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phan⋅tas⋅ma⋅go⋅ri⋅a [fan-taz-muh-gawr-ee-uh]
–noun 1. a shifting series of phantasms, illusions, or deceptive appearances, as in a dream or as created by the imagination. 2. a changing scene made up of many elements. 3. an optical illusion produced by a magic lantern or the like in which figures increase or diminish in size, pass into each other, dissolve, etc. |
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con⋅tu⋅ma⋅cious [kon-too-mey-shuhs]
–adjective stubbornly perverse or rebellious; willfully and obstinately disobedient. |
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con⋅tu⋅me⋅ly [kon-too-muh-lee]
–noun, plural -lies. 1. insulting display of contempt in words or actions; contemptuous or humiliating treatment. 2. a humiliating insult. |
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ob⋅strep⋅er⋅ous [uhb-strep-er-uhs]
–adjective 1. resisting control or restraint in a difficult manner; unruly. 2. noisy, clamorous, or boisterous: obstreperous children. |
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prig [prig]
–noun a person who displays or demands of others pointlessly precise conformity, fussiness about trivialities, or exaggerated propriety, esp. in a self-righteous or irritating manner. |
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pop⋅in⋅jay [pop-in-jey]
–noun 1. a person given to vain, pretentious displays and empty chatter; coxcomb; fop. 2. British Dialect. a woodpecker, esp. the green woodpecker. 3. Archaic. the figure of a parrot usually fixed on a pole and used as a target in archery and gun shooting. 4. Archaic. a parrot. |
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pith [pith]
–noun 1. Botany. the soft, spongy central cylinder of parenchymatous tissue in the stems of dicotyledonous plants. 2. Zoology. the soft inner part of a feather, a hair, etc. 3. the important or essential part; essence; core; heart: the pith of the matter. 4. significant weight; substance; solidity: an argument without pith. 5. Archaic. spinal cord or bone marrow. 6. Archaic. strength, force, or vigor; mettle: men of pith. |
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com⋅pen⋅di⋅ous [kuhm-pen-dee-uhs]
–adjective of or like a compendium; containing the substance of a subject, often an exclusive subject, in a brief form; concise: a compendious history of the world. |
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o⋅ro⋅tund [awr-uh-tuhnd]
–adjective 1. (of the voice or speech) characterized by strength, fullness, richness, and clearness. 2. (of a style of speaking) pompous or bombastic. |
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fus⋅tian [fuhs-chuhn]
–noun 1. a stout fabric of cotton and flax. 2. a fabric of stout twilled cotton or of cotton and low-quality wool, with a short nap or pile. 3. inflated or turgid language in writing or speaking: Fustian can't disguise the author's meager plot.
–adjective 4. made of fustian: a fustian coat; fustian bed linen. 5. pompous or bombastic, as language: fustian melodrama. 6. worthless; cheap: fustian knaves and dupes. |
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