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| one who does not know whether there is a god |
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| without a name; having an unknown or unacknowledged name |
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| the quality of having two possible meanings |
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| having conflicting feelings towards someone or something |
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| a written acount of events year by year; historical records |
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| an investment that provides fixed payments yearly or at other regular intervals |
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| having a life cycle lasting through two more than two years |
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| anything that logically comes before something else |
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| old- fashioned or primitive |
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| one who collects or studies objects of former times |
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| a person who struggles against in a contest |
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| the opposite of the climax; a sudden drop from the important to the commonplace |
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| one idea placed opposite another; the exact opposite |
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| government by a single person |
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| pertaining to the autonomic nervous system, which acts according to its own laws, rather than through voluntary control |
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| a speaking of good wishes |
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| an inclination to do good; a kindly or charitable act |
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| having a kindly attitude or disposition |
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| able to use two languages |
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| consisting of supported by two parties |
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| capable of being broken down by living microorganisms and absorbed by the environment |
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| a seeing of living tissues |
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| the living together in close union of two dissimilar organisms |
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| anything out of its proper historical time |
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| arranged in order of time of occurance |
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| to cause to operate in unison |
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| to write a line around the bounds; to limit; to confine |
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| cautious; careful to examine any consequences |
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| sticking together, having an orderly relation of parts |
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| with plenty of room; spacious |
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| tendency to believe too readily on too little evidence; gullibility |
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| originally, an unbeliever in religion; now,an evildoer or criminal |
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| a running together; a large open space where crowds gather togheter |
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| running over rapidly without attention to detail; hasty and superficial |
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| running back, returning repeatedly |
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| people rule; government by representatives elected by the people |
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| upon the people; a disease or other abnormal condition spreading rapidly among many people |
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| among all the people; widespread |
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| to proclaim away; to renounce formally a throne or high office |
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| speaking and acting in a domineering or oppressive way |
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| the right to interpret and apply the law; legal power to hear and decide cases |
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| not able to be consoled; hopelessly sad |
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| sitting apart; one who disagrees; a dissenter |
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| evenness of mind or temper; composure |
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| equal in value, force, or meaning |
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| to give a good speech; to give a speech in praise of |
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| word in place of a distasteful one or unpleasant one |
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| a hymn or expression of praise to god |
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| a speech directed to the audience at the conclusion of a play |
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| the study of the origin and development of words |
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| like the language used when people speak together informally; informal or conversational |
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| a speaking alone to oneself; as in a drama; a monologue |
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| a bad condition; a disease |
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| badly approprite; not appropriate; a ludicrous misuse of a word that sounds somewhat like the world intended. |
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| without definite form or shape |
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| the branch of biology that makes a study of the form of animals or plants |
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| marriage to one person at a time |
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| like one single stone, hence solid, uniform and massive |
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| the belief that there is only one god |
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| sent between intervals; stopping and starting at intervals |
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| to send away; to leave out |
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| a clocklike instrument for measuring the exact time in music by a regularly repeated tick |
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| an instrument that measures the distance walked by recording the number of steps taken |
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| instrument used to measure the speed of a revolting shaft in revolutions per minute |
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| overflowing with enthusiasm |
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| to take the nerve out; to weaken |
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| having confidence in one's self |
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| deceiving through a pretense of faith |
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| having unborn talent; clever at contriving |
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| freeborn, honest; showing innocent or childlike simplicity or gullibility |
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| a writing on a subject; any short, witty saying |
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| a book written about one specific subject |
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| one who uses narrow or small handwriting |
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| a full suit of armor; ceremonial attire |
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| a feeling against someone or something, a strong dislike |
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| without feeling; indifferent |
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| a feeling as if one were in the other persons place |
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| a quality, especially in literature, that arouses feelings of pity |
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| advantageous; useful in getting a desired result |
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| to get the foot out of an entaglement |
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| to get the food in an entanglement |
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| tax exemption; a stamp collector |
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| an excessive or illogical fear of high places |
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| an excessive or illogical fear of enclosed places |
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| the branch of language study dealing with speech sounds and their symbols |
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| the use of sounds of letters and groups of letters in teaching beginners to read |
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| after ones death, as an award received posthumously |
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| having the before part where the after part should be |
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| an act that goes before and may serve as an example for later acts |
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| something required beforehand |
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| a seeing beforehand; a preperation for the future |
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| an inclination toward something, especially towards something objectionable |
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| kicking back the heels; obstinate; stubbornly rebellious |
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| one who lives shut out from the world |
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| to turn back; to return to a previous habit or condition |
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| names written together, an enforced enrollment or military draft |
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| lacking in distinctive qualities, not easy to write about |
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| to condemn or forbid as harmful |
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| more dangerous than seems evident |
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| to sit above; to take the place of; to displace |
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| promising good luck; favorable |
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| below the threshold of concious perception |
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| serving under someone; submissive, as a servant might be |
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| to include under a more general catagory |
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| not capable of being overcome |
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| overflowing what is needed, extra |
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| to lay something over something else |
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| a meeting at which several speakers deliver opinions on a certain topic |
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| a seeing thing, together; a brief general summary |
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| the way words are arranged together to form sentences |
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| supposed communication between two people by other that normal sensory means |
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| automatic measurement or transmission or data by radio from far away |
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| to obtain by violence or threat |
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Definition
| to twist away; to twist something from its true meaning |
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| a twisting back on the giver |
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| a statement, principle or belief that is considered to be true by established means |
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| capable of being proved as true |
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| one of three identical copies or things; threefold |
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| a three legged stand for holding a vessel or dish |
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| one turned against another; opponent |
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| the state of being turned against; misfortunate |
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| not turning ones mind to a matter; unintentional |
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| turned away from what is right or good; obstinately disobedient or difficult |
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| to turn away from an established way |
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| straying from the proper way; crooked |
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| no way through; not capable of being passed through |
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| one called to give evidence; a person who pleads on anothers behalf or for a cause |
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| a calling away, a diversion, a hobby |
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| not capable of being called back; unalterable |
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| a calling; an occupation or proffesion |
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