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| of, pertaining to, or consisting of citizens |
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| moved by a strong feeling, madness, or a supernatural power |
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| a poem of fourteen lines, usually in iambic pentameter |
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| to carryout or accomplish |
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| to bring back to health or existence, improve |
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| to ask earnestly, implore |
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| money, good, or estate a wife gives to her husband at marriage |
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| to provoke, instigate, or encourage |
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| to stay attached, to hold closely or firmly |
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| the devil or another evil spirit |
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| a woman with authority and control, the female head of a household |
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| to express an unfavorable judgement, to find guilty |
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| a punishment undergone because of sin |
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| contemptible or despicable |
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| lacking knowledge or information |
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| reflect or engage in deep thought or contemplation |
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| to refuse to grant a request, to state that something believed to be true is not |
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| to relieve from a charge, fault, or crime |
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| to get off or leave one's horse |
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| braveness or determination in the face of danger |
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