Saccholactate to Sacrifice

Saccholactate
(Sac`cho*lac"tate) n. [See Saccholactic.] (Chem.) A salt of saccholactic acid; — formerly called also saccholate. [Obs.] See Mucate.

Saccholactic
(Sac`cho*lac"tic) a. [L. saccharon sugar + lac, lactis, milk.] (Chem.) Of, pertaining to, or designating, an acid now called mucic acid; saccholic. [Obs.]

Saccholic
(Sac*chol"ic) a. Saccholactic. [Obs.]

Sacchulmate
(Sac*chul"mate) n. (Chem.) A salt of sacchulmic acid.

Sacchulmic
(Sac*chul"mic) a. [Saccharine + ulmic.] (Chem.) Of, pertaining to, or designating, an acid obtained as a dark amorphous substance by the long-continued boiling of sucrose with very dilute sulphuric acid. It resembles humic acid. [Written also sacculmic.]

Sacchulmin
(Sac*chul"min) n. (Chem.) An amorphous huminlike substance resembling sacchulmic acid, and produced together with it.

Sacciferous
(Sac*cif"er*ous) a. [L. saccus a sack + -ferous.] (Biol.) Bearing a sac.

Sacciform
(Sac"ci*form) a. [L. saccus a sack + -form.] (Biol.) Having the general form of a sac.

Saccoglossa
(||Sac`co*glos"sa) n. pl. [NL., fr. L. saccus a sack + Gr. a tongue.] (Zoöl.) Same as Pellibranchiata.

Saccular
(Sac"cu*lar) a. Like a sac; sacciform.

Sacculated
(Sac"cu*la`ted) a. Furnished with little sacs.

Saccule
(Sac"cule) n. [L. sacculus, dim. of saccus sack.] A little sac; specifically, the sacculus of the ear.

Sacculo-cochlear
(Sac`cu*lo-coch"le*ar) a. (Anat.) Pertaining to the sacculus and cochlea of the ear.

Sacculo-utricular
(Sac`cu*lo-u*tric"u*lar) a. (Anat.) Pertaining to the sacculus and utriculus of the ear.

Sacculus
(||Sac"cu*lus) n.; pl. Sacculi [L., little sack.] (Anat.) A little sac; esp., a part of the membranous labyrinth of the ear. See the Note under Ear.

Saccus
(||Sac"cus) n.; pl. Sacci [L., a sack.] (Biol.) A sac.

Sacellum
(Sa*cel"lum) n.; pl. Sacella [L., dim. of sacrum a sacred place.] (a) (Rom. Antiq.) An unroofed space consecrated to a divinity. (b) (Eccl.) A small monumental chapel in a church. Shipley.

Sacerdotal
(Sac`er*do"tal) a. [L. sacerdotalis, fr. sacerdos, -otis, a priest, fr. sacer holy, sacred: cf. F. sacerdotal.] Of or pertaining to priests, or to the order of priests; relating to the priesthood; priesty; as, sacerdotal dignity; sacerdotal functions.

The ascendency of the sacerdotal order was long the ascendency which naturally and properly belongs to intellectual superiority.
Macaulay.

Sacerdotalism
(Sac`er*do"tal*ism) n. The system, style, spirit, or character, of a priesthood, or sacerdotal order; devotion to the interests of the sacerdotal order.

Sacerdotally
(Sac`er*do"tal*ly), adv. In a sacerdotal manner.

Sachel
(Sach"el) n. A small bag. See Satchel.


  By PanEris using Melati.

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