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        | Unselfishly concerned for the welfare of others, generous |  | 
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        | Having contrary feelings or attitudes, uncertain as to course of action |  | 
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        | Lean; sharp cornered; gaunt |  | 
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        | Overbearingly assuming; insolently proud |  | 
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        | Strong disinclination, disliking |  | 
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        | To differentiate between two or more things |  | 
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        | Intense dislike; to treat with scorn or contempt, to reject as unworthy |  | 
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        | To degrade, to speak of someone or something in a derogatory manner |  | 
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        | Inequality, the condition or fact of being unequal in age, rank, or degree |  | 
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        | To decorate, to make beautiful with ornamentation |  | 
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        | To cause, to produce, to create |  | 
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        | Harmless, producing no injury |  | 
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        | To mourn or express sorrow in a demonstrative manner |  | 
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        | Wasteful, a person given to extravagance |  | 
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        | To reject, to disown, to disavow |  | 
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        | Restraint in speech, reluctance to speak |  | 
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        | To honor, to regard with respect |  | 
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        | Delicate, elusive, not obvious |  | 
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        | Beyond what is needed or required, and overflow |  | 
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        | A direct opposite, a contrast |  | 
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        | To move upward, to rise from a lower station |  | 
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        | Strict, stern; unadorned, ascetic |  | 
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        | Independent, self-contained |  | 
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        | Common, ordinary, lacking freshness, hackneyed |  | 
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        | Not causing harm, of gentle disposition, beneficial |  | 
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        | Changing suddenly, fickle |  | 
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        | To waste time, to spend time idly, to move in a lackadaisical manner |  | 
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        | Act of harming or ruining another's reputation |  | 
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        | Understood only by a small group or a select few |  | 
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        | To aggrivate, to irritate, to vex |  | 
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        | Reflecting a meticulous or demanding attitude |  | 
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        | Secret in an underhanded way, stealthy |  | 
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        | One who is insincere or deceitful |  | 
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        | Existing from birth, inborn |  | 
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        | Not allowing the passage of light, not transparent; hard to understand |  | 
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        | Abundantly fruitful, marked by great productivity |  | 
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        | To scold or to rebuke for a misdeed usually with kindly intent |  | 
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        | Difficult to understand, recondite, concealed |  | 
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        | Friendly, courteous, amiable |  | 
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        | Excessive boldness, rashness, daring |  | 
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        | Believing on slight evidence, gullible |  | 
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        | Moral corruption, a wicked or perverse act |  | 
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        | To disapprove regretfully, to belittle, to express mild disapproval |  | 
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        | Instructive, disigned to teach |  | 
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        | Mysterious, inexplicable, puzzling |  | 
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        | To mix or to join (usually by melting) |  | 
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        | Incapable of being reformed or improved |  | 
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        | To cause to become less harsh or hostile; to make less severe |  | 
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        | To cause not to be in effect, to negate |  | 
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        | Opposed to war or use of force |  | 
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        | Making an extravagant outward show, self-importance |  | 
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        | Introductory remarks in a speech, play or literary work, introductory action |  | 
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        | To withdraw or to repudiate a statement or belief, revoke |  | 
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        | Fear, trembling, agitation |  | 
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        | To malign, to defame, to utter abusive statements against |  | 
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        | Relating or pertaining to a sense of beauty or art |  | 
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        | Antiqued, old, out of use |  | 
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        | To contradict, to give a false impression |  | 
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        | Quarrelsome, stirring controversy |  | 
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        | Unreasonable touchiness or irritability |  | 
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        | lack of agreement, strife, tension |  | 
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        | Strongly opinionated in an unwarranted manner |  | 
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        | Extremely poisonous; hateful |  | 
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        | Quickly changeable, easily vaporized |  | 
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        | Exceptionally early in development or occurence |  | 
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        | Exaggerated show of dignity or self-importance, bombastic |  | 
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        | Greedy for food and drink |  | 
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        | Substitution of an inoffensive word for one that is offensive |  | 
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        | Double-dealing, hypocrisy |  | 
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        | The act of spreading widely; scattering |  | 
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        | To make better, to relieve, to improve |  | 
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        | open or willing to follow advice or suggestions, tractable, malleable |  | 
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        | Shapeless, having no definite form |  | 
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        | Capable of floating; cheerful |  | 
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        | To persuade with deliberate flattery, to coax, to wheedle |  | 
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        | A serious event causing distress or misfortune |  | 
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        | To reduce in dignity or quality |  | 
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        | To make clear, to explain |  | 
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        | Lasting a short period of time, fleeting |  | 
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        | Arrogant, excessively proud and vain |  | 
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        | Incapable of being entered or penetrated, not capable of being damaged |  | 
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        | Lacking significance, meaning or point; silly, insipid |  | 
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        | Difficult to understand; mysterious |  | 
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        | Slow, sluggish, listless, weak |  | 
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        | Slanting, indirect, evasive, devious, misleading |  | 
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        | Wealth, affluence, abundance |  | 
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        | Showing or feeling regret for wrongdoing |  | 
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        | Acting routinely with little interest or care |  | 
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