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| To make or become better; improve |
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| A ghostly figure; a specter |
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| A false statement maliciously made to injure a person; slander |
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| A fortress in a commanding position |
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| A severe test; terrible ordeal |
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| Attack on anohter person's reputation |
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| Statement by a witness written down for court use. |
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| Exactly opposite; contrary |
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| Lying; disguising; concealing |
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| Relating to a formal church |
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| An object believed to have magical powers |
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| A person of great wickedness |
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| Treacherous cunning; skill deciet |
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| To impress upon the mind by frequent instruction |
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| A written statemetn charing a person with crime |
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| Gross immortality; wickedness; sin |
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| Vicious ill-will towards another |
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| To make evil, often untrue statemetns about another |
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| An introductions or beginning; a prelude |
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| The conditions of feeling sorrow for wrongdoing |
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| Party that institutes a suit in court |
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| A partiality in favor of something. A preference |
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| To conciliate; to appease |
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| Someone who brings legal action against someone |
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| The care, guardianship, and control exercised by God |
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| To free from impurities. To cleanse |
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| Characterized by rigid morality |
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| To postone or cancel the punishment |
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| A government run by religious authority |
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| A small room attached to a church |
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| An attendant, servant, or less official |
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