receptive
— Tillægsord
– Engelsk
~ of a nerve fiber or impulse originating outside and passing toward the central nervous system; "sensory neurons"
receptive
— Tillægsord
– Engelsk
~ ready or willing to receive favorably; "receptive to the proposals"
receptive
— Tillægsord
– Engelsk
~ able to absorb liquid (not repellent); "the paper is ink-receptive"
receptive
— Tillægsord
– Engelsk
~ open to arguments, ideas, or change; "receptive to reason and the logic of facts"
recessed
— Tillægsord
– Engelsk
~ having a sunken area; "hunger gave their faces a sunken look"
recessed
— Tillægsord
– Engelsk
~ resembling an alcove
recessional
— Tillægsord
– Engelsk
~ of or relating to receding
recessionary
— Tillægsord
– Engelsk
~ of or pertaining to a recession
recessive
— Tillægsord
– Engelsk
~ of or pertaining to a recession
recessive
— Tillægsord
– Engelsk
~ (of genes) producing its characteristic phenotype only when its allele is identical
rechargeable
— Tillægsord
– Engelsk
~ capable of being recharged; "a rechargeable battery"
recherche
— Tillægsord
– Engelsk
~ lavishly elegant and refined
reciprocal
— Tillægsord
– Engelsk
~ concerning each of two or more persons or things; especially given or done in return; "reciprocal aid"; "reciprocal trade"; "mutual respect"; "reciprocal privileges at other clubs"
reciprocal
— Tillægsord
– Engelsk
~ of or relating to the multiplicative inverse of a quantity or function; "the reciprocal ratio of a:b is b:a"
reciprocative
— Tillægsord
– Engelsk
~ given or done or owed to each other
reciprocative
— Tillægsord
– Engelsk
~ moving alternately backward and forward
reciprocatory
— Tillægsord
– Engelsk
~ moving alternately backward and forward
reciprocatory
— Tillægsord
– Engelsk
~ given or done or owed to each other
reckless
— Tillægsord
– Engelsk
~ characterized by careless unconcern; "the heedless generosity and the spasmodic extravagance of persons used to large fortunes"- Edith Wharton; "reckless squandering of public funds"
reckless
— Tillægsord
– Engelsk
~ marked by defiant disregard for danger or consequences; "foolhardy enough to try to seize the gun from the hijacker"; "became the fiercest and most reckless of partisans"-Macaulay; "a reckless driver"; "a rash attempt to climb Mount Everest"