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        | Praise or approval. An embrace of greeting or salutation.
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        | A private or secret meeting. 
 An assembly or gathering, especially one with authority, power, and influence.
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        | A funeral hymn. A slow, sad song, poem, or musical composition.
 A lament.
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        | Harsh or vigorous. A law or code of extreme severity.
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        | Devoted to the pursuit of please. Fond of good food, comfort, and ease.
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        | Soft, sheer, gauzy fabric. Fine film of cobwebs seen in autumn.
 Anything delicate, light, substantial.
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        | To kill, as a sacrifice. To destroy or renounce for the sake of something else.
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        | Anything that exacts as blind devotion or terrible sacrifice. Any terrible, irresistible force.
 Any large, overpowering destructive force.
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        | A party, banquet, or outing. A trip taken by an official and paid for with public funds.
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        | A rejection or exclusion from a group or society by general consent. |  | 
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        | Confused, incoherent, foolish talk. A complicated and petty procedure.
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        | A title, heading, or direction in a book, written or printed in red or otherwise distinguished from the rest of the text. An established custom or rule of procedure.
 A short commentary or explanation covering a broad subject.
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        | Pertaining to Socrates or his philosophical method of repeated questioning to elicit truths implicit in all rational beings. |  | 
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        | A self-seeking, servile flatterer. Fawning parasite.
 One who attempts to win favor or advance himself by flattering persons of influence.
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        | Characterized by lust; lewd; lascivious. |  | 
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        | Morally unrestrained; lascivious. |  | 
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        | Flashy; tawdry; falsely alluring. |  | 
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        | Inconstant; fickle; tending to frequent change. |  | 
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        | Cool; indifferent; without warmth or  animation. |  | 
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        | Harmful to health. Unwholesome.
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        | Hardhearted; inflexible. Not easily moved to pity.
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        | Meddlesome. Offering unnecessary and unwanted advice.
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        | Having infinite knowledge. Knowing all things.
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        | The working class; the unpropertied class. |  | 
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