These are the meanings of the letters PROCTORRHAPHY when you unscramble them.
- Atrophy (n.)
A wasting away from want of nourishment; diminution in bulk or slow emaciation of the body or of any part.
- Atrophy (v. i.)
To waste away; to dwindle.
- Atrophy (v. t.)
To cause to waste away or become abortive; to starve or weaken.
- carport (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- Carroty (a.)
Like a carrot in color or in taste; -- an epithet given to reddish yellow hair, etc.
- charpoy (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- Corpora (pl. )
of Corpus
- Oratory (n.)
A place of orisons, or prayer; especially, a chapel or small room set apart for private devotions.
- Oratory (n.)
The art of an orator; the art of public speaking in an eloquent or effective manner; the exercise of rhetorical skill in oral discourse; eloquence.
- parroty (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- Phratry (n.)
A subdivision of a phyle, or tribe, in Athens.
- Portray (v. t.)
Hence, figuratively, to describe in words.
- Portray (v. t.)
To adorn with pictures.
- Portray (v. t.)
To paint or draw the likeness of; as, to portray a king on horseback.
- procarp (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- Proctor (n.)
A person appointed to collect alms for those who could not go out to beg for themselves, as lepers, the bedridden, etc.; hence a beggar.
- Proctor (n.)
A representative of the clergy in convocation.
- Proctor (n.)
An officer employed in admiralty and ecclesiastical causes. He answers to an attorney at common law, or to a solicitor in equity.
- Proctor (n.)
An officer in a university or college whose duty it is to enforce obedience to the laws of the institution.
- Proctor (n.)
One who is employed to manage to affairs of another.
- Proctor (v. t.)
To act as a proctor toward; to manage as an attorney or agent.
- Rapport (n.)
Relation; proportion; conformity; correspondence; accord.
- Rootcap (n.)
A mass of parenchymatous cells which covers and protects the growing cells at the end of a root; a pileorhiza.
- Trochar (n.)
See Trocar.