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| showing or expressive of gentleness or kindness |
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| wishing evil or harm to another or others; showing ill will; ill-disposed; malicious |
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| to bring into discord or conflict; involve in contention or strife. |
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| having or showing little or no emotion |
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| anything prohibited by law from being imported or exported. |
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| crying out noisily; clamorous. |
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| characterized by or expressing goodwill or kindly feelings: |
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| nullification or withdrawal, especially of an offer to contract. |
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| same kind are copied or on which they are based; a model or first form; prototype. |
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| to violate, infringe, or transgress: |
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| a visible incorporeal spirit, especially one of a terrifying nature; |
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| a slight and partial experience, knowledge, |
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| any action, especially in speech or writing, promoting such discontent or rebellion. |
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| to comply with the time or occasion; yield temporarily or ostensibly to prevailing opinion or circumstances. |
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| a person who does not conform to generally accepted patterns of behaviour or thought |
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| characterized by or liable to sudden unpredictable changes in attitude or behaviour; impulsive; fickle |
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| exceedingly eager or avid |
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| caustic, stinging, or bitter in nature, speech, behavior, |
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| to clear from a charge of guilt or fault; free from blame; vindicate. |
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| to place close together or side by side, especially for comparison orcontrast. |
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| a person whose life is devoted to the pursuit of pleasure andself-gratification. |
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| morally ignoble or base; vile: |
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| to remove unreasonable elements from. |
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| characterized by, done in, or executed with secrecy or concealment,especially for purposes of subversion or deception; private orsurreptitious: |
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| to assent tacitly; submit or comply silently or without protest; agree;consent: |
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| convincing or believable by virtue of forcible, clear, or incisive presentation; telling. |
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| apathetic or sluggish inactivity. |
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| scarcity and dearness of food; famine. |
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| a natural liking for or attraction to a person, thing, idea, etc. |
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| abundance of money, property, and other material goods; riches; wealth. |
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| giving or disposed to give freely; |
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| harsh discordance of sound; |
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| turned or turning away from what is right or proper; |
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| having many aspects or phases: |
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| very sheer and light; almost completely transparent or translucent. |
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| a bitter, sharply abusive denunciation, attack, or criticism: |
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| composition from like parts, |
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| to surrender unconditionally or on stipulated terms. |
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| brilliantly or excessively showy |
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| not in accordance with established or accepted doctrines or opinions, especially in theology |
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| unpropitious, ill-timed, unpromising. |
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| a person who is overly self-involved, and often vain and selfish. |
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| admitting or capable of some specified treatment |
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| of the nature of or made or done as a trial, experiment, or attempt; experimental: |
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| an artifice or expedient used to evade a rule, escape a consequence, hide something, etc. |
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| to clear from a charge of guilt or fault; free from blame; vindicate. |
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| out of keeping or place; inappropriate; unbecoming: |
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| something or someone that is not in its correct historical or chronological time, especially a thing or person that belongs to an earlier time: |
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| not slackening or abating; incessant |
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| a deviation from the common rule, type, arrangement, or form. |
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| a puzzling or inexplicable occurrence or situation: |
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| insidious cunning in attaining a goal; crafty or artful deception; duplicity. |
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| to flood; cover or overspread with water; |
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| devoid of freshness or originality; hackneyed; trite: |
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| the purging of the emotions or relieving of emotional tensions, especially through certain kinds of art, as tragedy or music. |
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| selecting or choosing from various sources. |
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| to seize and hold (a position, office, power, etc.) by force or without legal right: |
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| performed merely as a routine duty; hasty and superficial: |
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| division into two mutually exclusive, opposed, or contradictory groups: |
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| anything short-lived, as certain insects. |
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| of or pertaining to a parish or parishes |
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| natural or habitual inclination or tendency; propensity; predisposition: |
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| resisting control or restraint in a difficult manner; unruly. |
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| inclined or ready to submit |
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| to soften in feeling or temper, as a person; pacify; appease. |
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| to make easier to endure; lessen |
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| producing offspring, young, fruit, etc., abundantly; highly fruitful: |
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| a misapplied or inappropriate name or designation. |
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| to come between disputing people, groups, etc.; intercede; mediate. |
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