What is the meaning of INDIE. Phrases containing INDIE
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Acronyms & AI meanings
Diversified Investment Fund
Information Management and Census Division
Metal-On-Metal
Gids Blueberry Games
Health Information Service Provider
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Carrier Multiprotocol Label Switching
Fédération Francophone des Amis de l'Orgue
tetramethyl-p-phenylene diamine
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INDIE
The clouded tiger cat (Felis marmorata) of Southern Asia and the East Indies.
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n.
Any one of numerous species of bright-colored American birds belonging to Icterus and allied genera, especially Icterus icterus, a native of the West Indies and South America. Many of the species are called orioles in America.
v. t.
To put or send on a venture or chance; as, to venture a horse to the West Indies.
n. pl.
A name designating the East Indies, also the West Indies.
n.
A genus of large, brilliantly colored moths native of the West Indies and South America. Their bright colored and tailed hind wings and their diurnal flight cause them to closely resemble butterflies.
n.
A silver coin, and money of account, in the East Indies.
n.
A tree (Cookia punctata) of the Orange family, growing in China and the East Indies; also, its fruit, which is about the size of a large grape, and has a hard rind and a peculiar flavor.
n.
A coarse, mixed linen fabric made to be sold in the West Indies.
n.
The hard, lemon-colored, fragrant wood of an East Indian tree (Chloroxylon Swietenia). It takes a lustrous finish, and is used in cabinetwork. The name is also given to the wood of a species of prickly ash (Xanthoxylum Caribaeum) growing in Florida and the West Indies.
n.
A juice drawn from various kinds of palms in the East Indies; or, a spirituous liquor procured from it by fermentation.
n.
One engaged in trade or commerce; one who makes a business of buying and selling or of barter; a merchant; a trafficker; as, a trader to the East Indies; a country trader.
n.
A kind of package in which pepper and other dry commodities are sometimes exported from the East Indies. The robbin of rice in Malabar weighs about 84 pounds.
n.
A dish made in the West Indies by beating boiled plantain quite soft in a wooden mortar.
n.
a malvaceous plant (Hibiscus Sabdariffa) cultivated in the east and West Indies for its fleshy calyxes, which are used for making tarts and jelly and an acid drink.
n.
A food fish (Elagatis pinnulatus) of Florida and the West Indies; -- called also skipjack, shoemaker, and yellowtail. The name alludes to its rapid successive leaps from the water.
n.
Benne (Sesamum orientale); also, its seeds; -- so called in the West Indies.
n.
A dry granulated starch imported from the East Indies, much used for making puddings and as an article of diet for the sick; also, as starch, for stiffening textile fabrics. It is prepared from the stems of several East Indian and Malayan palm trees, but chiefly from the Metroxylon Sagu; also from several cycadaceous plants (Cycas revoluta, Zamia integrifolia, etc.).
n.
A very large and powerful carnivore (Felis tigris) native of Southern Asia and the East Indies. Its back and sides are tawny or rufous yellow, transversely striped with black, the tail is ringed with black, the throat and belly are nearly white. When full grown, it equals or exceeds the lion in size and strength. Called also royal tiger, and Bengal tiger.
n.
Either one of two species of large, brilliantly colored humming birds of the Topaza, of South America and the West Indies.
n.
A seashore shrub (Borrichia arborescens) of the West Indies.
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