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empezar lección
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a fussy and eccentric disposition
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empezar lección
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To lie in wait, as in ambush. 2. To move furtively; sneak.
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empezar lección
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To drop or come down freely under the influence of gravity
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empezar lección
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Irritated, impatient, or exasperated; peevish: a testy cab driver; a testy refusal to help
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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An atmosphere of melancholy or depression: Gloom pervaded the office. b. A state of melancholy or depression; despondency.
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empezar lección
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To acknowledge, often reluctantly, as being true, just, or proper; admit. See Synonyms at acknowledge. 2. To yield or grant (a privilege or right, for example).
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empezar lección
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A structure, usually brick or stone, built against a wall for support or reinforcement.
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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To suffer or die from extreme or prolonged lack of food.
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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a. To sway as if about to fall. b. To appear about to collapse: an empire that had begun to totter. 2. To walk unsteadily or feebly; stagger.
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empezar lección
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Money in any form when in actual use as a medium of exchange, especially circulating paper money.
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empezar lección
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A group of objects held together, as by tying or wrapping. 2. Something wrapped or tied up for carrying; a package.
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empezar lección
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kontrolowany przez system komputerowy
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empezar lección
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A protective glove worn with medieval armor.
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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To express polite refusal.
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empezar lección
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1. An imperfection, often concealed, that impairs soundness: a flaw in the crystal that caused it to shatter. See Synonyms at blemish. 2. A defect or shortcoming in something intangible: They share the character flaw of arrogance. 3. A defect in a legal document that can render it invalid.
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empezar lección
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charging or charged at too high a price
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empezar lección
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1. Lacking energy or vitality; weak: a languid wave of the hand. 2. Showing little or no spirit or animation; listless: a languid mood. 3. Lacking vigor or force; slow: languid breezes.
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empezar lección
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Having no previous example: unprecedented economic growth.
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empezar lección
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1. a. To miss one's step in walking or running; trip and almost fall. b. To proceed unsteadily or falteringly; flounder. See Synonyms at blunder. c. To act or speak falteringly or clumsily. 2. To make a mistake; blunder. 3. To fall into evil ways; err.
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empezar lección
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a. A flow or flowing. b. A continued flow; a flood. See Synonyms at flow.
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empezar lección
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1. a. The supposed force, principle, or power that predetermines events. b. The inevitable events predestined by this force. 2. A final result or consequence; an outcome. 3. Unfavorable destiny; doom.
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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Wet, sticky, soft earth, as on the banks of a river.
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empezar lección
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1. A reckoning or score. 2. a. A stick on which notches are made to keep a count or score. b. A stick on which notches were formerly made to keep a record of amounts paid or owed. 3. A mark used in recording a number of acts or objects, most often in series of five, consisting of four vertical lines canceled diagonally or horizontally by a fifth line.
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empezar lección
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1. To exert muscular energy, as against a material force or mass: struggled with the heavy load. 2. To be strenuously engaged with a problem, task, or undertaking: struggled with his math homework.
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empezar lección
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1. Affected by or full of woe; mournful. 2. Causing or involving woe. 3. Deplorably bad or wretched: woeful treatment of the accused; woeful errors in judgment.
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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being protected against danger or loss
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empezar lección
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Boasting is the act of making an ostentatious speech
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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Political power, refers especially to power within a political organization
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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a meeting of supporters or members of a political party or movement, especially in the United States. As the use of the term has been expanded the exact definition has come to vary among political cultures.
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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the status of facts that are not logically necessarily true or false. and prepared
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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In the United Kingdom, Her Majesty's Treasury is overseen by the Chancellor of the Exchequer. The traditional honorary title of First Lord of the Treasury is held by the Prime Minister. Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs administers the taxation system
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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in economics and finance is a term used to describe a situation where a bankrupt or nearly bankrupt entity, such as a corporation or a bank, is given a fresh injection of liquidity, in order to meet its short term obligations. Often bail outs are by governments, or by consortia of investors who demand control over the entity as the price for injecting funds.
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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Rozszczepienie (media) sygnału
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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empezar lección
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