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| Dirt, Neglect, Rechid Conditions |
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| Total or combined amount of |
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| A language or phrase distinct for a locale or set of people; dialect , a common, well known expression of a specific person, place or time |
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| A person who critisizes established ideas or traditions |
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| An akward, embarassing, often confusing situation; embroilment or altercation |
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| Enmity or hatred built up over time; bitterness |
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| A dictionary; vocabulary particular to a language or topic |
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| Not easily pulled apart, cohesive and tough |
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| Hidden or submerged, waiting to be aroused; dormant |
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| To set apart or at odds that which had been closely attuned; to alienate |
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| Clear and distinct; being sane in full possession of intellegence; intellegable |
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| Being persistence in demands or request; troublesome |
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| Deserving appraise; commendable |
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| To thin out or to drive away to the point that almost nothing is left (as a mob is dissipated). To use up in a worthless, foolish way (as an inheritence); to waste |
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| To overwhelm or flow over, as with a flood |
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| Lacking interest or stimulation; flat, dull |
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| Something debateable or indispute; also plainly abstract, strictly academic (in the sense that the outcome will not be affected) |
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| Profound disgrace or humiliation; dishonor, infamy |
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| Worry or concern: dismay or astonishment |
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| Changeabilityl mutability; movement or change in circumstances; fluctuations or difficulties |
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| To work your way into someone's good graces (use with "with") |
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| To go above or beyond the known or accepted limits; to exceed expectations |
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| To move or sway back and forthe; to fluxuate; to change fropm one opinion to another; also to hesitate |
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| Very noticeable or conspicuous |
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| To belittle, downgrade, or decry; to insult |
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| Tought to manage or control; strongly against authority; unruly, refractory |
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| Of extremely brief duration; short-lived, transitory, fleeting, ephemeral, evanescent |
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| The stimulus that gets something going; impulse, incentive |
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| Felt, touchable; tangible |
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| Making something worse; disparaging (as perjorative remarks) |
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| Inspiring awe; extremely large; enourmous, monsterous |
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| Extravaggant, elaborate style of decoration or presentation; ornate, as music or literature |
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| Giving a feeling of well being or aiding in well being; favorable to health |
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| Profoundly affecting feelings; highly emotional in affect; peircing |
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| Stirrings of pity; poignancy |
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| To calm, appease, particularly by offering to be good or to do a favor for someone |
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| Natural inclination or tendancy toward; inherint leaning towards something objectionable |
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| Beyond normal limits; unreasonable, accdesive, moderate |
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| Problem lacking a good solution; quandry in which the only two alternatives are equally unsatisfactory |
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| Concerning the common folk or masses (often used in a derogatory way) |
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| Worn out and inaffective form overuse hackneyed, banal, state (applies to expressions and words) |
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| Unusual skill or ability, military bravery & skills |
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| Short statement of principlel; belief; adage; proverb |
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