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FLED |
Escaped |
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ELUDED |
Escaped adroitly |
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EVADED |
Escaped or avoided |
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LEAKED |
Escaped and breached security |
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SEEPAGE |
Amount of escaped fluid |
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ATLARGE |
Escaped (of a criminal) |
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UNSCAPABLE |
Not be escaped; inevitable. |
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AT LARGE |
Having escaped, thanks backward jumbo |
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RATTLED |
Rat with hollowed tail escaped, shaken |
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DIN |
Racket when Bing’s escaped from bindings |
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CHEMICAL |
Mr Guevara, Michael ... he escaped compound |
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CONES |
Deacon escaped, taking some ice cream cornets |
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STEP |
Chickens have escaped – Stephens has rung |
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PYRENEES |
In jalopy, Rene escaped the European chain |
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AVOIDABLE |
Capable of being avoided, shunned, or escaped. |
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ABSCONDED |
Escaped imprisonment codes ... band on the run |
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RAFFLED |
Disposed of in lottery when British flyers escaped |
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GOT AWAY WITH IT |
Had a skill with computer science so escaped unpunished |
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GET AWAY WITH IT |
Had a skill with computer science so escaped unpunished |
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HOT-AIR BALLOON |
Two families escaped East Germany in 1979 using what homemade device? |
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SCAPEGALLOWS |
One who has narrowly escaped the gallows for his
crimes. |
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ESCAPE |
To avoid the notice of; to pass unobserved by; to evade;
as, the fact escaped our attention. |
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APPREHENSION |
The act of seizing or taking by legal process;
arrest; as, the felon, after his apprehension, escaped. |
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REGAIN |
To gain anew; to get again; to recover, as what has
escaped or been lost; to reach again. |
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WILDERING |
A plant growing in a state of nature; especially, one
which has run wild, or escaped from cultivation. |