List of synonyms from "natatorial" to synonyms from "nationalist"


Discover all the synonyms available for the terms national forest, natatory, national service, National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations, national-park, national association of securities dealers automated quotation and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the synonyms associated with it.

Definition of the day : « natatory »

  • As in aquatic : adj occurring in water
  • As in swimming : adj existing in liquid
Example sentences :
  • And yet 'this natatory art' is but little cultivated amongst us.
  • Extract from : « The Hero of the Humber » by Henry Woodcock
  • I had confidence enough in my natatory powers to make me easy on that score.
  • Extract from : « The Boy Tar » by Mayne Reid
  • About the degree of your natatory powers we needn't dispute.
  • Extract from : « Gwen Wynn » by Mayne Reid
  • The eyes were probably stalked, the antennae and mandibles biramous and natatory, and both armed with masticatory processes.
  • Extract from : « Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 7, Slice 7 » by Various
  • They are free and natatory when young, but in the adult state attached to rocks or some floating substance.
  • Extract from : « The Sailor's Word-Book » by William Henry Smyth
  • In this family a great number of natatory vesicles are connected with the terminal arial vesicle, as in Fig. 101, Praya diphys.
  • Extract from : « The Ocean World: » by Louis Figuier
  • They have four short legs, of which the hinder have toes, united by a natatory membrane, and only three claws to each foot.
  • Extract from : « Reptiles and Birds » by Louis Figuier
  • Confident in his natatory powers, he had at first believed this feat to be not only possible, but probable and easy.
  • Extract from : « The Ocean Waifs » by Mayne Reid
  • Its exact position likewise varies, for it arises either between the first or second pairs of natatory legs.
  • Extract from : « A Monograph on the Sub-class Cirripedia (Volume 2 of 2) » by Charles Darwin
  • In this fig. 3, it may be observed that the natatory legs and caudal appendages of the pupa have not as yet been moulted.
  • Extract from : « A Monograph on the Sub-class Cirripedia (Volume 2 of 2) » by Charles Darwin