maturer — ● maturer verbe transitif Procéder à la maturation d un alliage léger. maturer [matyʀe] v. tr. ÉTYM. Fin XVe, en méd., « faire aboutir, rendre mûr (un abcès) »; repris en 1874 (in Littré, Suppl.); lat. maturare « faire mûrir », de maturus « mûr » … Encyclopédie Universelle
Maturer — Ma*tur er, n. One who brings to maturity. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Maturer — Mature Ma*ture , a. [Compar. {Maturer}; superl. {Maturest}.] [L. maturus; prob. akin to E. matin.] [1913 Webster] 1. Brought by natural process to completeness of growth and development; fitted by growth and development for any function, action,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
maturer — fatter The language of those who seek to sell clothes to older women, who generally have put on weight and acquired a maturer figure … How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms
maturer — ma·ture || mÉ™ tjÊŠÉ™(r) v. cause to ripen; cause to develop fully; ripen, age, grow up; reach full maturity; develop; due for payment; work out (a plan) completely, perfect adj. ripe; full grown, adult; fully developed; based on careful… … English contemporary dictionary
maturer — erratum … Anagrams dictionary
maturer — ma·tur·er … English syllables
maturer — məˈtu̇rə(r), mə.ˈtyu̇ sometimes məˈchu̇ noun ( s) : one that brings something to maturity … Useful english dictionary
erratum — maturer … Anagrams dictionary
mysticism — /mis teuh siz euhm/, n. 1. the beliefs, ideas, or mode of thought of mystics. 2. a doctrine of an immediate spiritual intuition of truths believed to transcend ordinary understanding, or of a direct, intimate union of the soul with God through… … Universalium