Scrawl
91Hieroglyphical — Hieroglyphic Hi er*o*glyph ic, Hieroglyphical Hi er*o*glyph ic*al, a. [L. hieroglyphicus, Gr. ?; iero s sacred + gly fein to carve: cf. F. hi[ e]roglyphique.] [1913 Webster] 1. Emblematic; expressive of some meaning by characters, pictures, or… …
92Scrawler — Scrawl er ( [ e]r), n. One who scrawls; a hasty, awkward writer. [1913 Webster] …
93Scribble — Scrib ble, v. i. To write without care, elegance, or value; to scrawl. [1913 Webster] If M[ae]vius scribble in Apollo s spite. Pope. [1913 Webster] …
94Scribble — Scrib ble, n. Hasty or careless writing; a writing of little value; a scrawl; as, a hasty scribble. Boyle. [1913 Webster] Neither did I but vacant seasons spend In this my scribble. Bunyan. [1913 Webster] …
95scrod — also schrod noun Etymology: probably from British dialect (Cornwall) scrawed, past participle of scraw, scrawl to split, salt, and lightly dry (young fish) Date: 1841 a young fish (as a cod or haddock); especially one split and boned for cooking …
96scrabble — I. verb (scrabbled; scrabbling) Etymology: Dutch schrabbelen to scratch Date: 1537 intransitive verb 1. scrawl, scribble 2. to scratch, claw, or grope about clumsily or frantically 3. a. scramble …
97squiggle — I. verb (squiggled; squiggling) Etymology: blend of squirm and wriggle Date: circa 1816 intransitive verb 1. squirm, wriggle < squiggling in her seat > 2. to write or paint hastily ; …
98scrawler — noun see scrawl …
99scrawly — adjective see scrawl …
100Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) — Disciples of Christ redirects here. For the followers of Christ in the gospels, see Disciple (Christianity). Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) Logo: The chalice with the Cross of St Andrew Classification Protesta …