1705036499
1705036500
Notes
1705036501
1705036502
durable, enduring; lasting; that which does not wear out or decay soon.
1705036503
1705036504
gratifications, the giving of pleasure and satisfaction; pleasures.
1705036505
1705036506
indispensable, absolutely necessary or requisite.
1705036507
1705036508
wholesomeness, healthfulness, soundness of body and mind and morals.
1705036509
1705036510
vitality, power of enduring or continuing; vital force or animation.
1705036511
1705036512
condescending, deferring; stooping or descending; giving in to.
1705036513
1705036514
gluttony, excessive eating; eating too much; extravagant indulgence of the appetite for food.
1705036515
1705036516
licentiousness, lack of restraint; lawlessness; immorality.
1705036517
1705036518
animal spirits, figuratively, as applied to human beings, animal stresses the ascendancy, the dominant control, of the animal nature. Spirits are animal that pertain to the merely sentient, the feeling, part of a creature, as distinguished from the intellectual, rational, spiritual part. Spirits is here used in the sense of temper, liveliness, energy, vivacity, courage, and qualities of the like nature.
1705036519
1705036520
kitten or puppy stages, childhood stages; days of early childhood.
1705036521
1705036522
incidental, occupying as inferior position; playing an unimportant part; subordinate.
1705036523
1705036524
grip, power or force to hold securely.
1705036525
1705036526
prolonged education, education that is lengthened in time; schooling that we continue for many years without interruption.
1705036527
1705036528
livelihood, means of supporting life; maintenance; living sustenance.
1705036529
1705036530
professional school, where the student is given training in one of the learned or skilled professions, such as engineering, law, medicine, religion, and education.
1705036531
1705036532
inference, a truth or proposition drawn from another which is admitted; conclusion; deduction.
1705036533
1705036534
sustained, maintained or carried on; keep from discontinuing.
1705036535
1705036536
“the purest treasure mortal times afford is spotless reputation,” from Shakespeare,Richard II , I, i, 177, 178. The most important thing that we can get out of life is an unblemished, irreproachable, spotless reputation. Reputation is the estimation in which a person is held by his contemporaries.
1705036537
1705036538
degrades, cheapens; dishonors; shames; humiliates.
1705036539
1705036540
candid, free from undue bias; fair; just; impartial; frank.
1705036541
1705036542
generous, liberal; noble; magnanimous; characterized by generosity.
1705036543
1705036544
attribute, characteristic quality; that which is recognized as appropriate to the person or office.
1705036545
1705036546
tribunal, court of justice; the group of qualified persons who pass judgment.
1705036547
1705036548
“This was an honorable man,” from Shakespeare,Pericles , IV, vi, 54.
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