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| a beginner or novice; a person newly converted to a belief |
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| a feeling of utter weariness and discontent resulting from satiety or lack of interest |
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| a flat, dull or trite remark; the quality or state of being flat, dull or trite |
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| a lone dissenter who takes an independent stand apart from associates |
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| a mournful or plaintive poem |
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| a new word, meaning, usage or phrase; a new doctrine |
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| a person who spends money extravagantly or wastefully |
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| a tendency to think favorably of something in particular |
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| actively poisonous; violently or spitefully hostile; malicious |
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| adverce in tendency or effect; harmful; unfriendly, hostile |
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| an expression of approval and praise |
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| anxious or concerned; anxiously desirous; eager; careful or particular |
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| any song of joy, praise or triumph |
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| beginning to exist or appear; in an initial stage |
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| being at rest, quiet, still; inactive or motionless |
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| brief, forceful and meaningful in expression; forcible |
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| burdensome, oppressive or troublesome; causing hardship; having or involving obligations that outweigh the advantages (esp. in Legal affairs) |
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| calm, peaceful, tranquil; rich, wealthy, prosperous; happy, carefree |
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| causing or tending to cause sleep |
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| changeable, volatile, fickle/ animated, lively, spritely/ pertaining to mercury |
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| characterized by great knowledge; learned or scholarly |
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| commonplace or dull; matter of fact and unimaginative; having character and form of prose rather than poetry |
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| conflicting; dissonant or harsh in sound |
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| controversial; characterized by controversial arguement |
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| convincing; appealing forcibly to the mind |
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| daily; usual or customary; ordinary, commonplace |
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| dealing with very profound. difficult or abtruse subject matter; esoteric |
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| deeply respectful; godly, worshipful |
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| deliberate breach or faith or trust; act of treachery |
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| deserving or causing hatred; highly offensive; disgusting |
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| diligent in application or attention; persevering; persistently |
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| disposed to be silent or not to speak freely; reserved, reluctant |
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| done, spoken, performed, etc..without special advanced preparation; previously planned but delivered with the help of few; made for the occasion as a shelter |
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| easily provoked to anger; characterized or produced by anger |
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| excess or overindulgence; general disgust caused by excess; to suffer from the effects of overindulgence (v) |
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| excessively talkative in a rambling, roundabout manner, esp about trivial matters |
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| exemption from punishment; immunity from detremental effects |
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| existing or being everywhere, esp at the same time; omnipresent |
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| extraordinary in size, amount, extent, degree, etc...; marvelous; abnormal |
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| extreme poverty; dearth; insufficiency |
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| extremely stingy; poorly or inadequately supplied |
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| favorable to or promoting health; healthful |
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| fierce, cruel, savagely brutal; scathing, belligerent |
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| following or in agreement with Orthodox requirements |
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| foul and repulsive, as from lack of care or cleanliness; sordid |
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| full of complaints; complaining |
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| full of or showing rancor - malicious resentfulness or hostility |
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| full of twists, turns or bends; not directed or straight forward |
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| fundamentally distinct or dissimilar |
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| habitual observance of truth in speech or statement; accuracy |
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| harmful to health or physical well-being/ morally harmful |
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| having a tightening effect on living tissue |
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| having keen mental perception and understanding; having keen vision |
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| having little or no money; penniless |
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| having the power of softening or relaxing |
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| hazy, vague, indistinct or confused, cloudy or cloudlike |
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| inactive or sluggish; slow, dull, apathetic; lethargic |
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| inapt, inappropriate or awkward; unhappy |
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| incapable of being defended as an argument, thesis; not fit to be occupied |
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| incapable of being upset or agitated; not easily excited; calm |
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| incisive or keen, as language or person; vigorous; sharply defined |
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| integrity and uprightness; honesty |
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| knowledge of things before they exist or happen |
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| lasting for an indefinitely long time/ continuing throughout the year |
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| leadership or predominant influence exercised by one nation over others/ aggression or expansionism by large nations in an effort to achieve world domination |
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| made commonplace or trite; stale, banal |
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| measured ability of a rotating element; to cause to rotate |
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| morally ignoble or base; meanly selfish; dirty or filthy |
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| natural or habitual tendency; predisposition |
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| natural to or characteristic of a specific people/place/ endemic disease |
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| neatly or effectively concise; curt |
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| not easily controlled or directed; hard to cure, treat or work with |
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| not genuine, authentic or true; of illegitimate birth |
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| not quick or alert in perception, feeling or intellect/rounded at the extremity |
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| not yet completed or fully developed; rudimentary/ lacking order |
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| of glutinous nature or consistency |
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| one with an amateurish or superficial interest |
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| ostentatious in ones learning; overly conceived with formalisms |
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| outrageously shameful; infamy; cause or object of such disgrace or reproach |
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| performed merely as a routine duty; hasty and superficial; lacking interest, care or enthusiasm |
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| prolonged outburst of bitter, outspoken denunciation |
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| quick, keen or accurate knowledge or insight |
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| readily fluent, often thoughtlessly; easy or unconstrained |
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| refusing to agree or compromise |
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| regretful, seeking forgiveness |
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| requiring immediate assistance or action; urgent, pressing |
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| resembling Don Quixote; extravagantly chivalrous or Romantic/ visionary/ impetuous |
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| resisting authority or control; not obedient or compliant |
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| resolutely fearless, dauntless |
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| scolding or long verbal attack; long, passionate, vehement speech |
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| scolding or long verbal attack; long, passionate, vehement speech |
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| severe criticism or punishment |
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| shameless or impudent boldness/an act or instance of this |
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| shining brightly; radiant, gleaming |
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| smallness of quantity or number; scarcity |
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| something that weighs down or depresses (n)/ to drop down; to plunge (v) |
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| speech that is lofty in tone, often to the point of being pompous |
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| tending to pervade (see definition for pervade) |
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| that which is to be feared; formitable; commanding or evoking respect |
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| the important or essential part; the core; significant weight, substance |
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| the use of irregular or obstructive tactics to prevent adoption or a measure |
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| the willingness to comply with the wishes of others |
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| to accustom to hardship, toughen or harden; to become advantageous |
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| to annul; revoke; repeal, invalidate |
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| to anticipate and prevent or eliminate by effective measures |
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| to become spread throughout all parts of |
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| to clear from a charge of guilt or fault; vindicate |
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| to close, shut or stop up/ shut in, out or off |
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| to confuse, bewilder or stupefy/ make obscure or unclear |
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| to criticize severely; expression of blame or disapproval |
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| to deprive of force or strength; destroy the vigor of; weaken |
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| to disguise or conceal; to mislead |
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| to dress oneself carefully or smartly; pride oneself on achievement |
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| to drink an alcohol beverage profusely with heart enjoyment |
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| to dry out or dehydrate; preserve by drying |
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| to ease or lessen; to appease or pacify |
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| to entice, lure or ensnare by flatteryor artful talk/ to obtain by talk |
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| to explode with a loud noise; detonate; to issue denunciations or the like; (n) on of a group of unstable compounds |
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| to go back on one's word; deny, disown, renounce |
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| to grow or produce by multiplication of parts; increase and spread rapidly and often excessively |
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| to hinder, block or thwart (v). A situation presenting such difficulties as to discourage or defeat any attempt to deal with or resolve it |
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| to lesson in force or intensity, to make less severe |
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| to lesson in intensity or degree |
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| to make better or more tolerable |
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| to question or oppose; to hesitate/raise objections |
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| to regect as having no authority or bending force; cast-down, disown |
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| to send or consign to an inferior position; consign or commit; banish |
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| to soften in feeling or temper, to mitigate or reduce |
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| to solicit business, employement, votes or the like; to describe boastfully; to watch, to spy on (v); Person who solicites business (n) |
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| to speak falsely ore misleadingly; create an incorrect impression |
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| to speak ill of; defame; slander |
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| to state as a fact; to confirm or support |
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| to take the place of another, as through force, scheming, etc; replace |
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| to talk in a foolish or simple-minded way; babble |
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| to treat with disdain, scorn or contempt |
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| to undeceive; to set right |
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| to use ambiguous or unclear expressions to mislead or avoid committment |
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| to use or address with harsh or abusive language |
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| to yearn deeply, suffer with longing; fail from grief or intense desperation |
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| unmoved by persuasion, pity or tender feelings; resistant to influence |
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| untruthfulness; and instance of lying; falsehood |
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| utterly and shamelessly immoral or dissapated; extravagant |
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| vanishing, fading away or fleeting; scarcely perceptible |
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| varied in appearance or color; varied; diversified |
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| wishing evil or harm to another or others; evil, harmful, injurious |
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| without distinctive, interesting or stimulating qualities; vapid |
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| without emotion; apathetic, unmoved/ calm, serene/ insensible |
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| worshipping idols; blindly adoring |
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