-
abdicate
0
v 1: give up, such as power, as of monarchs and emperors, or
duties and obligations; "The King abdicated when he married
a divorcee" [syn: abdicate, renounce]
-
adjudicate
0
v 1: put on trial or hear a case and sit as the judge at the
trial of; "The football star was tried for the murder of
his wife"; "The judge tried both father and son in separate
trials" [syn: judge, adjudicate, try]
2: bring to an end; settle conclusively; "The case was decided";
"The judge decided the case in favor of the plaintiff"; "The
father adjudicated when the sons were quarreling over their
inheritance" [syn: decide, settle, resolve,
adjudicate]
-
advocate
0
n 1: a person who pleads for a cause or propounds an idea [syn:
advocate, advocator, proponent, exponent]
2: a lawyer who pleads cases in court [syn: advocate,
counsel, counselor, counsellor, counselor-at-law,
pleader]
v 1: push for something; "The travel agent recommended strongly
that we not travel on Thanksgiving Day" [syn: recommend,
urge, advocate]
2: speak, plead, or argue in favor of; "The doctor advocated a
smoking ban in the entire house" [syn: preach, advocate]
-
affricate
0
n 1: a composite speech sound consisting of a stop and a
fricative articulated at the same point (as `ch' in `chair'
and `j' in `joy') [syn: affricate, affricate consonant,
affricative]
-
allocate
0
v 1: distribute according to a plan or set apart for a special
purpose; "I am allocating a loaf of bread to everyone on a
daily basis"; "I'm allocating the rations for the camping
trip" [syn: allocate, apportion]
-
altercate
0
v 1: have a disagreement over something; "We quarreled over the
question as to who discovered America"; "These two fellows
are always scrapping over something" [syn: quarrel,
dispute, scrap, argufy, altercate]
-
auspicate
0
v 1: indicate by signs; "These signs bode bad news" [syn:
bode, portend, auspicate, prognosticate, omen,
presage, betoken, foreshadow, augur, foretell,
prefigure, forecast, predict]
2: commence in a manner calculated to bring good luck; "They
auspicated the trip with a bottle of champagne"
-
authenticate
0
v 1: establish the authenticity of something
-
basket
0
n 1: a container that is usually woven and has handles [syn:
basket, handbasket]
2: the quantity contained in a basket [syn: basket,
basketful]
3: horizontal circular metal hoop supporting a net through which
players try to throw the basketball [syn: basket,
basketball hoop, hoop]
4: a score in basketball made by throwing the ball through the
hoop [syn: basket, field goal]
-
bifurcate
0
adj 1: resembling a fork; divided or separated into two
branches; "the biramous appendages of an arthropod";
"long branched hairs on its legson which pollen
collects"; "a forked river"; "a forked tail"; "forked
lightning"; "horseradish grown in poor soil may develop
prongy roots" [syn: bifurcate, biramous, branched,
forked, fork-like, forficate, pronged, prongy]
v 1: split or divide into two
2: divide into two branches; "The road bifurcated"
-
borosilicate
0
n 1: a salt of boric and silicic acids
-
breadbasket
0
n 1: a geographic region serving as the principal source of
grain
2: an enlarged and muscular saclike organ of the alimentary
canal; the principal organ of digestion [syn: stomach,
tummy, tum, breadbasket]
3: a basket for serving bread
-
certificate
0
n 1: a document attesting to the truth of certain stated facts
[syn: certificate, certification, credential,
credentials]
2: a formal declaration that documents a fact of relevance to
finance and investment; the holder has a right to receive
interest or dividends; "he held several valuable securities"
[syn: security, certificate]
v 1: present someone with a certificate
2: authorize by certificate
-
cheapskate
0
n 1: a miserly person [syn: cheapskate, tightwad]
-
collocate
0
v 1: have a strong tendency to occur side by side; "The words
'new' and 'world' collocate"
2: group or chunk together in a certain order or place side by
side [syn: collocate, lump, chunk]
-
communicate
0
v 1: transmit information ; "Please communicate this message to
all employees"; "pass along the good news" [syn:
communicate, pass on, pass, pass along, put
across]
2: transmit thoughts or feelings; "He communicated his anxieties
to the psychiatrist" [syn: communicate, intercommunicate]
3: transfer to another; "communicate a disease" [syn: convey,
transmit, communicate]
4: join or connect; "The rooms communicated"
5: be in verbal contact; interchange information or ideas; "He
and his sons haven't communicated for years"; "Do you
communicate well with your advisor?"
6: administer Communion; in church [ant: curse,
excommunicate, unchurch]
7: receive Communion, in the Catholic church [syn: commune,
communicate]
-
complicate
0
v 1: make more complicated; "There was a new development that
complicated the matter" [syn: complicate, perplex]
[ant: simplify]
2: make more complex, intricate, or richer; "refine a design or
pattern" [syn: complicate, refine, rarify, elaborate]
-
confiscate
0
adj 1: surrendered as a penalty [syn: confiscate, forfeit,
forfeited]
v 1: take temporary possession of as a security, by legal
authority; "The FBI seized the drugs"; "The customs agents
impounded the illegal shipment"; "The police confiscated
the stolen artwork" [syn: impound, attach, sequester,
confiscate, seize]
-
contraindicate
0
v 1: make a treatment inadvisable [ant: indicate, suggest]
-
coruscate
0
v 1: reflect brightly; "Unquarried marble sparkled on the
hillside" [syn: sparkle, scintillate, coruscate]
2: be lively or brilliant or exhibit virtuosity; "The musical
performance sparkled"; "A scintillating conversation"; "his
playing coruscated throughout the concert hall" [syn:
sparkle, scintillate, coruscate]
-
decorticate
0
v 1: remove the outer layer of; "decorticate a tree branch"
2: remove the cortex of (an organ)
-
dedicate
0
v 1: give entirely to a specific person, activity, or cause;
"She committed herself to the work of God"; "give one's
talents to a good cause"; "consecrate your life to the
church" [syn: give, dedicate, consecrate, commit,
devote]
2: open to public use, as of a highway, park, or building; "The
Beauty Queen spends her time dedicating parks and nursing
homes"
3: inscribe or address by way of compliment; "She dedicated her
book to her parents"
4: set apart to sacred uses with solemn rites, of a church
-
defalcate
0
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]
-
defecate
0
v 1: have a bowel movement; "The dog had made in the flower
beds" [syn: stool, defecate, shit, take a shit,
take a crap, ca-ca, crap, make]
-
delicate
0
adj 1: exquisitely fine and subtle and pleasing; susceptible to
injury; "a delicate violin passage"; "delicate china"; "a
delicate flavor"; "the delicate wing of a butterfly"
[ant: rugged]
2: marked by great skill especially in meticulous technique; "a
surgeon's delicate touch"
3: easily broken or damaged or destroyed; "a kite too delicate
to fly safely"; "fragile porcelain plates"; "fragile old
bones"; "a frail craft" [syn: delicate, fragile, frail]
4: easily hurt; "soft hands"; "a baby's delicate skin" [syn:
delicate, soft]
5: developed with extreme delicacy and subtlety; "the satire
touches with finespun ridicule every kind of human pretense"
[syn: finespun, delicate]
6: difficult to handle; requiring great tact; "delicate
negotiations with the big powers";"hesitates to be explicit
on so ticklish a matter"; "a touchy subject" [syn:
delicate, ticklish, touchy]
7: of an instrument or device; capable of registering minute
differences or changes precisely; "almost undetectable with
even the most delicate instruments"
-
demarcate
0
v 1: separate clearly, as if by boundaries
2: set, mark, or draw the boundaries of something [syn:
demarcate, delimit, delimitate]
-
deprecate
0
v 1: express strong disapproval of; deplore
2: belittle; "The teacher should not deprecate his student's
efforts" [syn: deprecate, depreciate, vilipend]
-
desiccate
0
adj 1: lacking vitality or spirit; lifeless; "a technically
perfect but arid performance of the sonata"; "a desiccate
romance"; "a prissy and emotionless creature...settles
into a mold of desiccated snobbery"-C.J.Rolo [syn:
arid, desiccate, desiccated]
v 1: preserve by removing all water and liquids from; "carry
dehydrated food on your camping trip" [syn: dehydrate,
desiccate]
2: remove water from; "All this exercise and sweating has
dehydrated me" [syn: dehydrate, desiccate]
3: lose water or moisture; "In the desert, you get dehydrated
very quickly" [syn: exsiccate, dehydrate, dry up,
desiccate] [ant: hydrate]
-
dislocate
0
v 1: move out of position; "dislocate joints"; "the artificial
hip joint luxated and had to be put back surgically" [syn:
dislocate, luxate, splay, slip]
2: put out of its usual place, position, or relationship; "The
colonists displaced the natives"
-
domesticate
0
v 1: adapt (a wild plant or unclaimed land) to the environment;
"domesticate oats"; "tame the soil" [syn: domesticate,
cultivate, naturalize, naturalise, tame]
2: overcome the wildness of; make docile and tractable; "He
tames lions for the circus"; "reclaim falcons" [syn:
domesticate, domesticize, domesticise, reclaim,
tame]
3: make fit for cultivation, domestic life, and service to
humans; "The horse was domesticated a long time ago"; "The
wolf was tamed and evolved into the house dog" [syn:
domesticate, tame]
-
ducat
0
n 1: formerly a gold coin of various European countries
-
duplicate
0
adj 1: identically copied from an original; "a duplicate key"
2: being two identical [syn: duplicate, matching, twin(a),
twinned]
n 1: something additional of the same kind; "he always carried
extras in case of an emergency" [syn: extra, duplicate]
2: a copy that corresponds to an original exactly; "he made a
duplicate for the files" [syn: duplicate, duplication]
v 1: make or do or perform again; "He could never replicate his
brilliant performance of the magic trick" [syn:
duplicate, reduplicate, double, repeat,
replicate]
2: duplicate or match; "The polished surface twinned his face
and chest in reverse" [syn: twin, duplicate, parallel]
3: make a duplicate or duplicates of; "Could you please
duplicate this letter for me?"
4: increase twofold; "The population doubled within 50 years"
[syn: double, duplicate]
-
educate
0
v 1: give an education to; "We must educate our youngsters
better"
2: create by training and teaching; "The old master is training
world-class violinists"; "we develop the leaders for the
future" [syn: train, develop, prepare, educate]
3: teach or refine to be discriminative in taste or judgment;
"Cultivate your musical taste"; "Train your tastebuds"; "She
is well schooled in poetry" [syn: educate, school,
train, cultivate, civilize, civilise]
-
equivocate
0
v 1: be deliberately ambiguous or unclear in order to mislead or
withhold information [syn: beat around the bush,
equivocate, tergiversate, prevaricate, palter]
-
eradicate
0
v 1: kill in large numbers; "the plague wiped out an entire
population" [syn: eliminate, annihilate, extinguish,
eradicate, wipe out, decimate, carry off]
2: destroy completely, as if down to the roots; "the vestiges of
political democracy were soon uprooted" "root out corruption"
[syn: uproot, eradicate, extirpate, root out,
exterminate]
-
etiquette
0
n 1: rules governing socially acceptable behavior
-
exarchate
0
n 1: a diocese of the Eastern Orthodox Church [syn: eparchy,
exarchate]
-
excommunicate
0
v 1: exclude from a church or a religious community; "The gay
priest was excommunicated when he married his partner"
[syn: excommunicate, unchurch, curse] [ant:
communicate]
2: oust or exclude from a group or membership by decree
-
explicate
0
v 1: make plain and comprehensible; "He explained the laws of
physics to his students" [syn: explain, explicate]
2: elaborate, as of theories and hypotheses; "Could you develop
the ideas in your thesis" [syn: explicate, formulate,
develop]
-
exsiccate
0
v 1: lose water or moisture; "In the desert, you get dehydrated
very quickly" [syn: exsiccate, dehydrate, dry up,
desiccate] [ant: hydrate]
-
extricate
0
v 1: release from entanglement of difficulty; "I cannot
extricate myself from this task" [syn: extricate,
untangle, disentangle, disencumber]
-
fabricate
0
v 1: put together out of artificial or natural components or
parts; "the company fabricates plastic chairs"; "They
manufacture small toys"; He manufactured a popular cereal"
[syn: manufacture, fabricate, construct]
2: make up something artificial or untrue [syn: fabricate,
manufacture, cook up, make up, invent]
-
falcate
0
adj 1: curved like a sickle; "a falcate leaf"; "falcate claws";
"the falcate moon" [syn: falcate, falciform, sickle-
shaped]
-
fornicate
0
v 1: have sex without being married
-
gasket
0
n 1: seal consisting of a ring for packing pistons or sealing a
pipe joint
-
hypothecate
0
v 1: pledge without delivery or title of possession
2: to believe especially on uncertain or tentative grounds;
"Scientists supposed that large dinosaurs lived in swamps"
[syn: speculate, theorize, theorise, conjecture,
hypothesize, hypothesise, hypothecate, suppose]
-
imbricate
0
adj 1: used especially of leaves or bracts; overlapping or
layered as scales or shingles [syn: imbricate,
imbricated]
v 1: place so as to overlap; "imbricate the roof tiles"
2: overlap; "The roof tiles imbricate"
-
implicate
0
v 1: bring into intimate and incriminating connection; "He is
implicated in the scheme to defraud the government"
2: impose, involve, or imply as a necessary accompaniment or
result; "What does this move entail?" [syn: entail,
implicate]
-
imprecate
0
v 1: wish harm upon; invoke evil upon; "The bad witch cursed the
child" [syn: curse, beshrew, damn, bedamn,
anathemize, anathemise, imprecate, maledict] [ant:
bless]
2: utter obscenities or profanities; "The drunken men were
cursing loudly in the street" [syn: curse, cuss,
blaspheme, swear, imprecate]
-
inculcate
0
v 1: teach and impress by frequent repetitions or admonitions;
"inculcate values into the young generation" [syn:
inculcate, instill, infuse]
-
indelicate
0
adj 1: in violation of good taste even verging on the indecent;
"an indelicate remark"; "an off-color joke" [syn:
indelicate, off-color, off-colour]
2: lacking propriety and good taste in manners and conduct;
"indecorous behavior" [syn: indecorous, indelicate] [ant:
decorous]
3: verging on the indecent; "an indelicate proposition"
-
indicate
0
v 1: be a signal for or a symptom of; "These symptoms indicate a
serious illness"; "Her behavior points to a severe
neurosis"; "The economic indicators signal that the euro is
undervalued" [syn: bespeak, betoken, indicate,
point, signal]
2: indicate a place, direction, person, or thing; either
spatially or figuratively; "I showed the customer the glove
section"; "He pointed to the empty parking space"; "he
indicated his opponents" [syn: indicate, point,
designate, show]
3: to state or express briefly; "indicated his wishes in a
letter" [ant: contraindicate]
4: give evidence of; "The evidence argues for your claim"; "The
results indicate the need for more work" [syn: argue,
indicate]
5: suggest the necessity of an intervention; in medicine;
"Tetracycline is indicated in such cases" [syn: indicate,
suggest] [ant: contraindicate]
-
intercommunicate
0
v 1: be interconnected, afford passage; "These rooms
intercommunicate"
2: transmit thoughts or feelings; "He communicated his anxieties
to the psychiatrist" [syn: communicate, intercommunicate]
-
intoxicate
0
v 1: fill with high spirits; fill with optimism; "Music can
uplift your spirits" [syn: elate, lift up, uplift,
pick up, intoxicate] [ant: cast down, deject,
demoralise, demoralize, depress, dismay,
dispirit, get down]
2: make drunk (with alcoholic drinks) [syn: intoxicate,
soak, inebriate]
3: have an intoxicating effect on, of a drug
-
intricate
0
adj 1: having many complexly arranged elements; elaborate;
"intricate lacework"
-
locate
0
v 1: discover the location of; determine the place of; find by
searching or examining; "Can you locate your cousins in the
Midwest?"; "My search turned up nothing" [syn: locate,
turn up]
2: determine or indicate the place, site, or limits of, as if by
an instrument or by a survey; "Our sense of sight enables us
to locate objects in space"; "Locate the boundaries of the
property" [syn: situate, locate]
3: assign a location to; "The company located some of their
agents in Los Angeles" [syn: locate, place, site]
4: take up residence and become established; "The immigrants
settled in the Midwest" [syn: settle, locate]
-
locket
0
n 1: a small ornamental case; usually contains a picture or a
lock of hair and is worn on a necklace
-
lubricate
0
v 1: have lubricating properties; "the liquid in this can
lubricates well"
2: apply a lubricant to; "lubricate my car" [syn: lubricate,
lube]
3: make slippery or smooth through the application of a
lubricant; "lubricate the key"
-
mascot
0
n 1: a person or animal that is adopted by a team or other group
as a symbolic figure
-
masticate
0
v 1: grind and knead; "masticate rubber"
2: chew (food); to bite and grind with the teeth; "He jawed his
bubble gum"; "Chew your food and don't swallow it!"; "The
cows were masticating the grass" [syn: chew, masticate,
manducate, jaw]
-
medicate
0
v 1: impregnate with a medicinal substance
2: treat medicinally, treat with medicine [syn: medicate,
medicine]
-
obfuscate
0
v 1: make obscure or unclear [ant: clarify, clear up,
elucidate]
-
packet
0
n 1: a collection of things wrapped or boxed together [syn:
package, bundle, packet, parcel]
2: (computer science) a message or message fragment
3: a small package or bundle
4: a boat for carrying mail [syn: mailboat, mail boat,
packet, packet boat]
-
placate
0
v 1: cause to be more favorably inclined; gain the good will of;
"She managed to mollify the angry customer" [syn: pacify,
lenify, conciliate, assuage, appease, mollify,
placate, gentle, gruntle]
-
plicate
0
v 1: fold into pleats, "Pleat the cloth" [syn: pleat,
plicate]
-
pontificate
0
n 1: the government of the Roman Catholic Church [syn: papacy,
pontificate]
v 1: administer a pontifical office
2: talk in a dogmatic and pompous manner; "The new professor
always pontificates"
-
predicate
0
n 1: (logic) what is predicated of the subject of a proposition;
the second term in a proposition is predicated of the first
term by means of the copula; "`Socrates is a man'
predicates manhood of Socrates"
2: one of the two main constituents of a sentence; the predicate
contains the verb and its complements [syn: predicate,
verb phrase]
v 1: make the (grammatical) predicate in a proposition; "The
predicate `dog' is predicated of the subject `Fido' in the
sentence `Fido is a dog'"
2: affirm or declare as an attribute or quality of; "The speech
predicated the fitness of the candidate to be President"
[syn: predicate, proclaim]
3: involve as a necessary condition of consequence; as in logic;
"solving the problem is predicated on understanding it well"
[syn: connote, predicate]
-
prefabricate
0
v 1: to manufacture sections of (a building), especially in a
factory, so that they can be easily transported to and
rapidly assembled on a building site of buildings [syn:
prefabricate, preassemble]
2: produce synthetically, artificially, or stereotypically and
unoriginally
-
prevaricate
0
v 1: be deliberately ambiguous or unclear in order to mislead or
withhold information [syn: beat around the bush,
equivocate, tergiversate, prevaricate, palter]
-
prognosticate
0
v 1: make a prediction about; tell in advance; "Call the outcome
of an election" [syn: predict, foretell,
prognosticate, call, forebode, anticipate,
promise]
2: indicate by signs; "These signs bode bad news" [syn: bode,
portend, auspicate, prognosticate, omen, presage,
betoken, foreshadow, augur, foretell, prefigure,
forecast, predict]
-
quadruplicate
0
adj 1: having four units or components; "quadruple rhythm has
four beats per measure"; "quadruplex wire" [syn:
quadruple, quadruplicate, quadruplex, fourfold,
four-fold]
n 1: any four copies; any of four things that correspond to one
another exactly; "it was signed in quadruplicate"
v 1: reproduce fourfold; "quadruplicate the bill"
-
reallocate
0
v 1: allocate, distribute, or apportion anew; "Congressional
seats are reapportioned on the basis of census data" [syn:
reapportion, reallocate]
-
reciprocate
0
v 1: act, feel, or give mutually or in return; "We always invite
the neighbors and they never reciprocate!"
2: alternate the direction of motion of; "the engine
reciprocates the propeller"
-
rededicate
0
v 1: dedicate anew; "They were asked to rededicate themselves to
their country"
-
reduplicate
0
v 1: form by reduplication; "The consonant reduplicates after a
short vowel"; "The morpheme can be reduplicated to
emphasize the meaning of the word" [syn: reduplicate,
geminate]
2: make or do or perform again; "He could never replicate his
brilliant performance of the magic trick" [syn: duplicate,
reduplicate, double, repeat, replicate]
-
relocate
0
v 1: become established in a new location; "Our company
relocated to the Midwest"
2: move or establish in a new location; "We had to relocate the
office because the rent was too high"
-
replicate
0
v 1: bend or turn backward [syn: retroflex, replicate]
2: reproduce or make an exact copy of; "replicate the cell";
"copy the genetic information" [syn: replicate, copy]
3: make or do or perform again; "He could never replicate his
brilliant performance of the magic trick" [syn: duplicate,
reduplicate, double, repeat, replicate]
-
rusticate
0
v 1: live in the country and lead a rustic life
2: send to the country; "He was rusticated for his bad behavior"
3: suspend temporarily from college or university, in England
[syn: send down, rusticate]
4: give (stone) a rustic look
5: lend a rustic character to; "rusticate the house in the
country"
-
silicate
0
n 1: a salt or ester derived from silicic acid
-
sophisticate
0
n 1: a worldly-wise person [syn: sophisticate, man of the
world]
v 1: make less natural or innocent; "Their manners had
sophisticated the young girls"
2: practice sophistry; change the meaning of or be vague about
in order to mislead or deceive; "Don't twist my words" [syn:
twist, twist around, pervert, convolute,
sophisticate]
3: alter and make impure, as with the intention to deceive;
"Sophisticate rose water with geraniol" [syn: sophisticate,
doctor, doctor up]
4: make more complex or refined; "a sophisticated design"
-
suffocate
0
v 1: deprive of oxygen and prevent from breathing; "Othello
smothered Desdemona with a pillow"; "The child suffocated
herself with a plastic bag that the parents had left on the
floor" [syn: smother, asphyxiate, suffocate]
2: impair the respiration of or obstruct the air passage of;
"The foul air was slowly suffocating the children" [syn:
suffocate, stifle, asphyxiate, choke]
3: become stultified, suppressed, or stifled; "He is suffocating
--living at home with his aged parents in the small village"
[syn: suffocate, choke]
4: suppress the development, creativity, or imagination of; "His
job suffocated him" [syn: suffocate, choke]
5: be asphyxiated; die from lack of oxygen; "The child
suffocated under the pillow" [syn: suffocate, stifle,
asphyxiate]
6: feel uncomfortable for lack of fresh air; "The room was hot
and stuffy and we were suffocating"
7: struggle for breath; have insufficient oxygen intake; "he
swallowed a fishbone and gagged" [syn: gag, choke,
strangle, suffocate]
-
supplicate
0
v 1: ask humbly (for something); "He supplicated the King for
clemency"
2: make a humble, earnest petition; "supplicate for permission"
3: ask for humbly or earnestly, as in prayer; "supplicate God's
blessing"
-
syndicate
0
n 1: a loose affiliation of gangsters in charge of organized
criminal activities [syn: syndicate, crime syndicate,
mob, family]
2: an association of companies for some definite purpose [syn:
consortium, pool, syndicate]
3: a news agency that sells features or articles or photographs
etc. to newspapers for simultaneous publication
v 1: join together into a syndicate; "The banks syndicated"
2: organize into or form a syndicate
3: sell articles, television programs, or photos to several
publications or independent broadcasting stations
-
trifurcate
0
v 1: divide into three; "The road trifurcates at the bridge"
-
triplicate
0
n 1: one of three copies; any of three things that correspond to
one another exactly
v 1: reproduce threefold; "triplicate the letter for the
committee"
-
truncate
0
adj 1: terminating abruptly by having or as if having an end or
point cut off; "a truncate leaf"; "truncated volcanic
mountains"; "a truncated pyramid" [syn: truncate,
truncated]
v 1: replace a corner by a plane
2: approximate by ignoring all terms beyond a chosen one;
"truncate a series"
3: make shorter as if by cutting off; "truncate a word";
"Erosion has truncated the ridges of the mountains" [syn:
truncate, cut short]
-
tunicate
0
n 1: primitive marine animal having a saclike unsegmented body
and a urochord that is conspicuous in the larva [syn:
tunicate, urochordate, urochord]
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vacate
0
v 1: leave (a job, post, or position) voluntarily; "She vacated
the position when she got pregnant"; "The chairman resigned
when he was found to have misappropriated funds" [syn:
vacate, resign, renounce, give up]
2: leave behind empty; move out of; "You must vacate your office
by tonight" [syn: vacate, empty, abandon]
3: cancel officially; "He revoked the ban on smoking"; "lift an
embargo"; "vacate a death sentence" [syn: revoke, annul,
lift, countermand, reverse, repeal, overturn,
rescind, vacate]
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vindicate
0
v 1: show to be right by providing justification or proof;
"vindicate a claim" [syn: justify, vindicate]
2: maintain, uphold, or defend; "vindicate the rights of the
citizens"
3: clear of accusation, blame, suspicion, or doubt with
supporting proof; "You must vindicate yourself and fight this
libel"
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wainscot
0
n 1: panel forming the lower part of an interior wall when it is
finished differently from the rest of the wall [syn:
wainscot, dado]
2: wooden panels that can be used to line the walls of a room
[syn: wainscot, wainscoting, wainscotting]
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wastebasket
0
n 1: a container with an open top; for discarded paper and other
rubbish [syn: wastepaper basket, waste-paper basket,
wastebasket, waste basket, circular file]
-
workbasket
0
n 1: container for holding implements and materials for work
(especially for sewing) [syn: workbasket, workbox,
workbag]
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sulcate
0
adj 1: having deep narrow furrows or grooves
-
manducate
0
v 1: chew (food); to bite and grind with the teeth; "He jawed
his bubble gum"; "Chew your food and don't swallow it!";
"The cows were masticating the grass" [syn: chew,
masticate, manducate, jaw]
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metricate
0
v 1: convert from a non-metric to the metric system [syn:
metricize, metricise, metrify, metricate]
-
rubricate
0
v 1: place in the church calendar as a red-letter day honoring a
saint; "She was rubricated by the pope"
2: furnish with rubrics or regulate by rubrics; "the manuscript
is not rubricated"
3: decorate (manuscripts) with letters painted red; "In this
beautiful book, all the place names are rubricated" [syn:
miniate, rubricate]
4: sign with a mark instead of a name
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suricate
0
n 1: burrowing diurnal meerkat of southern Africa; often kept as
a pet [syn: suricate, Suricata tetradactyla]
-
urticate
0
v 1: whip with or as with nettles
2: sting with or as with nettles and cause a stinging pain or
sensation [syn: nettle, urticate]
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vesicate
0
v 1: get blistered; "Her feet blistered during the long hike"
[syn: blister, vesicate]
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alcott
0
n 1: United States novelist noted for children's books
(1832-1888) [syn: Alcott, Louisa May Alcott]