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| temporary inactivity, cessation, or suspension |
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| the quality of being ancient; ancientness; the period of history before the Middle Ages |
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| the act or state of being engaged |
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| anxiety arising from awareness of guilt |
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| appearance, esp. the look or expression of the face |
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| doubtful; marked by or occasioning doubt |
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| selecting or choosing from various sources |
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| a person, as a handyman or servant, employed to do all kinds of work around the house |
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| acts characterized by lack of seriousness or sense |
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| any opinions or doctrines at variance with the official or orthodox |
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| begging urgently or piteously, as for aid or mercy |
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| an illegal act of entering, seizing, or taking possession of another's property |
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| lightness of mind, character, or behavior; lack of appropriate seriousness or earnestness |
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| a strong inclination, taste, or liking for something |
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| a loud, prolonged ringing of bells |
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| pertaining to or of the nature of a musical entertainment given usually by a single performer or by a performer and one or more accompanists |
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| of, pertaining to, containing, or characterized by the use of irony, sarcasm, ridicule, or the like, in exposing, denouncing, or deriding vice, folly, etc |
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| a subtle, tricky, superficially plausible, but generally fallacious method of reasoning |
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| an act or instance of praying modestly; humble prayer, entreaty, or petition |
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| a literary or artistic burlesque of a serious work or subject, characterized by grotesque or ludicrous incongruity of style, treatment, or subject matter |
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| the quality of being zealous; ardent; impassioned |
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