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| To depart clandestinely; to steal off and hide |
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| To give a false impression of; to misrepresent |
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| Self-important or pompous writing or speech |
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| Severe criticism or punishment |
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| To criticize severely; to officially rebuke |
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| Serving or intended to compel by force or authority |
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| Contemptibly fainthearted; lacking any courage |
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| Scorn; ridicule; contemptuous treatment |
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| To disguise or conceal; to mislead |
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| Pointlessly talkative; talking too much |
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| To deliver a pompus speech or tirade |
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| Saucy; impertinent; bold and disrespectful |
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| Having or showing often vicious ill-will, spite, or hatred |
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| One who hates all other humans |
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| Unyielding; hardhearted; intractable |
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| Exhibting a fawning attentiveness |
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| Disgrace; contempt; scorn |
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| The parading of learning; excessive attention to minutiae and formal rules |
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| The purposeful giving of false or misleading testimony while under oath |
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| Obstinately defiant of authority; difficult to manage |
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| To ensconce, conceal, or stow |
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| Seeming true, but actually being fallacious; misleadingly attractive |
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| Lacking authenticity or validity; false, counterfeit |
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| To comingle; to debase by mixing with something inferior |
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| To take for one's own use; confiscate |
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| To suspend; to engage; to hold one's attention |
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| Leaning; inclination; proclivity; tendency |
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| To tolerate, endure, or contenance |
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| To change as if by dyeing, i.e. to distort, gloss, or affect |
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| To diminish the intensity or check the vibration of a sound, etc. |
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| Part of a machine that punches shaped holes or cuts |
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| To test or try; to attempt or experiment |
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| To sag or droop; to become spiritless; to decline |
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| To wade across the shallow part of a river or stream |
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| A cord or cable used to steady or guide something |
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| To imply, suggest, or insinuate |
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| To tilt or lean to one side |
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| To move heavily and clumsily |
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| To exploit; to squeeze every last ounce of |
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| To pronounce or speak affectedly; to speak too carefully; also, to take tiny steps or to tiptoe |
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| Exacting; fastidious; extremely, even excessively precise |
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| To be established, accepted, or customary |
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| Hidden; concealed; beyond comprehension |
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| Commonplace; trite; unremarkable; quotidian |
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| Multicolored, usually in blotches or patches |
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| To lose vigor (as through grief); to yearn |
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| To pry; to press or foce with a lever; something taken by force; spoils |
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| To complain about bitterly |
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| Torn, past of rend; an opening or tear caused by such |
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| To lose courage; to become frightened |
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| The supporting structural cross-part of a wing |
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| To remove (as a parliamentary motion) from consideration |
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| To give; to proffer or offer |
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| To equivocate; to change one's position |
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