(noun) a long, mournful complaint or lamentation; a list of woes
a recurrent theme throughout a musical or literary composition, associated with a particular person, idea, or situation
(noun) the text of a work (as an opera) for the musical theater / (noun) the book containing a libretto (from Italian)
(adjective) marked by wantonness; lecherous / (adjective) salacious / (adjective) having a smooth or slippery quality
(noun) material wealth or possessions especially as having a debasing influence (from the New Testament)
(noun) historically, a high government bureaucrat of the Chinese Empire OR a pedantic or elitist bureaucrat OR senior person of influence in academia or literary circles / (adj) deliberately superior or complex; esoteric, highbrow, obscurantist
(noun) a posited object or event as it appears in itself independent of perception by the senses
a manuscript or piece of writing material on which the original writing has been effaced to make room for later writing but of which traces remain
(adjective) deficient in color; wan / (adjective) lacking sparkle or liveliness; dull
(noun) the lower middle class including especially small shopkeepers and artisans
(adjective) of or relating to rogues or rascals / (adjective) of, relating to, suggesting, or being a type of fiction dealing with the episodic adventures of a usually roguish protagonist / (noun) one that is picaresque
(noun) a vote by which the people of an entire country or district express an opinion for or against a proposal especially on a choice of government or ruler
(adjective) characteristic of or belonging to the time or state before the fall of humankind
(adjective) favorably disposed; benevolent / (adjective) being a good omen; auspicious / (adjective) tending to favor; advantageous
(adjective) being less dense / (adjective) of, relating to, or interesting to a select group; esoteric / (adjective) very high / (verb) to make rare, thin, porous, or less dense; to expand without the addition of matter / (verb) to make more spiritual, refined, or abstruse / (verb) to become less dense
make (something abstract) more concrete or real
make (something abstract) more concrete or real
a novel in which real people or events appear with invented names
(adjective) difficult knotty / (adjective) ; rough to the touch; as / (adjective) having small raised dots, scales, or points / (adjective) covered with raised, roughened, or unwholesome patches / (adjective) dealing with suggestive, indecent, or scandalous themes; salacious / (adjective) squalid
(verb) philosophy: to negate or eliminate (as an element in a dialectic process) but preserve as a partial element in a synthesis; assimilate (a smaller entity) into a larger one; used by Hegel
assistance and support in times of hardship and distress
(adjective) affording a general view of a whole / (adjective) manifesting or characterized by comprehensiveness or breadth of view / (adjective) presenting or taking the same or common view
(noun) an ultimate end (from Greek)
(noun) a change or variation occurring in the course of something; successive, alternating, or changing phases or conditions, as of life or fortune; ups and downs
(noun) sustained and bitter railing and condemnation; vituperative utterance / (noun) an act or instance of vituperating