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WON |
Succeeded |
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TRIUMPHED |
Succeeded in tidying up their dump |
|
SCOURGE |
Succeeded with valour to banish a destructive force |
|
DESUDATION |
A sweating; a profuse or morbid sweating, often
succeeded by an eruption of small pimples. |
|
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ROTATE |
To cause to succeed in turn; esp., to cause to succeed
some one, or to be succeeded by some one, in office. |
|
CHILDE |
A cognomen formerly prefixed to his name by the oldest son,
until he succeeded to his ancestral titles, or was knighted; as, Childe
Roland. |
|
MEGRIM |
A sudden vertigo in a horse, succeeded sometimes by
unconsciousness, produced by an excess of blood in the brain; a mild
form of apoplexy. |
|
TRAVERSE |
Something that thwarts, crosses, or obstructs; a cross
accident; as, he would have succeeded, had it not been for unlucky
traverses not under his control. |
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PERSEVERANCE |
Continuance in a state of grace until it is succeeded
by a state of glory; sometimes called final perseverance, and the
perseverance of the saints. See Calvinism. |
|
INTERLUDE |
A form of English drama or play, usually short, merry,
and farcical, which succeeded the Moralities or Moral Plays in the
transition to the romantic or Elizabethan drama. |
|
SUCCEED |
To obtain the object desired; to accomplish what is
attempted or intended; to have a prosperous issue or termination; to be
successful; as, he succeeded in his plans; his plans succeeded. |
|
HYDRA |
...a, in the
Peloponnesus, represented as having many heads, one of which, when cut
off, was immediately succeeded by two others, unless the wound ... |
|
GENERATION |
...t which one rank follows another, or
father is succeeded by child, usually assumed to be one third of a
century; an age. ... |