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Definition
| accusation in response to an accusation from someone else |
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| moral correctness or straightforwardness; honesty |
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| acting to save someone from error or evil |
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| smelling strongly of something; aromatic; fragrant |
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| to be feared and respected; formidable; awe-inspiring |
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| dining hall in an institution |
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| difficult to control or discipline; willful or unmanageable |
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| radiant; shiny; brilliant |
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| sporting event at which races are held between rowing boats or yachts |
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| restored to a better, higher or more worthy state |
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| what is said in reply; retort |
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| to forcibly assign, especially to a lower place or position |
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| having a healthy reddish color; ruddy |
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| type of round building or hall, esp. one with a domed roof |
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| a stage for public speaking |
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| deep pink; rosy; optimistic |
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| to engage in noisy revelry; carouse |
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| to stir up; disturb; disorder |
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| defensive wall round a fort; a protective barrier |
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| greedy for money; covetous |
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| establishment of or state of having cordial relations |
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| less dense than is normal; thin |
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| to reject or refuse; snub |
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| sharp, severe, disapproval |
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| resisting authority or discipline; disobedient |
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| to form, fashion or arrange again |
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| hidden, concealed; difficult to understand; obscure |
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| to make a preliminary examination of for military, surveying, or geological purposes |
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| process of logical and methodical reasoning |
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| a repeated passage in music |
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| brown mixed with gray or white |
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| to wrench open or tear apart or to pieces |
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| arousing or provoking laughter |
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| a set of confused and meaningless statements; a long and complicated and confusing procedure |
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| humorous in a vulgar, obscene, or disrespectful way |
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| full of concerns; anxious; worried |
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1. not well organized
2. quarrelsome; having an aggressive and determined spirit |
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| careless; untidy; dirty in appearance |
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| feeling that prevents one from doing or allowing something that one thinks may be wrong |
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| extremely careful and thorough; paying great attention to details |
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| abusive and insulting, esp. in a crude or obscene way |
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| diligent; persistent; hardworking |
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| expressing pompous moral judgments |
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| a burial vault, tomb or grave |
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| a secondary consequence or result |
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| keep oneself away or apart from other people; seclude |
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| one of the six-winged angels standing in the presence of God |
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| compact; crowded or pressed together |
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| stale from excessive use or familiarity |
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| send from one track to another; lay aside |
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| unscrupulous and dishonest person, esp a lawyer |
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| to plan or designate for a particular place and time; propose; criticize |
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| in a careless and hasty way |
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| waste matter that remains after metal has been extracted from ore by smelting |
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| deception and planning of evil acts; trickery |
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| person who spends as little money as possible; miser |
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| position that requires no work or responsibility but gives the holder prestige or money |
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| funereal; suggestive of a tomb |
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| astral; relating to the stars |
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| great skill in using the hands in performing conjuring tricks, etc. |
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Definition
| not done or not doing things carefully; careless |
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| untidy esp. in personal appearance |
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Definition
| sliding gate or other device for controlling the flow of water out of or into a canal, lake, lock, etc. |
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Definition
| excessively or unctuously flattering, servile, etc. |
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Definition
| heat and melt in order to obtain the metal it contains |
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Definition
| stay in a place for a time |
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Definition
| mistake in the use of language, esp. one that shows someone to be foreign or of low social class |
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Definition
| producing a beneficial effect |
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| a simultaneous discharge of two or more guns in military action or as a salute |
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| hypocritical self-righteousness; with false piety |
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| hopeful; optimistic; confident |
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Definition
| to weaken or exhaust the energy or vitality of |
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| disdainful; sarcastic; mocking |
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| of or relating to tailoring, clothes or style of dress |
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| gloomy; dark, sullen, morose |
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| god of the woods, half man and half goat |
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| small in size or amount; hardly large enough |
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| a separation or division into factions |
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Definition
| young member of a family, descendant |
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| a division or split in a group or union |
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| feeling, showing, or expressing sorrow or pity; mournful |
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| written or inscribed with runes |
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| send a student away from university temporarily as a punishment |
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| of or relating to the break or change from a normal routine |
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| relating to priests; priestly |
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| considered too important to be changed, argued about, etc.; sacred |
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| treating sexual activity, nudity, etc. in an obscene way; indecent; lewd |
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| standing out conspicuously; prominent; protruding |
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| promoting health or well-being |
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| careless of one's duty; lax |
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| pardoning or forgiveness of sins by God |
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| serious, dull and old-fashioned, sober; grave; sedate |
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| marked by outstanding strength and vigor of body, mind or spirit |
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Definition
| fixed, done or required by statute |
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Definition
| firmly fixed in place; constant |
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| stiff and unnatural; pompous |
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Definition
| an enclosure or pen made with posts and stakes |
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Term
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Definition
1. heavy, solid and difficult to digest (food)
2. boring, dull |
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Definition
| indifferent to or unaffected by pleasure or pain; steadfast |
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Definition
| showing no emotion or interest; impassive |
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| having a stout heart or spirit; stubborn |
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Definition
| a situation of perplexity or distress |
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Term
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Definition
| trick, plan or scheme to deceive someone |
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Term
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Definition
| to mark with linear marks |
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Definition
| severe criticism or condemnation |
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Definition
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Definition
| cause something to be ineffective or seem absurd; negate |
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Definition
| very dark, gloomy, forbidding |
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Definition
| to block, hinder, present an obstacle to; stand in the way of |
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Definition
| confidentially; secretly; privately |
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Definition
| any officer in the army below the rank of captain |
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Definition
| gain control of (a country, etc.); subdue; conquer |
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Term
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Definition
| express instinctual urges, esp. sexual ones, in more socially acceptable ways |
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Definition
| use bribery to get someone to commit perjury |
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Definition
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Definition
| connected to but smaller, of less importance than something else; subordinate |
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Definition
| money paid, esp. by a government, to help an industry, to support the arts, to keep prices down, etc. |
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Definition
| include something in a particular group, class, etc. or under a rule |
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Definition
| an artifice or expedient used to evade a rule, escape a consequence, hide something, etc. |
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Definition
| trying or likely to weaken or destroy a political system; tending to overthrow or ruin |
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Definition
| assistance, relief in the time of distress |
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Definition
| to spread all over something; flush; fill |
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Definition
| looking expensive and splendid; magnificent |
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Definition
| able to meet financial obligations |
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Definition
| the quality or state of being drowzy, sleepiness |
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Definition
| having a full, deep resonant sound |
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Definition
| a conciliatory or propitiatory bribe, gift or gesture |
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Definition
| an argument apparently correct in form but actually invalid; esp. such an argument used to deceive |
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Definition
| person who uses clever but false arguments intended to deceive |
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Definition
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Definition
| conceited and overconfident of knowledge, but poorly informed and immature |
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Definition
| a large number or amount; sudden fast rush |
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Definition
| seeming true, but actually being false; misleadingly attractive |
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Definition
| result of changing round, esp. accidentally, the initial sounds of two or more words when speaking |
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| lacking authenticity or validity; false |
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| wretched and dirty as from neglect |
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Definition
| separate something, esp. by force or for ever |
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Definition
| old and barely fit for work or use |
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Definition
| thinking or showing that one thinks one is better than other people; arrogant and disdainful |
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Definition
| superfluous; more than needed or demanded |
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Definition
| exceeding what is sufficient or necessary |
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Definition
| in excess of the normal number; extra |
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Term
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Definition
| take the place of, be introduced so as to be used instead of something |
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Definition
| asking humbly or pleadingly for something |
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Definition
| person who asks or begs for something earnestly or humbly |
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Definition
| an uncertain, supposing belief |
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Definition
| assumed; counterfeit; hypothetical |
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Definition
| an additional charge or payment |
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Definition
| excess; overindulgence; satiate |
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Definition
| strip of grass or other plants cut by a mower |
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Definition
| person who is very fond of luxury and comfort |
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Definition
| a self-seeking, servile flatterer; person who tries to gain people's favor by insincerely flattering |
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Definition
| form of reasoning in which a conclusion is drawn from two statements |
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Definition
| working together; cooperating |
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Definition
| implied without being put into words |
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Definition
| tap or drive down by repeated light blows |
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Definition
| peripheral; only slightly connecting |
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Definition
| equal in effect to something |
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Definition
| a piece of material used for protecting exposed objects or areas |
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Definition
| needless repetition of an idea, esp. in words other than those of the immediate context, without imparting additional force or clearness |
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| reckless boldness; rashness; audacity |
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| stimulate or excite, esp. sexually |
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| avoid committing oneself; gain time |
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Definition
| capable of being held, maintained or defended |
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Definition
| aimed at helping a cause; biased |
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| holding of office or land or other property |
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| person who has made a will |
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| a person who is in bondage; slave |
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| drink alcohol too much and too often |
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