v. deface (a) to dig out of the earth (what has been buried) (b) to pervade (c) to turn away or aside (d) to vandalize
v. amalgamate (a) to recover; to regain; to repossess (b) to turn aside from the main subject and for a time dwell on some incidental matter (c) to mix or blend together in a homogeneous body (d) to promote or advertise in an understated manner
v. aggress (a) to arouse, as emotion, interest or the like (b) to exceed in influence or power (c) to make smaller using pressure; condense (d) to make the first attack
v. telescope (a) to drive together so that one slides into the another like the sections of a spy-glass (b) to bring or hold under any overmastering influence (c) to surpass in importance or excellence (d) to expel
v. disinfect (a) to render flustered or agitated (b) to overstate (c) to remove or destroy the poison of infectious or contagious diseases (d) to give the authority of law to |
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v. vacillate (a) to interweave (b) to put in order after disarrangement (c) to waver (d) to regard with blame
v. upbraid (a) to belong, as by right, fitness, association, classification, possession or natural relation (b) to reproach as deserving blame (c) to disclaim responsibility for (d) to examine minutely or critically
v. precipitate (a) to render ludicrous by imitating the language of (b) to force forward prematurely (c) to encircle (d) to wet or moisten
v. distill (a) to free from sin or its penalties (b) to expose to peril (c) to return to a former place or condition (d) to extract or produce by vaporization and condensation
v. repeal (a) to cover or pave, as a path or roadway, with small broken stone (b) to abridge; to shorten (c) to render of no further effect (d) to warn of a fault |