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UNPAID |
Left-owing |
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DUE |
Owing |
|
INTHEHOLE |
Owing money |
|
INTHERED |
Owing money |
|
|
INHOCK |
Owing money |
|
INDEBT |
Owing money |
|
DEBTS |
Amounts owing |
|
UNDUE |
United Nations owing what’s excessive |
|
|
DUES |
Payments owing for outside duties |
|
DUEL |
Owing Elle fight of honour |
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DEBT |
Even added bets to money owing |
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DEBITED |
Bit in the title document showed amount owing |
|
SUDOKU |
Logic puzzle owing its name to 'single digit' in Japanese |
|
GROGGY |
Moving in a hobbling manner, owing to ten der feet; -- said
of a horse. |
|
ATTENDANT |
Depending on, or owing duty or service to; as, the
widow attendant to the heir. |
|
CACOPHONY |
An uncouth or disagreable sound of words, owing to the
concurrence of harsh letters or syllables. |
|
GOSSAN |
Decomposed rock, usually reddish or ferruginous (owing to
oxidized pyrites), forming the upper part of a metallic vein. |
|
BREVIPENNATE |
Short-winged; -- applied to birds which can not fly,
owing to their short wings, as the ostrich, cassowary, and emu. |
|
ANNAT |
A half years's stipend, over and above what is owing for the
incumbency, due to a minister's heirs after his decease. |
|
SYNCLINORIUM |
A mountain range owing its origin to the progress of
a geosynclinal, and ending in a catastrophe of displacement and
upturning. |
|
SUBJECT |
Placed under the power of another; specifically
(International Law), owing allegiance to a particular sovereign or
state; as, Jamaica is subject to Great Britain. |
|
BITE |
A blank on the edge or corner of a page, owing to a portion
of the frisket, or something else, intervening between the type and
paper. |
|
OWING |
Had or experienced as a consequence, result, issue,
etc.; ascribable; -- with to; as, misfortunes are often owing to vices;
his failure was owing to speculations. |
|
SHADE |
Comparative obscurity owing to interception or interruption
of the rays of light; partial darkness caused by the intervention of
something betw... |
|
FAINTING |
Syncope, or loss of consciousness owing to a sudden
arrest of the blood supply to the brain, the face becoming pallid, the
respiration feeble, and the heat's beat weak. |