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Based on Merriam-Webster's Collegiate® Dictionary
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versed.adjective
acquainted through study or experience; knowledgeable or skilled (he is well versed in classical languages)
verse.noun
one line of poetry; a single metrical line in a poetic composition; a division of a metrical composition, such as a stanza of a poem or hymn; metrical or rhymed composition as distinct from prose; poetry
verse, versed, versing, verses.transitive verbs
to familiarize by study or experience (getting well verses in plumbing)

vista.noun
an awareness of a range of time, events, or subjects; a broad mental view; a distant view or prospect, especially one seen through an opening

villain.noun
a wicked or evil person; a scoundrel; a dramatic or fictional.character who is typically.at odds with the hero.

villain.noun
one of a class of feudal.serfs who held the legal status of freemen (not 'free men' - with the space in it means a true free man under God) in their dealings with all people except their lord (a man of high rank in a feudal society or in one that retains feudal forms and institutions, especially a king, a territorial magnate; the proprietor of a manor

value.noun
an amount, as of goods, services, or money, considered to be a fair and suitable equivalent for something else; a fair price or return; monetary or material worth (the fluctuating value of gold and silver); worth in usefulness or importance to the possessor; utility or merit (the value of an education); to assign a value to (a unit of currency, for example)
valuer.noun
valuable.adjective
having considerable monetary or material value for use or exchange (a valuable diamond); of great importance, use, or service (valuable information; valuable advice).
valuable(s)
a personal possession, such as a piece of jewelry, having a relatively high monetary value
valuableness.noun
valuably.adverb

Vedanta.noun.Hinduism
the system of philosophy that further develops the implications in the Upanishads that all reality is a single principle the ancients called Brahman.(the unified field) and teaches that mankind's goal is to transcend the limitations of his self identity (ego) and realize one's unity in consciousness with the intelligent energy where a change in consciousness to higher frequencies produces good for all
Vedantic.adjective
Vedantism, Vedantist.nouns

vein.noun
a pervading.character or quality; a streak ("All through the interminable.narrative there ran a vein of impressive earnestness" ...Mark Twain); a particular turn of mind (spoke later in a more serious vein); any of a branching system of membranous tubes that carry blood to the heart; a blood vessel; one of the vascular bundles or ribs that form the branching framework of conducting and supporting tissues in a leaf or other expanded plant organ; one of the horny ribs that stiffen and support the wing of an insect; a regularly shaped and lengthy occurrence of an ore; a lode; a long, wavy strip of a different shade or color, as in wood or marble, or as mold in cheese; a fissure, crack, or cleft
vein, veined, veining, veins.transitive verbs
to supply or fill with veins; to mark or decorate with veins
veinal.adjective

vulgate.noun
the common speech of a people; the vernacular; a widely accepted text or version of a work; the Latin edition or translation of the Bible made by Saint Jerome at the end of the fourth century A.D., now used in a revised form as the Roman Catholic authorized version
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