See Also: malicious(medicine)
Malicious(money)
malicious(dictionary)
malicious(dictionary)
MALICIOUS(law)
Malicious Prosecution(law)
MALICIOUS MISCHIEF(law)
MALICIOUS ABANDONMENT(law)
DESERTION, MALICIOUS(law)
ABANDONMENT, malicious(law)

tottle (iou) and malicious (medicine)


tottle (iou)



tottle verb. M18.
[In sense 1 app. imit. In senses 2, 3 by-form of toddle, topple, or totter.]
a. verb intrans. Move and bubble like a boiling liquid or a brook; simmer. Scot. M18.
b. verb trans. Cause to simmer or boil. Scot. M-L18.
verb intrans. Move unsteadily with faltering steps. Chiefly Scot. E19.
verb intrans. = TOPPLE verb 2. dial. M19.
tottling ppl adjective that tottles; apt to topple over; shaky; fig. feeble-minded: M18.
tottlish adjective unsteady, tottery M19.

malicious (medicine)


malicious


1. Indulging or exercising malice; harboring ill will or enmity. "I grant him bloody, . . . Sudden, malicious, smacking of every sin That has a name." (Shak)

2. Proceeding from hatred or ill will; dictated by malice; as, a malicious report; malicious mischief.

3. With wicked or mischievous intentions or motives; wrongful and done intentionally without just cause or excuse; as, a malicious act. Malicious abandonment, the desertion of a wife or husband without just cause. Malicious mischief, a wanton prosecution or arrest, by regular process in a civil or criminal proceeding, without probable cause.

Synonym: Ill-disposed, evil-minded, mischievous, envious, malevolent, invidious, spiteful, bitter, malignant, rancorous, malign.

Maliciously, Maliciousness.

Origin: Of. Malicius, F. Malicieux, fr. L. Malitiosus. See Malice.

Source: Websters Dictionary