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Interested in adding your pet? FYI: These are the rules. Note that only pets whose names are real, English words will be added. If you're not sure whether your pet has a real word name, you can try looking it up at the official Webster's, Oxford's or Dictionary's dictionary. (I'll re-check the name if I have to). Names with underscores, misspellings or numbers won't be accepted; The name must stand on its own as a real word. If you have a pet you want to add, please neomail me the following form. If I do not add your pet within three weeks please resend your form, I may have misplaced it....
NOTICE: A lot of people have been asking to be in the directory without filling out the form, only filling parts of it out, or filling it out with inaccurate information. PLEASE be sure to include every part of it. From now on, if you don't include all the information, your pet won't be added.
The Form-----
Pet's full name:
Remember, the pet has to be yours.
Definition of word:
Please use one of the definitions from the dictionaries I listed above. (If the word is not there, I am sorry but it will not be added. No more exceptions.) It's up to you to choose which one if your word has multiple definitions and which one suits your pet better than another.


Do you accept pets with real given names?
Yep. I was saying no to this BUT it seems like many names are listed in the dictionary with the definition "a male/female given name." So, sure-- why not? As long as they're listed in the dictionary.
How do people get real word pets, especially ones created so recently?
Neopets periodically deletes very old accounts, which clears those names and the ones of the pets on the account. You just have to be lucky to snag one.
Can I submit more than one pet at a time?
Sure. Make sure to include the necessary information for all of them.
How do I make changes to my pet's information, or remove it?
Just neomail me and ask. :)
None of these pets are up for trade or adoption! So please do not ask their owners about this...
or else you'll have to deal with Villainy.

Abbacies
the office of an abbot or abbess.
Abilities
Power or capacity to do or act physically, mentally, legally, morally, financially, etc.
Able
Having the power, skill, opportunity, or means to do something
Abodance
An omen; a portending.
Aborted
To terminate a procedure prematurely
Absolves
To pronounce clear of guilt or blame.
Absonant
dissonant; discordant (usually fol. by from or to): behavior that is absonant to nature.
Abstained
to have refrained deliberately from an action or practice
Academy
A school for special instruction.
Acceleration
the act of accelerating; increase of speed or velocity.
Accoutre
to provide with equipment or furnishings
Accumulation
that which is accumulated; an accumulated amount, number, or mass
Acheron
Classical Mythology. a river in Hades over which Charon ferried the souls of the dead.
Adjusted
adapted to surroundings or circumstances
Adjuvant
serving to help or assist; auxiliary.
Admixes
To mix; blend.
Afflict
To inflict grievous physical or mental suffering on.
Aftereffect
a delayed effect; an effect that follows at some interval after the stimulus that produces it.
Age
the length of time during which a being or thing has existed; length of life or existence to the time spoken of or referred to: trees of unknown age; His age is 20 years.
Aging
to grow old: He is aging rapidly.
Ago
gone; gone by; past (usually prec. by a noun): five days ago.
Agraphia
the pathologic loss of the ability to write
Albeit
Even though; although; notwithstanding
Amigo
a friend, esp. a male friend.
Analytical
Having parametric equations that represent analytic functions.
Anoint
To choose by or as if by divine intervention.
Antivenin
An antitoxin to a venom
Apologetic
containing an apology or excuse for a fault, failure, insult, injury, etc.: An apologetic letter to his creditors explained the delay.
Appealingly
evoking or attracting interest, desire, curiosity, sympathy, or the like; attractive.
Appellative
of or relating to a common noun
Appoggiatura
Music. a note of embellishment preceding another note and taking a portion of its time.
Apprehensive
Anxious or fearful about the future; uneasy.
Approve
to speak or think favorably of; pronounce or consider agreeable or good; judge favorably: to approve the policies of the administration.
Aquitanian
Of or pertaining to Aquitania, now called Gascony.
Arboreal
adapted for living and moving about in trees, as the limbs and skeleton of opossums, squirrels, monkeys, and apes.
Artificially
Made by humans; produced rather than natural.
Artisan
a person skilled in applied art; a craftsperson.
Asmodeus
an angel exiled from Heaven; demon of lust
Assignments
a task that is assigned or undertaken; All team members have received their assignments.
Assort
to distribute into groups of a like kind
Atazir
The influence of a star upon other stars or upon men
Attempt
to make an effort at; try; undertake; seek
Attendee
a person who is present on a given occasion or at a given place
Attic
the part of a building, esp. of a house, directly under a roof; garret.
Audial
of or pertaining to the sense of hearing; aural.
Audiences
The spectators or listeners assembled at a performance, for example, or attracted by a radio or television program.
Autolatry
Self-worship.
Automatous
a mechanical figure or contrivance constructed to act as if by its own motive power; robot.
Awakening
A recognition, realization, or coming into awareness of something.

Bae
bachelor of art education
Baetylus
a meteorite or stone held sacred or believed to be of divine origin
Bafflement
confusion resulting from failure to understand
Ballad
any light, simple song, esp. one of sentimental or romantic character, having two or more stanzas all sung to the same melody.
Bassinet
a basket with a hood over one end, for use as a baby's cradle.
Bate
to moderate or restrain
Battle
a fight between opposing armies or individuals
Baulk
Var. of 'balk'. To stop short and stubbornly refuse to go on.
Believably
in a believable manner; "he acted believably sincere
Benefact
help as a benefactor; "The father benefacted his daughter in more ways than she was aware of
Besiege
to surround with armed forces
Bibliometrics
A set of methods used to study or measure texts and information.
Bickered
Quarreled in a tiresome, insulting manner.
Bicyclist
to ride a bicycle.
Bilander
A small two-masted merchant vessel, fitted only for coasting, or for use in canals, as in Holland.
Bill
a statement of money owed for goods or services supplied
Biochemists
people with special training in biochemistry.
Bipolarity
characterized by opposite extremes, as two conflicting political philosophies
Birch
any tree or shrub of the genus Betula, comprising species with a smooth, laminated outer bark and close-grained wood.
Bitumen
any of various natural substances, as asphalt, maltha, or gilsonite, consisting mainly of hydrocarbons.
Blackjack
Also called natural. (in twenty-one) an ace together with a ten or a face card as the first two cards dealt.
Bleakly
without hope; doing something with bleakness
Blue
a color whose hue is that of the clear sky or that of the portion of the color spectrum lying between green and violet
Booking
a contract, engagement, or scheduled performance of a professional entertainer.
Boundaries
something that indicates bounds or limits; a limiting or bounding line
Bounteous
giving or disposed to give freely; generous; liberal.
Boy
A male child.
Brandished
To move or wave, as a weapon
Brightening
Daytime, or daylight hours. Can also refer to one Allerian day.
Brims
The rim or uppermost edge of a hollow container or natural basin.
Brokering
Also, brokerage. the business of a broker.
Brogue
An irish accent in the pronunciation of english.
Brontophobia
abnormal fear of thunder
Bundled
To tie together or to wrap in a bundle.
Butler
the chief male servant of a household, usually in charge of serving food, the care of silverware, etc.

C
The third letter of the English alphabet, a consonant.
Callbacks
a second or additional audition for a theatrical part
Capsaicin
a colorless irritant phenolic amide C18H27NO3 found in various capsicums that gives hot peppers their hotness
Cascade
a waterfall descending over a steep, rocky surface.
Celt
a member of an Indo-European people now represented chiefly by the Irish, Gaels, Welsh, and Bretons.
Chakras
One of the seven centers of spiritual energy in the human body according to yoga philosophy.
Cheating
to decieve by trickery; swindle, or to mislead; defraud.
Chorales
A harmonized hymn.
Chronicler
a writer or compiler of a chronicle, a recorder of events
Chugging
Irregular product flow that pulses and splashes as it leaves the container. Caused by lack of air venting into container as product is drained.
Churchyards
A yard adjacent to a church, especially a cemetery.
Circumambulate
to circle on foot especially ritualistically
Civility
courtesy; politeness.
Classier
of high class, rank, or grade; stylish; admirably smart; elegant.
Clea
a female given name, form of Cleopatra.
Close
At a little distance; near.
Closings
The end or conclusion: the closing of a debate.
Cloud
A visible collection of particles of water or ice suspended in the air, usually at an elevation above the earth's surface.
Club
to unite; combine; join together.
Coast
the land next to the sea; seashore: the rocky coast of Maine.
Cocktail
any eclectic mixture or miscellaneous collection.
Colt
a young male animal of the horse family.
Coming
In time, To come ; On the way
Command
to have or exercise authority or control over
Compare
to examine (two or more objects, ideas, people, etc.) in order to note similarities and differences
Compete
To strive to outdo another for acknowledgment, a prize, supremacy, profit, etc.; engage in a contest; vie: to compete in a race; to compete in business.
Complains
To express discontent
Compromise
a: settlement of differences by arbitration or by consent reached by mutual concessions b: something intermediate between or blending qualities of two different things
Conducted
To comport (oneself) in a specified way: She conducted herself stoically in her time of grief.
Conductors
A person who conducts; a leader, guide, director, or manager.
Conquest
anything acquired by conquering, as a nation, a territory, or spoils.
Contemplating
To consider thoroughly; think fully or deeply about
Contempt
The feeling with which a person regards anything considered mean, vile, or worthless; disdain; scorn.
Contend
to struggle in opposition
Contrite
filled with a sense of guilt and the desire for atonement; penitent: a contrite sinner.
Copyeditor
A person who edits a manuscript, text, etc., for publication, esp. to find and correct errors in style, punctuation, and grammar.
Cornball
something corny
Coupling
The act of a person or thing that couples.
Covering
something laid over or wrapped around a thing, esp. for concealment, protection, or warmth.
Cozened
To have misled by means of a petty trick or fraud; to have persuaded or induced someone to do something by cajooling or wheedling; to have deceived.
Cresting
Architecture. a decorative coping, balustrade, etc., usually designed to give an interesting skyline.
Criminals
One that has committed or been legally convicted of a crime
Crimson
deep purplish-red.
Crisp
brisk; sharp; clear; decided: a crisp reply.
Crypts
An underground vault or chamber, especially one beneath a church that is used as a burial place.
Cures
The act or process of healing or restoring health (OR) the plural form of "cure".
Cymbal
a flat round musical instrument made of brass, which makes a loud noise when hit with a stick or against another cymbal

Dagger
a short, swordlike weapon with a pointed blade and a handle, used for stabbing.
Damnify
to cause loss or damage to.
Damsels
A young woman or girl; a maiden.
Darkens
To make dark or darker.
Daunts
to overcome with fear; intimidate
Dealt
To give out as a share or portion; apportion.
Decapitate
to cut off the head of; behead
Decease
the act of dying; departure from life; death
Deceitfully
in a corrupt and deceitful manner, deliberately misleading
Deceitfulness
the quality of being crafty, misleading, fraudulent
Deceived
to mislead by a false appearance or statement; delude
Deck
Any open platform suggesting an exposed deck of a ship.
Deed
A usually praiseworthy act; a feat or exploit.
Deimos
an ancient Greek personification of terror, a son of Ares and Aphrodite.
Dejected
Cast down in spirits; depressed
Deliverance
salvation; liberation
Dematiaceous
Having a dark color, usually olive, gray, or black, as some fungi.
Demise
death or decease.
Demography
the science of vital and social statistics, as of the births, deaths, diseases, marriages, etc., of populations.
Dentil
one of a series of small projecting rectangular blocks forming a molding especially under a cornice.
Descanted
To sing or play a descant.
Desolate
to forsake or abandon.
Destiny
An event (or a course of events) that will inevitably happen in the future
Determinative
having power or tendency to determine : tending to fix, settle or define something.
Devastation
to bring to ruin or desolation by violent action
Devilment
Devilish behavior; mischief.
Diagnosis
The process of determining by examination the nature and circumstances of a diseased condition.
Didactically
Inclined to teach or moralize excessively.
Die
to suffer total and irreversible loss of the bodily attributes and functions that constitute life
Dihedral
Having or formed by two planes.
Disable
to make unable or unfit; weaken or destroy the capability of; cripple
Disappears
To pass out of sight; vanish.
Disarm
to divest or relieve of hostility, suspicion, etc.; win the affection or approval of; charm: His smile disarmed us.
Discretions
individual choice or judgment
Disengaging
To release (oneself) from an engagement, pledge, or obligation.
Disliking
a feeling of aversion; antipathy
Dismantling
To take apart; disassemble; tear down.
Disperse
to drive or send off in various directions; scatter: to disperse a crowd.
Distraction
that which distracts, divides the attention, or prevents concentration
Divisibility
The quality of being divisible; the property of bodies by which their parts are capable of separation.
Divorce
any formal separation of husband and wife according to established custom.
Document (the site refuses to let me link to this pet!)
a written or printed paper furnishing information or evidence, as a passport, deed, bill of sale, or bill of lading; a legal or official paper.
Dot
a small, round mark
Doubtful
lacking a definite opinion, conviction, or determination (they were doubtful about the advantages of the new system) : uncertain in outcome
Downsizes
to reduce in size; especially : to design or produce in smaller size
Dryable
Can be made dry
Duchess
The wife or widow of a duke.
Duke
a nobleman of the highest rank
Dulcet
pleasant to the ear; melodious
Dulled
having lost or been caused to lose interest because of overexposure; "the mind of the audience is becoming dulled"
Dullsville
something boring or dull
Dyschronous
Not synchronous.
Dynasty
a sequence of powerful leaders in the same family
Dysnomy
Bad legislation; the enactment of bad laws.

E
the fifth letter of the English alphabet, a vowel.
Earlier
before the usual or appointed time; ahead of time
Easterly
a wind that blows from the east
Ebon
Black in color.
Educed
To draw or bring out; elicit.
Eerily
To do something in a Eerie way; Eerie like
Eeuwenoud
Age-old.
Effort
exertion of physical or mental power: It will take great effort to achieve victory.
Eliminations
To remove from consideration by defeating; as in a contest.
Eloquence
Persuasive, powerful discourse.
Embarrass
to cause confusion and shame to; make uncomfortably self-conscious; disconcert; abash: His bad table manners embarrassed her.
Embellishes
To make beautiful, as by ornamentation; decorate.
Embitter
cause to be bitter or resentful; "These injustices embittered her even more"
Embower
To shelter in or as in a bower; cover or surround with foliage.
Embrave
To inspire with bravery.
Emulsify
to disperse or convert.
Endeavors
A conscientious or concerted effort toward an end; an earnest attempt
Endoscope
a slender, tubular optical instrument used as a viewing system for examining an inner part of the body and, with an attached instrument, for biopsy or surgery.
Engrossed
preoccupied with something to the exclusion of everything else
Ennobled
To confer nobility upon: ennoble a prime minister for distinguished service.
Ensiform
sword-shaped; xiphoid
Entoiled
To be ensnared; entrapped.
Entrapping
Catching in a trap; Luring into danger, difficulty or a compromising situation.
Enwreathe
To encircle something, especially with decorations.
Enwreathed
to encircle with or as if with a wreath.
Epitaphist
One who inscribes an epitaph.
Eras
A fixed point of time, usually an epoch, from which a series of years is reckoned.
Ereshkigal
The Mesopotamian goddess of the underworld.
Err
to make a mistake or be incorrect
Erupted
To emerge violently from restraint or limits; explode
Euskera
the language of the Basque people
Executability
The extent to which something may be executed
Exoticism
exotic quality or character.
Expects
To consider likely or certain
Explicating
to make plain or clear; explain; interpret
Expropriate
to take possession of, for public use by the right of eminent domain, thus divesting the title of the private owner
Extempore
on the spur of the moment; without premeditation or preparation; offhand: Questions were asked extempore from the floor.
Exudes
to exhibit in abundance

Fable
the plot of an epic, a dramatic poem, or a play.
Faintheartedly
lacking courage; timidly
Faerie
A tiny, mischievous, imaginary being; a fairy.
Fashion
A distinctive or peculiar and often habitual manner or way.
Faultings
(geology) a crack in the earth's crust resulting from the displacement of one side with respect to the other
Fearsome
causing fear: a fearsome noise.
Fed
Past tense and past participle of feed.
Feign
to make believe with the intent to deceive.
Fervid
heated or vehement in spirit, enthusiasm, etc.: a fervid orator.
Fib
An insignificant or childish lie.
Film
a thin covering or coating
Fire
A state, process, or instance of combustion in which fuel or other material is ignited and combined with oxygen, giving off light, heat, and flame.
Fixates
To attach (oneself) to a person or thing in an immature or neurotic fashion.
Flame
the light and heat given off by combustion
Fleeringly
to grin or laugh coarsely or mockingly
Flow
To move or run smoothly with unbroken continuity, as in the manner characteristic of a fluid.
Flummeries
Complete nonsense; foolish humbug.
Foothold
an area in hostile territory that has been captured and is held awaiting further troops and supplies; "an attempt to secure a bridgehead behind enemy lines"; "the only foothold left for British troops in Europe was Gibraltar"
Foreseen
To see or know beforehand: foresaw the rapid increase in unemployment.
Fructose
the very sweet levorotatory d-form of fructose that occurs especially in fruit juices and honey —called also fruit sugar levulose
Frumenty
hulled wheat boiled in milk and seasoned with sugar and cinnamon etc.
Future
time that is to be or come hereafter.

Gaia
The goddess of the earth, who bore and married Uranus and became the mother of the Titans and the Cyclopes.
Gamine
a girl of impish appeal
Gauntness
extremely thin and bony in appearance
Generation
a group of individuals born and living contemporaneously
Genesis
an origin, creation, or beginning.
Gentlest
Considerate or kindly in disposition; amiable and tender.
Geography
the topographical features of a region, usually of the earth, sometimes of the planets.
Ghyll
A ravine.
Gliders
one that glides: as a: an aircraft similar to an airplane but without an engine
Gnarliest
Slang. distasteful; distressing; offensive; gross.
Gobble
to swallow or eat hastily or hungrily in large pieces; gulp.
God
a being or object believed to have more than natural attributes and powers and to require human worship; specifically : one controlling a particular aspect or part of reality
Gore
Blood, especially coagulated blood from a wound.
Granddaughter
The daughter of one's son or daughter
Granting
To consent to the fulfillment of
Greet
To salute or welcome in a friendly and respectful way with speech or writing; to receive with a specified reaction; to be perceived by.
Grim
having a harsh, surly, forbidding, or morbid air: a grim man but a just one; a grim countenance.
Gun
any portable firearm, as a rifle, shotgun, or revolver.
Gyroscopic
Pertaining to an apparatus consisting of a rotating wheel used to maintain equilibrium and determine direction.

Halos
To encircle with or as if with a halo.
Handicrafts
the articles fashioned by those engaged in handicraft
Haste
Rapidity of action or motion.
Haven
a place of safety
Hectically
characterized by intense agitation, excitement, confused and rapid movement; in a frenzied manner
Hectograms
Metric unit of mass equal to 100 grams.
Helical
Of or having the shape of a helix; spiral.
Heritor
inheritor
Hex
An evil spell; a curse.
Hi
a word of greeting
High
of relatively great importance: as a: foremost in rank, dignity, or standing (high officials)
Hoarded
To gather or accumulate a hoard.
Hoax
something intended to deceive or defraud: The Piltdown man was a scientific hoax.
Holographic
a document wholly in the handwriting of its author
Horridness
such as to cause horror; shockingly dreadful; abominable.
Horus
The ancient Egyptian god of the sun, son of Osiris and Isis, represented as having the head of a hawk.
Hostages
Ones manipulated by the demands of others.
Hostilities
(Plural) A hostile act.
Humanized
to make humane, kind, or gentle.
Huzzah
an instance of giving praise or applause; accolade: The newspaper's review was one big huzzah for the new movie.
Hydrolysate
A product of hydrolysis.
Hydroxide
A substance containing hydrogen and oxygen, made by combining water with an oxide.

Icon
One who is the object of great attention and devotion; an idol: He is ... a pop icon designed and manufactured for the video generation" (Harry F. Waters).
Idled
To have moved lazily and without purpose.
Idyllic
pleasing or picturesque in natural simplicity
Immoral
not moral and connotes evil or licentious behavior.
Impart
to make known; tell; relate; disclose: to impart a secret.
Inconvincible
Not able to be convinced: impossible or very difficult to convince.
Infatuate
Of foolish passions
Inferiorities
Situated under or beneath.
Inflections
Alteration in pitch or tone of the voice.
Info
A message received and understood
Informative
giving information; instructive
Input
Something that is put in.
Insane
mad; mentally ill
Instancing
to illustrate or demonstrate by an instance
Italia
Italian name of Italy.
Intentionally
Done with intention or on purpose; intended
Intergalactically
Being or occurring between galaxies: intergalactic space.
Interpretation
an explanation of the meaning of another's artistic or creative work; an elucidation: an interpretation of a poem.
Inwardly
With respect to private feelings
Its
used to represent an inanimate thing understood, previously mentioned, about to be mentioned, or present in the immediate context

Jethro
a male given name.
Juridical
Of or relating to the law and its administration.
Justice
Conformity to moral rightness in action or attitude; righteousness.
Juvenile
Of or pertaining to youth

Kelt
a member of a European people who once occupied Britain and Spain and Gaul prior to Roman times
Kenning
a conventional poetic phrase used for or in addition to the usual name of a person or thing, esp. in Icelandic and Anglo-Saxon verse, as "a wave traveler" for "a boat."
Kinetic
Of, relating to, or produced by motion.
Kinglike
a male sovereign or monarch; a man who holds by life tenure, and usually by hereditary right, the chief authority over a country and people.
Knight
any person of a rank similar to that of the medieval knight.
Knockoff
An unlicensed copy of something, intended to be sold at a lower price than the original.

Labours
Variant of labor. Chiefly British.
Ladders
A structure consisting of a series of bars or steps between two uprights, used for climbing up or down.
Laminating
to separate or split into thin layers.
Leashing
the act of putting a leash onto a pet
Leaf
a lateral outgrowth from a plant stem that is typically a flattened expanded variably shaped greenish organ, constitutes a unit of the foliage, and functions primarily in food manufacture by photosynthesis
Leer
a lascivious or sly look.
Legacy
anything handed down from the past, as from an ancestor or predecessor
Lennon
John, 1940-80, English singer, songwriter, and guitarist for the Beatles.
Lethargically
without energy; in a lethargic manner; he hung around the house lethargically
Licentious
immoral
Lilith
a woman who in rabbinic legend is Adam's first wife, is supplanted by Eve, and becomes an evil spirit; a famous witch in medieval demonology
Lily
any scaly-bulbed plant of the genus Lilium, having showy, funnel-shaped or bell-shaped flowers.
Limp
to progress slowly and with great difficulty; make little or no advance
Liquefy
To make or become liquid.
Loathes
dislikes greatly and often with disgust or intolerance
Loci
Mathematics. The set of all points, lines, or surfaces that satisfy a given requirement.
Lola
a female given name, form of Charlotte or Dolores.
Lotic
pertaining to or living in flowing water
Lutefisk
Norwegian form of prepared fish often served during Christmas
Luxuriousness
given to or loving luxury; wanting or requiring what is choice, expensive, or the like
Lyra
a northern constellation representing the lyre of Orpheus or Mercury and containing Vega

Makeup
facial cosmetics, as eye shadow or lipstick.
Maledict
archaic : accursed
Mayoress
a woman who is the chief executive official of a city, village, or town
Mazzard
a wild sweet cherry
Melanism
an increased amount of black or nearly black pigmentation (as of skin, feathers, or hair) of an individual or kind of organism
Melodize
to compose a melody
Memberships
The state of being a member.
Memoirist
An account of the personal experiences of an author.
Mercury
The smallest of the inner planets and the one nearest the sun.
Messaging
A system or process of transmitting messages, esp. electronically, by computer, telephone, television cable, etc.
Metafiction
A type of fiction that self-consciously addresses the devices of fiction.
Metheglin
a beverage typically made of fermented honey and water, spiced or medicated mead. (Often with mint.)
Midriff
the middle of the body just below the ribs
Midst
A position of proximity to others: a stranger in our midst.
Militarize
lend a military character to (a country), as by building up a military force; "militarize Germany again after the war"
Milkweed
Any of numerous plants of the genus Asclepias, having milky juice, usually opposite leaves, variously colored flowers grouped in umbels, and pods that split open to release seeds with downy tufts. Also called silkweed.
Millisecond
one thousandth of a second.
Minutest
extremely small, as in size, amount, extent, or degree
Mist
A mass of fine droplets of water in the atmosphere near or in contact with the earth.
Mistakes
An error or fault resulting from defective judgment, deficient knowledge, or carelessness; A misconception or misunderstanding.
Modesties
Lack of pretentiousness; simplicity.
Module
A standard or unit of measurement.
Molted
To shed periodically part or all of a coat or an outer covering, such as feathers, cuticle, or skin, which is then replaced by a new growth.
Monism
any of various theories holding that there is only one basic substance or principle as the ground of reality, or that reality consists of a single element.
Monk
Someone who has withdrawn from the world for religious reasons.
Moonstone
a transparent or translucent feldspar of pearly or opaline luster used as a gem.
Mordacity
State of being sharp or caustic in style, tone, etc.
Mortgage
a conveyance of or lien against property (as for securing a loan) that becomes void upon payment or performance according to stipulated terms
Motionlessness
a state of no motion or movement; "the utter motionlessness of a marble statue"
Murmurer
An indistinct, whispered, or confidential complaint; a mutter.
Muse
the goddess or the power regarded as inspiring a poet, artist, thinker, or the like.
Musk
An artificial imitation of the substance.
Mutter
to utter words indistinctly or in a low tone, often as if talking to oneself_ murmur.
Myth
a traditional story accepted as history; serves to explain the world view of a people

N
the 14th letter of the English alphabet, a consonant.
Narcissine
referring to narcissist and vanity
Nearing
To become Near; in the state of being Near
Nebulation
The condition of being nebulated; or a clouded ill defined color mark.
Necessitous
requiring immediate attention or action; urgent
Necrosed
Affected by necrosis; dead; as, a necrosed bone.
Needed
A condition or situation in which something is required or wanted: crops in need of water; a need for affection.
Neighborly
characteristic of congenial neighbors
Ness
A strip of land projecting into a body of water
Neutralize
to counteract the activity or effect of
Night
the period of darkness between sunset and sunrise.
Nomadically
Of or pertaining to nomads, or their way of life; wandering; moving from place to place for subsistence; as, a nomadic tribe.
Nonfictions
(plural) literature that only deals with facts or real events.
Northerly
(of a wind) blowing from the north.
Nudging
To push slightly or gently, esp. with the elbow, to get someone's attention, prod someone into action, etc.
Numinous
surpassing comprehension or understanding; mysterious
Nurture
to feed and protect: to nurture one's offspring.

Oath
A solemn swear or vow.
Odds
the probability that one thing is so or will happen rather than another
Objectives
Something that actually exists.
Occult
Of or pertaining to magic, astrology, or any system claiming use or knowledge of secret or supernatural powers or agencies.
Ohm
Chanted alone or as part of a phrase during meditation.
Olympia
A plain in ancient Elis, Greece, where the ancient Olympic Games were held.
Omnipotence
the quality or state of being omnipotent.
Onychophagy
The habit of nail biting
Opal
a quartz-like gemstone that is typically semi-transparent and shows many small points of shifting colour against a pale or dark ground.
Openings
The act or an instance of becoming open or being made to open.
Ossuaries
a place or receptacle for the bones of the dead
Overage
Beyond the proper or required age.
Overhead
Over one's head; aloft; up in the air or sky, esp. near the zenith.

Palatalize
to articulate (a consonant other than a normal palatal) as a palatal or with relatively more contact between the blade of the tongue and the hard palate, as in certain pronunciations of the l-sound in million.
Palatially
of, pertaining to, or resembling a palace. eg; a palatial home.
Paled
Lacking intensity of color; colorless or whitish: a pale complexion.
Pansophism
A claim or pretension to pansophy.
Parried
To ward off (a thrust, stroke, weapon, etc.), as in fencing; avert.
Pathway
A path, course, route, or way.
Patience
quiet, steady perseverance; even-tempered care; diligence: to work with patience.
Pearl
a hard, shiny spherical mass, typically white or bluish-grey, formed within the shell of an oyster or other mollusc and highly prized as a gem.
Pedestals
An architectural support or base, as for a column or statue.
Pediophobia
a fear of dolls; a fear of children
Pendant
a hanging ornament, as an earring or the main piece suspended from a necklace.
Percolates
To make (coffee) in a percolator
Perduring
continuing to exist.
Perform
to act (a play, part, etc.), as on the stage, in movies, or on television
Peripheral
Related to, located in, or constituting an outer boundary or periphery.
Persephone
The daughter of Demeter and Zeus who was abducted by Hades but rescued by her mother and thereafter spent six months of the year on earth and six months in the underworld.
Personalities
The visible aspect of one's character as it impresses others: He has a pleasing personality; they had nice personalities.
Persuasion
the power of persuading; persuasive force.
Phantasmagorial
An optical illusion produced by a magic lantern or the like in which figures increase or diminish in size, pass into each other, dissolve, etc.
Pharmacon
A medicine for all diseases; a panacea.
Phasing
Pertaining to phase or differences of phase
Philatelist
the collecting of stamps and other postal matter as a hobby or an investment.
Phobic
suffering from irrational fears
Picardy
a region in N. France: formerly a province.
Pilular
of, pertaining to, or resembling pills.
Pinwheel
a child's toy consisting of a wheel or leaflike curls of paper or plastic loosely attached by a pin to a stick, designed to revolve when blown by or as by the wind.
Platonically
often platonic. Transcending physical desire and tending toward the purely spiritual or ideal: platonic love.
Playhouses
a small house for children to play in
Plum
an oval fleshy fruit which is purple, reddish, or yellow when ripe, containing a flattish pointed stone.
Pointless
without force, meaning, or relevance: a pointless remark.
Poof
Exclamation describing a sudden disappearance or expressing contemptuous dismissal.
Possessing
To gain or exert influence or control over; dominate
Possible
that may be true or may be the case, as something concerning which one has no knowledge to the contrary
Prawn
any of various shrimplike decapod crustaceans of the genera Palaemon, Penaeus, etc., certain of which are used as food.
Precisely
in exact terms; without vagueness
Prehension
perceiving of something through senses: the perception by the senses of a sight, sound, smell, taste, or texture
Prehistorical
belonging to or existing in times before recorded history; "prehistoric settlements"; "prehistoric peoples"
Preshrink
to shrink (as a fabric) before making into a garment so that it will not shrink much when washed
Presswork
Management or operation of a printing press.
Presuming
the act of taking for granted, assuming, or supposing
Prince
A non-reigning male member of a royal family.
Prisoner
a person deprived of liberty and kept under involuntary restraint, confinement, or custody ; especially : one on trial or in prison
Prissy
excessively proper; affectedly correct; prim.
Promise
to make a promise of something to (a specified person): Promise me that you will come.
Prosumer
A portmanteau formed by contracting either the word professional or producer with the word consumer.
Protozoan
any of a diverse group of eukaryotes, of the kingdom Protista, that are primarily unicellular, existing singly or aggregating into colonies, are usually nonphotosynthetic, and are often classified further into phyla according to their capacity for and means of motility, as by pseudopods, flagella, or cilia.
Protrude
to thrust forward; cause to project.
Provokingly
Serving to provoke; causing annoyance.
Psychiatric
the practice or science of diagnosing and treating mental disorders.
Pyralid
any of numerous slender-bodied moths of the family Pyralidae, having elongated triangular forewings, and in the larval phase including many crop pests.
Pyrocumulonimbus
a type of cumulus cloud formed above a source of heat such as a wildfire and may sometimes even extinguish the fire that formed it. It is the most extreme manifestation of pyrocumulus.
Pyrolatry
The worship of fire
Pyrology
That branch of physical science which treats of the properties, phenomena, or effects of heat; also, a treatise on heat.
Pyxidium
a seed vessel that opens transversely, the top part acting as a lid, as in the purslane.

Quantity
a particular or indefinite amount of anything: a small quantity of milk; the ocean's vast quantity of fish.
Quartette
a musical composition for four voices or instruments
Quested
to search for; seek.
Quincentenary
pertaining to or marking a period of 500 years.
Quinquennium
A period of five years

Ra
The ancient Egyptian sun god, the supreme deity represented as a man with the head of a hawk crowned with a solar disk and uraeus.
Raffish
slightly disreputable, especially in an attractive manner.
Raffled
to dispose of by a raffle (often followed by off): to raffle off a watch.
Raftings
The business of making or managing rafts.
Rash
acting or tending to act too hastily or without due consideration.
Ratings
A position assigned on a scale; a standing.
Raven
To seek or seize as prey or plunder.
Reactant
A substance that enters into and is altered in the course of a chemical reaction
Readjust
(used with object) to adjust again or anew; rearrange.
Reascend
To rise again
Rebooted
To turn (a computer or operating system) off and then on again; restart.
Rebounded
bounce back after hitting a hard surface.
Rebuild
to replace, restrengthen, or reinforce
Rebuilt
made over usually with changes, redone
Recapitulate
to give new form or -disallowed_word-i.e., it can be used for pulling, not pushing). Rope is thicker and stronger than similarly constructed cord, line, string, or twine.
Roscius
Roman actor.
Runcation
A weeding.
Ruthlessly
without pity or compassion; cruel; merciless

Salad
a mixture of foods, usually including fruits or vegetables
Saleswoman
a woman who sells goods, services, etc.
Salvation
deliverance from the power and effects of sin
Sanding
To polish or scrape with sand or sandpaper
Satay
a Southeast Asian, esp. Indonesian and Malaysian, dish of marinated, bite-size pieces of meat, skewered, barbecued, and usually served with a peanut-flavored dipping sauce.
Satisfactory
giving or affording satisfaction; fulfilling all demands or requirements
Savagism
The state of being savage; the state of rude, uncivilized men, or of men in their native wildness and rudeness.
Scholarships
The methods, discipline, and attainments of a scholar or scholars.
Scurvy
arousing disgust or scorn : contemptible, despicable
Sea
the salt waters that cover the greater part of the earth's surface.
Seastrand
land adjacent to the sea
Seclusive
Causing or providing isolation
Senesce
To reach later maturity; grow old.
Sentence
An authoritative decision; a judicial judgment or decree, esp. the judicial determination of the punishment to be inflicted on a convicted criminal.
Separable
Capable of being seperated, parted or dissociated
Serendipitous
come upon or found by accident; fortuitous
Serpent
Any reptile of the order Ophidia; a snake, especially a large snake.
Serval
a long-limbed, nocturnal African cat, Felis serval, about the size of a bobcat, having a tawny coat spotted with black: now rare in many former habitats.
Server
One who serves.
Shakespearean
of, pertaining to, or suggestive of Shakespeare or his works.
Shame
a fact or circumstance bringing disgrace or regret.
Sharpen
To make or become sharp or sharper.
Shelve
to put off or aside from consideration.
Shipwrecks
The destruction of a ship, as by storm or collision.
Should
must; ought (used to indicate duty, propriety, or expediency): You should not do that.
Showed
to cause or allow to be seen; exhibit; display.
Shy
Drawing back from contact or familiarity with others; retiring or reserved.
Sighfully
mournful; sorrowful: a sighful ballad.
Silliest
Lacking seriousness or responsibleness; frivolous.
Silo
A structure, typically cylindrical, in which fodder or forage is kept.
Sink
to cause to fall, drop, or descend gradually.
Sir
(initial capital letter) the distinctive title of a knight or baronet: Sir Walter Scott.
Skid
The act of sliding or slipping over a surface, often sideways.
Slaty
gray like slate
Slaying
to destroy; extinguish.
Sleighed
To ride in or drive a sleigh.
Slink
to move or go in a furtive, abject manner, as from fear, cowardice, or shame.
Smell
to perceive the odor or scent of through the nose by means of the olfactory nerves
Smitten
impressed favorably, charmed, enamored
Snag
to grab; seize: to snag the last piece of pie.
Snitched
to take by stealth : pilfer
Softdrinks
a usually carbonated nonalcoholic beverage
Sojourners
a temporary resident.
Solemness
a trait of dignified seriousness
Somnifacient
Causes or induces sleep.
Sorcery
the art, practices, or spells of a person who is supposed to exercise supernatural powers through the aid of evil spirits; black magic; witchery.
Sorrow
distress caused by loss, affliction, disappointment, etc.; grief, sadness, or regret.
Sprocket
a toothed wheel engaging with a conveyor or power chain.
Stigma
a mark of disgrace or infamy; a stain or reproach, as on one's reputation.
Subjectable
being under domination, control, or influence (often fol. by to).
Subsidise
British variant of subsidize
Subvention
a subsidy from a government or foundation
Suffers
To feel pain or distress; sustain loss, injury, harm, or punishment.
Suggestion
something suggested
Sulks
holding oneself aloof in a sullen, ill-humored, or offended mood.
Sunburn
inflammation of the skin caused by overexposure to ultraviolet radiation especially from sunlight
Sunshine
the shining of the sun; direct light of the sun.
Surreal
having the disorienting, hallucinatory quality of a dream; unreal; fantastic: surreal complexities of the bureaucracy.
Surveil
to place under surveillance.
Susurruses
A soft murmuring or rustling sound; whisper.
Svetlana
(Russian) female given name.
Swifter
coming, happening, or performed quickly or without delay.
Synagogues
places of assembly
Synch
Harmony; accord

Tablet
A flat piece of any material on which to write, paint, draw, or engrave.
Tabloids
A newspaper of small format giving the news in condensed form, usually with illustrated, often sensational material.
Tanginess
having a tang.
Tarantelle
a lively whirling Italian dance for two persons
Tartan
A design of such a plaid known by the name of the clan wearing it.
Tease
to irritate or provoke with persistent petty distractions, trifling raillery, or other annoyance, often in sport.
Teatray
a tray that accommodates a tea service
Tempestuously
resembling a tempest
Tendons
A band of tough, inelastic fibrous tissue that connects a muscle with its bony attachment.
Tethered
to fasten, or restrain by, or as if by, a tether
Tetramer
A molecule (as an anzyme or a polymer) that consists of four structural subunits (as peptide chains or condensed monomers)
Theatricals
Affectedly dramatic gestures or behavior; histrionics.
Thievish
of, relating to, or characteristic of a thief
Thin
having relatively little extent from one surface or side to the opposite; not thick: thin ice.
Third
the third member of a series.
Thirteen
a cardinal number, 10 plus 3.
Threads
A thin strand, cord, or filament of natural or manufactured material.
Tiredly
In a weary manner
Toe
Any of the five digits at the end of the foot.
Tomb
an excavation in earth or rock for the burial of a corpse; grave.
Tongs
To seize, hold, or manipulate with tongs
Tonia
Degree or state of tonicity: myotonia.
Toplofty
probably from the phrase top loft, Date: 1823 : very superior in air or attitude
Totalled
to bring to a total; add up
Trained
To make proficient with specialized instruction and practice.
Trainline
a pipe or hose distributing compressed air through a train for operation of the brakes.
Transcension
The act of transcending, or surpassing; also, passage over.
Transporting
The condition of being transported by emotion; rapture.
Treatability
able to be treated, esp. medically:Some diseases are treatable but not curable.
Tribulations
Great affliction, trial, or distress; suffering: Their tribulation has finally passed. An experience that tests one's endurance, patience, or faith.
Trifled
To deal with something as if it were of little significance or value.
Trivially
Ordinary; commonplace.
Troves
A collection of valuable items discovered or found; a treasure-trove.
Truce
a suspension of hostilities for a specified period of time by mutual agreement of the warring parties; cease-fire; armistice.
Trusts
Firm reliance on the integrity, ability, or character of a person or thing.
Tulip
a spring-flowering plant with boldly colored cup-shaped flowers.
Tune
A succession of musical sounds forming an air or melody, with or without the harmony accompanying it.
Tunics
A long, plain, close-fitting jacket, usually having a stiff high collar and worn as part of a uniform.
Tzar
A person having great power; an autocrat: the square-jawed, ruddy complacency of Jack Farrell, the czar of the Fifteenth Street police station" (Ernest Hemingway).

Ugly
Offensive to the sense of beauty; morally reprehensible; provoking horror; objectionable.
Unattended
Not accompanied, as by an attendant or companion; alone
Unclasp
to undo the clasp or clasps of; unfasten.
Undergarments
A garment worn under outer garments, especially one worn next to the skin.
Unessential
not of prime importance; not indispensable.
Ungrave
To raise or remove from the grave; to disinter; to untomb; to exhume
Unhappiness
state characterized by emotions ranging from mild discontentment to deep grief
Unhesitating
without hesitation
Unlifelike
Unreal;not life;without substance
Unmingled
Not mixed with extraneous elements
Unnecessary
not necessary.
Unsaid
not said; thought but not mentioned or discussed; unstated: It was best left unsaid.
Unscrupulousness
the quality of being oblivious to or contemptuous of what is right or honorable; unrestrained by scruples; conscienceless; unprincipled
Unsewn
To remove or rip stitches of (something sewed).
Unskilled
exhibiting a marked lack of skill or competence: an unskilled painting; an unskilled writer.
Untruthfulness
the quality of being untruthful, given to falsehood
Unwisely
without good sense or judgment
Unwittingly
unintentionally; accidentallly
Urtext
the original text (as of a musical score)

V
the 22nd letter of the English alphabet, a consonant.
Vacates
makes legally void.
Venom
something resembling or suggesting poison in its effect; spite; malice: the venom of jealousy.
Ventriloquy
the art of projecting your voice so that it seems to come from another source (as from a ventriloquist's dummy)
Verboten
forbidden, as by law; prohibited
Verticillium
a fungus of the genus Verticillium
Vicariously
performed, exercised, received, or suffered in place of another: vicarious punishment.
Villainy
the actions or conduct of a villain; outrageous wickedness.
Viper
a venomous or reputedly venomous snake; a vicious or treacherous person
Virgo
the sixth sign of the zodiac in astrology
Virulence
venomous hostility
Vision
The mystical experience of seeing as if with the eyes the supernatural or a supernatural being.

W
the 23rd letter of the English alphabet
Waggery
the action, spirit, or language of a wag; roguish or droll humor
Wetter
Characterized by the presence or use of water or other liquid.
Wig
an artificial covering of hair for all or most of the head, of either synthetic or natural hair, worn to be stylish or more attractive.
Wight
a supernatural being, as a witch or sprite.
Wittiness
a message whose ingenuity or verbal skill or incongruity has the power to evoke laughter.
Worse
bad or ill in a greater or higher degree; inferior in excellence, quality, or character.
Wraps
To arrange or fold (something) about as cover or protection.
Wrong
not in accordance with what is morally right or good: a wrong deed.
Wrongdoer
A person who transgresses moral or civil law
Wrongfully
in an unjust or unfair manner

Xenagogue
A guide.
Xylans
A yellow, water-soluble, gummy polysaccharide found in plant cell walls and yielding xylose upon hydrolysis.

Yam
the sweet potato.
Yearn
have affection for; feel tenderness for
Yearns
The he/she/it form of 'to yearn'. To have a strong, often melancholy desire.
Yo
used as an exclamation to get someone's attention, express excitement, greet someone, etc.

Zettabytes
A zettabyte is a unit of information equal to 1000 exabytes or 10^21 bytes.
Zoa
pl. of zoon.
Zone
An area or a region distinguished from adjacent parts by a distinctive feature or characteristic.
Zygomorphy
having bilateral symmetry; divisible lengthwise into similar or symmetrical halves.

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