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RENTING |
Letting |
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LEASING |
Letting |
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ADMITTANCE |
Letting in |
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DEFLATING |
Letting down |
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LEASES |
Letting contracts |
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LEASE |
Letting contract |
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LET-ALONE |
Letting alone. |
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DRAINING |
Falling; letting fall |
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DROPPING |
Falling; letting fall |
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UNHARNESSING |
Letting off the rein |
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LOOSE |
A letting go; discharge. |
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GEYSERS |
Geezers heard letting off steam? |
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RELEASING |
Letting go and renting again |
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ENTITLING |
Authorising and letting in haphazardly |
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INTROMISSION |
The act of letting go in; admission. |
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DAMPSQUIB |
Anticlimax from letting off fireworks in the rain |
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CONACRE |
A system of letting a portion of a farm for a single crop. |
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VENESECTION |
The act or operation of opening a vein for letting
blood; bloodletting; phlebotomy. |
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TWANG |
To make to sound, as by pulling a tense string and
letting it go suddenly. |
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TABLING |
The letting of one timber into another by alternate scores
or projections, as in shipbuilding. |
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DRIP |
A falling or letting fall in drops; a dripping; that which
drips, or falls in drops. |
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ABROACH |
Broached; in a condition for letting out or yielding
liquor, as a cask which is tapped. |
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DEMISSION |
The act of demitting, or the state of being demitted; a
letting down; a lowering; dejection. |
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EXHAUST |
To empty by drawing or letting out the contents; as, to
exhaust a well, or a treasury. |
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DISCHARGE |
Firing off; explosive removal of a charge; explosion;
letting off; as, a discharge of arrows, of artillery. |