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Based on Merriam-Webster's
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license.noun
a license is a waver
of prosecution, an official or legal permission to do or own a specified
thing, as though you were a slave and required consent
and payment before you could act; permission with a fee that usually does
no more for a person that if he didn't have it; limited 'freedom' granted
by some authority for a charge; authorize; also means deviation
from normal rules, practices, or methods in order to achieve a certain
end or effect (poetic license)
licensable.adjective
licenser.or.licensor.noun
license,
licensed,
licensing,
licenses.transitive
verbs
to give or yield permission
to or for usually for a fee; to grant a license to or for with a charge
of money; authorize
lateral.adjective
of, relating to, or situated
at or on the side
lateral.noun
a lateral part or projection
Football.-.lateral
pass
lateral,
lateraled,
lateraling,
laterals.verbs
intransitive
verb use.to
execute a lateral pass
transitive verb use.to
pass (the ball) sideways or backward
laterally.adverb
likelihood.noun
the state
of being probable; probability;
something probable
leaflet.noun
one of the segments
of a compound leaf; a small leaf
or leaflike part; a printed, usually folded handbill
or flier intended for free distribution
leaflet, leafleted,
leafleting,
leaflets.verbs
intransitive verb use.to
hand out leaflets
transitive verb use.to
hand out leaflets to or in (leafleted the morning commuters; leaflet a
neighborhood)
lop, lopped,
lopping,
lops.transitive
verbs
to cut off a part from; trim (lopped her long
curls); to cut off from a tree or shrub (lopped dead branches); to eliminate
or excise as superfluous:
lopped him from the payroll
lopper.noun
lop, lopped,
lopping,
lops.intransitive
& transitive verbs
to hang or let hang loosely; droop
levy, levied,
levying,
levies.verbs
transitive verb use.to
impose
or collect a tax, for example
intransitive verb use.to
confiscate
property
levy.noun,.plural.levies
the act or process of levying money, property
levier.noun
liberty.noun,.plural.liberties
freedom from unjust
or undue governmental control; the
right and power to be (a human being) and act in ways in harmony
with underlying principles causing
no harm in any manner; to believe,
or express oneself as a free mind in formation and maturation.-.a
continually growing and changing human being; the condition of being physically
and legally free from confinement,
servitude,
or forced labor; freedom; the condition
of being free from restriction or control; a right and power to engage
in actions without control or interference
as long as they do no harm; free
liberate,
liberated,
liberating,
liberates.transitive
verbs
to set free, as from oppression
liberatingly.adverb
liberator.noun
lax,
laxer,
laxest.adjectives
lacking in rigor,
strictness, or firmness; negligent;
not taut, firm, or compact; slack;
loose
laxation,
laxness.nouns
laxly.adverb
laxity.noun
the state
or quality of being lax
loll,
lolled,
lolling,
lolls.verbs
intransitive verb use.to
move, stand, or recline in an indolent
or relaxed manner; to hang or droop laxly.(a
pennant lolling from the mast)
transitive verb use.to
permit to hang or droop laxly (lolled his head on the armrest)
loll.noun
an act or attitude of lolling
loller.noun
lollingly.adverb
lollygag, lollygagged,
lollygagging,
lollygags.intransitive
verbs
to waste time by puttering
aimlessly; dawdle
lounge,
lounged,
lounging,
lounges.verbs
intransitive verb use.to
move or act in a lazy, relaxed way; loll.(lounging
on the sofa; lounged around in pajamas); to pass time idly (lounged in
a warm climate for awile)
transitive verb use.to
pass (time) in a lazy, relaxed, or idle way (lounged the day away)
lounge.noun
a public waiting room, as
in a hotel or an air terminal, often having smoking or lavatory facilities;
an establishment or a room in an establishment, as in a hotel or restaurant,
where cocktails are served; a living room; a lobby; a long couch, especially
one having no back and a headrest at one end
lounger.noun
legend.noun
an unverified
story handed down from earlier times, especially one popularly believed
to be historical, like the flood; a body or collection of such stories;
an inscription or a title on
an object, such as a coin; an explanatory table or list of the symbols
appearing on a map or
chart
Latin.adjective
of or relating to the Roman
Catholic Church, ancient Rome,
its people, or its culture; of or relating to Latium, an ancient country
of west-central Italy, its people, or its culture; of or relating to the
languages that developed from Latin, such as Italian, French, Spanish,
and Portuguese, or to the peoples that speak them; of or relating to the
peoples, countries, or cultures of Latin America; accounts of the Latin
period have come down overlaid with such a mass of myth and legend that
few can be verified...leaders would call the common people to war along
with their armies, and leaders would tell people they were instituted by
divine.fiat,
implying.populace.subordination...they
also used proscription as
a means of people control ...comprised
with Microsoft® Encarta® Encyclopedia 99. © 1993-1998 Microsoft
Corporation. All rights reserved..It
appears the so-called lost 100 years after Emmanuel
was crucifed and rose again were purposely hidden as the Catholic Church
attempted a takeover of peoples' faith in order to control them for their
own purposes beyond religion (religion hid the real purposes of people
and world control of finances), by amalgamatingvancient
paganism
into what were then regarded as Christian holy days - from which we get
holidays, days off regular routine in order to become whole
again after one was getting too far away from spirituality
Latin.noun
the Indo-European
language of the ancient Latins and Romans; Latin, the most important member
of the Italic branch of Indo-European, is divided into several historical
periods and social dialects and
was the cultural language of western Europe until the end of the 17th century;
a member of a Latin people, especially a native or inhabitant of Latin
America; a native or resident of ancient Latium; the limiting language
of Latin restricted progress, as since the 17th century the world has exploded
technologically and in informational ways; the Latin language and literature
was especially extant from the end
of the third century B.C. to the end of the second century A.D.
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