Welcome to Bookmarker!

This is a personal project by @dellsystem. I built this to help me retain information from the books I'm reading.

Source code on GitHub (MIT license).

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(noun) a vehicle used to haul goods / (noun) a strong cart or wagon without sides / (verb) to haul on a dray; cart / (noun) a horse adapted for drawing heavy loads

(noun) trash, rubbish

(noun) the scum that forms on the surface of molten metal / (noun) waste or foreign matter; impurity / (noun) something that is base, trivial, or inferior

a feeling of offense or deep resentment

dun (en)

(adjective) marked by dullness and drabness

(noun) instances of putting someone under duress?

(noun) a government in which power is vested in two rulers or authorities

(noun) indigestion; ill humor; disgruntlement

(noun) the quality of lively or enthusiastic expression of thoughts or feelings; exuberance

means Church Militant; a branch of the Christian Church which consists of Christians on earth who struggle as soldiers of Christ against sin, the devil, and "the rulers of the world of this darkness, against the spirits of wickedness in the high places"

(adjective) true genuine

(noun) a poem in which shepherds converse

(noun) beige

(noun) the principle or aim of promoting unity among the world's Christian churches.

(verb) build / (verb) establish / (verb) to instruct and improve especially in moral and religious knowledge; uplift / (verb) enlighten inform

a German philosopher (1859-1938) who established the school of phenomenology

(verb) to bring out (as something latent) / (verb) deduce

(adjective) no longer fertile / (adjective) having lost character, vitality, or strength / (adjective) marked by weakness or decadence / (adjective) soft or delicate from or as if from a pampered existence / (adjective) effeminate

(noun) radiant splendor; brilliance

the action of going out of or leaving a place

meaning "form" "essence", "type" or "species" (developed in Plato's theory of forms?)

a card game in which the deck has been stacked

tending to promote peace or reconciliation; peaceful or conciliatory (alt: irenic); a part of Christian theology

the process of interpreting a text or portion of text in such a way that the process introduces one's own presuppositions, agendas, or biases into and onto the text

a rhetorical term originally taught to Greek students as a way of bringing the experience of an object to a listener or reader through highly detailed descriptive writing