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| worn out and ruined because of age or neglect |
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| to fall into disrepair or ruin esp. a building |
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| a state of severe disrepair |
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| to utterly deteriorate (morally) |
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| inclined to put things off; intended to postpone something |
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| to make thinner or weaker |
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| done with speed/efficiency |
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| a person who makes slow progress and falls behind others |
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| carelessly lazy, withour enthusiasm or determinaton |
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| with a brisk and cheerfull readiness |
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| showing great care and perserverance |
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| showing dedication and diligence |
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| wanting to avoid activity or extertion- lazy |
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| carried out with minimum effort |
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| hasty and therefore not thorough or detailed |
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| to perplex confuse or embarrass completely to defeat or frustrate completely |
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| a decisive defeat esp. in a military sense |
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| to decisively defeat, more physical |
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| formal discussion on speech and/or writing |
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| digressing from subject to subject |
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| a written work dealing formally and systematicallty on a subject |
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| a written examination of a suject esp. for a doctorate |
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| a formal conversation of some kind of common issure |
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| a summary of a text or speech |
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| the quality of having a ready insight into things ; shrewdness |
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| the ability to make good judgements and quick decisions esp. in a field |
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| the ability to judge well |
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| intolereance towards those who hold different views than oneself |
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| regard or represent as haveing little worth |
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| an analysis/summary given by a knowledgeable person |
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| not feeling or showing emotion |
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| in a state of nervous excitement or anxiety |
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| thoroughly disturbed or upset |
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| easy to control or influence |
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| open and responsive to suggestion, easily controlled |
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| showing a deliberate and obstinate desire to behave in a way that is unreasonable or unacceptable, often in spite of the consequences: |
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| stubbornly refusing to change an opinion or a course of action |
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| lacking the ability or strength to move. lacknig vigour |
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| existing, but not yet developed |
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| a state or period of inactivity |
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| mentally or physically inactive, lethargic |
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| liable to change rapidly and quickly for the worse |
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| violently forceful and swift, extreme |
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| haveing great power, influence, or effect |
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| excessively harsh or sever in law |
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| not producing the desired effects |
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| deliberate deception in speech or conduct |
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| preetense, concealment of ones thoughts or feelings or character |
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| the use of trickery to achieve a political, financial or legal purpose |
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| pretending to be someone else to deceive others |
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| having strong moral principles |
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| honest and straighforward behaviour towards others |
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| the practice of working to peoples disadvantage behind their backs |
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| something that looks kindly or affectionate or courteous but is the opposite in reality |
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| discrimintaion (favorable) |
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| the ability to make fine or acute distinctions |
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| discrimination (unfavorable) |
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| the practice of differentiating unfarily based on individuals or groups because of prejudice |
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| difference or inequality as of age chharacter or quality |
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| less pain, more anoyance, uneasiness or uncomfortableness |
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