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| A sign that something bad is going to happen. |
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| Feeling bored or impatient while waiting for something. |
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| The side that is protected from the wind. |
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| Treating a holy place or object without respect. |
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| To admit you have been defeated. |
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| To split apart violently. |
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| To say someone or something is bad. |
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| 12. fiat (not the Italian car) |
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| An order given by someone with power. |
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| Correct and polite in a particular situation. |
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| Official approval or permission. |
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| Refusing to do what others want. |
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| A formal song of loyalty. |
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| Changing a message to keep it secret. |
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| the use of words to exchange thoughts. |
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| Great disrespect shown to God. |
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| Speech or writing that is meant to sound important but is not sincere. |
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| To disagree and argue about something. |
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| Something that makes a person feel less sadness. |
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| The act of requiring much attention. |
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| To make someone free from guilt. |
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| To show little or no emotion. |
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| A person who favors the abolition of a practice. |
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| A thing that is not what it is purported to be. |
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| a lack of being religious |
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| extreme greed for wealth. |
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| A question directed to make a point, instead of getting an answer. |
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| Appeals to reader through emotion. |
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| Appeals to reader through credibility. |
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| Appeals to reader through logic. |
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| The passionate expression of grief. |
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| A gradual increase in loudness in a musical piece. |
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| A style of writing using perfect grammatical form. |
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| An action of invoking someone. |
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| The device of giving emphasis by professing to say little or nothing about a subject. |
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| A type of speech that two contradictory terms appear. |
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| A comparison between two things. |
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| A person that is the direct opposite of someone. |
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| A figure of speech that identifies something as being the same as some unrelated thing for rhetorical effect. |
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| A figure of speech in which two or more clauses are related to each other through a reversal of structures in order to make a larger point. |
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| A seemingly absurd or self-contradictory statement. |
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| Attributing human characteristics to an animal. |
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| The repetition of a word or phrase at the beginning of successive clauses. |
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| Intensely enthusiastic, or passionate. |
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