Examples
1. Was your dad the marshal?
2. Most Far Cry games are marshal stories.
3. President Trump marshaled the full resources of our federal government from the outset.
4. At this point, the French marshal had only around 15,000 troops against 60,000 Russians.
5. Get the fire marshal in here.
Examples
1. On Sunday, Myanmar's military declared martial law in parts of Yangon, the country's largest city.
2. Martial law was declared.
3. - I picked martial discipline.
4. Martial excellence under king Ashurbanipal gave the great Neo-Assyrian Empire its popular reputation.
5. Martial eagles weigh in at around 14 pounds, with a wingspan up to eight and a half feet.
martian
/ˈmɑɹʃən/
adjectiveof or relating to the planet Mars (or its fictional inhabitants)
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Examples
1. In the Martian, the Chinese space industry saves the day.
2. That book is not "The Martian."
3. The Martian atmosphere is 1% the density of Earth's atmosphere.
4. Here, you've got Martian alphabet.
5. Now, none of you is a Martian.
martinet
/mˌɑːɹtɪnˈɛt/
nounan individual who demands total obedience to rules, laws, and orders
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Examples
1. But when they act under rules and make no exceptions, when first-order reasoning favors exceptions, they become caricatures in our eyes, soulless, rule-following martinets.
martyrdom
/ˈmɑɹtɝdəm/
noundeath that is imposed because of the person's adherence of a religious faith or cause
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Examples
1. But it won't feel like martyrdom.
2. The agonizing martyrdom of Phillip White coincided with the loyalist's worst fears of persecution.
3. So this new phenomenon of martyrdom, really for the first time, required new responses and the book of Daniel provides a fully apocalyptic response.
4. But that he chose martyrdom, has made Socrates the poster child of free speech rights over the mob.
5. What constitutes the values or elements of martyrdom?
cabal
/kəˈbɑɫ/
nouna plot to carry out some harmful or illegal act (especially a political plot)
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Examples
1. They can expose the evil cabals.
2. A cabal with at its head, a man with seemingly no interest in our laws, in our rights, in our constitution and with the brain that appears to not work properly.
3. One of the biggest threats to any family's fortune is the greed of an individual or a cabal of family members.
4. But the cabal largely sought to make their fortunes through a combination of insider trading and extortion.
5. Maybe Blossom and 5 Minute Crafts are in like a cabal together.
to sublimate
/sˈʌblᵻmˌeɪt/
verbchange or cause to change directly from a solid into a vapor without first melting
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Examples
1. Or it's sublimating.
2. According to their model, water could sublimate faster than erosion could smooth things out at latitudes below 23° or so.
3. Then, in the morning, it sublimates and turns back into gas.
4. As solid CO2 sublimates in summer, it powers 400 kilometer per hour winds.
5. It's sublimating!
Examples
1. Everything is absolutely sublime!
2. Ah oh yes, The stuffing is sublime!
3. It's simply sublime.
4. Pregnancy is not very sublime.
5. The execution on site from Jason Warren and his team is just absolutely sublime.
subliminal
/səˈbɫɪmɪnəɫ/
adjectivebelow the threshold of conscious perception
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Examples
1. - Subliminal Message Concert is my answer.
2. But subliminal advertising doesn’t really work.
3. It was like subliminal torment.
4. It's subliminal.
5. So subliminal messages are common in modern media.
infinitesimal
/ˌɪnfɪnɪˈtɛsɪməɫ/
adjectiveinfinitely or immeasurably small
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Examples
1. The chances are infinitesimal.
2. It would be infinitesimal.
3. This is an infinitesimal loop.
4. It was like infinitesimal in the private equity side of the business.
5. Now, it's infinitesimal.
opponent
/əˈpoʊnənt/
nounsomeone who disagrees with a system, plan, etc. and intends to put an end to it or change it
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Examples
1. But opponents had a convincing arguments.
2. Opponents heard a dangerous voice with fascist ideas.
3. Oh, opponent found!
4. Some cards damage your opponent.
5. Your opponent will most likely pick Scissors!
fraudulence
/fɹˈɔːdʒuːləns/
nounsomething intended to deceive; deliberate trickery intended to gain an advantage
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Examples
1. Accomplishments at the level of Angelou’s or Einstein’s are rare, but their feeling of fraudulence is extremely common.
2. Their work established pervasive feelings of fraudulence in this group.
3. Where do these feelings of fraudulence come from?
4. And even when they receive positive feedback, it often fails to ease feelings of fraudulence.
Examples
1. In the 12 years of history, not a single entry on its block chain has been fraudulent.
2. In the 12 years of history, not a single entry on its block chain has been fraudulent.
3. The business model was fraudulent right from the beginning.
4. yeah, the election wasn't fraudulent.
5. So of course, the recounts are fraudulent as well.
Examples
1. Zack shoves an armful of pepper up Slater's nose making him sneeze.
2. There you go, armfuls if you want it.
3. She makes off with an armful of Mexican turnips.
4. He worked methodically, even collecting an armful of the larger branches to be used later when the fire gathered strength.
5. Whether you're a dewy-eyed newbie, or a grisly old festival veteran with an armful of old wristbands, sometimes you do need a little help from your friends.
Examples
1. A mob stormed the Bastille armory, lynching the garrison commander.
2. While he was on leave from his position in Texas, John Brown attacked the armory at Harper’s Ferry, an event that clearly set the nation on the road to war.
3. That bomb is in the armory, which is a mile from here.
4. Pennhurst is now the site of a veteran’s home and a Pennsylvania National Guard armory.
5. My equips legit, look me up in the armory.
armistice
/ˈɑɹməstəs/
nouna state of peace agreed to between opponents so they can discuss peace terms
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Examples
1. And so eventually the leadership of Germany negotiated an armistice.
2. And then they sign an armistice with the Allies in November.
3. You have an armistice at the end of October with the Ottoman empire.
4. Six days later, The Armistice was signed.
5. On June 9 UN Security council achieved armistice between sides.
Examples
1. But thanks in part to bad weather, Elizabeth’s England defeated the armada.
2. On the 2nd of November 1274 an armada of perhaps 20,000 Mongols, Northern Chinese, Jurchen, Khitans, and Korean soldiers and sailors aboard nearly 1,000 ships set out from Happ’o on Korea’s southern coast.
3. Until D-Day, it was the largest armada in history.
4. The calm waters of Armada explode into massive naval conflict as players battle for control of large naval vessels.
5. Armada is chaos in the best way.
