| a calculus or concretion found in the stomach or intestines of certain animals, esp. ruminants, formerly reputed to be an effective remedy for poison. |
| a fool or simpleton; ninny. |
| protest | |
| —n | |
| 1. | a. public, often organized, dissent or manifestation of such dissent |
| b. (as modifier): a protest march | |
| 2. | a declaration or objection that is formal or solemn |
| 3. | an expression of disagreement or complaint: without a squeak of protest |
| 4. | a. a formal notarial statement drawn up on behalf of a creditor and declaring that the debtor has dishonoured a bill of exchange or promissory note |
| b. the action of drawing up such a statement | |
| c. a formal declaration by a taxpayer disputing the legality or accuracy of his assessment | |
| 5. | a statement made by the master of a vessel attesting to the circumstances in which his vessel was damaged or imperilled |
| 6. | the act of protesting |
| 7. | under protest having voiced objections; unwillingly |
| —vb (when intr, | |
| 8. | to make a strong objection (to something, esp a supposed injustice or offence) |
| 9. | ( |
| 10. | ( |
| 11. | chiefly (US) (tr) to object forcefully to: leaflets protesting Dr King's murder |
| 12. | (tr) to declare formally that (a bill of exchange or promissory note) has been dishonoured |
| [C14: from Latin prōtestārī to make a formal declaration, from prō- before + testārī to assert] | |
| pro'testant | |
| —adj, —n | |
| pro'tester | |
| —n | |
| pro'testor | |
| —n | |
| pro'testingly | |
| —adv | |
| protest | |
| —n | |
| 1. | a. public, often organized, dissent or manifestation of such dissent |
| b. (as modifier): a protest march | |
| 2. | a declaration or objection that is formal or solemn |
| 3. | an expression of disagreement or complaint: without a squeak of protest |
| 4. | a. a formal notarial statement drawn up on behalf of a creditor and declaring that the debtor has dishonoured a bill of exchange or promissory note |
| b. the action of drawing up such a statement | |
| c. a formal declaration by a taxpayer disputing the legality or accuracy of his assessment | |
| 5. | a statement made by the master of a vessel attesting to the circumstances in which his vessel was damaged or imperilled |
| 6. | the act of protesting |
| 7. | under protest having voiced objections; unwillingly |
| —vb (when intr, | |
| 8. | to make a strong objection (to something, esp a supposed injustice or offence) |
| 9. | ( |
| 10. | ( |
| 11. | chiefly (US) (tr) to object forcefully to: leaflets protesting Dr King's murder |
| 12. | (tr) to declare formally that (a bill of exchange or promissory note) has been dishonoured |
| [C14: from Latin prōtestārī to make a formal declaration, from prō- before + testārī to assert] | |
| pro'testant | |
| —adj, —n | |
| pro'tester | |
| —n | |
| pro'testor | |
| —n | |
| pro'testingly | |
| —adv | |