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Based on Merriam-Webster's
Collegiate® Dictionary
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emaciate,
emaciated,
emaciating,
emaciates.transitive
and intransitive
verbs
to make or become extremely thin, especially as
a result of starvation; to make thin
emaciation.noun
exclusive.adjective
not accompanied by others; single or sole (your
exclusive function); complete; undivided (gained their exclusive attention);
excluding or tending to exclude (exclusive barriers); not divided or shared
with others (exclusive publishing rights); excluding some or most, as from
membership or participation (an exclusive club); catering to a wealthy
clientele; expensive (exclusive shops)
exclusive,
exclusiveness
or exclusivity.nouns
a news item initially released to only one publication
or broadcaster; an exclusive right or privilege, as to market a product
exclusively.adverb
essential.adjective
constituting or being part of the essence of something;
inherent
basic or indispensable; necessary (essential ingredients);
indispensable
essential, essentiality
or essentialness.nouns
something fundamental; something necessary or
indispensable
essentially.adverb
entrap,
entrapped,
entrapping,
entraps.transitive
verbs
to catch in or as if in a trap; to lure
into danger, difficulty, or a compromising
situation; catch; to lure into performing a previously or otherwise uncontemplated
illegal act
entrapment.noun
eternal.adjective
being without beginning or end; existing outside
of time; infinite;
continuing without interruption; perpetual;
forever true or changeless; seemingly endless; interminable;
ageless; continual
eternal
something timeless, uninterrupted, or endless;
Eternal;
the Creator
eternality or eternalness.noun
eternally.adverb
earnest1.adjective
marked by or showing deep sincerity and desire,
or serious desire (an earnest concern for children who are hurting); of
an important or weighty nature; grave; serious
in earnest.idiom
with a purposeful or sincere intent (settled down
to study in earnest for the examination)
earnestly.adverb
earnestness.noun
earnest2.noun
money paid in advance as part payment to bind
a contract or bargain; a token of something to come; a promise or an assurance;
a
pledge
eponym.noun
a person whose name is or is thought to be the
source of the name of something, such as a city, country, or era, for example,
Romulus is the eponym of Rome
eponymic.adjective
epistle.noun
a letter, especially a formal one; a literary
composition in the form of a letter; one of the letters included as a book
in the New Testament; an excerpt
from one of these letters
euglena.noun
any of various minute single celled freshwater
organisms of the genus Euglena, characterized by the presence of chlorophyll,
a reddish eyespot and a single anterior.flagellum
epilogue also epilog.noun
a short poem or speech spoken directly to the
audience following the conclusion of a play; the performer who delivers
such a short poem or speech; a short addition or concluding section at
the end of a literary work, often dealing with the future of its characters;
in this sense, also called afterword
etiquette.noun
the practices and forms prescribed by social convention
or by authority;
protocol;
decorum
etiquette and the
plural
form proprieties-denote
the forms of conduct prescribed in polite
society
ex post facto.adjective
formulated, enacted,
or operating
retroactively
estimate,
estimated,
estimating,
estimates.transitive
verbs
to calculate approximately (the amount, extent,
magnitude,
position, or value of something); to form an opinion about; evaluate
estimate.noun
the act of evaluating or appraising; tentative
evaluation or rough calculation, as of worth, quantity, or size; a statement
of the approximate cost of work to be done, such as a building project
or car repairs; a judgment based on one's impressions; an opinion
estimative.adjective
estimator.noun
synonyms-appraise,
assess, assay, evaluate, rate
equity.noun,.plural.equities
the state,
quality,
or ideal of being just,
impartial
and fair; the residual value of a business or property beyond any mortgage
thereon and liability therein; the market value of securities less any
debt incurred; common stock and preferred stock
equitable.adjective
marked by or having equity;
just and impartial; fair
equitableness.noun
equitably.adverb
expedient.adjective
appropriate
to a purpose; serving to promote one's interest (was merciful only when
mercy was expedient); based on or marked by a concern for self interest
rather than principle; self interested
expedient.noun
something that is a means to an end; something
contrived
or used to meet an
urgent need;
makeshift
expediently.adverb
exile.noun
enforced removal from one's native country; self
imposed absence from one's country; the condition or a period of living
away from one's native country; one who lives away from one's native country,
whether because of expulsion
or voluntary absence
exile, exiled,
exiling,
exiles.transitive
verbs
to send into exile; banish
exilic or exilian.adjective
engulf, engulfed,
engulfing,
engulfs.transitive
verbs
to swallow up or overwhelm
by or as if by overflowing and enclosing (the spring tide engulfed the
beach houses) engulfment.noun
empower, empowered,
empowering,
empowers.transitive
verbs
to invest
with power
empowerment.noun
enterprising.adjective
showing initiative
and willingness to undertake new projects (the enterprising children opened
a lemonade stand)
enterprisingly.adverb
enterprise.noun
an undertaking; an industrious,
systematic
activity, especially when directed toward profit; a business organization;
willingness to undertake new ventures; initiative
enterpriser.noun
evil, eviler,
evilest.adjectives
thoughts and/or actions contributing no good to
those affected/to be affected by them; morally
bad or wrong; wicked.(an
evil tyrant); bad; causing ruin,
injury, or pain; harmful (the evil effects of a poor diet or government);
characterized
by or indicating misfortune;
ominous.(evil
omens);
blameworthy; infamous.(an
evil reputation); malicious
evil.noun
being morally bad or wrong; wickedness; that which
causes harm, misfortune, or destruction (a leader's power to do both good
and evil to a populace that only wanted the good); something that is a
cause or source of suffering, injury, or destruction (the social evils
of poverty and injustice are exacerbated
by wicked governments)
evilly.adverb
evilness.noun
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