Princeton 118-128
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| calm | ||
| unemotional; serious | ||
| indifferent to pleasure or pain; impassive | ||
| to express strong disapproval of; denounce | ||
| to cause to be doubted | ||
| to speak of in a slighting way or negatively; to belittle | ||
| describing words or phrases that belittle or speak negatively of someone | ||
| the act of passing off the ideas or writing of another as one's own | ||
| to make vicious statements about | ||
| rudely abrupt | ||
| bitingly sarcastic or witty | ||
| quarrelsome; unruly | ||
| unable to be reformed | ||
| an ungrateful person | ||
| insulting in manner or speech | ||
| known widely and usually unfavorably; infamous | ||
| combative; belligerent | ||
| worthy of blame | ||
| having a harmful effect; injurious | ||
| mutual hatred or ill-will | ||
| hatefully evil' abominable | ||
| wrongdoing, misconduct | ||
| extreme ill-will or spite | ||
| rotten | ||
| hateful; marked by deep-seated ill-will | ||
| poisonous | ||
| characteristic of an earlier period; old-fashioned | ||
| worn out through overuse; trite | ||
| referring to the Middle Ages; old-fashioned | ||
| no longer in use; old-fashioned | ||
| without decoration; strict | ||
| the state or quality of being average; of moderate to low quality | ||
| commonplace; ordinary | ||
| extremely dull | ||
| unimaginative; dull | ||
| not migratory; settled | ||
| anxiety or fear about the future | ||
| something that indicates what is to come; a forerunner | ||
| menacing; threatening | ||
| a feeling about the future | ||
| timid; fearful about the future | ||
| uncertainty; apprhension | ||
| introducing something new | ||
| lacking sophistication | ||
| coming into existence; emerging | ||
| strikingly new or unusual | ||
| a beginner | ||
| sincerity; openness | ||
| open and sincere in expression; straightforward | ||
| describing a dry, rainless climate | ||
| a widespread fire | ||
| of or occuring in the night | ||
| producing a deep or full sound | ||
| describing a large amount of something | ||
| large in scope or content | ||
| plentiful; having a large quantity | ||
| spread or flowing throughout | ||
| dispersed throughout | ||
| enormous | ||
| abundantly supplied; filled to capacity | ||
| commendable; worhthy of imitation | ||
| to consider perfect | ||
| giving praise | ||
| of chief concern or importance | ||
| highly respected | ||
| to make an itemized list of | ||
| done or achieved with little effort; easy | ||
| possessing careful attention to detail; difficult to please | ||
| a group organized by rank | ||
| extremely careful and precise | ||
| practical | ||
| able to pay one's debts | ||
| removed or disassociated from (friends, family, or homeland) | ||
| not applied to actual objects | ||
| something out of place in time or sequence | ||
| the attribution of humanlike characteristics to inanimate objects, animals, or forces of nature | ||
| defense of an idea | ||
| equipment; a group of machines | ||
| a grammar construction in which a non (or noun phrase) is placed with another as an explanation | ||
| a perfect example; an original pattern or model | ||
| easily broken when subjected to pressure | ||
| an inversion in the second of two parallel phrases | ||
| making gestures while speaking | ||
| existing only as an assumption or speculation | ||
| a word book describing language with definitions; a dictionary | ||
| a type of figurative language in which one term is substituted for another term with which it is clearly associated | ||
| an apparent contradiction of terms | ||
| statement of high praise | ||
| an example or model | ||
| a grammar construction in which two identical syntactic constructions are used | ||
| expressing remorse for one's misdeeds | ||
| long, complex, grammatically correct sentence | ||
| causing great harm | ||
| an unusual, observable event | ||
| presenting favorable circumstances; auspicious | ||
| logical; motivated by reason rather than feeling | ||
| disdainfully or ironically humorous; harsh, bitter, or caustic | ||
| a form of deductive reasoning: a major premise, a minor premise, and a conclusion | ||
| when a part is used to signify the whole | ||
| lacking application or practical application | ||
| shortened; cut off |
