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APPEARING |
Seeming |
|
SEMBLANT |
Seeming, rather than real; apparent. |
|
SEMBLANCE |
Seeming; appearance; show; figure; form. |
|
SUBSTANTIAL |
Not seeming or imaginary; not illusive; real; solid;
true; veritable. |
|
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QUESTIONABLE |
Admitting of being questioned; inviting, or seeming
to invite, inquiry. |
|
SPEAKING |
Seeming to be capable of speech; hence, lifelike; as, a
speaking likeness. |
|
LANCINATING |
Piercing; seeming to pierce or stab; as, lancinating
pains (i.e., severe, darting pains). |
|
DRAGON |
A luminous exhalation from marshy grounds, seeming to move
through the air as a winged serpent. |
|
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SEEMING |
Having a semblance, whether with or without reality;
apparent; specious; befitting; as, seeming friendship; seeming truth. |
|
PREVARICATION |
A false or deceitful seeming to undertake a thing
for the purpose of defeating or destroying it. |
|
FETTERED |
Seeming as if fettered, as the feet of certain animals
which bend backward, and appear unfit for walking. |
|
PLUNGE |
To bet heavily and with seeming recklessness on a race,
or other contest; in an extended sense, to risk large sums in hazardous
speculations. |
|
APPARENT |
Appearing to the eye or mind (distinguished from, but not
necessarily opposed to, true or real); seeming; as the apparent motion
or diameter of the sun. |
|
DISSEMBLE |
To hide under a false semblance or seeming; to feign
(something) not to be what it really is; to put an untrue appearance
upon; to disguise; to mask. |
|
BRACKET |
An architectural member, plain or ornamental, projecting
from a wall or pier, to support weight falling outside of the same;
also, a decorative feature seeming to discharge such an office. |
|
FRONT |
...as
expressive of character or temper, and especially, of boldness of
disposition, sometimes of impudence; seeming; as, a bold front; a
harden... |
|
HYPOCRITE |
...e
purpose of winning approbation of favor, puts on a fair outside
seeming; one who feigns to be other and better than he is; a false
pretende... |
|
INTRAPETIOLAR |
...d
of the pair of stipules at the base of a petiole when united by those
margins next the petiole, thus seeming to form a single stipule between
... |
|
QUASI |
...ment; quasi historical, apparently
historical, seeming to be historical. ... |