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INTEGRATED |
Incorporated |
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ASSIMILATED |
Incorporated |
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ANNEXED |
Incorporated (territory) |
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CORPORATE |
To become incorporated. |
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ZINC |
Zambian leader briefly incorporated metal |
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INTERMINGLE |
To be mixed or incorporated. |
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CONCORPORATE |
United in one body; incorporated. |
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INCORPORATION |
A body incorporated; a corporation. |
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BURROW |
An incorporated town. See 1st Borough. |
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DEACON |
The chairman of an incorporated company. |
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INCAS |
Ancient Peruvians incorporated the first Anglo Saxons |
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ORATED |
Addressed the crowd about having incorporated fifty per cent |
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EVIDENT |
It’s obvious one of Freud’s concepts is incorporated in event |
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BURGH |
A borough or incorporated town, especially, one in Scotland.
See Borough. |
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MUNICIPALITY |
A municipal district; a borough, city, or
incorporated town or village. |
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ASSIMILABLE |
That may be assimilated; that may be likened, or
appropriated and incorporated. |
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INCORPORATE |
Not incorporated; not existing as a corporation; as,
an incorporate banking association. |
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INCORPORATOR |
One of a number of persons who gets a company
incorporated; one of the original members of a corporation. |
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ELECTUARY |
A medicine composed of powders, or other ingredients,
incorporated with some convserve, honey, or sirup; a confection. See
the note under Confection. |
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INHERE |
To be inherent; to stick (in); to be fixed or
permanently incorporated with something; to cleave (to); to belong, as
attributes or qualities. |
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MILL-CAKE |
The incorporated materials for gunpowder, in the form of
a dense mass or cake, ready to be subjected to the process of
granulation. |
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ASSIMILATE |
To be converted into the substance of the
assimilating body; to become incorporated; as, some kinds of food
assimilate more readily than others. |
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COLLEGE |
A society of scholars or friends of learning, incorporated
for study or instruction, esp. in the higher branches of knowledge; as,
the colleges... |
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TOWN |
Any collection of houses larger than a village, and
not incorporated as a city; also, loosely, any large, closely populated
place, whether inco... |
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CARYOPSIS |
...
membranous pericarp, adhering closely to the seed, so that fruit and
seed are incorporated in one body, forming a single grain, as of wheat,
... |