temporary support for the defenders of Fort Pickens, who refused to follow Armstrong's example, Walke took off some of the
Henry_A._Walke
Cottonclad ram of the Confederate States Navy
CSS General M. Jeff Thompson was a warship which served in the River Defense Fleet of the Confederate States of America during the American Civil War
CSS_General_M._Jeff_Thompson
Gunboat of the United States Navy
inflicted many casualties. On the second day of the battle, USS Monitor engaged CSS Virginia, allowing tugs to free Minnesota on the morning of 10 March. Minnesota
USS_Minnesota_(1855)
Battle of the American Civil War
deployed three fire rafts, which were ignited and followed the ironclad ram CSS Manassas into the action. The attack occurred after moonset in the early
Battle_of_the_Head_of_Passes
Gunboat of the Confederate States Navy
CSS Forrest was a wooden-hulled Confederate gunboat that saw action in the North Carolina sounds in 1861 to 1862. Despite being considered "worn out"
CSS_Forrest
Gunboat of the United States Navy
Dispatch. Richmond, Virginia. June 25, 1861. p. 3. Retrieved 18 October 2016. "CSS Plymouth". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Navy Department,
USS_Plymouth_(1844)
Steamboat
CSS Governor Moore was a schooner-rigged steamer in the Confederate States Navy. Governor Moore had been Southern S. S. Company's Charles Morgan, named
Governor_Moore_(gunboat)
CSS General Lovell was a cotton-clad sidewheel ram of the Confederate Navy during the American Civil War. Originally built in 1845 as a steam tug in Cincinnati
CSS_General_Lovell
Steamboat
CSS George Page, a 410-ton sidewheel steamship, was originally built as a transport at Washington, D.C. in 1853. She was attached to the Quartermaster's
CSS_George_Page
American military ship
received word of the construction of the Confederate casemate ironclad, CSS Virginia, Congress appropriated $1.5 million on 3 August to build one or
USS_Galena_(1862)
American Civil War steamship
Orleans, where Louisiana Governor Thomas Overton Moore changed its name to CSS St. Philip. The old name persisted, however, and Star of the West served
Star_of_the_West
Unrecognized state in North America (1861–1865)
306 and CSS Atlanta, USS Atlanta. Navy Heritage Archived April 7, 2010, at the Library of Congress Web Archives. In both events, as with the CSS Virginia
Confederate_States_of_America
and Fort Pickens for their bravery during April and May of that year. Over the course of 1862 and 1863, the Chamber condemned the acts of the CSS Alabama
Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York
Chamber_of_Commerce_of_the_State_of_New_York
American Civil War ironclad warship
War-era ironclads in existence in addition to the Cairo: USS Monitor, CSS Neuse, and CSS Muscogee. USS Cairo in her final resting place at Vicksburg National
USS_Cairo
CSS Fanny was a small propeller-driven steam tug used by the Confederate States Navy to defend the sounds of northeastern North Carolina in the American
CSS_Fanny
Originally intended to be a ship of the line for the U.S. Navy
Apr: CSS General Lovell, CSS Governor Moore, CSS Manassas, CSS Stonewall Jackson, Sweepstakes, USS Varuna 25 Apr: CSS Mississippi, CSRC Pickens, Pioneer
USS_Vermont_(1848)
Ship
relief of Fort Pickens, Florida. President Abraham Lincoln had attempted to countermand the order sending the Powhatan to Fort Pickens and send the ship
USS_Powhatan_(1850)
Apr: CSS General Lovell, CSS Governor Moore, CSS Manassas, CSS Stonewall Jackson, Sweepstakes, USS Varuna 25 Apr: CSS Mississippi, CSRC Pickens, Pioneer
USS_Timor
Ship of the Confederate Navy in the American Civil War
CSS Curlew was an iron-hull North Carolina Sounds paddlewheel steamboat that was taken into the Confederate Navy in 1861. It was run aground at Fort Forrest
CSS_Curlew
Sidewheel steamer
CSS Oregon was a wooden sidewheel steamer that served as a gunboat in the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War. Built in 1846 for the
CSS_Oregon
Gunboat during the American Civil War that sank off the Bahamas
Washington, D.C. that the British-built screw steamer Oreto — later known as the CSS Florida — had arrived at the island of New Providence and, although constructed
USS_Adirondack_(1862)
Steamer in the Confederate States Navy
CSS Pamlico was a sidewheel steamer that served in the Confederate States Navy during the early stages of the American Civil War. Originally a passenger
CSS_Pamlico
U.S Revenue-Marine cutter
where she transported Brigadier General Lewis G. Arnold's troops from Fort Pickens to the other side of the bay, where they occupied Forts Barrancas and McRee
USRC_Harriet_Lane
Confederate two-masted schooner
Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA. Retrieved August 26, 2025. "CSS Black Warrior". Nautilus Productions. Retrieved March 22, 2016. "Weekly listing"
CSS_Black_Warrior
Confederate gunboat
CSS McRae was a Confederate gunboat that saw service during the American Civil War. Displacing around 680 tons, she was armed with one 9-inch (229 mm)
CSS_McRae
US revenue cutter ship (1837–1861)
Apr: CSS General Lovell, CSS Governor Moore, CSS Manassas, CSS Stonewall Jackson, Sweepstakes, USS Varuna 25 Apr: CSS Mississippi, CSRC Pickens, Pioneer
Washington_(1837_ship)
CSS Grampus was a stern-wheel river steamer built in 1856 at McKeesport, Pennsylvania, for civilian employment. Taken by the Confederate Army in early
CSS_Grampus
US Navy admiral (1818–1897)
in April to carry secret dispatches—regarding the reinforcement of Fort Pickens—south to the warships at Pensacola. During the return journey north, Worden
John_Lorimer_Worden
American passenger and package freighter ship
Apr: CSS General Lovell, CSS Governor Moore, CSS Manassas, CSS Stonewall Jackson, Sweepstakes, USS Varuna 25 Apr: CSS Mississippi, CSRC Pickens, Pioneer
SS_Merchant
US ship in its Civil War
Apr: CSS General Lovell, CSS Governor Moore, CSS Manassas, CSS Stonewall Jackson, Sweepstakes, USS Varuna 25 Apr: CSS Mississippi, CSRC Pickens, Pioneer
USS_Brockenborough
Gunboat of the United States Navy
delivered by the gunboat CSS R. J. Breckinridge, while the naval historians Neil Chatelain and W. Craig Gaines state that it was from CSS Stonewall Jackson.
USS_Varuna_(1861)
Apr: CSS General Lovell, CSS Governor Moore, CSS Manassas, CSS Stonewall Jackson, Sweepstakes, USS Varuna 25 Apr: CSS Mississippi, CSRC Pickens, Pioneer
USS_New_England_(1861)
Confederate states sidewheel steamer
CSS Maurepas was a sidewheel steamer that briefly served as a gunboat in the Confederate States Navy during the American Civil War. Built in 1858 in Indiana
CSS_Maurepas
Confederate States Navy steam gunboat
CSS Appomattox was a small screw-steam gunboat used early in the American Civil War by the Confederate States Navy to patrol the sounds of northeastern
CSS_Appomattox
American politician (1812–1873)
Zachary Taylor at Key West, Fort Jefferson in the Dry Tortugas, and Fort Pickens near Pensacola. Some of the most strident secessionists proposed that they
Stephen_Mallory
Apr: CSS General Lovell, CSS Governor Moore, CSS Manassas, CSS Stonewall Jackson, Sweepstakes, USS Varuna 25 Apr: CSS Mississippi, CSRC Pickens, Pioneer
USS_Potomac_(1861)
American soldier
Military Academy. In January 1861, South Carolina Governor Francis Wilkinson Pickens ordered a detachment of SCMA cadets under the command of Stevens to man
Peter_Fayssoux_Stevens
Gunboat of the United States Navy
sloop-of-war in the United States Navy. During the Civil War, she destroyed the CSS Governor Moore and served in blockade operations. She was attached to the
USS_Oneida_(1861)
Union navy gunboat steamer in the American Civil War
While there she joined three other ships in engaging Confederate steamer CSS Patrick Henry and drove her back up stream. A month later Flag Officer Louis
USS_Isaac_N._Seymour
Apr: CSS General Lovell, CSS Governor Moore, CSS Manassas, CSS Stonewall Jackson, Sweepstakes, USS Varuna 25 Apr: CSS Mississippi, CSRC Pickens, Pioneer
USS_Noble_(1861)
American Civil War naval vessel
sailing to Port Royal, South Carolina; and the hunt for CSS Alabama in October 1862 and CSS Tacony in June 1863. Sabine returned to New York for blockade
USS_Sabine_(1855)
Apr: CSS General Lovell, CSS Governor Moore, CSS Manassas, CSS Stonewall Jackson, Sweepstakes, USS Varuna 25 Apr: CSS Mississippi, CSRC Pickens, Pioneer
USS_Bainbridge_(1842)
Prussian barque wrecked in False Bay
Apr: CSS General Lovell, CSS Governor Moore, CSS Manassas, CSS Stonewall Jackson, Sweepstakes, USS Varuna 25 Apr: CSS Mississippi, CSRC Pickens, Pioneer
Johanna_Wagner_(ship)
Sloops-of-war of the United States Navy
placed in service with the Confederate States Navy as the floating battery CSS Germantown before again being scuttled in 1862. Germantown was launched at
USS_Germantown_(1846)
1861 ship of the Royal Navy
Apr: CSS General Lovell, CSS Governor Moore, CSS Manassas, CSS Stonewall Jackson, Sweepstakes, USS Varuna 25 Apr: CSS Mississippi, CSRC Pickens, Pioneer
HMS_Defence_(1861)
1861–1865 conflict in the United States
Confederacy experimented with the submarine CSS Hunley, which proved unsuccessful, and with the ironclad CSS Virginia, rebuilt from the sunken Union ship
American_Civil_War
Family of lossless-compression image file formats
Alexander Lehmann, Chris Lilley, Dave Martindale, Owen Mortensen, Keith S. Pickens, Robert P. Poole, Glenn Randers-Pehrson, Greg Roelofs, Willem van Schaik
PNG
Apr: CSS General Lovell, CSS Governor Moore, CSS Manassas, CSS Stonewall Jackson, Sweepstakes, USS Varuna 25 Apr: CSS Mississippi, CSRC Pickens, Pioneer
USS_Stephen_Young
Sidewheel steamer
CSS Carondelet was a sidewheel steamer that served in the Confederate States Navy during the American Civil War. Construction for the vessel started in
CSS_Carondelet
Gunboat of the United States Navy
vessels past the Confederate position. On July 15, the Confederate ironclad CSS Arkansas made a run through Farragut's fleet to Vicksburg. Sidney C. Jones
USS_Sidney_C._Jones
First ironclad of the US Navy, 1861–1862
command of Lieutenant John L. Worden, where she fought the casemate ironclad CSS Virginia (built on the hull of the scuttled steam frigate USS Merrimack)
USS_Monitor
Military operations near the coastal areas of the Southeastern United States
state with the exceptions of Fort Zachary Taylor at Key West and Fort Pickens at Pensacola. The Union navy established a blockade of the coast early
Lower seaboard theater of the American Civil War
Lower_seaboard_theater_of_the_American_Civil_War
Apr: CSS General Lovell, CSS Governor Moore, CSS Manassas, CSS Stonewall Jackson, Sweepstakes, USS Varuna 25 Apr: CSS Mississippi, CSRC Pickens, Pioneer
USS_Meteor_(1819)
Civil War gunboat
aftermath of the Confederate surrender, Mound City captured the Rebel steamer CSS Red Rover, which had been used for accommodating the crew of the floating
USS_Mound_City
U.S. presidential administration from 1861 to 1865
installations at Fort Sumter near Charleston and Fort Pickens near Pensacola. Less secure than Fort Pickens, and situated in the secessionist hotbed of South
Presidency_of_Abraham_Lincoln
Finnish-American banker and seacaptain
laden with Southern cotton to Liverpool to raise war funds. His ship, the CSS Kate Dale was captured on July 14, 1863, by the USS R. R. Cuyler off the
Charles_Linn
Gunboat of the United States Navy
Apr: CSS General Lovell, CSS Governor Moore, CSS Manassas, CSS Stonewall Jackson, Sweepstakes, USS Varuna 25 Apr: CSS Mississippi, CSRC Pickens, Pioneer
USS_Tigress_(1861)
Gunboat of the United States Navy
Apr: CSS General Lovell, CSS Governor Moore, CSS Manassas, CSS Stonewall Jackson, Sweepstakes, USS Varuna 25 Apr: CSS Mississippi, CSRC Pickens, Pioneer
USS_Henry_Andrew
Apr: CSS General Lovell, CSS Governor Moore, CSS Manassas, CSS Stonewall Jackson, Sweepstakes, USS Varuna 25 Apr: CSS Mississippi, CSRC Pickens, Pioneer
USS_Peri
Apr: CSS General Lovell, CSS Governor Moore, CSS Manassas, CSS Stonewall Jackson, Sweepstakes, USS Varuna 25 Apr: CSS Mississippi, CSRC Pickens, Pioneer
PS_Iona_(1855)
Ship of the line of the Royal Navy
Apr: CSS General Lovell, CSS Governor Moore, CSS Manassas, CSS Stonewall Jackson, Sweepstakes, USS Varuna 25 Apr: CSS Mississippi, CSRC Pickens, Pioneer
HMS_St_Vincent_(1815)
Union schooner during the American Civil War
Apr: CSS General Lovell, CSS Governor Moore, CSS Manassas, CSS Stonewall Jackson, Sweepstakes, USS Varuna 25 Apr: CSS Mississippi, CSRC Pickens, Pioneer
USS_Maria_J._Carlton
CSS PICKENS
CSS PICKENS
Girl/Female
English
Diminutive of any name begining with Christ-, for example Christahel, Christian, or Christopher.....
Girl/Female
English
Diminutive of any name begining with Christ-, for example Christahel, Christian, or Christopher.....
Female
English
English short form of Latin Cassandra, CASS means "she who entangles men."Â
Male
Hungarian
Hungarian form of Greek Loukas, LUKÃCS means "from Lucania."
Boy/Male
English
Diminutives of any masculine or feminine name begining with Christ-, for example Christahel,...
Biblical
same as Kish
Boy/Male
Greek
Order.
Boy/Male
Australian, Farsi, Irish, Latin
Vain; He who Guards the Treasure; Curly-headed
Girl/Female
British, Christian, English
Diminutive of Christie or Any Name Beginning with Christ
Female
English
Short form of English Cissy, CIS means "blind."
Girl/Female
English
Cassandra was a Trojan prophetess, daughter of King Priam. A diminutive of Casirnir, Cassandra,...
Female
English
Short form of English Cissy, CISS means "blind."
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from the medieval female personal name Cass, a short form of Cassandra. This was the name (of uncertain, possibly non-Greek, origin) of an ill-fated Trojan prophetess of classical legend, condemned to foretell the future but never be believed; her story was well known and widely popular in medieval England.
Boy/Male
Australian, Celtic, Irish, Netherlands, Welsh
Curly-haired; Lover; Loving Person; Legendary Son of Seidi
Girl/Female
British, English
Happy
Boy/Male
English Latin Irish Welsh
Wealthy man.
Boy/Male
Arthurian Legend
Name of a king.
Male
Scottish
Scottish Gaelic form of Latin Lucas, LÙCAS means "from Lucania."Â
Boy/Male
English Biblical
Diminutives of any masculine or feminine name begining with Christ-, for example Christahel,...
Boy/Male
Welsh
Legendary son of Seidi.
CSS PICKENS
CSS PICKENS
Boy/Male
Arabic, Assamese, Hindu, Indian, Muslim, Oriya, Telugu
Stainless; Pure
Boy/Male
Hindu
Wealth
Surname or Lastname
English
English : unexplained.
Girl/Female
Arabic
Outstanding; Distinguished
Surname or Lastname
Irish (chiefly County Down)
Irish (chiefly County Down) : variant of Prey.English : topographic name for someone who lived by a meadow, from Middle English pre(y), Old French pree ‘meadow’, or a habitational name from any of the minor places deriving their name from this word, of which there are several examples in Surrey.
Boy/Male
Latin
Bean farmer. Famous Bearer: 50's singer Fabian.
Girl/Female
Greek
Of the sea. Descendant of Dorus.
Boy/Male
Gaelic Irish
Strong; oak-hearted. See also Derek.
Girl/Female
Anglo, Australian, French, German
Feminine of Charles
Boy/Male
Arabic, Muslim
Extreme Power
CSS PICKENS
CSS PICKENS
CSS PICKENS
CSS PICKENS
CSS PICKENS
n.
A tax; an assessment. See Cess.
n.
To prophesy; to presage.
n.
The wild ass of Persia.
n.
A rate or tax.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Cess
pl.
of Inadvertence
v. t.
To render useless or void; to annul; to reject; to send away.
n.
A Hindoo measure of distance, varying from one and a half to two English miles.
n.
Bound; measure.
v. t.
To rate; to tax; to assess.
n.
The state of being health/ess.
imp. & p. p.
of Cess
n.
A quadruped of the genus Equus (E. asinus), smaller than the horse, and having a peculiarly harsh bray and long ears. The tame or domestic ass is patient, slow, and sure-footed, and has become the type of obstinacy and stupidity. There are several species of wild asses which are swift-footed.
n.
One that brays like an ass.
n.
The male ass; a donkey.
v. i.
To cease; to neglect.
n.
A wild ass, especially the koulan.
n.
A thing (only in phrase below).