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[NOUN]
A specialist in a certain field esp. arts, literature, taste |
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| A learned Hindu, a scholar, esp. having knowledge of philosophy, religion, etc. |
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| A person of learning; one who is versed in literature or science |
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| A self-styled expert in a given field...self taught |
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| A specialist in judging works |
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| A person appointed, or chosen by parties to determine a controversy because of their skill |
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| People who have a more extensive and refined understanding |
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| A beginner who is not very experienced or familiar in a certain subject |
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| A beginner, novice, or recent convert in religion |
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| An inexperienced person...newcomer |
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| A learner, beginner, freshman |
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| An amateur, someone who dabbles in a field out of casual interest rather than as a profession or serious interest |
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USAGE NOTE: Amateur & Dilettante VS Connoisseur |
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Amateur & Dilettante = Someone who studies for their own interest Connoisseur = a person who has sufficient knowledge to serve as a judge/critic |
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[NOUN] General agreement within a group mutual uniformity in agreement |
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| The condition of complete agreement by all parties...The state of being unanimous |
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| A state of agreement, harmony, or union |
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| Agreement of opinion, will or action |
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| Disagreement from the views and opinions of those holding authority |
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| The quality of being different; having different views |
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| It is not necessary to add "of opinion" when using Consensus--as the word already implies such |
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[VERB] To analyze, explain, interpret, understand |
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| To interpret incorrectly, or misunderstand |
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| To reach a conclusion by applying rules of logic to a given premises |
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| To infer something as meaning something |
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| To collect together (information) |
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[ADJECTIVE]: Complete or perfect in the highest degree [VERB]: To bring to completion or perfection |
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| Exceptionally good, of the highest quality |
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| Being beyond the range of normal perception; surpassing usual limits |
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| Of or pertaining to the matter of a master; very skillful |
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| Exhibiting the abilities of a person (usually musician) with masterly ability, technique, or personal style |
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| To make certain; to finalize |
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| To bring to an end or close; to reach a realization |
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| Not different; lack of emotion |
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| Not bale to do something; not proficient |
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| Unskilled, lacking normal degree of ability |
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| lacking qualities or resources to meet a task |
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| To being, start, introduce |
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[ADJECTIVE] Large in number or quantity; full |
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| Having a quantity or amount that is gernour or plentiful |
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(of a person) inclined to be generous (of a gift, thing, etc.) liberal or abundant |
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| Large in spatial extent or range or scope or quantity |
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| Broadly or completely covered; including a large proportion of something |
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| Large in size, capacity, extend, or bulk |
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| Poor, deficient or inferior in amount, quality, or extent |
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| unequal to purpose, not fully sufficient |
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| Showing a lack of thought or intelligence |
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[ADJECTIVE]: Fat and bulky |
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| Large, well-built, muscular |
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| having a round shape; plump |
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| tall, slim, rather ungraceful |
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| slim, 'healthy', having little fat |
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| small, malnourished, weak |
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[VERB]: To confirm the truth or accuracy of |
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| To confirm or test the truth or accuracy of something |
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| To verify something by supplying evidence; to authenticate |
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| To prove or confirm, to provide evidence for |
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| to speak out against, to forbid |
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| To prove something to be false or incorrect |
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| To drive back or beat back; to reject |
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| To disprove; to show something to be false |
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| Harm the good reputation of a person; to cause an idea or piece of evidence to seem false or unreliable |
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| to question the truth or validity of |
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[NOUN]: Advice secured through consultation [NOUN]: An adviser, especially a legal adviser [VERB]: To advise or recommend as a course of action |
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| The act of suggesting an idea |
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| One who advises or represents others in legal matters as a profession |
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| To warn or notify of a fault; to counsel against wrong practices, to caution or advise |
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[NOUN]: The ability to inspire belief or trust |
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[NOUN]: A standard or principle on which to base a judgment or decision |
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| A standard to which other measurements or comparisons are judged |
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| A standard of comparison or evaluation |
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| A nonspecific rule or principle that provides direction to action or behaviour |
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| A measure; a standard of measure; an instrument used to determine dimensions, distance, or capacity |
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| A generally accepted principle |
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| A regulation, law, guideline |
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[ADJECTIVE]: At a point that will determine the final outcome; of supreme importance |
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| Outstanding in importance, unparalleled significance |
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| Being of crucial importance; central, key |
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| Being that on which life depends; important |
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| Having no consequence; of little importance |
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[ADJECTIVE]: At fault; blameworthy |
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| Failing on or neglectful of a duty or obligation; guilty of a misdeed or offense |
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| Unhealthy, causing disease; sinful |
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| Deserving of censure; blameworthy |
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| Blameworthy; guilty, deserving of criticism |
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| Deserving praise, admiration, creditable or meritorious |
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| Deserving of award or merit |
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[ADJECTIVE] Hasty or superficial |
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| performed out of routine and with little care |
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| Performed speedily and without formal ceremony |
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| Performed comprehensively and completely |
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| Broadly or completely covered |
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| Carried out using a planned, ordered procedure |
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| With extreme care, precision, and attention to detail |
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[VERB]: To shorten or reduce |
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| To make shorter, to diminish |
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| To shorten something as if by cutting off part of it |
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| Decrease gradually, bit by bit |
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[ADJECTIVE]: Inclined to doubt or deny virtuousness or honestly of human motives; sneeringly bitter or negative |
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| Having or expressing doubt; questioning |
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| Hating or disliking mankind |
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| Expressing or characterized by mocking, ridiculing |
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| Showing disrespect; disdain |
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| Sharp or biting; sarcastic and bitter |
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| Scornfully mocking or cynical |
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| Sour or bitter, sarcastic |
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| Confidently optimistic and cheerful |
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| Lacking experience, wisdom, or judgment--childlike |
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| describing one who has naively optimistic hopes and outlooks |
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| Idealistic yet impractical |
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| stemming conduct from ideas rather than practicality |
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