What is the meaning of SUBSTANCE. Phrases containing SUBSTANCE
See meanings and uses of SUBSTANCE!Slangs & AI meanings
n A talkative person who communicates nothing of substance or interest.
Yellow Eyed Nigger. These are Blacks, usually male, that due to a life of hard substance abuse have the whites of their eyes turn a hepatitis yellow.
mixing drug with other substances (usually non- drug) to increase quantity
Substance is British slang for cannabis, hashish, marijuana.
One ounce of a drug substance
Methamphetamine-like substance
To throw a light substance, as a flat stone, or a shell, with a careless jerk. Also means to turn aside, or start, as a horse, to sheer. And means, to hang about.
In a "sketchy†manner - lacking substance, superficial, incomplete.
mixing drug with other substances (usually non- drug) to increase quantity
International Convention on Psychotropic Substances
A mixture of marijuana and other substances within a cigar; blunts
Consuming a mixture of prescription substances
the gelatinous substance on the outside of fish before washing
Crack pipe; marijuana pipe; vein into which a drug is injected; mix drugs with other substances
Blunts; methamphetamine; PCP; a mixture of marijuana and other substances within a cigar; Gamma hydroxybutyrate (GHB)
a procedure whereby a substance such as animal fat is melted down in order to clarify them through extracting the impurities.
French beans, so called from the string-like substance stripped from the side of the pod in preparing it for the table.
Easily carried food substance on the frontier. Formed by pounding the choice parts of the meat very small, dried over a slow fire or in the frost, and put into bags made of the skin of the slain animal, into which a portion of melted fat is then poured.
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v. t.
To make vicious, faulty, or imperfect; to render defective; to injure the substance or qualities of; to impair; to contaminate; to spoil; as, exaggeration vitiates a style of writing; sewer gas vitiates the air.
a.
Having no substance; unsubstantial.
v. t.
To insert or crowd a wad into; as, to wad a gun; also, to stuff or line with some soft substance, or wadding, like cotton; as, to wad a cloak.
n.
A wad, or the materials for wads; any pliable substance of which wads may be made.
a.
Abounding in, or covered with, fine hairs, or a woolly substance; shaggy with soft hairs; nappy.
n.
The contents or substance of the ovum; egg yolk. See Illust. of Ovum.
n.
A clear, viscous, tasteless substance extracted from the mucilaginous sap of the mistletoe (Viscum album), holly, etc., and constituting an essential ingredient of birdlime.
a.
Pertaining to, derived from, or designating, an acid obtained from a lichen (Cetraria vulpina) as a yellow or red crystalline substance which on decomposition yields pulvinic acid.
v. t.
To furnish or endow with substance; to supply property to; to make rich.
n.
Energy or influence operating without contact of the material or sensible substance.
n.
A complex nitrogenous substance, produced as a yellow crystalline substance, and regarded as a complex derivative of barbituric acid.
n.
Body; matter; material of which a thing is made; hence, substantiality; solidity; firmness; as, the substance of which a garment is made; some textile fabrics have little substance.
a.
Of, pertaining to, or designating, a complex nitroso derivative of barbituric acid. It is obtained as a white or yellow crystalline substance, and forms characteristic yellow, blue, and violet salts.
a.
Producing yolk, or vitelline substance; -- applied to certain cells (also called nutritive, or yolk, cells) formed in the ovaries of many insects, and supposed to supply nutriment to the developing ova.
n.
A glucoside extracted from the root of the white swallowwort (Vincetoxicum officinale, a plant of the Asclepias family) as a bitter yellow amorphous substance; -- called also asclepiadin, and cynanchin.
n.
A soft mass, especially of some loose, fibrous substance, used for various purposes, as for stopping an aperture, padding a garment, etc.
v. i.
To walk in a substance that yields to the feet; to move, sinking at each step, as in water, mud, sand, etc.
n.
A pale yellow amorphous substance of alkaloidal nature and emetic properties, said to have been extracted from the root and foliage of the violet (Viola).
v. t.
To convert into, or cause to resemble, glass or a glassy substance, by heat and fusion.
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