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        | warm, friendly, easy to get along with; congenial, sociable |  | 
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        | pardon or acceptance (by gov.'t) of some group behavior (as for refugees) |  | 
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        | a thing out of place in time; a chronological error |  | 
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        | absence of gov.'t, often resulting in lawlessness and disorder |  | 
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        | curse or formal ban; something or someone denounced in a strongly disapproving manner |  | 
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        | strong dislike, hate; enmity, hostility |  | 
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        | basic spirit, attitude, or intention; a spiteful feeling of ill will |  | 
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        | historical records; chronicles |  | 
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        | to wipe out, to destroy almost entirely; to vanquish, abolish |  | 
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        | something different from the norm; irregularity or paradox |  | 
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        | extreme dislike or aversion; distaste, enmity |  | 
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        | lack of feeling; indifference, impassiveness |  | 
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        | short statement of principle, belief; adage, proverb |  | 
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        | absolute cool; complete poise and self-confidence |  | 
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        | person who renounces a faith or a commitment to a previous loyalty |  | 
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        | shocking or dismaying; causing fear, disgust, or even horror |  | 
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 | Definition 
 
        | to quiet, calm, allay, soothe, pacify, or conciliate |  | 
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 | Definition 
 
        | the fear of evil, a foreboding; conception or comprehension of someone or something |  | 
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        | suited to cultivation or the growing of crops; tillable |  | 
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        | according to wish or desire, decided by choice rather than merit; in a despotic or tyrannical way |  | 
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        | known only to a select few people, mysterious or secret |  | 
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        | place for public records; the records themselves |  | 
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        | demanding, difficult, and hard to achieve; strenuous, hard |  | 
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        | the feeling of superiority shown by an overbearing manner; excess pride |  | 
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        | clearly spoken, intelligible and coherent |  | 
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 | Definition 
 
        | to speak distinctly and clearly; to enunciate; to put into a logical whole or group |  | 
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        | in a disapproving manner; scornfully |  | 
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        | out of line or place; awry |  | 
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        | roughness or harshness of manner; acrimony |  | 
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        | marked by careful, diligent attention; persistent |  | 
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        | wise, shrewd, and perceptive; perspicacious |  | 
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        | harking back to a form of an earlier time |  | 
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        | person who says there is no God |  | 
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        | the waste away (as muscles) from a debilitating illness; to degenerate, wither |  | 
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        | to affirm or authenticate; to prove, testify, verify |  | 
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        | adventurous and bold; intrepid, daring, even rash |  | 
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        | to increase; to make something greater or larger |  | 
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        | to foretell, presage (as from omens); to predict |  | 
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        | person who foretells events |  | 
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        | sponsorship or patronage; favorable or prophetic signs |  | 
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        | favorable, promising, of good omen |  | 
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        | absolute in the sense of final; dictatorial, despotic |  | 
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        | extremely eager or very greedy; fond of or devoted to |  | 
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        | distinct area; a person's normal territory or jurisdiction |  | 
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        | anything that soothes or makes you feel better |  | 
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        | reserved, somber, or grave in manner; unadorned; abstemious or ascetic; restrained |  | 
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