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| courteous and pleasant, sociable, easy to speak to |
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| to increase in greatness, power, or wealth |
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| shapeless, without definite form |
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| illegal traffic, smuggled goods |
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| thin, light, insubstantial |
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| incapable of being understood |
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| relating to, characteristic of, or situated on an island |
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| incapable of being changed |
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| a natural inclination or predilection toward |
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| to argue or plead with someone against something |
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| to disown, reject, or deny the validity of something |
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| able to return quickly to original shape or form |
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| to re-echo, resound, or be reflected repeatedly |
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| coarsly abusive, vilgar, or low |
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| persistent, showing industry and determination |
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| thin or flimsy in texture, cheap, shoddy, inferior |
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| a general pardon for an offense against the government; in general, any act of forgiveness or absolution |
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| self-government, political control |
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| self-evident, expressing a universally accepted principle or rule |
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| to adorn or embellish; to display conspicuously; to publish or proclaim widely |
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| a warning or caution to prevent misunderstanding or discourage behavior |
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| fair, just, embodying principles of justice |
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| to free from entanglements or difficulties; to remove with effort |
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| to steal, especially in a sneaky way and in petty amounts |
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| to mock, treat with contempt |
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| tending to be troublesome; unruly, quarrlesome, contrary; unpredictable |
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| a rule of conduct or action |
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| beneficial, helpful; healthful, wholesome |
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| bitterly severe, withering; causing great harm |
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| (v) to whip, punish severely; (n) a cause of affliction or suffering; a source of severe punishment or criticism |
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| funeral, typical of the tomb; extremely gloomy or dismal |
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| (adj) tending to cause sleep, relating to sleepiness or lethargy; (n) something that induces sleep |
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| extremely strict in regard to moral standards and conduct; prudish, puritanical |
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| (adj) lasting only a short time, fleeting; (n) one who stays only a short time |
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| not easily carried, handled, or managed because of size or complexity |
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| dull, uninteresting, tiresome; lacking in sharpness, flavor, liveliness, or force |
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| abnormal, irregular, departing from the usual |
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| a damaging or derogatory statement |
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| extremely strange, unusual, atypical |
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| abrupt, blunt, with no formalities |
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| to coax, persuade through flattery or atriface |
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| to punish severely, to criticize severely |
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| to plan with ingenuity, invent, scheme |
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| a leader who exploits popular prejudices and false claims and promises in order to gain power |
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| to free from deception or error, set right in ideas or thinking |
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| weariness or dissatisfaction from lack of occupation or interest, boredom |
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| a chain or shackle placed on the feet |
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| very wicked, offensive, hateful |
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| not subject to change, constant |
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| one who rebels or rises against authority |
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| a delusion marked by a feeling of power, wealth, talent |
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| a position requiring little or no work, an easy job |
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| stealthy, secret, intended to escape observation |
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| to go beyond a limit or boundary, to sin, to violate law |
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| to change from one nature, substance or form, to another |
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| performed, suffered, or otherwise experienced by one person in place of another |
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