Appellable(a.) Appealable.
Appellancy(n.) Capability of appeal.
Appellant(a.) Relating to an appeal; appellate.
Appellant(n.) One who accuses another of felony or treason.
Appellant(n.) One who appeals, or asks for a rehearing or review of a cause by a higher tribunal.
Appellant(n.) A challenger.
Appellant(n.) One who appealed to a general council against the bull Unigenitus.
Appellant(n.) One who appeals or entreats.
Appellate(a.) Pertaining to, or taking cognizance of, appeals.
Appellate(n.) A person or prosecuted for a crime. [Obs.] See Appellee.
Appellation(n.) The act of appealing; appeal.
Appellation(n.) The act of calling by a name.
Appellation(n.) The word by which a particular person or thing is called and known; name; title; designation.
Appellative(a.) Pertaining to a common name; serving as a distinctive denomination; denominative; naming.
Appellative(a.) Common, as opposed to proper; denominative of a class.
Appellative(n.) A common name, in distinction from a proper name. A common name, or appellative, stands for a whole class, genus, or species of beings, or for universal ideas. Thus, tree is the name of all plants of a particular class; plant and vegetable are names of things that grow out of the earth. A proper name, on the other hand, stands for a single thing; as, Rome, Washington, Lake Erie.
Appellative(n.) An appellation or title; a descriptive name.
Appellatively(adv.) After the manner of nouns appellative; in a manner to express whole classes or species; as, Hercules is sometimes used appellatively, that is, as a common name, to signify a strong man.
Appellativeness(n.) The quality of being appellative.
Words within appellations