Digest

From BiblePortal Wikipedia

Digest [1]

(1): ( v. t.) To appropriate for strengthening and comfort.

(2): ( v. t.) Hence: To bear comfortably or patiently; to be reconciled to; to brook.

(3): ( v. t.) To soften by heat and moisture; to expose to a gentle heat in a boiler or matrass, as a preparation for chemical operations.

(4): ( v. t.) To dispose to suppurate, or generate healthy pus, as an ulcer or wound.

(5): ( v. t.) To think over and arrange methodically in the mind; to reduce to a plan or method; to receive in the mind and consider carefully; to get an understanding of; to comprehend.

(6): ( v. t.) To separate (the food) in its passage through the alimentary canal into the nutritive and nonnutritive elements; to prepare, by the action of the digestive juices, for conversion into blood; to convert into chyme.

(7): ( v. t.) To ripen; to mature.

(8): ( v. i.) To undergo digestion; as, food digests well or ill.

(9): ( v. i.) To suppurate; to generate pus, as an ulcer.

(10): ( v. t.) That which is digested; especially, that which is worked over, classified, and arranged under proper heads or titles

(11): ( v. t.) A compilation of statutes or decisions analytically arranged. The term is applied in a general sense to the Pandects of Justinian (see Pandect), but is also specially given by authors to compilations of laws on particular topics; a summary of laws; as, Comyn's Digest; the United States Digest.

(12): ( v. t.) To distribute or arrange methodically; to work over and classify; to reduce to portions for ready use or application; as, to digest the laws, etc.

(13): ( v. t.) To quiet or abate, as anger or grief.

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