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appropriate
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adj 1: suitable for a particular person or place or condition
etc; "a book not appropriate for children"; "a funeral
conducted the appropriate solemnity"; "it seems that an
apology is appropriate" [ant: inappropriate]
v 1: give or assign a resource to a particular person or cause;
"I will earmark this money for your research"; "She sets
aside time for meditation every day" [syn: allow,
appropriate, earmark, set aside, reserve]
2: take possession of by force, as after an invasion; "the
invaders seized the land and property of the inhabitants";
"The army seized the town"; "The militia captured the castle"
[syn: appropriate, capture, seize, conquer]
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associate
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adj 1: having partial rights and privileges or subordinate
status; "an associate member"; "an associate professor"
n 1: a person who joins with others in some activity or
endeavor; "he had to consult his associate before
continuing"
2: a friend who is frequently in the company of another;
"drinking companions"; "comrades in arms" [syn: companion,
comrade, fellow, familiar, associate]
3: a person with subordinate membership in a society,
institution, or commercial enterprise; "associates in the law
firm bill at a lower rate than do partners"
4: any event that usually accompanies or is closely connected
with another; "first was the lightning and then its
thunderous associate"
5: a degree granted by a two-year college on successful
completion of the undergraduates course of studies [syn:
associate degree, associate]
v 1: make a logical or causal connection; "I cannot connect
these two pieces of evidence in my mind"; "colligate these
facts"; "I cannot relate these events at all" [syn:
associate, tie in, relate, link, colligate, link
up, connect] [ant: decouple, dissociate]
2: keep company with; hang out with; "He associates with strange
people"; "She affiliates with her colleagues" [syn:
consort, associate, affiliate, assort]
3: bring or come into association or action; "The churches
consociated to fight their dissolution" [syn: consociate,
associate]
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at
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n 1: a highly unstable radioactive element (the heaviest of the
halogen series); a decay product of uranium and thorium
[syn: astatine, At, atomic number 85]
2: 100 at equal 1 kip in Laos
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ate
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n 1: goddess of criminal rashness and its punishment
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consociate
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v 1: bring or come into association or action; "The churches
consociated to fight their dissolution" [syn: consociate,
associate]
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disassociate
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v 1: part; cease or break association with; "She disassociated
herself from the organization when she found out the
identity of the president" [syn: disassociate,
dissociate, divorce, disunite, disjoint]
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dissociate
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v 1: part; cease or break association with; "She disassociated
herself from the organization when she found out the
identity of the president" [syn: disassociate,
dissociate, divorce, disunite, disjoint]
2: regard as unconnected; "you must dissociate these two
events!"; "decouple our foreign policy from ideology" [syn:
decouple, dissociate] [ant: associate, colligate,
connect, link, link up, relate, tie in]
3: to undergo a reversible or temporary breakdown of a molecule
into simpler molecules or atoms; "acids dissociate to give
hydrogen ions"
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freshet
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n 1: the occurrence of a water flow resulting from sudden rain
or melting snow [syn: freshet, spate]
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luxuriate
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v 1: become extravagant; indulge (oneself) luxuriously [syn:
luxuriate, wanton]
2: enjoy to excess; "She indulges in ice cream" [syn: indulge,
luxuriate]
3: thrive profusely or flourish extensively
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mediate
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adj 1: acting through or dependent on an intervening agency;
"the disease spread by mediate as well as direct contact"
[ant: immediate]
2: being neither at the beginning nor at the end in a series;
"adolescence is an awkward in-between age"; "in a mediate
position"; "the middle point on a line" [syn: in-between,
mediate, middle]
v 1: act between parties with a view to reconciling differences;
"He interceded in the family dispute"; "He mediated a
settlement" [syn: intercede, mediate, intermediate,
liaise, arbitrate]
2: occupy an intermediate or middle position or form a
connecting link or stage between two others; "mediate between
the old and the new"
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misappropriate
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v 1: appropriate (as property entrusted to one's care)
fraudulently to one's own use; "The accountant embezzled
thousands of dollars while working for the wealthy family"
[syn: embezzle, defalcate, peculate,
misappropriate, malversate]
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nauseate
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v 1: upset and make nauseated; "The smell of the food turned the
pregnant woman's stomach"; "The mold on the food sickened
the diners" [syn: sicken, nauseate, turn one's
stomach]
2: cause aversion in; offend the moral sense of; "The
pornographic pictures sickened us" [syn: disgust, revolt,
nauseate, sicken, churn up]
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negotiate
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v 1: discuss the terms of an arrangement; "They negotiated the
sale of the house" [syn: negociate, negotiate, talk
terms]
2: succeed in passing through, around, or over; "The hiker
negociated the high mountain pass" [syn: negotiate,
negociate]
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novitiate
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n 1: the period during which you are a novice (especially in a
religious order) [syn: novitiate, noviciate]
2: someone who has entered a religious order but has not taken
final vows [syn: novitiate, novice]
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nucleate
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adj 1: having a nucleus or occurring in the nucleus; "nucleated
cells" [syn: nucleated, nucleate]
v 1: form into a nucleus; "Some cells had nucleated"
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obviate
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v 1: do away with [syn: obviate, rid of, eliminate] [ant:
ask, call for, demand, involve, necessitate,
need, postulate, require, take]
2: prevent the occurrence of; prevent from happening; "Let's
avoid a confrontation"; "head off a confrontation"; "avert a
strike" [syn: debar, forefend, forfend, obviate,
deflect, avert, head off, stave off, fend off,
avoid, ward off]
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officiate
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v 1: act in an official capacity in a ceremony or religious
ritual, such as a wedding; "Who officiated at your
wedding?"
2: perform duties attached to a particular office or place or
function; "His wife officiated as his private secretary"
[syn: officiate, function]
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palliate
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v 1: lessen or to try to lessen the seriousness or extent of;
"The circumstances extenuate the crime" [syn: extenuate,
palliate, mitigate]
2: provide physical relief, as from pain; "This pill will
relieve your headaches" [syn: relieve, alleviate,
palliate, assuage]
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permeate
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v 1: spread or diffuse through; "An atmosphere of distrust has
permeated this administration"; "music penetrated the
entire building"; "His campaign was riddled with
accusations and personal attacks" [syn: permeate,
pervade, penetrate, interpenetrate, diffuse,
imbue, riddle]
2: pass through; "Water permeates sand easily" [syn:
percolate, sink in, permeate, filter]
3: penetrate mutually or be interlocked; "The territories of two
married people interpenetrate a lot" [syn: interpenetrate,
permeate]
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potentiate
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v 1: increase the effect of or act synergistically with (a drug
or a physiological or biochemical phenomenon); "potentiate
the drug"
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procreate
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v 1: have offspring or produce more individuals of a given
animal or plant; "The Bible tells people to procreate"
[syn: reproduce, procreate, multiply]
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propitiate
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v 1: make peace with [syn: propitiate, appease]
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radiate
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adj 1: arranged like rays or radii; radiating from a common
center; "radial symmetry"; "a starlike or stellate
arrangement of petals"; "many cities show a radial
pattern of main highways" [syn: radial, stellate,
radiate]
2: having rays or ray-like parts as in the flower heads of
daisies
v 1: send out rays or waves; "The sun radiates heat"
2: send out real or metaphoric rays; "She radiates happiness"
3: extend or spread outward from a center or focus or inward
towards a center; "spokes radiate from the hub of the wheel";
"This plants radiate spines in all directions" [syn:
radiate, ray]
4: have a complexion with a strong bright color, such as red or
pink; "Her face glowed when she came out of the sauna" [syn:
glow, beam, radiate, shine]
5: cause to be seen by emitting light as if in rays; "The sun is
radiating"
6: experience a feeling of well-being or happiness, as from good
health or an intense emotion; "She was beaming with joy";
"Her face radiated with happiness" [syn: glow, beam,
radiate, shine]
7: issue or emerge in rays or waves; "Heat radiated from the
metal box"
8: spread into new habitats and produce variety or variegate;
"The plants on this island diversified" [syn: diversify,
radiate]
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recreate
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v 1: give new life or energy to; "A hot soup will revive me";
"This will renovate my spirits"; "This treatment repaired
my health" [syn: animate, recreate, reanimate,
revive, renovate, repair, quicken, vivify,
revivify]
2: engage in recreational activities rather than work; occupy
oneself in a diversion; "On weekends I play"; "The students
all recreate alike" [syn: play, recreate]
3: give encouragement to [syn: cheer, hearten, recreate,
embolden] [ant: dishearten, put off]
4: create anew; "she recreated the feeling of the 1920's with
her stage setting"
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renegotiate
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v 1: negociate anew; "The two warring parties will have to
renegociate" [syn: renegociate, renegotiate]
2: revise the terms of in order to limit or regain excess
profits gained by the contractor; "We renegociated our old
mortgage now that the interest rates have come down" [syn:
renegociate, renegotiate]
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repatriate
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n 1: a person who has returned to the country of origin or whose
citizenship has been restored
v 1: send someone back to his homeland against his will, as of
refugees
2: admit back into the country [ant: deport, exile,
expatriate]
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repudiate
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v 1: cast off; "She renounced her husband"; "The parents
repudiated their son" [syn: disown, renounce,
repudiate]
2: refuse to acknowledge, ratify, or recognize as valid; "The
woman repudiated the divorce settlement"
3: refuse to recognize or pay; "repudiate a debt"
4: reject as untrue, unfounded, or unjust; "She repudiated the
accusations"
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retaliate
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v 1: take revenge for a perceived wrong; "He wants to avenge the
murder of his brother" [syn: revenge, avenge,
retaliate]
2: make a counterattack and return like for like, especially
evil for evil; "The Empire strikes back"; "The Giants struck
back and won the opener"; "The Israeli army retaliated for
the Hamas bombing" [syn: retaliate, strike back]
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roseate
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adj 1: of something having a dusty purplish pink color; "the
roseate glow of dawn" [syn: rose, roseate,
rosaceous]
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satiate
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adj 1: supplied (especially fed) to satisfaction [syn:
satiate, satiated] [ant: insatiable, insatiate,
unsatiable]
v 1: fill to satisfaction; "I am sated" [syn: satiate, sate,
replete, fill]
2: overeat or eat immodestly; make a pig of oneself; "She
stuffed herself at the dinner"; "The kids binged on ice
cream" [syn: gorge, ingurgitate, overindulge, glut,
englut, stuff, engorge, overgorge, overeat,
gormandize, gormandise, gourmandize, binge, pig
out, satiate, scarf out]
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planchet
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n 1: a flat metal disk ready for stamping as a coin [syn:
planchet, coin blank]
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cushat
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n 1: Eurasian pigeon with white patches on wings and neck [syn:
wood pigeon, ringdove, cushat, Columba palumbus]
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aydt
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ait
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lynchet
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wishart
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