What is the meaning of SANDE. Phrases containing SANDE
See meanings and uses of SANDE!SANDE
SANDE
Chemistry
Simulated Annealing With NMR-derived Energy Restraints
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Acronyms & AI meanings
Joint Service Action Group
Exposure Core Foods
: Maple Shade Babe Ruth
Enterprise Compensation Performance Management
: Australia New Zealand Food Authority (Now Food Standards Australia New Zealand)
Missouri Disaster Fund
Association for Education Rehabilitation
Japanese Society for Plant Systematics
Equipe Cadre Du
Total Ship Information Integration Plan
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Any one of several small sandpipers and plovers, as the ringed plover, the turnstone, the dunlin, and the sanderling.
SANDE
imp. & p. p.
of Sand
n.
A follower of Robert Sandeman, a Scotch sectary of the eighteenth century. See Glassite.
a.
Covered or sprinkled with sand; sandy; barren.
a.
Marked with small spots; variegated with spots; speckled; of a sandy color, as a hound.
n.
See Saunders-blue.
n.
An old name of sandalwood, now applied only to the red sandalwood. See under Sandalwood.
n.
Any one of several species of small sandpipers, as the sanderling of Europe and America, the dunlin, the little stint of India (Tringa minuta), etc. Called also pume.
n.
See Sandiver.
n.
A genus of ganoid fishes, found in strata of the new red sandetone, and the lias bone beds.
n.
The sanderling.
n.
The faith or system of the Sandemanians.
n.
A European pike perch (Stizostedion lucioperca) allied to the wall-eye; -- called also sandari, sander, sannat, schill, and zant.
n.
The sanderling; -- so called from its cry.
n.
A member of a Scottish sect, founded in the 18th century by John Glass, a minister of the Established Church of Scotland, who taught that justifying faith is "no more than a simple assent to the divine testimone passively recived by the understanding." The English and American adherents of this faith are called Sandemanians, after Robert Sandeman, the son-in-law and disciple of Glass.
n.
A small gray and brown sandpiper (Calidris arenaria) very common on sandy beaches in America, Europe, and Asia. Called also curwillet, sand lark, stint, and ruddy plover.
a.
Short-sighted.
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