These are the meanings of the letters COLDPROOF when you unscramble them.
- Color (n.)
A distinguishing badge, as a flag or similar symbol (usually in the plural); as, the colors or color of a ship or regiment; the colors of a race horse (that is, of the cap and jacket worn by the jockey).
- Color (n.)
A property depending on the relations of light to the eye, by which individual and specific differences in the hues and tints of objects are apprehended in vision; as, gay colors; sad colors, etc.
- Color (n.)
An apparent right; as where the defendant in trespass gave to the plaintiff an appearance of title, by stating his title specially, thus removing the cause from the jury to the court.
- Color (n.)
Any hue distinguished from white or black.
- Color (n.)
Shade or variety of character; kind; species.
- Color (n.)
That which covers or hides the real character of anything; semblance; excuse; disguise; appearance.
- Color (n.)
That which is used to give color; a paint; a pigment; as, oil colors or water colors.
- Color (n.)
The hue or color characteristic of good health and spirits; ruddy complexion.
- Color (v. i.)
To acquire color; to turn red, especially in the face; to blush.
- Color (v. t.)
To change or alter the hue or tint of, by dyeing, staining, painting, etc.; to dye; to tinge; to paint; to stain.
- Color (v. t.)
To change or alter, as if by dyeing or painting; to give a false appearance to; usually, to give a specious appearance to; to cause to appear attractive; to make plausible; to palliate or excuse; as, the facts were colored by his prejudices.
- Color (v. t.)
To hide.
- Dolor (n.)
Pain; grief; distress; anguish.
- Drool (v. i.)
To drivel, or drop saliva; as, the child drools.
- Droop (n.)
A drooping; as, a droop of the eye.
- Droop (v. i.)
To grow weak or faint with disappointment, grief, or like causes; to be dispirited or depressed; to languish; as, her spirits drooped.
- Droop (v. i.)
To hang bending downward; to sink or hang down, as an animal, plant, etc., from physical inability or exhaustion, want of nourishment, or the like.
- Droop (v. i.)
To proceed downward, or toward a close; to decline.
- Droop (v. t.)
To let droop or sink.
- Flood (v. i.)
A great flow of water; a body of moving water; the flowing stream, as of a river; especially, a body of water, rising, swelling, and overflowing land not usually thus covered; a deluge; a freshet; an inundation.
- Flood (v. i.)
A great flow or stream of any fluid substance; as, a flood of light; a flood of lava; hence, a great quantity widely diffused; an overflowing; a superabundance; as, a flood of bank notes; a flood of paper currency.
- Flood (v. i.)
Menstrual disharge; menses.
- Flood (v. i.)
The flowing in of the tide; the semidiurnal swell or rise of water in the ocean; -- opposed to ebb; as, young flood; high flood.
- Flood (v. t.)
To cause or permit to be inundated; to fill or cover with water or other fluid; as, to flood arable land for irrigation; to fill to excess or to its full capacity; as, to flood a country with a depreciated currency.
- Flood (v. t.)
To overflow; to inundate; to deluge; as, the swollen river flooded the valley.
- Floor (n.)
A horizontal, flat ore body.
- Floor (n.)
A story of a building. See Story.
- Floor (n.)
That part of the bottom of a vessel on each side of the keelson which is most nearly horizontal.
- Floor (n.)
The bottom or lower part of any room; the part upon which we stand and upon which the movables in the room are supported.
- Floor (n.)
The part of the house assigned to the members.
- Floor (n.)
The right to speak.
- Floor (n.)
The rock underlying a stratified or nearly horizontal deposit.
- Floor (n.)
The structure formed of beams, girders, etc., with proper covering, which divides a building horizontally into stories. Floor in sense 1 is, then, the upper surface of floor in sense 2.
- Floor (n.)
The surface, or the platform, of a structure on which we walk or travel; as, the floor of a bridge.
- Floor (v. t.)
To cover with a floor; to furnish with a floor; as, to floor a house with pine boards.
- Floor (v. t.)
To finish or make an end of; as, to floor a college examination.
- Floor (v. t.)
To strike down or lay level with the floor; to knock down; hence, to silence by a conclusive answer or retort; as, to floor an opponent.
- Fordo (v. i.)
To destroy; to undo; to ruin.
- Fordo (v. i.)
To overcome with fatigue; to exhaust.
- Orlop (n.)
The lowest deck of a vessel, esp. of a ship of war, consisting of a platform laid over the beams in the hold, on which the cables are coiled.
- Proof (a.)
Being of a certain standard as to strength; -- said of alcoholic liquors.
- Proof (a.)
Firm or successful in resisting; as, proof against harm; waterproof; bombproof.
- Proof (a.)
Used in proving or testing; as, a proof load, or proof charge.
- Proof (n.)
A process for testing the accuracy of an operation performed. Cf. Prove, v. t., 5.
- Proof (n.)
A trial impression, as from type, taken for correction or examination; -- called also proof sheet.
- Proof (n.)
Any effort, process, or operation designed to establish or discover a fact or truth; an act of testing; a test; a trial.
- Proof (n.)
Firmness of mind; stability not to be shaken.
- Proof (n.)
That degree of evidence which convinces the mind of any truth or fact, and produces belief; a test by facts or arguments that induce, or tend to induce, certainty of the judgment; conclusive evidence; demonstration.
- Proof (n.)
The quality or state of having been proved or tried; firmness or hardness that resists impression, or does not yield to force; impenetrability of physical bodies.
- Proof (v. t.)
Armor of excellent or tried quality, and deemed impenetrable; properly, armor of proof.