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CONCEIT |
Vanity |
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VAINGLORY |
Ostentatious vanity |
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VANITIES |
Of Vanity |
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MODESTY |
Freedom from vanity |
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FUTILITY |
Centre of Mafia usefulness? Such vanity! |
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CONCEITEDNESS |
The state of being conceited; conceit; vanity. |
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SELF-GLORIOUS |
Springing from vainglory or vanity; vain; boastful. |
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VAINGLORIOUS |
Feeling or indicating vainglory; elated by vanity;
boastful. |
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VAIN |
Vanity; emptiness; -- now used only in the phrase in vain. |
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INFLATION |
The state of being puffed up, as with pride; conceit;
vanity. |
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FLATULENT |
Pretentious without substance or reality; puffy; empty;
vain; as, a flatulent vanity. |
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LEVITY |
Lack of gravity and earnestness in deportment or character;
trifling gayety; frivolity; sportiveness; vanity. |
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TRIFLE |
To spend in vanity; to fritter away; to waste; as, to
trifle away money. |
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OMNIVOROUS |
All-devouring; eating everything indiscriminately; as,
omnivorous vanity; esp. (Zool.), eating both animal and vegetable food. |
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RETORT |
To return, as an argument, accusation, censure, or
incivility; as, to retort the charge of vanity. |
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INFLATE |
Fig.: To swell; to puff up; to elate; as, to inflate
one with pride or vanity. |
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COQUETRY |
Attempts to attract admiration, notice, or love, for the
mere gratification of vanity; trifling in love. |
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MAYA |
The name for the doctrine of the unreality of matter, called,
in English, idealism; hence, nothingness; vanity; illusion. |
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VAUNT |
A vain display of what one is, or has, or has done;
ostentation from vanity; a boast; a brag. |
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INANITY |
An inane, useless thing or pursuit; a vanity; a silly
object; -- chiefly in pl.; as, the inanities of the world. |
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AIR |
An artificial or affected manner; show of pride or vanity;
haughtiness; as, it is said of a person, he puts on airs. |
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BOAST |
To display in ostentatious language; to speak of with
pride, vanity, or exultation, with a view to self-commendation; to
extol. |
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COQUETTE |
A vain, trifling woman, who endeavors to attract
admiration from a desire to gratify vanity; a flirt; -- formerly
sometimes applied also to men. |
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CORD |
Fig.: Any moral influence by which persons are caught, held,
or drawn, as if by a cord; an enticement; as, the cords of the wicked;
the cords of sin; the cords of vanity. |
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FLATTER |
To treat with praise or blandishments; to gratify or
attempt to gratify the self-love or vanity of, esp. by artful and
interested commendation ... |