Free Letter - District Court of Delaware - Delaware


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Category: District Court of Delaware
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Case 1:05-cv—OO292-JJF Document 164-2 Filed O3/31/2006 Page 1 014
E h 'b °t 1 8

THE AMER1cAN HERITAGE A
I .
3 DICTIONARY A
OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
A

Case 1 :05-cv—OO292-JJF Document 164-2 Filed O3/31/2006 Page 3 of 4
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{ Words that are believed to be registered trademarks have been
J checked with uuthoritative sourccst No investigation has been
; made of common—law trademark rights in tiny word, because such
{ investigation is irnpracticabte. Words that are known to have
{ current registrations are shown with an initial capital and are
j alsolidentilied as trademarks. The inclusion of any word _in this
_ Dictionary is rmt, however, an expression of the publishers
t opinion as to whether or not it is subject to proprietary rights.
E Indeed, no definition in this Dictionary is to be regarded as ttt'— `
= iecting the vaiidity of any trademark.
I
i @1969, E970, i97t, 1973 by American Heritage Publishing Co., Inc.
i All correspondence and inquiries should be directed to
1 Dictionary Division, American Heritage Publishing Co., Inc.,
Q l22l Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10020.
i
i AH rights reserved under Bern and Pun-American Copyright Conventions
Standard Book Nurnhers: 395gD9U64—4 (de iexe edition);
i Q 395-09055-e2 (piain edges); 395gD§066—0 (thumb-inderied);
i 395-09070-9 tschoot edition)
i Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 76»-85995
i anufnetured in the United States of Ameriea U
i Computer-composed by Irtforortics, Int:.
I XU in Maynard. Massachusetts ~
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I l` I I · - ` - .-.. .- » -~ · . .- · »r·· ·. ·- ·.· . ·r1·—{Z"·

Case 1 :05-cv-00292-JJF Document 164-2 Fnled O3/31/2006 Page 4 0f 4
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scat l scherzando was ii =_. ·
$c_¤t¤ (skill) rr. A type oi jazz singjng consisting of the irnpro— heave upward on _u wave or swell. -n Also cond The rising
vrsrrtion and repetition of meanrngless wliubies sung to u rncvcmbnt of ¤ ship on ¤ Wave or Swcil- {Perhaps {rom eayiicy I .`‘_
melody. ·-!mr.v. scarred, aeattlng. seater To sim; in this 'reend, short For oescswo or .·tsr:sn¤.] ‘
manner. {Perhaps imitative.] ‘ _ scene (sén) n 1. A locatity as seen by s viewer; view, ;_ The
sr:ot*(slrlit)r1. Any of several freshwater fishes of the genus surroundings and place where an action or event occurs
Senrnphagm, of tropical Asia and adiacent areas, having a {Int, 3. Abbr. ee. The place in which the action of rr narrative ewmi
rounded, spotted or striped body, and popular as an aquarium setting; locale. 4. Abbr. se. A subdivision of an net in u drai
fish. Fhortenecl lron1‘New Latin Scarophngux, from Greek matic presentation in which the setting is iirred and the time ;_
rknrep egos, scxrornnoous.] . _ _ continuops. 5..·§bbrz ee. _A shot or scries_ot shots in s mm ~_
scaf (?k§?Pn.b'I`1hle zigurrement of im ammo}, espceraliy a zumc cogstrtuungu r.§_n1t oisconttntzous relatetrjl action. S}1The sperm-y _·
an mo. .ro a y rorn scxro-. an properties ora ramatic presents on. 1.Are nt¤.Ath . *1-
P gi scqtho (skarh) rr.v. aemhud. scathing. aearhea. 1. To harm or tenstuge. B. A real or lictitious episode, espeeiatly when ‘
,;r,_ , lmure severely, especially by hre or heat: wither: scar. 2.. To scribed. B Aagrubhc display of passion or temper. 1o.sr¤¤g_ A ·‘
` ,· , qa, eririeize severely. ··-n. Harm; injury {Middle English skarin- piace or re rn of the currently fashionable or exciting J
, · ig,. en, Irggrnr Pl;} Norse .rk¤dIm.. See skéttv in Appendix-'} —·buhlrr5e|1¤r¤ ai=_;n¤s.ti1;Ba¤lgstar;e 2.1111 private. —m¤k¤ uw `,`
.. ( ··~·sea a a u . searm. ang. par ctpate rn an cctvity or event. pcm;
ar ‘~Q,_ scnttvlng (slcffrfring} nd]. 1. Extremely severe or harsh; bitterty scene. from Old French scene. stage, surge performnnqfg [w£ Q
la g Qt? denuneietory; "a scathing rreer an rhs toelesxnexs afwer'“ (Pierre Latin rmenn, stage, scene, theater, from Greek .rké.·ié;,’"t¤m_··g ; `
V-· —§ Brodie). 2. Harmful or painful; injurious sc¤n·or·y (s&'n=·rE) n. 1. The landscape. 2. The painted bm;.
—?· mb. ,_ snare-. Indicates feces or exerement; lor example, eearoluny. drops on n theatrical stage. {Italian reenaria, scsmnrgg ‘·
dif {Greek sgero-, gonlzskér (gentuve skater), dung, ordure See -—-eeeznée ga? -—;e§'ni·eut·ly mug:. 2 ‘_
r ? skor—*in open ix. scant s nt rr. ]. istinetiveo or._2. A erfurxre. 3.An oda
_ ·‘._ s¤a·t¤l·¤-gy (ska-tbth-ji, skit-) rr. 1. The study of fecal were- left by the pnsszna of an animal. 4. The traril ni xt hunted animal
_, ‘ j,_ ment, as 15 merlrmne or pnleontology. 2.1:. An obsession with or itggitlve. 5. The sense of smell. Br A hint of something Y
H excremcnt or cgtcretory It.tn¤lJ¤ns._ b. Tire psycllmlrrc slutiy pf tmmmbnli Sl1[;i;¤Sii¤t't. -·—S¤¤ Synonyms at smell ·—v. eeqmmt, ·`
' _ ,1;,, ‘· such an ohsessron 3. Prenceupatrnn with obscenrty. es 111 l2l· scenting. scents. —rr. 1. To perceive oriafentify by the sense af '
~ erasure. {scam- -t- —wor.} -—-eca1'¤~I¤g'i#e¤l(skiit'¤—liij'E·i4=l}, smell. 2. To suspect or detect as it by smelling: seen: danggn, -j._;
se¤r’¤»|¤g'le adj. ·····—5Dl§I¤i'G*QiEl n _ 3. To perfume. ·~·lnrn_ To hunt hy means of the sense of smelt. _
* : s¤u»t¤ph·¤~gous (sito-¤oi'¤·ges, sk¥1·) ud'}. Feeding on dung, as Used of hounds. [Middle English sent, from renter:. to smell, s
., a beetle or Ily. [Greek rkercplrngas : s¤.·t·r¤· + »r·nAoous.] Stunt, from Old French xenrir. iron: Latin ranrfrs. to feel. See
scubtor (sklitbr) v, -1er¤d. -tarlng, -t¤re. ·—-rr. 1. To cause to aont·- in Appendix?]
i separate and go in various directions; disperse. 2.. To distribute scopdar (sEp't¤r) rz. Aiso rht'ej7y British ¤eep—tro. 1. A staff held
.g loosely by or as if by sprinkling or strewingr 3. Physics. To by a sovereign on ceremonial occasions as an emblem of
_: dcflecttradintion or particles}. —-fair. 1.To separate and goin authority. 2.Sovere§gn office or power. -»-rr.v, seaprarad. ·
Q several directions; disperse. 2. To appear, occur. or {atl at -tartn¤. -tars.A1so c.'1!ejIyBr!rr'rhaeap·r.ra.-ered.-trim;.-tres. To ·‘
U .1 widely spaced intervals. -··-rz. 1. The BCI of scattering. 2 The invest with royal authority. {Middle English {.r}cb_crrc, from
.·· condition or extent of being scattered. 3. 'Ilrat which is sc:nl~ Old French. from Latin rcéprrumi from Greek rképrrpnh ~
Swpwr tercd. [Midtile·English rcaleren, possibly variant ot' rchoreren, "stnt’t’," "stiek."] .
scc tcrcrchmlcsv stsA"r"r.=zn.] -acat’ter»er n. scap·tic. Variant of skuprte.
P {F Synonyms: scatter. disperse, e'¤'.rripore, dispel These verbs are sch. school. _· ·
° ’“"°° compared as they mean to cause sorncthmg, corrsrdercd as n Sci1&u·dirm (shou'din). Fritz. iB71—l9U6. Gcrmarr zootogist; =’
nrarss or aggregate, to break up._Sc¤.·rer usually refers to wide— discovered organism that causes syphilis.
spread and often haphaznrd distribution of components. as Schaumburg-I.Ip·pe (slr¤um'bcTork’llp'¤). A former same ot 2*-
persons fleeing a storm or pitysicul objects blown by_wind. northwestern Gern1nny,now part ol Lower Saucony, West Ger- _`
Dirperre makes a stronger implication of complete braskrng up many. ..
oi the mass, as rs crowd of persons routed by poilce et a mussel sehov (shiiv) n, A chilled soup made with snrrel, onions, lemon "
clouds acted on by sunlight. Dlrsipate usuaiiyimpiies reduction juice. eggs, and sugar. and served with sour cream. {Polish
\¤ ¤¤¤1i¤t;. ¤S by Sqwinticrinc (rx fortune. time. or eneray) or szczawr surrel. akin ro Russian iéavely.] ‘ .
causing something (such as fog or mist) to evaporate. Dispel schedule (s§cEj'¢H:»!, ·rH»—¤i, sicijbi; Brirrlrlr si1Ed'yri';E) rr. LA '
Suggests making disappear as if by scattering; often it takes as formal written list ol items, usually in tabular form; especially,
Las gbjeet something nonphysical. as a rumor, fear, joy. or o listing of rates or prices. 2.u.A program of forthcoming
ou t. _ events cr appointments. h A students ro ram of classes. , ”
senr~ter·brotn (slr!it'¤r-bran') a. A person lacking the power of 3. A timetable at departures and arrivals. E Ag roduction plan .
conecntratton or attention; a Highty, disorganized, or thoughb allotting work to be done and specifying deadiines. 5. A sup- .
less person. ··-·ee¤t’tar·bra§n¤d' adj. plementai statement of details appended to u document. ~···rnv. ~
stsatétrmgoori (skht'or—griod') ll One who wastes money; spend- sehadulgéawllog, -·utasi 1. {Fo enter on rt schedule. 2. To make _
trri L; wastre . up rt sc e tr e or. 3. o p an or appoint For a certain time or .
scat-toning (sklit'or-Ing) :1. La The net or process of dis- date. {Middle English cedule. sedule, sii of oarehment or -
pcrsing or scattering. h. The state of being dispersed or scat-- paper. short note, from Old French ccriuiz, from Late Latin
tcreé. 2. A sparse distribution or irregukar occurrence ofsnn1e· schedula. diminutive of Latin scheda, selda, papyrus leaf, from -.-— -`
thing: rr scattering of applets:. 3. Pixyrfer. The dispersal of a Greek sleirldé (unattested). splinter ol wood, from slclrizein. to
bearn of particles or of ruriiution into a range of directions re- split. See stmt- in Appendirr.'] t `
sulting from physical Entersetlons. —-adj. Flsced at intervais or Sehoedn (sh§'Ec}, Karl Wilhelm. 1742-I‘736 Swedish ehernirt; ~ f
occurring irregularly. --ee¤t'r¤r·5ng~Iy adv. discovered many acids, gases, and elements `
5¤¤t1¤f Pit'!. A SMG?} bfvvtilt ¤l`1¢l1 Worn in groups of two or B¤h&¤~iitB (sh&’IFt') rr. A 'variously coiured natural [crm of ca§~ {
. A ege a n.: three as ra decoratwc accessory for a woman. clam tuagstate, CaWO,, found in ignenne racks and used as a -.._·
_§,,${;:q·; scatter rug. A small rug for carpeting a part of u floor. Also source of tungsten. [Discovered by Karl S¢:1·1ssLt=:.]
tsgsxgrrstt-;_.. Q I called "throw rug," _ _ Seho•her·o·xa·do (stm-hEr'¤—zil'ée, ·ztid'). The Iietlonel narra-- _.
--;g- ‘··‘ seaup (stron} n. Either pf two dwrng ducks. {tyrhye merile or A tor of The Ambien Nighrs-' Enrmeinmenrr. ;.;a·.-
·5 gt ,zj_g` §S££$:a··-== qfjinls, having predominantly black and while plurncge Some- Schoiqr {s}_ r _L giigi;-;n , , trrnes called “§>luchtll." [Perhaps from rmup, variant of st:ALr¤ cout (cs-l "·¢¢i;i;§~_'1i}" greg? sense "bed of mussels"), because these ducks lead on shell- milesdgenergglygortg tshrougtr Belgrum and the southern Neth- ·_ _
wl§gj;§__.g=s_ ‘,=;.g;g;;*j."`·.;-f,.:, rs . er nm s to c art ca.
scaur. Scoulrh. Variant of scar (rock). Sehobtlng (shEE'Eng), Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von. E"»'T5·
_¥n;;;;s·.‘e.i; seawenge (sk5v'iru) v. ·enged, —angtnn. -ang¤¤. mrr. 1- Io t85·€. German phnlosepher. _
—*iii£**‘i?·"=**=···*··e¢*¤¤¤¤‘**¥‘?*¤4»*¤‘*=’=¤‘*=·‘ collect and remove refuse from; eieaa up. 2. To search through schmma §skE'mo)_n., pl'. -mata (-rnrma). A summarized or rim-
scm} for salyageable material. 3. To collect (salvageabie rnaterral) by gramrnatrc representation of something; an outline. {German -‘
· A rh ujnm searching. 4,To_¤:tpel (exhaust gases) from a cyltndcr ol an Schema. from Cjreck skfréma. form. $ee eenente.]
Ly Y ·’ tnaernalwsornbttstron engrne. E. {Metallurgy. To clean (moitcn echo~mert·lc (sire-ml.tt'}lc) nd]. Pertnmtng to or rn the form of It 1;
°“°“°““Y’ metal) by chemically removing rmpurltles. —-inar. To search scheme or schema; dtsgrarnmatiz:. ·—n. A structural or pw- =Z§_
through discarded material finr edible or useful things. {Back- cedurul diagram, especially of an eiectrieet or mechanical H5- fjff
ormntzon rom scsvsrmsrt. tern.
semr·¤n·gnr (skliv'!n-jar) rr. 1. An animal that feeds on dead soho-ma»tisrn (si animal flesh or other decaying organic matter. 2. One who constituents within a given system.
scavenges. 3. Chemfruy. A substance added to n mixture to echu~m¤·tieo (skE'ma~tiz’) rr.v. -rtz¤H. -·1Ezlng, -t1z¤e. To form wg
remove irrtpnritles or to counteract the undcslrsbie effects of into rt scheme. [Greek skhénrarizeln. to give n Iorm to, lr¤¤'¤ raf;.
other constituents. [Earlier serwager. strcebclcaner, Middle rkhémo, form, manner. See uehnn-rn.] -eehn'm¤·rJ--za'tlon H-
English skawager, cotlector of tolls, from Norman French sch¤rn¤(skErn)n. 1.As5··stemntir:pIan of action, 2. An or¢l¤fl.Y Q-
scnwoger, from reotvoge, tt toll levied on foreign merchants, combination of related or successive parts or things; sys¢¤F¤· (ij-_=.
variant of Qld North French rereauwage, inspection. from es- 3. An underharni or secret plan: pint; mtrigue, 4, A visionary i.i—'»’_
enrgrer, tojinsnleet, from Flemish rcowuen. to look nt. Sen kau·' plan. 5. A chart, diagram, or outline ota system or objecg. -it r·`·
in ppen lx." schomad. achnmlng. schemes. -—.·r. 1`To cnntrivo a p lll? GV 4,
s¤o·nar·l·o (st·nEtr'E·o',sl-nlir'·)n..p!. ·¤e. 1 An outiine ofthe scheme for. 2. To plot, -lm·r. To make éeviqrrs pl¤¤5- -;_ I
plot of n dramatic or literary work. 2 A screenplay free}. {I..atin..rc}1Emu, form figure, manner, from Greek sklrémo. See
3. An outiine oi rr hypothesized chain of events. {Italian, uegh- in Appendix';] —-eehum'¤r rr,
"seenery," from Lute Latin rcaerrérmr. at the stage, from Latin Scho·noo·tn·dy {sk¤—aék'te·dé). Acit amd industrial ce11l=_f ¤l _ E .
scoena, stage, scan:.} · New York State, in the east on Lhe Mohawk River Population,
soo-navlst (sl·nCn·’l’st, s!~ni§r’—) rr. A writer ot screenplays. 77.600.
sound {sénd) inrr v. ascended. eeandlng. seondar Also send. To twhcr-zowdo (sk£r—tslln'd5) nd} Mu.;-fe. Playin]; sportive l}¤¤d ,j _.-_ ,_
-t
H pat/ii pay/Err core/it father/b bib/ph church/ti deed/E pat/E be/j' Fife/g mg/h hat/hw wljch/I pit/I pta/lr pier/j judge/lr kick/l Pd] jj-.-
ncedlc/rn mum/n no, sudden/ng thang/5 out/B tue/6 paw, For/or noise/on out/do took/oo bout/p pap/r mar/s sence/sh ship. d¤5il gg ··
,.;.=_ si;
.-elw