Used to describe a person or property that is not insured to an adequate extent, typically in the context of insurance. It refers to insufficient insurance coverage, leaving something or someone vulnerable to significant financial loss in the event of damage or loss.
/ʌndərˈɪnsəd/
a genus of the mushroom family Tricholomataceae; it includes the winecap mushrooms and other species of fleshy fungi that are found in woodland and lawns.
/'strɔfiə/
Not according to the teachings or spirit of Christianity, or not showing the qualities expected of a Christian.
/ʌnˈchrɪstiən/
Anti-prelatism refers to a rejection of hierarchical religious governance controlled by prelates (high-ranking clergy). It often supports a more democratic or egalitarian form of church governance and opposes the authority of an established religious hierarchy. This concept is particularly prominent in certain Protestant churches and some movements within Christianity.
/ænti.prel.ə.tɪz.əm/
The quality of lacking manliness or masculinity; a lack of the traits traditionally considered masculine.
/ʌnˈmænɪnəsnes/
Spirillotropism refers to the directional growth or movement of a microbial cell, most commonly a bacterium, along a spiral path, often influenced by environmental factors such as changes in nutrient concentrations or chemical gradients.
/spaɪrɪˈlɒtrəpɪsm/
The practice or habit of regarding Britain and its language and culture as central to human affairs, with undue emphasis or a biased perspective.
/ˌæŋgliˈsentrɪzɪzəm/
The biological phenomenon where an organism, a parasitoid, lives in or on another living organism, a host, and eventually leads to the host's death, usually after consuming it or its tissues.
/ˌpærəˈsɪtədɪsms/
Used to emphatically indicate disagreement or to express strong negation. It implies that there is not even one way or possibility of a certain thing happening or being true.
/ˈnaʊ.ways/