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EVERYTHING |
All things |
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OMNIPAROUS |
Producing all things; omniparient. |
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OMNIPATIENT |
Capable of enduring all things. |
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OMNIPREVALENT |
Prevalent everywhere or in all things. |
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EARTHLY |
Of all things on earth; possible; conceivable. |
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OMNIPARIENT |
Producing or bringing forth all things; all-producing. |
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ORIGAMI |
It turns paper into all sorts of things |
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OMNISPECTIVE |
Beholding everything; capable of seeing all things;
all-seeing. |
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FATALIST |
One who maintains that all things happen by inevitable
necessity. |
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CASUALISM |
The doctrine that all things exist or are controlled by
chance. |
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OMNISCIENT |
Having universal knowledge; knowing all things;
infinitely knowing or wise; as, the omniscient God. |
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PREPARE |
To make all things ready; to put things in order; as,
to prepare for a hostile invasion. |
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FATALISM |
The doctrine that all things are subject to fate, or that
they take place by inevitable necessity. |
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BLUR |
A dim, confused appearance; indistinctness of vision; as, to
see things with a blur; it was all blur. |
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DANITE |
One of a secret association of Mormons, bound by an oath to
obey the heads of the church in all things. |
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TRUTH |
That which is true or certain concerning any matter or
subject, or generally on all subjects; real state of things; fact;
verity; reality. |
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SANKHYA |
A Hindoo system of philosophy which refers all things to
soul and a rootless germ called prakriti, consisting of three elements,
goodness, passion, and darkness. |
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EMBOITEMENT |
The hypothesis that all living things proceed from
preexisting germs, and that these encase the germs of all future living
things, inclosed one within another. |
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CHRISTOCENTRIC |
Making Christ the center, about whom all things are
grouped, as in religion or history; tending toward Christ, as the
central object of thought or emotion. |
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FATE |
A fixed decree by which the order of things is prescribed;
the immutable law of the universe; inevitable necessity; the force by
which all existence is determined and conditioned. |
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PERMUTATION |
The arrangement of any determinate number of things,
as units, objects, letters, etc., in all possible orders, one after the
other; -- called also alternation. Cf. Combination, n., 4. |
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UNIVERSE |
All created things viewed as constituting one system or
whole; the whole body of things, or of phenomena; the / / of the
Greeks, the mundus of the Latins; the world; creation. |
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CASE |
That which befalls, comes, or happens; an event; an instance;
a circumstance, or all the circumstances; condition; state of things;
affair; as,... |
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SWEEPSTAKES |
The whole money or other things staked at a
horse race, a given sum being put up for each horse, all of which goes
to the winner, or is divided among several, as may be previously
agreed. |
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STOIC |
...t complaint to unavoidable necessity, by
which all things are governed. ... |