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| to use sparingly or economically |
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| careful management or conservation of resources; economy |
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| the act of resting or the state of being at rest |
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| to make an earnest request of; to plead |
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| a title conferred for achievement; glory or recognition; distinction; a code of integrity, dignity, and pride |
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| to make something already well under way greater, as in size or extent |
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| perceptible by the sense or by the mind |
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| existing or happening now |
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| worthless or inferior; causing sorrow, grief, or misfortune |
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| used at the end of a prayer or statement to express assent or approval |
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| suffering from a disorder of the mind; insane; temporarily or apparently deranged, as by violent emotions |
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| a soothing, healing, or comforting agent or quality |
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| excessive indulgence in sexual activity; lewdness |
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| to use deliberately ambiguous language; to avoid making an explicit statement |
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| a person who deliberately speaks in a way to confuse listeners |
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| appearance; the expression of the face; a look or expression of support or approval |
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| the dregs; the sediment that settles during fermentation of wine |
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| unfavorable destiny; doom |
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| a tool for boring holes in wood or ice |
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| a narrow hole bored by an auger |
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| to suborn - to induce a person to commit an unlawful or evil act |
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| bitter regret; moral anguish arising from regret at one's deeds |
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| concerned with the production or operation of something useful |
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| concerned with facts and actual occurrences, with practicalities rather than philosophical considerations |
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