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The commencment of two or more stressed syllables of a word group either with the same consonant sound or group. |
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A passing or casual reference; an incidental mention of something. |
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A person who is apposed to, struggles against, or competes with another. |
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The gaseous evelope surrounding the Earth; the air. |
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Any light, simple song, especally one of sentimental or romantic character, having two or more stanzes all sung to the same melody. |
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Unrymed verse, especally the unrymed iambic pentameter most frequently used in Eniglish drama. |
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The highest or most intense point in the development or resolution of something. |
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To come into a collision or disaggreement. |
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A pair of successive lines of a verse. |
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The final resolution of the intricies of a plot, as of a drama or novel. |
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A verietly of a language that is distinguished from other varieties of the same language by features. |
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Conversation between two or more persons. |
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In literature or drama, a character who undergoes a permanent change in outlook or character during their story. |
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a large-scale public exhibition or show manfactured products. |
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A short tale to teach a moral lesson. |
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Easily recoginezd character type in fictionwho might not be fully delineated but is useful carrying out some narrative purposes. |
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The terminal part of the let, below the ankle joint, on whichthe body stands or moves. |
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To show or indicate beforehand; prefigure. |
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Verses that does not flow a mixed material pattern. |
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Class or category of artistic endeavor having a particular form, content, technigue, or the like. |
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A man distinguished curage or ability, admired for his brave deeds and noble qualities. |
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Obvious and intentional exaggeration. |
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Any various devices furinishing artifical light, as by electicty or gas. |
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The use of words to conveay a meaning |
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A short poem of songlike quality. |
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A figure of speech in which a term or phrase is applied to something to which it is not literally applicable in order to suggest a resemblance. |
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The fundamental unit of length in the Metric system. |
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A line of verse consisting of five materical feet. |
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The arttribution of the personal nature of a personal character. |
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A secret plan or scheme to accomplish, some purpose. |
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A specified or stated manner of consideration or appeaisal. |
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Identity in sound of some part. |
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The patterns of rhymes used in a poem. |
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Movement or procudure with uniform or patterned recurrence of a beat. |
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A character in Fiction who is explained Fully by the Author. |
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The act of a person or thing that sets. |
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A literary character who remains basically unchanged troughout a work. |
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Cheerful readiness, promptness or willingness. |
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An active hostility opposition, as between unfriendly or conflicting groups. |
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A preceding Circumstance, event, object, style, etc. |
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A personpowered to decide matters at issue. |
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The original pattern or model form which all things of the same kind are copied or on wich they are based. |
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Harsh discordance of sound; dissonance. |
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To surrander unconditionally or on stioulated terms. |
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Having or claiming to have the power of seeing objects or actions beyond the rage of natural vision. |
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A flowing together of two or more streams. |
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Willingness to believe or trust to readily. |
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Inharmonious or harsh sound. |
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Allowing the possibility of several different meanings. |
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The derviation of a word. |
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To clear form or change of guilt or fault. |
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To amend by removing words. |
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Marked by or attached with ignominy. |
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Embodied in flesh; given body. |
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Orginiating in a characterstic of a particular region or country. |
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A person who takes part in a conversation or dialogue. |
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Refusing to agree or compromise. |
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Probhiting violation; secure from destruction. |
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To lesson in force or intensity, as wrath, greif. |
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Unmoved by persuasion, pity, or tender feeling. |
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Characterized by or showing servile complaisance or deferance. |
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A person who dilivers an oration; a public speaker. |
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Deliberately faithless; treherous; deceitful. |
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Having an apperance of truth or reason. |
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To prevent the presence, existance, oroccurence of. |
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Natural or habitual inclination or tendency. |
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Rightness of principle or conduct. |
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A feeling or attitude of deep respect tinged with awe. |
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To bring under compplete control ro subjection. |
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Being more than is sufficient or required. |
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To violate a law, command, moral code. |
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Habitual observance of truth in speech or ststement; trouthfulness. |
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The commencment of two or more stressed syllables of a word group either with the same consonant sound or group. |
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The commencment of two or more stressed syllables of a word group either with the same consonant sound or group. |
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