Webster's Unabridged Dictionary - Letter R - Page 48

Rescript (n.) A counterpart. -- Bouvier.

Rescript (n.) A reply by a Pope to an inquiry concerning a point of law or morality

Rescript (n.) A legally binding command or decision entered on the court record (as if issued by a court or judge); "a friend in New Mexico said that the order caused no trouble out there" [syn: decree, edict, fiat, order, rescript].

Rescript (n.) The act of rewriting something [syn: revision, revisal, revise, rescript].

Rescript (n.) Something that has been written again; "the rewrite was much better" [syn: rewrite, revision, rescript].

Recript () conv. A counterpart.

Recript () In the canon law, by rescripts are understood apostolical letters, which emanate from the pope, under whatever form they may be. The answers of the pope in writing are so called. Diet. Dr. Can. h.v. Vide Chirograph; Counterpart; Part.

Rescription (n.) A writing back; the answering of a letter. -- Loveday.

Rescription () 付款通知 French law. A rescription is a letter by which the maker requests some one to pay a certain sum of money, or to account for him to a third person for it. Poth. Du Contr. de Change, n. 225.

Rescription () According to this definition, bills of exchange are a species of rescription. The difference appears to be this, that a bill of exchange is given when there has been a contract of exchange between the drawer and the payee; whereas the rescription is sometimes given in payment of debt, and at other times it is lent to the payee. Id.

Rescriptive (a.) Pertaining to, or answering the purpose of, a rescript; hence, deciding; settling; determining.

Rescriptively (adv.) By rescript. -- Burke.

Rescuable (a.) That may be rescued.

Rescue (n.) The act of rescuing; deliverance from restraint, violence, or danger; liberation.

Spur to the rescue of the noble Talbot. -- Shak.

Rescue (n.) (Law) The forcible retaking, or taking away, against law, of things lawfully distrained.

Rescue (n.) (Law) The forcible liberation of a person from an arrest or imprisonment.

Rescue (n.) (Law) The retaking by a party captured of a prize made by the enemy. -- Bouvier.

The rescue of a prisoner from the court is punished with perpetual imprisonment and forfeiture of goods. -- Blackstone.

Rescue grass. [Etymol. uncertain.] (Bot.) A tall grass ({Ceratochloa unioloides) somewhat resembling chess, cultivated for hay and forage in the Southern States.

Rescued (imp. & p. p.) of Rescue.

Rescuing (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Rescue.

Rescue (v. t.) 援救;營救;挽救 [+from];【律】強行奪回(在押人犯或財物) To free or deliver from any confinement, violence, danger, or evil; to liberate from actual restraint; to remove or withdraw from a state of exposure to evil; as, to rescue a prisoner from the enemy; to rescue seamen from destruction.

Had I been seized by a hungry lion, I would have been a breakfast to the best, Rather than have false Proteus rescue me. -- Shak.

Syn: To retake; recapture; free; deliver; liberate; release; save.

Rescue (n.) 援救;營救 [U] [C];【律】強行奪回 Recovery or preservation from loss or danger; "work is the deliverance of mankind"; "a surgeon's job is the saving of lives" [syn: rescue, deliverance, delivery, saving].

Rescue (v.) Free from harm or evil [syn: rescue, deliver].

Rescue (v.) Take forcibly from legal custody; "rescue prisoners."

Rescue (), crim. law. A forcible setting at liberty against law of a person duly arrested. Co. Litt. 160; 1 Chitty's Cr, Law, *62; 1 Russ. on Cr. 383. The person who rescues the prisoner is called the rescuer.

Rescue () If the rescued prisoner were arrested for felony, then the rescuer is a felon; if for treason, a traitor; and if for a trespass, he is liable to a fine as if he had committed the original offence. Hawk. B. 5, c. 21. If the principal be acquitted, the rescuer may nevertheless be fined for the misdemeanor in the obstruction and contempt of public justice. 1 Hale, 598.

Rescue () In order to render the rescuer criminal, it is necessary he should have knowledge that the person whom he sets at liberty has been apprehended for a criminal offence, if he is in the custody of a private person; but if he be under the care of a public officer, then he is to take notice of it at his peril. 1 Hale, 606.

Rescue () In another sense, rescue is the taking away and setting at liberty, against law, a distress taken for rent, or services, or damage feasant. Bac. Ab. Rescue, A.

Rescue () For the law of the United States on this subject, vide Ing. Dig. 150. Vide, generally, 19 Vin. Ab. 94.

Rescue (), mar. war. The retaking by a party captured of a prize made by the enemy. There is still another kind of rescue which partake's of the nature of a recapture; it occurs when the weaker party before he is overpowered, obtains relief from the arrival of fresh succors, and is thus preserved from the force of the enemy. 1 Rob. Rep. 224; 1 Rob. Rep. 271.

Rescue () Rescue differs from recapture. (q.v.) The rescuers do not by the rescue become owners of the property, as if it had been a new prize -- but the property is restored to the original owners by the right of postliminium. (q.v.)

Rescueless (a.) Without rescue or release.

Rescuer (n.) One who rescues.

Rescuer (n.) A person who rescues you from harm or danger [syn: savior, saviour, rescuer, deliverer].

Rescuer (n.) Someone who saves something from danger or violence [syn: rescuer, recoverer, saver].

Rescussee (n.) (O.Eng. Law) The party in whose favor a rescue is made. -- Crabb.

Rescussor (n.) [LL.] (O.Eng.Law) One who makes an unlawful rescue; a rescuer. --Burril.

Rescussor. () The party making a rescue, is sometimes so called, but more properly he is a rescuer.

Rese (v. i.) To shake; to quake; to tremble. [Obs.] "It made all the gates for to rese." -- Chaucer.

Re-search (v. t.) To search again; to examine anew.

Research (n.) [S] [P1] [+in/ into/ on](學術)研究;調查,探究 Diligent inquiry or examination in seeking facts or principles; laborious or continued search after truth; as, researches of human wisdom ; to research a topic in the library; medical research.

The dearest interests of parties have frequently been staked on the results of the researches of antiquaries. -- Macaulay.

Research (n.) Systematic observation of phenomena for the purpose of learning new facts or testing the application of theories to known facts; -- also called {scientific research}. This is the research part of the phrase "research and development" (R&D).

Note: The distinctive characteristic of scientific research is the maintenance of records and careful control or observation of conditions under which the phenomena are studied so that others will be able to reproduce the observations. When the person conducting the research varies the conditions beforehand in order to test directly the effects of changing conditions on the results of the observation, such investigation is called experimental research or experimentation or experimental science; it is often conducted in a laboratory. If the investigation is conducted with a view to obtaining information directly useful in producing objects with commercial or practical utility, the research is called applied research.

Investigation conducted for the primary purpose of discovering new facts about natural phenomena, or to elaborate or test theories about natural phenomena, is called basic research or fundamental research.

Research in fields such as astronomy, in which the phenomena to be observed cannot be controlled by the experimenter, is called observational research.

Epidemiological research is a type of observational research in which the researcher applies statistical methods to analyse patterns of occurrence of disease and its association with other phenomena within a population, with a view to understanding the origins or mode of transmission of the disease.

Syn: Investigation; examination; inquiry; scrutiny.

Research (v. t.) (v. i.) [+in/ into/ on] 作學術研究;調查,探究 (v. t.) 研究,探究 To search or examine with continued care; to seek diligently.

Research (n.) Systematic investigation to establish facts.

Research (n.) A search for knowledge; "their pottery deserves more research than it has received" [syn: {inquiry}, {enquiry}, {research}].

Research (v.) Attempt to find out in a systematically and scientific manner; "The student researched the history of that word".

Research (v.) Inquire into; "the students had to research the history of the Second World War for their history project"; "He searched for information on his relatives on the web"; "Scientists are exploring the nature of consciousness" [syn: {research}, {search}, {explore}].

Researcher (n.) 研究員;調查者 One who researches.

Researcher (n.) One who conducts research. In the field of scientific research, also called an investigator or scientist.

Researcher (n.) A scientist who devotes himself to doing research [syn: research worker, researcher, investigator].

Researchful (a.) 研究的 Making researches; inquisitive. [R.] -- Coleridge.

Reseat (v. t.) 使再坐下;給……裝設新座位(或底座) To seat or set again, as on a chair, throne, etc. -- Dryden.

Reseat (v. t.) To put a new seat, or new seats, in; as, to reseat a theater; to reseat a chair or trousers.

Reseat (v.) Provide with a new seat; "reseat the old broken chair."

Reseat (v.) Provide with new seats; "reseat Carnegie Hall."

Reseat (v.) Show to a different seat; "The usher insisted on reseating us."

Resected (imp. & p. p.) of Resect.

Resecting (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Resect.

Resect (v. t.) 【醫】切除;割除 To cut or pare off; to remove by cutting.

Resect (v.) Surgically remove a part of a structure or an organ [syn: resect, eviscerate].

Resection (n.) 【醫】切除(術)The act of cutting or paring off. -- Cotgrave.

Resection (n.) (Surg.) The removal of the articular extremity of a bone, or of the ends of the bones in a false articulation.

Resection (n.) Surgical removal of part of a structure or organ.

Reseda (n.) (Bot.) 木犀草屬植物;淺綠色 A genus of plants, the type of which is mignonette.

Reseda (n.) A grayish green color, like that of the flowers of mignonette.

Reseda (n.) Any plant of the genus Reseda.

Reseda (a.) 灰綠色的 Grayish green, like the flowers of the mignonette.

Reseek (v. t.) To seek again. -- J. Barlow.

Reseize (v. t.) 再逮捕,奪回,使恢復土地佔有權 To seize again, or a second time.

Reseize (v. t.) To put in possession again; to reinstate.

And then therein [in his kingdom] reseized was again. -- Spenser.

Reseize (v. t.) (Law) To take possession of, as lands and tenements which have been disseized.

The sheriff is commanded to reseize the land and all the chattels thereon, and keep the same in his custody till the arrival of the justices of assize. -- Blackstone.

Reseizer (n.)  Resumption of possession by a feudal lord after a tenant's default.

Reseizer (n.) One who seizes again.

Reseizer (n.) (Eng. Law) The taking of lands into the hands of the king where a general livery, or oustre le main, was formerly mis-sued, contrary to the form and order of law.

Reseizure (n.) A second seizure; the act of seizing again. --Bacon.

Resell (v. t.) 再賣;轉售 To sell again; to sell what has been bought or sold; to retail.

Resell (v.) Sell (something) again after having bought it.

Resemblable (a.) Admitting of being compared; like. [Obs.] -- Gower.

Resemblance (n.) 相似;相貌相似 [U] [+between];相似點;相似程度 [C] [+to The quality or state of resembling; likeness; similitude; similarity.

One main end of poetry and painting is to please; they bear a great resemblance to each other. -- Dryden.

Resemblance (n.) That which resembles, or is similar; a representation; a likeness.

These sensible things, which religion hath allowed, are resemblances formed according to things spiritual. -- Hooker.

Resemblance (n.) A comparison; a simile. [Obs.] -- Chaucer.

Resemblance (n.) Probability; verisimilitude. [Obs.] -- Shak.

Syn: Likeness; similarity; similitude; semblance; representation; image.

Resemblance (n.) Similarity in appearance or external or superficial details.

Resemblant (a.) Having or exhibiting resemblance; resembling.

Resembled (imp. & p. p.) of Resemble.

Resembling (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Resemble.

Resemble (v. t.) 相似,像,類似 To be like or similar to; to bear the similitude of, either in appearance or qualities; as, these brothers resemble each other.

Resemble (v. t.) To liken; to compare; to represent as like. [Obs.]

The other . . . He did resemble to his lady bright. -- Spenser.

Resemble (v. t.) To counterfeit; to imitate. [Obs.] "They can so well resemble man's speech." -- Holland.

Resemble (v. t.) To cause to imitate or be like. [R.] -- H. Bushnell.

Resemble (v.) Appear like; be similar or bear a likeness to; "She resembles her mother very much"; "This paper resembles my own work".

Resembler (n.) One who resembles.

Resemblingly (adv.) So as to resemble; with resemblance or likeness.

Reseminate (v. t.) To produce again by means of seed. [Obs.] -- Sir. T. Browne.

Resend (v. t.) 再送 To send again; as, to resend a message.

Resend (v. t.) To send back; as, to resend a gift. [Obs.] -- Shak.

Resend (v. t.) (Telegraphy) To send on from an intermediate station by means of a repeater.

Resented (imp. & p. p.) of Resent.

Resenting (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Resent.

Resent (v. t.) 憤慨;怨恨 [+v-ing]resend的動詞過去式、過去分詞 To be sensible of; to feel; as:

Resent (v. t.) In a good sense, to take well; to receive with satisfaction. [Obs.]

Which makes the tragical ends of noble persons more favorably resented by compassionate readers. -- Sir T. Browne.

Resent (v. t.) In a bad sense, to take ill; to consider as an injury or affront; to be indignant at.

Resent (v. t.) To express or exhibit displeasure or indignation at, as by words or acts.

The good prince King James . . . bore dishonorably what he might have resented safely. -- Bolingbroke.

Resent (v. t.) To recognize; to perceive, especially as if by smelling; -- associated in meaning with sent, the older spelling of scent to smell. See Resent, v. i. [Obs.]

This bird of prey resented a worse than earthly savor in the soul of Saul. -- Fuller.

Our King Henry the Seventh quickly resented his drift. -- Fuller.

Resent (v. i.) To feel resentment. -- Swift.

Resent (v. i.) To give forth an odor; to smell; to savor. [Obs.]

The judicious prelate will prefer a drop of the sincere milk of the word before vessels full of traditionary pottage resenting of the wild gourd of human invention. -- Fuller.

Resent (v.) Feel bitter or indignant about; "She resents being paid less than her co-workers."

Resent (v.) Wish ill or allow unwillingly [syn: begrudge, resent] [ant: wish, wish well].

Resenter (n.) One who resents. -- Sir H. Wotton.

Resentful (a.) 忿恨的,怨恨的;表示忿恨的;怨恨引起的 Inclined to resent; easily provoked to anger; irritable. -- Re*sent"ful*ly, adv.

Resentful (a.) Full of or marked by resentment or indignant ill will; "resentful at the way he was treated"; "a sullen resentful attitude" [ant: unresentful].

Resentiment (n.) 憤慨,忿怒,怨恨 [U] [C] [+at/ against] Resentment. [Obs.]

Resentingly (adv.) With deep sense or strong perception. [Obs.] -- Dr. H. More.

Resentingly (adv.) With a sense of wrong or affront; with resentment.

Resentive (a.) 忿恨的,怨恨的;怨恨引起的;表示忿恨的 Resentful. [R.] -- Thomson.

Resentment (n.) 憤怒,憤慨,憎恨,怨恨 The act of resenting.

Resentment (n.) The state of holding something in the mind as a subject of contemplation, or of being inclined to reflect upon something; a state of consciousness; conviction; feeling; impression. [Obs.]

He retains vivid resentments of the more solid morality. -- Dr. H. More.

It is a greater wonder that so many of them die, with so little resentment of their danger. -- Jer. Taylor.

Resentment (n.) In a good sense, satisfaction; gratitude. [Obs.]

The Council taking notice of the many good services performed by Mr. John Milton, . . . have thought fit to declare their resentment and good acceptance of the same. -- The Council Book (1651).

Resentment (n.) In a bad sense, strong displeasure; anger; hostility provoked by a wrong or injury experienced.

Resentment . . . is a deep, reflective displeasure against the conduct of the offender. -- Cogan.

Syn: Anger; irritation; vexation; displeasure; grudge; indignation; choler; gall; ire; wrath; rage; fury.

Usage: Resentment, Anger. Anger is the broader term, denoting a keen sense of disapprobation (usually with a desire to punish) for whatever we feel to be wrong, whether directed toward ourselves or others.

Resentment is anger exicted by a sense of personal injury. It is, etymologically, that reaction of the mind which we instinctively feel when we think ourselves wronged. Pride and selfishness are apt to aggravate this feeling until it changes into a criminal animosity; and this is now the more common signification of the term. Being founded in a sense of injury, this feeling is hard to be removed; and hence the expressions bitter or implacable resentment. See Anger.

Anger is like A full-hot horse, who being allowed his way, Self-mettle tires him. -- Shak.

Can heavently minds such high resentment show, Or exercise their spite in human woe? -- Dryden.

Resentment (n.) A feeling of deep and bitter anger and ill-will [syn: resentment, bitterness, gall, rancor, rancour].

Reserate (v. t.) 開……的鎖;開;開啟 To unlock; to open. [Obs.] -- Boyle.

Reservance (n.) 保留(意見);異議 [C] [U];(公共)專用地;禁獵區;自然保護區;【美】【加】保留(給印第安人居住的)區域 [C] Reservation. [R.]

Reservation (n.) 保留(意見);異議 [C] [U];(公共)專用地;禁獵區;自然保護區;【美】【加】保留(給印第安人居住的)區域 [C] The act of reserving, or keeping back; concealment, or withholding from disclosure; reserve. -- A. Smith.
With reservation of an hundred knights. -- Shak.

Make some reservation of your wrongs. -- Shak.

Reservation (n.) Something withheld, either not expressed or disclosed, or not given up or brought forward. --Dryden.

Reservation (n.) A tract of the public land reserved for some special use, as for schools, for the use of Indians, etc. [U.S.]

Reservation (n.) The state of being reserved, or kept in store. -- Shak.

Reservation (n.) (Law) A clause in an instrument by which some new thing is reserved out of the thing granted, and not in esse before.

Reservation (n.) (Law) A proviso. -- Kent.

Note: This term is often used in the same sense with exception, the technical distinction being disregarded.

Reservation (n.) (Eccl.) The portion of the sacramental elements reserved for purposes of devotion and for the communion of the absent and sick.

Reservation (n.) (Eccl.) A term of canon law, which signifies that the pope reserves to himself appointment to certain benefices.

Reservation (n.) An agreement to have some space, service or other acommodation, as at a hotel, a restaurant, or on a public transport system, held for one's future use; also, the record or receipt for such an agreement, or the contractual obligation to retain that accommodation; as, a hotel reservation; a reservation on a flight to Dallas; to book a reservation at the Ritz.

Mental reservation, the withholding, or failing to disclose, something that affects a statement, promise, etc., and which, if disclosed, would materially change its import.

Reservation (n.) A district that is reserved for particular purpose [syn: reservation, reserve].

Reservation (n.) A statement that limits or restricts some claim; "he recommended her without any reservations" [syn: reservation, qualification].

Reservation (n.) An unstated doubt that prevents you from accepting something wholeheartedly [syn: mental reservation, reservation, arriere pensee].

Reservation (n.) The act of reserving (a place or passage) or engaging the services of (a person or group); "wondered who had made the booking" [syn: booking, reservation].

Reservation (n.) The written record or promise of an arrangement by which accommodations are secured in advance.

Reservation (n.) Something reserved in advance (as a hotel accommodation or a seat on a plane etc.).

Reservation (n.) The act of keeping back or setting aside for some future occasion.

Reservation () Contracts. That part of a deed or other instrument which reserves a thing not in esse at the time of the grant, but newly created. 2 Hill. Ab. 359; 3 Pick. R. 272; It differs from an exception. (q.v.) See 4 Vern. 622; Brayt. R. 230; 9 John. R. 73; 20 John, R. 87; 3 Ridg. P. C. 402; Co. Litt. 43 a; 2 Tho Co. Litt. 412.

Reservative (a.) Tending to reserve or keep; keeping; reserving.

Reservatory (v. t.) A place in which things are reserved or kept. -- Woodward.

Reserved (imp. & p. p.) of Reserve.

Reserving (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Reserve.

Reserve (v. t.) 儲備,保存;保留 [+for];預約,預訂;延遲作出;暫時不作 To keep back; to retain; not to deliver, make over, or disclose. "I have reserved to myself nothing." -- Shak.

Reserve (v. t.) Hence, to keep in store for future or special use; to withhold from present use for another purpose or time; to keep; to retain ; to make a reservation [7]. -- Gen. xxvii. 35.

Note: In cases where one person or party makes a request to an agent that some accommodation (such as a hotel room or place at a restaurant) be kept (reserved) for their use at a particular time, the word reserve applies both to the action of the person making the request, and to the action of the agent who takes the approproriate action (such as a notation in a book of reservations) to be certain that the accommodation is available at that time.

Hast thou seen the treasures of the hail, which I have reserved against the time of trouble? -- Job xxxviii. 22,23.

Reserve your kind looks and language for private hours. -- Swift.

Reserve (v. t.) To make an exception of; to except. [R.]

Reserve (n.) 儲備(物);儲備金;保留(物);儲藏量 [C] [U] [+of];保留地;保護區;禁獵區 [C];儲備選手,候補 [C];克制;沉默寡言;含蓄;冷淡 [U];預備軍,後備隊;預備役軍人 [P1] The act of reserving, or keeping back; reservation.

However any one may concur in the general scheme, it is still with certain reserves and deviations. -- Addison.

Reserve (n.) That which is reserved, or kept back, as for future use.

The virgins, besides the oil in their lamps, carried likewise a reserve in some other vessel for a continual supply. -- Tillotson.

Reserve (n.) That which is excepted; exception.

Each has some darling lust, which pleads for a reserve. -- Rogers.

Reserve (n.) Restraint of freedom in words or actions; backwardness; caution in personal behavior.

My soul, surprised, and from her sex disjoined, Left all reserve, and all the sex, behind. -- Prior.

The clergyman's shy and sensitive reserve had balked this scheme. -- Hawthorne.

Reserve (n.) A tract of land reserved, or set apart, for a particular purpose; as, the Connecticut Reserve in Ohio, originally set apart for the school fund of Connecticut; the Clergy Reserves in Canada, for the support of the clergy.

Reserve (n.) (Mil.) A body of troops in the rear of an army drawn up for battle, reserved to support the other lines as occasion may require; a force or body of troops kept for an exigency.

Reserve (n.) (Mil.) troops trained but released from active service, retained as a formal part of the military force, and liable to be recalled to active service in cases of national need (see Army organization, above).

Reserve (n.) (Banking) Funds kept on hand to meet liabilities.

Resist (n.) (Calico Printing) A substance used to prevent a color or mordant from fixing on those parts to which it has been applied, either by acting machanically in preventing the color, etc., from reaching the cloth, or chemically in changing the color so as to render it incapable of fixing itself in the fibers; -- also called reserve. The pastes prepared for this purpose are called resist pastes. -- F. C. Calvert.

Resist (n.) (Technology) Something that resists or prevents a certain action; specif.: A substance applied to a surface, as of metal, or of a silicon wafer, to prevent the action on it of acid, other chemical agents, or any other process such as irradiation or deposition, which would modify the surface if not protected. The resist is usually applied or in some way formed into a pattern so that the underlying surface may be modified in a complementary pattern.

Reserve (n.) Formality and propriety of manner [syn: modesty, reserve].

Reserve (n.) Something kept back or saved for future use or a special purpose [syn: reserve, backlog, stockpile].

Reserve (n.) An athlete who plays only when a starter on the team is replaced [syn: substitute, reserve, second-stringer].

Reserve (n.) (Medicine) Potential capacity to respond in order to maintain vital functions.

Reserve (n.) A district that is reserved for particular purpose [syn: reservation, reserve].

Reserve (n.) Armed forces that are not on active duty but can be called in an emergency [syn: military reserve, reserve].

Reserve (n.) The trait of being uncommunicative; not volunteering anything more than necessary [syn: reserve, reticence, taciturnity].

Reserve (v.) Hold back or set aside, especially for future use or contingency; "they held back their applause in anticipation".

Reserve (v.) Give or assign a resource to a particular person or cause; "I will earmark this money for your research"; "She sets aside time for meditation every day" [syn: allow, appropriate, earmark, set aside, reserve].

Reserve (v.) Obtain or arrange (for oneself) in advance; "We managed to reserve a table at Maxim's".

Reserve (v.) Arrange for and reserve (something for someone else) in advance; "reserve me a seat on a flight"; "The agent booked tickets to the show for the whole family"; "please hold a table at Maxim's" [syn: reserve, hold, book].

Reserve, WI -- U.S. Census Designated Place in Wisconsin

Population (2000): 436

Housing Units (2000): 252

Land area (2000): 53.009057 sq. miles (137.292821 sq. km)

Water area (2000): 0.698415 sq. miles (1.808887 sq. km)

Total area (2000): 53.707472 sq. miles (139.101708 sq. km)

FIPS code:  67050

Located within:  Wisconsin (WI), FIPS 55

Location:  45.859877 N, 91.372722 W

ZIP Codes (1990):   

Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.

Headwords:

Reserve, WI

Reserve

Reserve, MT -- U.S. Census Designated Place in Montana

Population (2000): 37

Housing Units (2000): 25

Land area (2000): 1.375721 sq. miles (3.563101 sq. km)

Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)

Total area (2000): 1.375721 sq. miles (3.563101 sq. km)

FIPS code: 62125

Located within:  Montana (MT), FIPS 30

Location: 48.605251 N, 104.463969 W

ZIP Codes (1990): 59258

Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.

Headwords:

Reserve, MT

Reserve

Reserve, NM -- U.S. village in New Mexico

Population (2000): 387

Housing Units (2000): 238

Land area (2000): 0.555844 sq. miles (1.439628 sq. km)

Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)

Total area (2000): 0.555844 sq. miles (1.439628 sq. km)

FIPS code: 62620

Located within: New Mexico (NM), FIPS 35

Location: 33.708493 N, 108.760822 W

ZIP Codes (1990): 87830

Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.

Headwords:

Reserve, NM

Reserve

Reserve, KS -- U.S. city in Kansas

Population (2000): 100

Housing Units (2000): 60

Land area (2000): 0.110424 sq. miles (0.285998 sq. km)

Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)

Total area (2000): 0.110424 sq. miles (0.285998 sq. km)

FIPS code: 59050

Located within: Kansas (KS), FIPS 20

Location: 39.976378 N, 95.564464 W

ZIP Codes (1990): 66434

Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.

Headwords:

Reserve, KS

Reserve

Reserve, LA -- U.S. Census Designated Place in Louisiana

Population (2000): 9111

Housing Units (2000): 3385

Land area (2000): 16.067055 sq. miles (41.613480 sq. km)

Water area (2000): 1.050370 sq. miles (2.720446 sq. km)

Total area (2000): 17.117425 sq. miles (44.333926 sq. km)

FIPS code: 64310

Located within:  Louisiana (LA), FIPS 22

Location: 30.062566 N, 90.553296 W

ZIP Codes (1990): 70084

Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.

Headwords:

Reserve, LA

Reserve

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