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decanal
[ dek-uh-nl, dih-keyn-l ]
adjective
- of or relating to a dean or deanery:
decanal responsibilities.
decanal
/ d瑟藞k忙n瑟k蓹l瑟; d瑟藞ke瑟n蓹l /
adjective
- of or relating to a dean or deanery
- (of part of a choir) on the same side of a cathedral, etc, as the dean; on the S side of the choir
Derived Forms
- 诲别藞肠补苍补濒濒测, adverb
Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- 诲别肠顎僡路苍补濒路濒测 诲别路肠补苍路颈路肠补濒路濒测 [dih-, kan, -ik-lee], adverb
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of decanal1
Example Sentences
The latest version of the report, he said, also addresses the rate of change at a much more gradual level, moving from millennial to decanal time scales.
But when the door was opened鈥攁nd it was opened by a butler with all the outward and visible signs of what a decanal butler ought to be鈥攖hat air of prosperous comfort, of dignity and solid charm, vanished.
To my surprise, she produced a key of her own, and was about to turn the lock, when I remembered that at this rate I should be deprived for the rest of the night of my only comforts, the warm atmosphere of the library and the decanal arm-chair.
There, in one of the decanal arm-chairs, I was sitting鈥攊n an easy, familiar posture, as if I had been myself a dean鈥 and there beside me, close at hand, within reach of my outstretched arm, was a tall figure in white, clearly a female form, and the precaution had been taken of drawing an ample veil closely around the head and face.
His antagonist followed him with his eyes, then looked more airily than ever at his plot and the progress made there, considered the weather with his chin at the decanal angle, finally with a flirt of his long coat-tails he went into the house, a happy man and the owner of a vastly improved appetite.
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