potence | (noun) the state of being potent; a male's capacity to have sexual intercourse | Synonyms: potency |
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precedence | (noun) the act of preceding in time or order or rank (as in a ceremony) | Synonyms: precedency, precession |
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(noun) preceding in time | Synonyms: antecedence, antecedency, anteriority, precedency, priority |
(noun) status established in order of importance or urgency | Synonyms: precedency, priority |
preeminence | (noun) high status importance owing to marked superiority | Synonyms: distinction, eminence, note |
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preexistence | (noun) existing in a former state or previous to something else | - |
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preference | (noun) grant of favor or advantage to one over another (especially to a country or countries in matters of international trade, such as levying duties) | - |
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(noun) the right or chance to choose | Synonyms: druthers |
(noun) a predisposition in favor of something | Synonyms: orientation, predilection |
(noun) a strong liking | Synonyms: penchant, predilection, taste |
prescience | (noun) the power to foresee the future | Synonyms: prevision |
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presence | (noun) the act of being present | - |
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(noun) dignified manner or conduct | Synonyms: bearing, comportment, mien |
(noun) the impression that something is present | - |
(noun) the immediate proximity of someone or something | Synonyms: front |
(noun) an invisible spiritual being felt to be nearby | - |
(noun) the state of being present; current existence | - |
pretence | (noun) the act of giving a false appearance | Synonyms: feigning, pretending, pretense, simulation |
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(noun) a false or unsupportable quality | Synonyms: pretense, pretension |
(noun) an artful or simulated semblance | Synonyms: guise, pretense, pretext |
(noun) imaginative intellectual play | Synonyms: make-believe, pretense |
(noun) pretending with intention to deceive | Synonyms: dissembling, feigning, pretense |
prevalence | (noun) the quality of prevailing generally; being widespread | - |
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(noun) a superiority in numbers or amount | Synonyms: preponderance |
(noun) (epidemiology) the ratio (for a given time period) of the number of occurrences of a disease or event to the number of units at risk in the population | - |
prominence | (noun) relative importance or fame | - |
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(noun) something that bulges out or is protuberant or projects from its surroundings | Synonyms: bulge, bump, excrescence, extrusion, gibbosity, gibbousness, hump, jut, protrusion, protuberance, swelling |
(noun) the state of being prominent: widely known or eminent | - |
prospicience | (noun) seeing ahead; knowing in advance; foreseeing | Synonyms: farsightedness, foresight, prevision |
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provenience | (noun) where something originated or was nurtured in its early existence | Synonyms: birthplace, cradle, place of origin, provenance |
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providence | (noun) the guardianship and control exercised by a deity | - |
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(noun) the prudence and care exercised by someone in the management of resources | - |
(noun) a manifestation of God's foresightful care for his creatures | - |
prudence | (noun) discretion in practical affairs | - |
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(noun) knowing how to avoid embarrassment or distress | Synonyms: circumspection, discreetness, discretion |
prurience | (noun) feeling morbid sexual desire or a propensity to lewdness | Synonyms: carnality, lasciviousness, lubricity, pruriency |
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pseudoscience | (noun) an activity resembling science but based on fallacious assumptions | - |
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pubescence | (noun) the time of life when sex glands become functional | Synonyms: puberty |
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purulence | (noun) a fluid product of inflammation | Synonyms: festering, ichor, pus, sanies, suppuration |
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(noun) symptom of being purulent (containing or forming pus) | Synonyms: purulency |
putrescence | (noun) the quality of rotting and becoming putrid | Synonyms: rottenness |
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(noun) in a state of progressive putrefaction | Synonyms: corruption, putridness, rottenness |
quiescence | (noun) quiet and inactive restfulness | Synonyms: dormancy, quiescency, sleeping |
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(noun) a state of quiet (but possibly temporary) inaction | Synonyms: dormancy, quiescency |
quintessence | (noun) the purest and most concentrated essence of something | - |
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(noun) the most typical example or representative of a type | - |
(noun) the fifth and highest element after air and earth and fire and water; was believed to be the substance composing all heavenly bodies | Synonyms: ether |
recrudescence | (noun) a return of something after a period of abatement | - |
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recurrence | (noun) happening again (especially at regular intervals) | Synonyms: return |
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redolence | (noun) a pleasingly sweet olfactory property | Synonyms: bouquet, fragrance, fragrancy, sweetness |
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reference | (noun) the act of referring or consulting | Synonyms: consultation |
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(noun) the most direct or specific meaning of a word or expression; the class of objects that an expression refers to | Synonyms: denotation, extension |
(noun) the relation between a word or phrase and the object or idea it refers to | - |
(noun) a formal recommendation by a former employer to a potential future employer describing the person's qualifications and dependability | Synonyms: character, character reference |
(noun) a remark that calls attention to something or someone | Synonyms: mention |
(noun) a short note recognizing a source of information or of a quoted passage | Synonyms: acknowledgment, citation, cite, credit, mention, quotation |
(noun) a book to which you can refer for authoritative facts | Synonyms: book of facts, reference book, reference work |
(noun) an indicator that orients you generally | Synonyms: point of reference, reference point |
(noun) a publication (or a passage from a publication) that is referred to | Synonyms: source |
(noun) (computer science) the code that identifies where a piece of information is stored | Synonyms: address, computer address |
refulgence | (noun) the quality of being bright and sending out rays of light | Synonyms: effulgence, radiance, radiancy, refulgency, shine |
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rejuvenescence | (noun) A renewal of youthful characteristics or vitality. | - |
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reminiscence | (noun) the process of remembering (especially the process of recovering information by mental effort) | Synonyms: recall, recollection |
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(noun) a mental impression retained and recalled from the past | - |
renascence | (noun) a second or new birth | Synonyms: rebirth, reincarnation |
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residence | (noun) the act of dwelling in a place | Synonyms: abidance, residency |
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(noun) the official house or establishment of an important person (as a sovereign or president) | - |
(noun) a large and imposing house | Synonyms: hall, manse, mansion, mansion house |
(noun) any address at which you dwell more than temporarily | Synonyms: abode |
resilience | (noun) the physical property of a material that can return to its original shape or position after deformation that does not exceed its elastic limit | Synonyms: resiliency |
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(noun) an occurrence of rebounding or springing back | Synonyms: resiliency |
resplendence | (noun) brilliant radiant beauty | Synonyms: glory, resplendency |
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resurgence | (noun) bringing again into activity and prominence | Synonyms: revitalisation, revitalization, revival, revivification |
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reticence | (noun) the trait of being uncommunicative; not volunteering anything more than necessary | Synonyms: reserve, taciturnity |
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reverence | (noun) an act showing respect (especially a bow or curtsy) | - |
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(noun) a reverent mental attitude | - |
(noun) a feeling of profound respect for someone or something | Synonyms: awe, fear, veneration |
salience | (noun) the state of being salient | Synonyms: saliency, strikingness |
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sapience | (noun) ability to apply knowledge or experience or understanding or common sense and insight | Synonyms: wisdom |
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science | (noun) a particular branch of scientific knowledge | Synonyms: scientific discipline |
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(noun) ability to produce solutions in some problem domain | Synonyms: skill |
senescence | (noun) the property characteristic of old age | Synonyms: agedness |
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(noun) the organic process of growing older and showing the effects of increasing age | Synonyms: ageing, aging |
sentence | (noun) (criminal law) a final judgment of guilty in a criminal case and the punishment that is imposed | Synonyms: condemnation, conviction, judgment of conviction |
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(noun) a string of words satisfying the grammatical rules of a language | - |
(noun) the period of time a prisoner is imprisoned | Synonyms: prison term, time |
sentience | (noun) the readiness to perceive sensations; elementary or undifferentiated consciousness | - |
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(noun) the faculty through which the external world is apprehended | Synonyms: sensation, sense, sensory faculty, sentiency |
(noun) state of elementary or undifferentiated consciousness | Synonyms: awareness |
sequence | (noun) the action of following in order | Synonyms: succession |
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(noun) film consisting of a succession of related shots that develop a given subject in a movie | Synonyms: episode |
(noun) a following of one thing after another in time | Synonyms: chronological sequence, chronological succession, succession, successiveness |
(noun) several repetitions of a melodic phrase in different keys | - |
(noun) serial arrangement in which things follow in logical order or a recurrent pattern | - |
silence | (noun) the absence of sound | Synonyms: quiet |
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(noun) a refusal to speak when expected | Synonyms: muteness |
(noun) the trait of keeping things secret | Synonyms: secrecy, secretiveness |
(noun) the state of being silent (as when no one is speaking) | - |
sixpence | (noun) a small coin of the United Kingdom worth six pennies; not minted since 1970 | Synonyms: tanner |
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somnolence | (noun) a very sleepy state | Synonyms: drowsiness, sleepiness |
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stridence | (noun) having the timbre of a loud high-pitched sound | Synonyms: shrillness, stridency |
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submergence | (noun) sinking until covered completely with water | Synonyms: immersion, submerging, submersion |
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subsequence | (noun) following in time | Synonyms: posteriority, subsequentness |
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(noun) something that follows something else | Synonyms: sequel |
subservience | (noun) abject or cringing submissiveness | Synonyms: obsequiousness, servility |
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(noun) the condition of being something that is useful in reaching an end or carrying out a plan | - |
(noun) in a subservient state | Synonyms: subservientness |
subsidence | (noun) a gradual sinking to a lower level | Synonyms: settling, subsiding |
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(noun) the sudden collapse of something into a hollow beneath it | Synonyms: cave in |
(noun) an abatement in intensity or degree (as in the manifestations of a disease) | Synonyms: remission, remittal |
subsistence | (noun) minimal (or marginal) resources for subsisting | - |
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(noun) the state of existing in reality; having substance | - |
(noun) a means of surviving | - |
succulence | (noun) a juicy appetizingness | Synonyms: juiciness, succulency |
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superintelligence | (noun) Remarkable intelligence, intelligence at or above and beyond the level of a genius. | Synonyms: hyperintelligence |
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superintendence | (noun) management by overseeing the performance or operation of a person or group | Synonyms: oversight, supervising, supervision |
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teleconference | (noun) a conference of people who are in different locations that is made possible by the use of such telecommunications equipment as closed-circuit television | Synonyms: teleconferencing |
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tenpence | (noun) a decimal coin worth ten pennies | - |
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threepence | (noun) former cupronickel coin of the United Kingdom equal to three pennies | - |
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totipotence | (noun) the ability of a cell to give rise to unlike cells and so to develop a new organism or part | Synonyms: totipotency |
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transcendence | (noun) a state of being or existence above and beyond the limits of material experience | Synonyms: transcendency |
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(noun) the state of excelling or surpassing or going beyond usual limits | Synonyms: superiority, transcendency |
transference | (noun) transferring ownership | Synonyms: transfer |
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(noun) the act of transferring something from one form to another | Synonyms: transfer |
(noun) (psychoanalysis) the process whereby emotions are passed on or displaced from one person to another; during psychoanalysis the displacement of feelings toward others (usually the parents) is onto the analyst | - |
transience | (noun) an impermanence that suggests the inevitability of ending or dying | Synonyms: transiency, transitoriness |
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(noun) the attribute of being brief or fleeting | Synonyms: brevity, briefness |
translucence | (noun) the quality of allowing light to pass diffusely | Synonyms: semitransparency, translucency |
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transparence | (noun) the quality of being clear and transparent | Synonyms: transparency, transparentness |
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(noun) permitting the free passage of electromagnetic radiation | Synonyms: transparency |
truculence | (noun) obstreperous and defiant aggressiveness | Synonyms: truculency |
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tumescence | (noun) tumidity resulting from the presence of blood or other fluid in the tissues | - |
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tuppence | (noun) a former United Kingdom silver coin; United Kingdom bronze decimal coin worth two pennies | Synonyms: twopence |
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turbulence | (noun) unstable flow of a liquid or gas | Synonyms: turbulency |
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(noun) a state of violent disturbance and disorder (as in politics or social conditions generally) | Synonyms: Sturm und Drang, upheaval |
(noun) instability in the atmosphere | - |
twopence | (noun) a former United Kingdom silver coin; United Kingdom bronze decimal coin worth two pennies | Synonyms: tuppence |
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valence | (noun) (chemistry) a property of atoms or radicals; their combining power given in terms of the number of hydrogen atoms (or the equivalent) | Synonyms: valency |
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(noun) (biology) a relative capacity to unite or react or interact as with antigens or a biological substrate | Synonyms: valency |
vehemence | (noun) the property of being wild or turbulent | Synonyms: ferocity, fierceness, furiousness, fury, violence, wildness |
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(noun) intensity or forcefulness of expression | Synonyms: emphasis |
violence | (noun) an act of aggression (as one against a person who resists) | Synonyms: force |
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(noun) the property of being wild or turbulent | Synonyms: ferocity, fierceness, furiousness, fury, vehemence, wildness |
(noun) a turbulent state resulting in injuries and destruction etc. | - |
virulence | (noun) extreme harmfulness (as the capacity of a microorganism to cause disease) | Synonyms: virulency |
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(noun) extreme hostility | Synonyms: virulency |