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


Discover all the synonyms available for the terms national park, National Information Infrastructure, national wildlife refuge, national holiday, nation 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