price | (noun) the property of having material worth (often indicated by the amount of money something would bring if sold) | Synonyms: cost, monetary value |
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(noun) the high value or worth of something | - |
(noun) value measured by what must be given or done or undergone to obtain something | Synonyms: cost, toll |
(noun) a monetary reward for helping to catch a criminal | - |
(noun) the amount of money needed to purchase something | Synonyms: damage, terms |
(noun) cost of bribing someone | - |
(verb) ascertain or learn the price of | - |
(verb) determine the price of | - |
prince | (noun) a male member of a royal family other than the sovereign (especially the son of a sovereign) | - |
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procurance | (noun) the act of getting possession of something | Synonyms: procural, procurement |
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produce | (noun) fresh fruits and vegetable grown for the market | Synonyms: garden truck, green goods, green groceries |
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(verb) come to have or undergo a change of (physical features and attributes) | Synonyms: acquire, develop, get, grow |
(verb) create or manufacture a man-made product | Synonyms: create, make |
(verb) bring forth or yield | Synonyms: bring forth |
(verb) cause to happen, occur or exist | Synonyms: bring about, give rise |
(verb) cultivate by growing, often involving improvements by means of agricultural techniques | Synonyms: farm, grow, raise |
(verb) bring onto the market or release | Synonyms: bring on, bring out |
(verb) bring out for display | Synonyms: bring forth |
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 | - |
pronounce | (verb) pronounce judgment on | Synonyms: judge, label |
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(verb) speak, pronounce, or utter in a certain way | Synonyms: articulate, enounce, enunciate, say, sound out |
prospicience | (noun) seeing ahead; knowing in advance; foreseeing | Synonyms: farsightedness, foresight, prevision |
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protuberance | (noun) something that bulges out or is protuberant or projects from its surroundings | Synonyms: bulge, bump, excrescence, extrusion, gibbosity, gibbousness, hump, jut, prominence, protrusion, swelling |
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(noun) the condition of being protuberant; the condition of bulging out | - |
provenance | (noun) where something originated or was nurtured in its early existence | Synonyms: birthplace, cradle, place of origin, provenience |
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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 | - |
province | (noun) the territory occupied by one of the constituent administrative districts of a nation | Synonyms: state |
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(noun) the proper sphere or extent of your activities | Synonyms: responsibility |
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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puce | (noun) a color varying from dark purplish brown to dark red | - |
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puissance | (noun) power to influence or coerce | - |
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pumice | (noun) a light glass formed on the surface of some lavas; used as an abrasive | Synonyms: pumice stone |
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(verb) rub with pumice, in order to clean or to smoothen | - |
pursuance | (noun) the continuance of something begun with a view to its completion | Synonyms: prosecution |
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(noun) a search for an alternative that meets cognitive criteria | Synonyms: pursuit, quest |
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 |
purveyance | (noun) the act of supplying something | - |
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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 |
quiesce | (verb) become quiet or quieter | Synonyms: hush, pipe down, quiet, quiet down, quieten |
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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 |
quince | (noun) aromatic acid-tasting pear-shaped fruit used in preserves | - |
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(noun) small Asian tree with pinkish flowers and pear-shaped fruit; widely cultivated | Synonyms: Cydonia oblonga, quince bush |
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 |
quittance | (noun) payment of a debt or obligation | Synonyms: repayment |
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(noun) a document or receipt certifying release from an obligation or debt | - |
race | (noun) a canal for a current of water | Synonyms: raceway |
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(noun) a contest of speed | - |
(noun) any competition | - |
(noun) people who are believed to belong to the same genetic stock | - |
(noun) (biology) a taxonomic group that is a division of a species; usually arises as a consequence of geographical isolation within a species | Synonyms: subspecies |
(noun) the flow of air that is driven backwards by an aircraft propeller | Synonyms: airstream, backwash, slipstream, wash |
(verb) compete in a race | Synonyms: run |
(verb) move hurridly | Synonyms: belt along, bucket along, cannonball along, hasten, hie, hotfoot, pelt along, rush, rush along, speed, step on it |
(verb) cause to move fast or to rush or race | Synonyms: rush |
(verb) to work as fast as possible towards a goal, sometimes in competition with others | - |
radiance | (noun) the quality of being bright and sending out rays of light | Synonyms: effulgence, radiancy, refulgence, refulgency, shine |
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(noun) the amount of electromagnetic radiation leaving or arriving at a point on a surface | Synonyms: glow, glowing |
(noun) an attractive combination of good health and happiness | - |
reactance | (noun) opposition to the flow of electric current resulting from inductance and capacitance (rather than resistance) | - |
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reappearance | (noun) the act of someone appearing again | Synonyms: return |
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(noun) the event of something appearing again | - |
reassurance | (noun) the act of reassuring; restoring someone's confidence | - |
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recalcitrance | (noun) the trait of being unmanageable | Synonyms: recalcitrancy, refractoriness, unmanageableness |
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recce | (noun) reconnaissance (by shortening) | Synonyms: recco, reccy |
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recognisance | (noun) (law) a security entered into before a court with a condition to perform some act required by law; on failure to perform that act a sum is forfeited | Synonyms: recognizance |
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recognizance | (noun) (law) a security entered into before a court with a condition to perform some act required by law; on failure to perform that act a sum is forfeited | Synonyms: recognisance |
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recommence | (verb) begin again | - |
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(verb) cause to start anew | - |
reconnaissance | (noun) the act of reconnoitring (especially to gain information about an enemy or potential enemy) | Synonyms: reconnaissance mission |
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recrudesce | (verb) become raw or open | Synonyms: break out, erupt |
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(verb) happen | Synonyms: break, develop |
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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reduce | (verb) take off weight | Synonyms: melt off, slenderize, slim, slim down, thin |
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(verb) cut down on; make a reduction in | Synonyms: bring down, cut, cut back, cut down, trim, trim back, trim down |
(verb) narrow or limit | Synonyms: tighten |
(verb) cook until very little liquid is left | Synonyms: boil down, concentrate |
(verb) to remove oxygen from a compound, or cause to react with hydrogen or form a hydride, or to undergo an increase in the number of electrons | Synonyms: deoxidise, deoxidize |
(verb) make smaller | Synonyms: scale down |
(verb) reduce in size; reduce physically | Synonyms: shrink |
(verb) make less complex | - |
(verb) reduce in scope while retaining essential elements | Synonyms: abbreviate, abridge, contract, cut, foreshorten, shorten |
(verb) lessen the strength or flavor of a solution or mixture | Synonyms: cut, dilute, thin, thin out |
(verb) be cooked until very little liquid is left | Synonyms: boil down, concentrate, decoct |
(verb) be the essential element | Synonyms: boil down, come down |
(verb) destress and thus weaken a sound when pronouncing it | - |
(verb) undergo meiosis | - |
(verb) reposition (a broken bone after surgery) back to its normal site | - |
(verb) lower in grade or rank or force somebody into an undignified situation | - |
(verb) lessen and make more modest | - |
(verb) simplify the form of a mathematical equation of expression by substituting one term for another | - |
(verb) bring to humbler or weaker state or condition | - |
(verb) put down by force or intimidation | Synonyms: keep down, quash, repress, subdue, subjugate |
redundance | (noun) the attribute of being superfluous and unneeded | Synonyms: redundancy |
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reedmace | (noun) tall marsh plant with cylindrical seed heads that explode when mature shedding large quantities of down; its long flat leaves are used for making mats and chair seats; of North America, Europe, Asia and North Africa | Synonyms: bullrush, bulrush, cat's-tail, nailrod, reed mace, Typha latifolia |
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reenforce | (verb) make stronger | Synonyms: reinforce |
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reface | (verb) put a new facing on (a garment) | - |
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(verb) provide with a new facing | - |
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 |
(verb) refer to | Synonyms: cite |
refinance | (verb) renew the financing of | - |
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reflectance | (noun) the fraction of radiant energy that is reflected from a surface | Synonyms: coefficient of reflection, reflection factor, reflectivity |
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refulgence | (noun) the quality of being bright and sending out rays of light | Synonyms: effulgence, radiance, radiancy, refulgency, shine |
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reinforce | (verb) make stronger | Synonyms: reenforce |
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(verb) strengthen and support with rewards | Synonyms: reward |
reinsurance | (noun) sharing the risk by insurance companies; part or all of the insurer's risk is assumed by other companies in return for part of the premium paid by the insured | - |
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reintroduce | (verb) introduce anew | Synonyms: re-introduce |
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rejoice | (verb) to express great joy | Synonyms: exuberate, exult, jubilate, triumph |
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(verb) feel happiness or joy | Synonyms: joy |
(verb) be ecstatic with joy | Synonyms: triumph, wallow |
rejuvenescence | (noun) A renewal of youthful characteristics or vitality. | - |
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relace | (verb) lace again | - |
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relevance | (noun) the relation of something to the matter at hand | Synonyms: relevancy |
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reliance | (noun) certainty based on past experience | Synonyms: trust |
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(noun) the state of relying on something | - |
reluctance | (noun) a certain degree of unwillingness | Synonyms: disinclination, hesitancy, hesitation, indisposition |
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(noun) (physics) opposition to magnetic flux (analogous to electric resistance) | - |
remembrance | (noun) the ability to recall past occurrences | Synonyms: anamnesis, recollection |
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(noun) a recognition of meritorious service | Synonyms: commemoration, memorial |
reminisce | (verb) recall the past | - |
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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 | - |
remittance | (noun) a payment of money sent to a person in another place | Synonyms: remission, remitment, remittal |
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remonstrance | (noun) the act of expressing earnest opposition or protest | Synonyms: expostulation, objection, remonstration |
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renascence | (noun) a second or new birth | Synonyms: rebirth, reincarnation |
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renounce | (verb) cast off | Synonyms: disown, repudiate |
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(verb) turn away from; give up | Synonyms: foreswear, quit, relinquish |
(verb) leave (a job, post, or position) voluntarily | Synonyms: give up, resign, vacate |
(verb) give up, such as power, as of monarchs and emperors, or duties and obligations | Synonyms: abdicate |
repentance | (noun) remorse for your past conduct | Synonyms: penance, penitence |
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replace | (verb) substitute a person or thing for (another that is broken or inefficient or lost or no longer working or yielding what is expected) | - |
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(verb) put something back where it belongs | Synonyms: put back |
(verb) put in the place of another; switch seemingly equivalent items | Synonyms: exchange, interchange, substitute |
(verb) take the place or move into the position of | Synonyms: supersede, supervene upon, supplant |
reproduce | (verb) have offspring or produce more individuals of a given animal or plant | Synonyms: multiply, procreate |
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(verb) repeat after memorization | Synonyms: regurgitate |
(verb) make a copy or equivalent of | - |
(verb) recreate a sound, image, idea, mood, atmosphere, etc. | - |
repugnance | (noun) intense aversion | Synonyms: horror, repulsion, revulsion |
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(noun) the relation between propositions that cannot both be true at the same time | Synonyms: incompatibility, inconsistency, mutual exclusiveness |
rerebrace | (noun) cannon that provides plate armor for the upper arm | Synonyms: upper cannon |
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resemblance | (noun) similarity in appearance or external or superficial details | - |
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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 |
resistance | (noun) group action in opposition to those in power | - |
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(noun) the military action of resisting the enemy's advance | - |
(noun) the action of opposing something that you disapprove or disagree with | Synonyms: opposition |
(noun) an electrical device that resists the flow of electrical current | Synonyms: resistor |
(noun) the degree of unresponsiveness of a disease-causing microorganism to antibiotics or other drugs (as in penicillin-resistant bacteria) | - |
(noun) (psychiatry) an unwillingness to bring repressed feelings into conscious awareness | - |
(noun) a secret group organized to overthrow a government or occupation force | Synonyms: underground |
(noun) any mechanical force that tends to retard or oppose motion | - |
(noun) a material's opposition to the flow of electric current; measured in ohms | Synonyms: electric resistance, electrical resistance, impedance, ohmic resistance, resistivity |
(noun) (medicine) the condition in which an organism can resist disease | Synonyms: immunity |
(noun) the capacity of an organism to defend itself against harmful environmental agents | - |
resonance | (noun) having the character of a loud deep sound; the quality of being resonant | Synonyms: plangency, reverberance, ringing, sonority, sonorousness, vibrancy |
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(noun) the quality imparted to voiced speech sounds by the action of the resonating chambers of the throat and mouth and nasal cavities | - |
(noun) a vibration of large amplitude produced by a relatively small vibration near the same frequency of vibration as the natural frequency of the resonating system | - |
(noun) an excited state of a stable particle causing a sharp maximum in the probability of absorption of electromagnetic radiation | - |
(noun) a relationship of mutual understanding or trust and agreement between people | Synonyms: rapport |
resource | (noun) a source of aid or support that may be drawn upon when needed | - |
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(noun) the ability to deal resourcefully with unusual problems | Synonyms: imagination, resourcefulness |
(noun) available source of wealth; a new or reserve supply that can be drawn upon when needed | - |
resplendence | (noun) brilliant radiant beauty | Synonyms: glory, resplendency |
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resurface | (verb) to come out of obscurity or hiding | - |
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(verb) cover with a new surface | - |
(verb) reappear on the surface | - |
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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retrace | (verb) reassemble mentally | Synonyms: construct, reconstruct |
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(verb) to go back over again | Synonyms: trace |
reverberance | (noun) having the character of a loud deep sound; the quality of being resonant | Synonyms: plangency, resonance, ringing, sonority, sonorousness, vibrancy |
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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 |
(verb) regard with feelings of respect and reverence; consider hallowed or exalted or be in awe of | Synonyms: fear, revere, venerate |
rice | (noun) grains used as food either unpolished or more often polished | - |
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(noun) annual or perennial rhizomatous marsh grasses; seed used for food; straw used for paper | - |
(verb) sieve so that it becomes the consistency of rice | - |
riddance | (noun) the act of forcing out someone or something | Synonyms: ejection, exclusion, expulsion |
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(noun) the act of removing or getting rid of something | Synonyms: elimination |
romance | (noun) an exciting and mysterious quality (as of a heroic time or adventure) | Synonyms: romanticism |
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(noun) a novel dealing with idealized events remote from everyday life | - |
(noun) a story dealing with love | Synonyms: love story |
(noun) a relationship between two lovers | Synonyms: love affair |
(verb) tell romantic or exaggerated lies | - |
(verb) talk or behave amorously, without serious intentions | Synonyms: butterfly, chat up, coquet, coquette, dally, flirt, mash, philander |
(verb) have a love affair with | - |
(verb) make amorous advances towards | Synonyms: court, solicit, woo |
sacrifice | (noun) the act of killing (an animal or person) in order to propitiate a deity | Synonyms: ritual killing |
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(noun) the act of losing or surrendering something as a penalty for a mistake or fault or failure to perform etc. | Synonyms: forfeit, forfeiture |
(noun) (baseball) an out that advances the base runners | - |
(noun) personnel that are sacrificed (e.g., surrendered or lost in order to gain an objective) | - |
(noun) a loss entailed by giving up or selling something at less than its value | - |
(verb) kill or destroy | - |
(verb) endure the loss of | Synonyms: give |
(verb) make a sacrifice of; in religious rituals | - |
(verb) sell at a loss | - |
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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satisfice | (verb) decide on and pursue a course of action satisfying the minimum requirements to achieve a goal | Synonyms: satisfise |
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sauce | (noun) flavorful relish or dressing or topping served as an accompaniment to food | - |
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(verb) add zest or flavor to, make more interesting | - |
(verb) dress (food) with a relish | - |
(verb) behave saucily or impudently towards | - |
scapegrace | (noun) a reckless and unprincipled reprobate | Synonyms: black sheep |
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scarce | (adjective) deficient in quantity or number compared with the demand | - |
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(adverb) only a very short time before | Synonyms: barely, hardly, just, scarcely |
(adverb) almost not | Synonyms: barely, hardly, scarcely |
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 |
sconce | (noun) a decorative wall bracket for holding candles or other sources of light | - |
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(noun) a candle or flaming torch secured in a sconce | - |
(noun) a small fort or earthwork defending a ford, pass, or castle gate | - |
(noun) a shelter or screen providing protection from enemy fire or from the weather | - |
seance | (noun) a meeting of spiritualists | Synonyms: session, sitting |
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seduce | (verb) lure or entice away from duty, principles, or proper conduct | - |
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(verb) induce to have sex | Synonyms: make, score |