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A departure, usually of large numbers of people. |
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To move from one region of habitat to another (esp. with animals) |
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Leave one country to settle in another (usually permanently) |
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Exodus or migration [Note: usually connected to Muhammad’s departure from |
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The arrival in large number or people or things |
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The action of coming from another country |
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(adj.) Foreign; charmingly unfamiliar or strikingly unusual. |
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Known to a specific person or group; familiar |
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Native/ Restricted to a certain country or area (usually related to a disease) |
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(adj.) Advantageous to one’s interest or purpose (n.) An emergency course of action; a means to an end. |
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(Of a time) -Well-chosen or particularly favorable or appropriate/ timely |
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A plan or scheme (esp. one used to outwit an opponent or achieve an end) |
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A carefully planned scheme or action involving deception |
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A temporary way of dealing with a problem |
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To use to the greatest possible advantage, often selfishly.(n.) A brilliant or heroic deed. |
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A notable or successful stroke or move |
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An impressive achievement |
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An action displaying heroic courage |
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To make something clear; explain |
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To describe or portray precisely |
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To make a written summary of |
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To assemble or construct from separate parts.(v.) To make up with the intention of deceiving. |
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To make or devise by combining various parts (esp. with food) |
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(adj.) Not meant seriously; playful or humorous. |
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Humorous in a playful, mischievous, or facetious manner |
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Not having any serious purpose or value; (of a person) carefree |
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Curious or unusual in a way that provokes dry amusement (archaic - a jester) |
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Serious; giving cause for alarm |
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formal and dignified; not cheerful; serious |
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Not what I’ll be come saturday. Serious, sensible, and solemn |
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An exact copy.(adj.) Reproduced exactly. |
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Faulty reasoning; an error in logic.(n.) A false or mistaken notion. |
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A grammatical mistake in speech or writing |
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A unit of length roughly equal to six feet and used primarily in marine depths.(v.) To get to the bottom of or understand. |
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to convey a specific impression |
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To explore fully or experience |
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To physically examine or explore |
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To research or make painstaking inquiries into something |
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- ew. To search tenaciously for something |
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To find and get to the bottom of something or something that may be pernicious |
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Unconsciously foolish, stupid, or absurd. |
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Having or showing a lack of thought or intelligence |
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So ludicrous as to be amusing |
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Showing a perceptive understanding |
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Intelligently analytical and clear thinking |
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Possible; both doable and workable. |
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Not able to function; impractical |
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To pretend or give a false appearance of. |
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- Well chosen or suited to the circumstances.
- Pleasing and fortunate.
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Suitable, well-adapted, or pertinent. |
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An object believed among primitive peoples to have magical powers. An object of unreasonably excessive attention or reverence. |
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Something carried or worn on one’s person for supposed magical effect. |
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Something carried or worn on one’s person for supposed magical effect. |
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An amulet or charm with remarkable influence on human feelings or actions. |
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A severe preoccupation with a subject, issue, or object. |
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The state of being occupied or already indulged in something else, normally mentally. |
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A strong irresistible impulse. |
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An obsession (Literally translated from French as a fixed idea) |
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A preoccupation or fixation. |
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Get a Complex About (phrase) - |
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To become absorbed in or about something. |
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One with an inordinate or obsessive zeal for a particular thing. |
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Something considered exempt from normal criticism or questioning. |
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To act in a servile or obeying manner. (Also, to touch one’s forehead to the ground while kneeling in an act of worship.) sincere or insincere |
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A business person of great wealth or power. |
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A cruel or vicious outlaw. |
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Something that does injury to the originator. |
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Improper or unacceptable. Prohibitive |
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Anything taken by dishonesty, force, or stealth. |
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Rich or powerful artist or entertainer |
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A bill, cost, or charge on implied goods |
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A natural object or animate being assumed as the emblem of a family or clan. |
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A group or meeting organized to further a special interest in a cause. |
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A large, overpowering, destructive force. |
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Senseless or pretentious language. |
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A polytheistic religion practiced by the West Indians deriving from African cult worship. |
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The lowest point; point of greatest despair. |
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Something serving as refuge; a place of asylum. |
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A particular method of reasoning and argumentation. |
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A syllogism) is a kind of logical argument in which one proposition (the conclusion) is inferred from two or more others (the premises) of a certain form. |
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A premise containing the major term which is the predicate of a syllogism. |
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A premise containing the minor term which is the subject of a syllogism. |
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A preposition or inference reached through the premises of a syllogism. |
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A conclusion supported by the major and minor premises, but does not necessarily follow them.
Conclusion made from constant observations |
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A conclusion that necessarily follows the major and minor premises, such that if both are true
Facts determined by combining existing statements |
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An argument constructed so that if both premises are jointly asserted, the conclusion must be |
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The act of endowing inanimate objects or ideas with thoughts, human traits, and feelings. |
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To be in a state of agitation or anger. |
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A continued loud or tumultuous clamor. |
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To suppress or extinguish. |
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Reject with disdain or contempt |
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Distribute evenly or fairly |
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To put out or extinguish. |
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To refrain or abstain from. |
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A difficult obstacle or problem to be overcome. (v.) - To overcome such an obstacle or problem. |
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