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Interlinked
Dictionary© based on
Merriam-Webster's Collegiate®
Dictionary (m-w.com)
and Star Dictionary
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convalesce,
convalesced,
convalescing,
convalesces.intransitive
verbs
to return to health and
strength after illness; recuperate;
from Latin 'convalescere' meaning
'to grow strong'
convalescence.noun
a rest period geared to
a return to health and strength after illness
convalescent.adjective
convalescent.noun,.plural.convalescents
Carmen Kissel-Verrier, Bonneville,
Alberta, Canada
successfully took
her rights back regarding the covid scam; wrote a
book to help young wayward people; a quote of hers:."I've
never found much use for shame or regret. Prickly and paralyzing, you'd
do well to ditch them both forever."
comrade.noun,.plural.comrades
a man, woman or child who
shares interests or activities with a friend
or companion; the word 'comrade'
in the recent past had also referred to one having joined and continues
to belong to a cruel communist
group who oppose any and all things of the real, kind, compassionate
and only true God of all good.creation;
the word 'comrade' is a common greeting of those sucked into being a tool
for lustful abuses and other purposes
done, in the name of, meaning, under the lie of, 'we're making a better
world'; a satanically evil
Communist Party, such as the Chinese Communist Party
has comrades as members; from the French 'camarade' from Old
French meaning 'roommate' and from Old
Spanish 'camarada' meaning 'barracks company' and 'roommate' and from
'camara' meaning 'room' which is from Late
Latin 'camera'
comradeship.noun,.plural.comradeships
comrades in the same ship
cancer.noun,.plural.cancers
a
disease in which cells in a
body increase rapidly in a seemingly
uncontrolled way, believed to be the human body's attempting
to eradicate poisoned, weakened,
dying and dead cells through peeing, pooping, sweating and breathing, the
normal way of eliminating
poisons, but if there are too many
poisons to quickly rid the body of, then the body, in order to keep them
from the blood stream, which is the body's stream of life (Leviticus
17:11,14), begins to store them in agglomerations;
if the poisoning continues, this agglomeration called a tumor
continues to enlarge; key is to remove yourself from whatever toxin
and/or toxins are poisoning
the body and eat only organic and always pray over your food, giving
thanks and also speaking to the food that it heal, energize, strengthen
and sustain your body
cancerous.adjective
catatonia.noun,.plural.catatonias
if you describe someone
as being in a catatonic state, you mean that they are not moving or responding
at all, such as no talking, usually as a result of chemical or electromagnetically
caused illness, shock or some kind of poisoning from drugs; an abnormal
condition variously characterized by stupor, stereotypy, mania and either
rigidity or extreme flexibility of the limbs. It is most often associated
with schizophrenia; from German 'katatonie' which is from Greek 'katatonos'
and 'katateinein' meaning 'stretching tight'
catatonic.adjective.&.noun.plural.catatonics
crocodile tears.plural
noun
an insincere
display of grief; false.tears
chicken shit.noun,.plural.chicken
shits
cowardly;
afraid
cinch.noun,.plural.cinches
a girth
for a pack or saddle; something
easy to accomplish; a breeze;
a sure thing (it was a cinch to qualify for the horse race on such a great
horse); a certainty
cinch,
cinched,
cinching,
cinches.verbs
transitive
verb use.to
put a saddle girth on; to make certain of (the horse will cinch the victory)
intransitive verb use.to
tighten a saddle girth; the word cinch is often used with up (cinched up
the trailer for the trip; to cinch up your belt to hold your pants up)
chum.noun,.plural.chums
a close intimate.friend
or companion
chum,
chummed,
chumming,
chums.intransitive
verbs
to be an intimate friend;
to display good-natured friendliness
(she was always helpful and most friendly to all she knew; he chummed around
with the other teammates)
chum.noun,.plural.chums
bait
usually consisting of oily fish ground up and scattered on the water
chum,
chummed,
chumming,
chums.verbs
intransitive verb use.to
fish with such bait
transitive verb use.to
lure
fish with such bait
chum.noun,.plural.chums
chum salmon
cupel.noun,.plural.cupels
a cupel is a shallow, porous
container in which gold or silver can be refined or assayed by melting
with a blast of hot air which oxidizes lead or other base metals; a porous
cup, often made of bone ash, used in assaying
to separate precious metals
from base elements such as lead; the bottom or receptacle in a silver-refining
furnace
cupel,
cupeled
or cupelled,
cupeling
or cupelling,
cupels.transitive
verbs
to assay or separate from
base metals in a cupel
cupeler
or cupeller.noun,.plural.cupelers
or cupellers
convoy.noun,.plural.convoys
the act of accompanying
or escorting, such
as for protective purposes; an accompanying and protecting force, as
of ships or troops; a group,
as of ships or motor vehicles, traveling together with a protective escort
or for safety or convenience
convoy,
convoyed,
convoying,
convoys.transitive
verbs
to accompany, especially
for protection; escort (warships convoying merchant vessels across the
Atlantic Ocean was common to see during World War II); from Middle
English 'convoyen' meaning 'to escort', from Old
French 'convoier' variant of
word 'conveier'; compare 'convey'
curtain.noun,.plural.curtains
material that hangs in a
window or other opening as a decoration, shade
or screen; something
that functions as or resembles a screen, cover or barrier (the curtain
of mist before the mountain); the
movable screen or drape in a theater
or hall that separates the stage from the auditorium or that serves as
a backdrop; the rising or opening of a theater curtain at the beginning
of a performance or an act (curtain time); the fall or closing of a theater
curtain at the end of a performance or an act; the end
curtain,
curtained,
curtaining,
curtains.transitive
verbs
to provide something with
or as if with a curtain; to shut off something with or as if with a curtain
catalog
or catalogue.noun,.plural.catalogs
or catalogues
a list or itemized display,
as of titles, course offerings or articles for exhibition or sale, usually
including descriptive information or illustrations; a publication, such
as a book or pamphlet, containing
such a list or display (a catalog of fall fashions; a seed catalog)
catalog,
cataloged
or
catalogued,
cataloging
or
cataloguing,
catalogs
or catalogues.verbs
transitive verb use.to
make an itemized list of (catalog a record of your stamp collection); to
list or include in a catalog; to classify
a book or publication, for example, according to a categorical.system
intransitive verb use.to
make a catalog; to be listed in a catalog (an item of furniture that catalogs
for 200 dollars); from Middle
English 'cathaloge' meaning 'list' or 'register',
from Old French 'catalogue'
from Late Latin 'catalogus'
from Greek 'katalogos' from
'katalegein' meaning 'to list' and also from Greek 'kata-' meaning 'down',
'away from', 'off' and comprised
with 'legein' meaning 'to count'
cataloger
or cataloguer.noun,.plural.catalogers
or cataloguers
crescent.noun,.plural.crescents
a crescent is a curved
shape that is wider in the middle than at its ends, like the shape of the
moon during its first (waxing,
rising, increasing) and last (waning,
diminishing,
decreasing.quarters
carrion.plural
noun
dead and decaying
flesh
carrion.adjective
feeding on such decaying
flesh
conflagration.noun,.plural.conflagrations
war; conflict;
a large, destructive fire; from Latin
'conflagratio' meaning 'to burn up'
conflagrate.verb
to cause to start burning
conflagrant.adjective
burning intensely; blazing
cadaver.noun,.plural.cadavers
a dead body, intended
for examination by dissection;
Middle
English from Latin
'cadaver' and 'cadere' meaning 'to die'
cadaveric.adjective
change,
changed,
changing,
changes.verbs
transitive verb use.to
cause to be different (change the spelling of a word); to give a different
form or appearance to; transform
(changed the yard into a garden); to interchange (change seats with a taller
man to see better); to switch (change
methods; changed to warmer clothes); to transfer
(changed planes); to put a fresh covering on (change a bed)
intransitive verb use.to
become different or undergo alteration
(he changed as he matured); to
go from one phase to another, as
the moon or the seasons; to make an exchange
(if you prefer this seat, I'll change with you); to put on other clothing
(we changed for dinner)
change.noun,.plural.changes
the act, process, or result
of altering or modifying (a change in facial expression); the replacing
of one thing for another; substitution
(she changed the drapes; a change
of weather; a change of ownership); Coins
(had change jingling in his pocket)
change off.phrasal
verb
to alternate
with another individual in performing a task
change hands.idiom
to pass from one owner to
another
changeable.adjective
liable
to change; capricious (changeable
weather)
changeability.noun,.plural.changeabilities
changeableness.noun,.plural.changeablenesses
changeably.adverb
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