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| the act of refraining from something by one's own choice |
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| something subordinate to another, more important thing |
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| the formation or expression of an opinion or theory without sufficient evidence for proof |
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| deserving blame or censure |
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| passage onward from stage to stage |
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| a seething or overflowing, as of passion or feeling |
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| (of land) plowed and left unseeded for a season or more; not in use |
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| the chief electrician on a motion-picture or television production |
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| embodied in flesh; given a bodily, esp. a human, form |
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| free from violation, injury, desecration, or outrage |
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| having or showing little or no interest in anything |
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| the doctrine or belief that there is only one God. |
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| a drug containing opium or its derivatives, used in medicine for inducing sleep and relieving pain |
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| allowing the maximum passage of light, as glass |
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| not easily excited to action or display of emotion |
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| unusually advanced or mature in development, esp. mental development |
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| to say or plead in protest, objection, or disapproval |
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| a reckoning or account so kept |
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| not clear or transparent because of stirred-up sediment |
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| obtained, done, made, etc., by stealth |
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