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feeling or showing anger or strong resentment
angry
an infant or very young child.
a baby
an institution for receiving, lending, exchanging, and safeguarding money and, in some cases, issuing notes and transacting other financial business.
a bank
a room equipped for taking a bath or shower.
a bathroom
being a color that lacks hue and brightness and absorbs light without reflecting any of the rays composing it
black
a large motor vehicle, having a long body, equipped with seats or benches for passengers, usually operating as part of a scheduled service
a bus
a sweet, baked, breadlike food, made with or without shortening, and usually containing flour, sugar, baking powder or soda, eggs, and liquid flavoring.
a cake
a small domesticated carnivore, Felis domestica or F. catus, bred in a number of varieties.
a cat
a large or important town.
a city
full of or overcast by clouds
cloudy
to move one's feet or body, or both, rhythmically in a pattern of steps, especially to the accompaniment of music.
dance
an article of furniture having a broad, usually level, writing surface, as well as drawers or compartments for papers, writing materials, etc.
a desk
soiled with dirt; foul; unclean
dirty
a device, as a piece of rubber or cloth, for erasing marks made with pen, pencil, chalk, etc.
an eraser
a basic social unit consisting of parents and their children, considered as a group, whether dwelling together or not
a family
moving or able to move, operate, function, or take effect quickly
fast
the mother of one's father or mother.
grandmother
any of numerous agile, hollow-horned ruminants of the genus Capra, of the family Bovidae, closely related to the sheep, found native in rocky and mountainous regions of the Old World, and widely distributed in domesticated varieties.
a goat
a vast computer network linking smaller computer networks worldwide. It includes commercial, educational, governmental, and other networks, all of which use the same set of communications protocols
The Internet
a tract of land completely surrounded by water, and not large enough to be called a continent.
an island
a short coat, in any of various forms, usually opening down the front.
a jacket
a light frame covered with some thin material, to be flown in the wind at the end of a long string.
a kite
a room in a home used, especially by a family, for leisure activities, entertaining guests, etc.; parlor.
a living room
the first part or period of the day, extending from dawn, or from midnight, to noon.
morning
the opening through which an animal or human takes in food.
a mouth
a motor vehicle similar to a bicycle but usually larger and heavier, chiefly for one rider but sometimes having two saddles or an attached sidecar for passengers.
a motorcycle
a building or place where works of art, scientific specimens, or other objects of permanent value are kept and displayed.
a museum
a person formally educated and trained in the care of the sick or infirm.
a nurse
a flat, open-faced baked pie of Italian origin, consisting of a thin layer of bread dough topped with spiced tomato sauce and cheese, often garnished with anchovies, sausage slices, mushrooms, etc.
pizza
affected by unhappiness or grief; sorrowful or mournful
sad
a small portion of food or drink or a light meal, especially one eaten between regular meals.
a snack
the transmission of programming, in the form of still or moving images, via radio waves, cable wires, satellite, or wireless network to a receiver or other screen.
television
the day following today
tomorrow
a cardinal number, nine plus one.
ten
the cold season between autumn and spring in northern latitudes (in the Northern Hemisphere from the winter solstice to the vernal equinox; in the Southern Hemisphere from the summer solstice to the autumnal equinox).
winter