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        | filled with amazedment, disgust, fear, or terror |  | 
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        | more than enough, large, spacious |  | 
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        | a ghost or ghostly figure, an unexplained or unusual apprearance |  | 
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        | to declare or state as truth, maintain or defend, put forward, forcefully |  | 
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        | to crouch or shrink away from in dear or shame |  | 
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        | to look upon with scorn; to refuse scornfully; a feeling of contempt |  | 
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        | a breif statement written on a tomb or gravestone |  | 
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        | having to do with morals, values, right and wrong; in accordance with standards of right conduct; requiring a prescritption for purchase |  | 
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        | humorous, not meant seriously |  | 
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        | without retraint or control; unselective |  | 
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        | crafty dealings, underhanded plotting; to form and carry out plots; to puzzle or excite the curiosity |  | 
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        | an area of suthority or control; the right to adminster justice |  | 
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        | appearing true, reasonable, or fair |  | 
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        | common, vulgar; belonging to the lower class; a common person, member of thelower case |  | 
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        | wastefully extravagant;lavishly or generously abundant; one who is wasteful and self-indulgent |  | 
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        | to grind or pound to powder or dust; to destroy or overcome (as though by smashing into fragments) |  | 
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        | that which follows, a result; a literary work or film continuing the story of one written or made earlier |  | 
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        | highly changeable, fickle;tending to become violent or explosive;changing readily from the liquid to the gaseous state |  | 
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