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abrasive
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adj 1: causing abrasion [syn: abrasive, scratchy]
2: sharply disagreeable; rigorous; "the harsh facts of court
delays"; "an abrasive character" [syn: harsh, abrasive]
n 1: a substance that abrades or wears down [syn: abrasive,
abradant, abrasive material]
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assuasive
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adj 1: freeing from fear and anxiety [syn: assuasive,
soothing]
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cursive
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adj 1: having successive letter joined together; "cursive
script"
n 1: rapid handwriting in which letters are set down in full and
are cursively connected within words without lifting the
writing implement from the paper [syn: longhand, running
hand, cursive, cursive script]
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dissuasive
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adj 1: deterring from action; "dissuasive advice"; "made a
slight dissuasive gesture with her hand" [ant:
persuasive]
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evasive
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adj 1: deliberately vague or ambiguous; "his answers were brief,
constrained and evasive"; "an evasive statement"
2: avoiding or escaping from difficulty or danger especially
enemy fire; "pilots are taught to take evasive action"
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impassive
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adj 1: having or revealing little emotion or sensibility; not
easily aroused or excited; "her impassive remoteness";
"he remained impassive, showing neither interest in nor
concern for our plight"- Nordhoff & Hall; "a silent
stolid creature who took it all as a matter of
course"-Virginia Woolf; "her face showed nothing but
stolid indifference" [syn: impassive, stolid]
2: deliberately impassive in manner; "deadpan humor"; "his face
remained expressionless as the verdict was read" [syn:
deadpan, expressionless, impassive, poker-faced,
unexpressive]
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invasive
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adj 1: relating to a technique in which the body is entered by
puncture or incision [ant: noninvasive]
2: marked by a tendency to spread especially into healthy
tissue; "invasive cancer cells" [ant: confined]
3: involving invasion or aggressive attack; "invasive war" [syn:
incursive, invading, invasive]
4: gradually intrusive without right or permission; "we moved
back from the encroaching tide"; "invasive tourists";
"trespassing hunters" [syn: encroaching(a), invasive,
trespassing(a)]
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massive
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adj 1: imposing in size or bulk or solidity; "massive oak
doors"; "Moore's massive sculptures"; "the monolithic
proportions of Stalinist architecture"; "a monumental
scale" [syn: massive, monolithic, monumental]
2: being the same substance throughout; "massive silver"
3: imposing in scale or scope or degree or power; "massive
retaliatory power"; "a massive increase in oil prices";
"massive changes"
4: consisting of great mass; containing a great quantity of
matter; "Earth is the most massive of the terrestrial
planets"
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missive
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n 1: a written message addressed to a person or organization;
"mailed an indignant letter to the editor" [syn: letter,
missive]
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obsessive
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adj 1: characterized by or constituting an obsession; "the
obsessional character of his response"; "obsessive
gambling" [syn: obsessional, obsessive]
n 1: a person who has obsessions
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obtrusive
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adj 1: undesirably noticeable; "the obtrusive behavior of a
spoiled child"; "equally obtrusive was the graffiti"
[syn: obtrusive, noticeable] [ant: unnoticeable,
unobtrusive]
2: sticking out; protruding
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occlusive
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adj 1: tending to occlude
n 1: a consonant produced by stopping the flow of air at some
point and suddenly releasing it; "his stop consonants are
too aspirated" [syn: stop consonant, stop, occlusive,
plosive consonant, plosive speech sound, plosive]
[ant: continuant, continuant consonant]
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offensive
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adj 1: violating or tending to violate or offend against;
"violative of the principles of liberty"; "considered
such depravity offensive against all laws of humanity"
[syn: offensive, violative]
2: for the purpose of attack rather than defense; "offensive
weapons" [ant: defensive]
3: causing anger or annoyance; "offensive remarks" [ant:
inoffensive, unoffending]
4: morally offensive; "an unsavory reputation"; "an unsavory
scandal" [syn: unsavory, unsavoury, offensive] [ant:
savory, savoury]
5: unpleasant or disgusting especially to the senses; "offensive
odors" [ant: inoffensive]
6: substitute a harsher or distasteful term for a mild one ;
"`nigger' is a dysphemistic term for `African-American'"
[syn: dysphemistic, offensive] [ant: euphemistic,
inoffensive]
7: causing or able to cause nausea; "a nauseating smell";
"nauseous offal"; "a sickening stench" [syn: nauseating,
nauseous, noisome, queasy, loathsome, offensive,
sickening, vile]
n 1: the action of attacking an enemy [syn: offense,
offence, offensive]
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oppressive
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adj 1: weighing heavily on the senses or spirit; "the atmosphere
was oppressive"; "oppressive sorrows"
2: marked by unjust severity or arbitrary behavior; "the
oppressive government"; "oppressive laws"; "a tyrannical
parent"; "tyrannous disregard of human rights" [syn:
oppressive, tyrannical, tyrannous]
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passive
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adj 1: lacking in energy or will; "Much benevolence of the
passive order may be traced to a disinclination to
inflict pain upon oneself"- George Meredith [syn:
passive, inactive] [ant: active]
2: peacefully resistant in response to injustice; "passive
resistance" [syn: passive, peaceful]
3: expressing that the subject of the sentence is the patient of
the action denoted by the verb; "academics seem to favor
passive sentences" [ant: active]
n 1: the voice used to indicate that the grammatical subject of
the verb is the recipient (not the source) of the action
denoted by the verb; "`The ball was thrown by the boy' uses
the passive voice"; "`The ball was thrown' is an
abbreviated passive" [syn: passive voice, passive]
[ant: active, active voice]
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pensive
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adj 1: deeply or seriously thoughtful; "Byron lives on not only
in his poetry, but also in his creation of the 'Byronic
hero' - the persona of a brooding melancholy young man";
[syn: brooding, broody, contemplative,
meditative, musing, pensive, pondering,
reflective, ruminative]
2: showing pensive sadness; "the sensitive and wistful response
of a poet to the gentler phases of beauty" [syn: pensive,
wistful]
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permissive
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adj 1: not preventive [ant: preventative, preventive]
2: granting or inclined or able to grant permission; not strict
in discipline; "direct primary legislation is largely
permissive rather than prescriptive"; "permissive parents"
[ant: unpermissive]
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persuasive
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adj 1: intended or having the power to induce action or belief;
"persuasive eloquence"; "a most persuasive speaker"; "a
persuasive argument" [ant: dissuasive]
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pervasive
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adj 1: spreading or spread throughout; "armed with permeative
irony...he punctures affectations"; "the pervasive odor
of garlic"; "an error is pervasive if it is material to
more than one conclusion" [syn: permeant, permeating,
permeative, pervasive]
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plosive
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n 1: a consonant produced by stopping the flow of air at some
point and suddenly releasing it; "his stop consonants are
too aspirated" [syn: stop consonant, stop, occlusive,
plosive consonant, plosive speech sound, plosive]
[ant: continuant, continuant consonant]
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possessive
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adj 1: serving to express or indicate possession; "possessive
pronouns"; "the genitive endings" [syn: possessive,
genitive]
2: desirous of owning; "small children are so possessive they
will not let others play with their toys"
3: having or showing a desire to control or dominate; "a
possessive parent"
n 1: the case expressing ownership [syn: genitive, genitive
case, possessive, possessive case]
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preclusive
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adj 1: made impossible [syn: preclusive, obviating(a)]
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progressive
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adj 1: favoring or promoting progress; "progressive schools"
[ant: regressive]
2: favoring or promoting reform (often by government action)
[syn: progressive, reformist, reform-minded]
3: (of taxes) adjusted so that the rate increases as the amount
of income increases [ant: regressive]
4: gradually advancing in extent
5: (of a card game or a dance) involving a series of sections
for which the participants successively change place or
relative position; "progressive euchre"; "progressive
tournaments"
6: advancing in severity; "progressive paralysis"
n 1: a tense of verbs used in describing action that is on-going
[syn: progressive, progressive tense, imperfect,
imperfect tense, continuous tense]
2: a person who favors a political philosophy of progress and
reform and the protection of civil liberties [syn: liberal,
liberalist, progressive] [ant: conservative,
conservativist]
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propulsive
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adj 1: having the power to propel; "propulsive coefficient"
2: tending to or capable of propelling; "propellant fuel for
submarines"; "the faster a jet plane goes the greater its
propulsive efficiency"; "universities...the seats of
propulsive thought" [syn: propellant, propellent,
propelling, propulsive]
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protrusive
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adj 1: thrusting outward [ant: intrusive]
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purposive
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adj 1: having or showing or acting with a purpose or design;
"purposive behavior"
2: having a purpose; "purposive behavior" [syn: goal-directed,
purposive]
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recessive
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adj 1: of or pertaining to a recession [syn: recessionary,
recessive]
2: (of genes) producing its characteristic phenotype only when
its allele is identical [ant: dominant]
n 1: an allele that produces its characteristic phenotype only
when its paired allele is identical [syn: recessive
allele, recessive]
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unpersuasive
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adj 1: not capable of persuading
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degressive
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adj 1: going down by steps
2: (of taxes) gradually decreasing in rate on sums below a
certain amount
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irresponsive
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jussive
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