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| to reduce in amount, degree, or severity |
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| concerning the appreciation of beauty |
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| to increase in power, influence, and reputation |
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| doubtful or uncertain; able to be interpreted several ways |
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| something out of place in time |
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| similar or alike in some way; equivalent to |
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| deviation from what is normal |
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| to judge a dispute between two opposing parties |
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| Intense and passionate feeling |
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| able to speak clearly and expressively |
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| to make something unpleasant less severe |
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| to reduce in force or degree; to weaken |
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| severe or stern in appearance; undecorated |
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| predictable, cliched, boring |
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| pompous in speech and manner |
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| impartial and honest speech |
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| changing one's mind quickly and often |
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| to punish or criticise harshly |
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| something that brings about a change in something else |
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| someone prejudiced in favor of a group to which he or she belongs |
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| deception by means of craft or guile |
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| convincing and well reasoned |
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| intricate and complicated |
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| to provide supporting evidence |
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| steadily increasing volume or force |
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| appropriateness of behavior or conduct |
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| to speak of or treat with contempt; to mock |
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| jumping from one thing to another; disconnected |
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an abusive, condemnatory speech
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| someone with an amateurish and superficial interest in a topic |
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| a funeral hymn or mournful speech |
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| to set right or free from error |
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| to perceive; to recognize |
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| fundamentally different; entirely unlike |
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| to present a false appearance; to disguise one's real intentions or character |
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| a harsh and disagreeable combination, often of sounds |
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| a firmly held opinion, often a religious belief |
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| dictatorial in one's opinion |
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| selecting from or made up from a variety of sources |
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| a sorrowful poem or speech |
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| persuasive and moving, especially in speech |
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| to copy, try to equal or exceed |
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| to produce, cause, or bring about |
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| to use expression of double meaning in order to mislead |
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| learned, scholarly, bookish |
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| known or understood by only a few |
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| use of an inoffensive word or phrasein place of a more distasteful one |
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| to clear from blame; prove innocent |
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| urgent; requiring immediate action |
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| one who opposed established beliefs, customs, and institutions |
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| not capable of being disturbed |
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| quick to act without thinking |
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| unable to be calmed down or made peaceful |
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| not fully formed; disorganized |
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| showing innocence or childlike simplicity |
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| lacking interest or flavor |
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| uncompromising; refusing to be reconciled |
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| to overwhelm; to cover with water |
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| to express sorrow; to grieve |
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| to give praise; to glorify |
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| to evade responsibility by pretending to be ill |
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| person who dislikes others |
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| to calm or make less severe |
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| hardened in feeling; resistance to persuasion |
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| overly submissive and eager to please |
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| to prevent; to make unnecessary |
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| to stop up; to prevent passage of |
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| troublesome and oppressive; burdensome |
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| a contradiction or dilemma |
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| model of excellence or perfection |
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| someone who shows off learning |
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| willing to betray one's trust |
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| done in a routine way; indifferent |
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| practical as opposed to idealistic |
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| to throw violently or bring about abruptly; lacking deliberation |
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| to lie or deviate from the truth |
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| to increase in number quickly |
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| to conciliate; to appease |
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| correct behavior; obedience to rules and customs |
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| wisdom, caution, or restraint |
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| to make thinner or sparser |
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| to reject the validity of |
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| causing sleep or lethargy |
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| deceptively attractive; seemingly plausible but fallacious |
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| a mark of shame or descredit |
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| unemotional; lacking sensitivity |
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| extreme mental and physical sluggishness |
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| to sway physically; to be indecisive |
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| filled with truth and accuracy |
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