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frequently_asked_questions_files/Oxford Thesaurus.pdf

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--n. 2 nonentity, unknown, zero, cipher, Colloq nothing:<br />

Overnight, Tony went from being a celebrity to being a nobody.<br />

nod v. 1 greet, acknowledge, recognize: The maŒtre d'h“tel nodded<br />

to me as I entered the restaurant. 2 say yes; consent, assent,<br />

agree, concur, acquiesce: Asked if she had seen Nick, the<br />

barmaid nodded. I <strong>asked</strong> permission to leave the room and the<br />

teacher nodded. 3 doze (off), nap, drowse, drop off, fall<br />

asleep: Exhausted travellers nodded in their chairs waiting for<br />

their flights to be announced. 4 slip (up), err, make a mistake,<br />

be mistaken or wrong; be careless or negligent or lax or<br />

inattentive: Sometimes, even Homer nods.<br />

--n. 5 signal, sign, cue, indication, gesture: I saw him give<br />

a nod to the barber, who suddenly held a cutthroat razor to my<br />

throat. 6 approval; consent, acquiescence, concurrence, assent,<br />

agreement, Colloq OK or okay: The company has given me the nod<br />

to open an office in Acapulco.<br />

nodding adj. casual, slight, superficial, distant; incomplete: I know<br />

Graham slightly - he's a nodding acquaintance. It was clear that<br />

the violinist had only a nodding acquaintance with Mozart's<br />

concerto.<br />

noise n. 1 sound, clamour, crash, clap, clash, clangour, din,<br />

thunder, thundering, rumble, rumbling, outcry, hubbub, uproar,<br />

hullabaloo, racket, charivari or US and Canadian also shivaree,<br />

rattle, caterwauling, rumpus, blare, blast, blasting, bawling,<br />

babel; commotion, bedlam, fracas, tumult, pandemonium, turmoil;<br />

discordance, dissonance, cacophony; Archaic alarms or alarums<br />

and excursions, Colloq ruckus, ruction, ballyhoo: I couldn't<br />

sleep because of the unbearable noise from the party next door.<br />

You may call acid rock music, but she calls it noise. 2 sound,<br />

disturbance: Did you just hear that strange noise? It's only<br />

the noise of the crickets.<br />

--v. 3 Often, noise about or around. circulate, spread, rumour,<br />

bruit (about): It is being noised about that John and Marsha<br />

are getting a divorce.<br />

noiseless adj. muted, quiet, soft, hushed, muffled, deadened, dampened,<br />

damped; silent, mute, still, inaudible, soundless: We watched<br />

the noiseless boats gliding past.

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