Search Result for "lava": 
Wordnet 3.0

NOUN (1)

1. rock that in its molten form (as magma) issues from volcanos; lava is what magma is called when it reaches the surface;


The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48:

Lava \La"va\ (l[aum]"v[.a]; 277), n. [It. lava lava, orig. in Naples, a torrent of rain overflowing the streets, fr. It. & L. lavare to wash. See Lave.] The melted rock ejected by a volcano from its top or fissured sides. It flows out in streams sometimes miles in length. It also issues from fissures in the earth's surface, and forms beds covering many square miles, as in the Northwestern United States. [1913 Webster] Note: Lavas are classed, according to their structure, as scoriaceous or cellular, glassy, stony, etc., and according to the material of which they consist, as doleritic, trachytic, etc. [1913 Webster] Lava millstone, a hard and coarse basaltic millstone from the neighborhood of the Rhine. Lava ware, a kind of cheap pottery made of iron slag cast into tiles, urns, table tops, etc., resembling lava in appearance. [1913 Webster]
WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006):

lava n 1: rock that in its molten form (as magma) issues from volcanos; lava is what magma is called when it reaches the surface
Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0:

60 Moby Thesaurus words for "lava": aa, abyssal rock, ash, ashes, basalt, bedrock, block lava, brand, brash, breccia, calx, carbon, charcoal, cinder, clinker, coal, coke, conglomerate, coom, crag, dross, druid stone, festooned pahoehoe, fume, gneiss, granite, igneous rock, limestone, living rock, magma, mantlerock, metamorphic rock, monolith, pahoehoe, pillow lava, porphyry, pudding stone, reek, regolith, rock, ropy lava, rubble, rubblestone, sandstone, sarsen, schist, scoria, scree, sedimentary rock, shelly pahoehoe, slag, smoke, smudge, smut, soot, stone, sullage, talus, tufa, tuff
The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (30 December 2018):

LAVA A language for VLSI that deals with "sticks", i.e. wires represented as lines with thickness. ["A Target Language for Silicon Compilers", R.J. Matthews et al, IEEE COMPCON, 1982, pp. 349-353]. (1994-12-07)