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| wandering, lacking consistency, regularity |
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| fondness, captivate, inspire with love |
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| lacking ease of manner, social polish |
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| polite, elegant in manner |
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| having or showing knowledge |
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| powerful or influential person |
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| to destroy or kill a large part of |
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| obliterate, or tear up by roots |
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| never known to have happen before |
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| a structural or behavioral characteric peculiar to a group |
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| distinguished, above others in rank and reputation |
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| interested in what happens around him than his own feelings and ideas |
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| to lie in hiding, to move about stealthily |
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| to walk with long steps, in a hasty way |
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| ponder, to think deeply about |
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| to persuade or attempt to persuade by flattery |
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| to persuade or try to persuade by pleading |
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| one that precedes and indicates |
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| to induce someone to convert to ones religious faith |
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| to permeate, saturate, to take in or drink |
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| to place or put in a resting new position |
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| resembling or forming a net or network |
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| a small territorial division of a country |
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| regular or accustomed course from place to place |
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| worthy of respect or honor |
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| characterized by or subject to whim, impulsive and unpredictable |
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| psychological condition characterized by self preoccupation lack of empathy |
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| dignified and impressive as in size |
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| of a pleasant disposition, friendly |
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| worn out and made tired and dull |
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| used so often as to be trite, dull, out of date |
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| strikingly new, unusual or different |
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| inference or judgement based on incomplete theory, evidence, guesswork |
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| stale, trite or commonplace through overuse |
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| false appearance, mode of dress |
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| to plan with cleverness or ingenuity |
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| to make an excuse for oneself |
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| showing or producing exalted joy |
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| unreasonably irritable or ill-tempered |
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| feeling or expressing despondency |
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| body of people ordained for religious service |
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| suffering from or characteristic of delirium |
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| a small monastery or nunnery that is governed by a prior or prioress |
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| a place for the storage of large quantities of equipment, food or some other commodity |
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| residence or former residence of a rector |
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| a person who shifts allegiance from one loyalty or ideal to another, betraying or deserting an original cause by switching to the opposing team |
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| a person who renounces a religious or political belief or principle |
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| lacking the least bit of courage |
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| a person who deserts and betrays an organization, country or set of principles |
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| to remove utterly from recognition or memory |
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| restore someone or something to their former position or condition |
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| not clearly seen or easily distinguished faint |
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| erase a mark from a surface |
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| root out and destroy completely |
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| a tax levied on certain goods and commodities produced or sold within a country and on licenses granted for certain activities |
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| a principle or set of principles laid down by an authority as incontrovertibly true. |
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| a distinctive practice, system, or philosophy, typically a political ideology or an artistic movement |
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| is a codification of belief or a body of teaching or instructions taught principles or position |
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| behaving or looking as though one thinks one is superior to others |
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| showing or feeling contempt or lack of respect |
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| modest or shy because of a lack of self-confidence |
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| arrogantly superior and disdainful |
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| lacking fresh air or ventilation |
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| shining brightly, radiant |
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| leave hurriedly and secretly typically to avoid detection or arrest |
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| escape or avoid by cleverness or trickery |
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| cease to resist an opponent or an unwelcome demand, surrender |
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| depart suddenly, abscond hurriedly to avoid prosecution or detection |
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| to make slender, fine or small. To lessen the density of |
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| to make strong as to strengthen and secure a position with fortifications. To reinforce by adding material. |
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| To drive away, disperse. To attenuate to or almost to the point of disappearing |
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| to destroy completely, ruin |
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| to diminish or destroy the strength or vitality of |
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| not being in accord, conflicting. Disagreeable in sound, harsh or dissonant. |
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| fundamentally distinct or different in kind, entirely dissimilar |
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| to increase the severity, violence, or bitterness of aggravate |
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| to make very angry or impatient, annoy greatly. To increase the gravity or intensity of |
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| to calm in temper or feeling, soothe |
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| given to excessive and often trivial or rambling talk, tiresomely talkative |
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| given to excessive and often trivial or rambling talk |
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| using or containing too many words |
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| to reveal especially through indiscreet or unreserved talk |
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