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FLAGGING |
Declining |
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DWINDLING |
Declining |
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DYING |
Declining |
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DECLINAL |
Declining; sloping. |
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SINKING |
Declining vice boss |
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STRIKER |
Employee declining to work |
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EBBING |
Declining renovation Of Big Ben |
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ENCLITICS |
The art of declining and conjugating words. |
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EAVESDROPPING |
Listening in and hearing that Adam’s partner’s declining |
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CADENCE |
The act or state of declining or sinking. |
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ASLOPE |
Slopingly; aslant; declining from an upright
direction; sloping. |
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DECLENSION |
The act or the state of declining; declination;
descent; slope. |
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DECLINATION |
The act or state of declining or refusing; withdrawal;
refusal; averseness. |
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DECLINATURE |
The act of declining or refusing; as, the declinature
of an office. |
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EVENING |
The latter portion, as of life; the declining period, as
of strength or glory. |
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NONCONFORMING |
Not conforming; declining conformity; especially,
not conforming to the established church of a country. |
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DECLINE |
To run through from first to last; to repeat like a
schoolboy declining a noun. |
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RETROGRESSIVE |
Tending to retrograde; going or moving backward;
declining from a better to a worse state. |
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RETROGRADE |
Declining from a better to a worse state; as, a
retrograde people; retrograde ideas, morals, etc. |
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PURPURE |
Purple, -- represented in engraving by diagonal lines
declining from the right top to the left base of the escutcheon (or
from sinister chief to dexter base). |
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PROP |
To support, or prevent from falling, by placing something
under or against; as, to prop up a fence or an old building; (Fig.) to
sustain; to maintain; as, to prop a declining state. |
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PIETIST |
One of a class of religious reformers in Germany in the
17th century who sought to revive declining piety in the Protestant
churches; -- often ... |