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frequently_asked_questions_files/Oxford Thesaurus.pdf

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proud adj. 1 Often, proud of. pleased (with), satisfied (with),<br />

contented (with), glad (about), happy (with or about), delighted<br />

(with or about), elated (with or about); honoured, gratified:<br />

He is very proud of his children and what they have achieved. I<br />

am proud to be your friend. 2 conceited, boastful,<br />

self-satisfied, narcissistic, self-important, egotistical, vain,<br />

vainglorious, prideful, self-centred, complacent, snobbish,<br />

haughty, supercilious, smug, arrogant, cocky, cocksure,<br />

boastful, braggart, Colloq high and mighty, snooty, stuck-up,<br />

Slang snotty, Brit toffee-nosed: She's far too proud to have<br />

anything to do with the likes of us. 3 lofty, dignified,<br />

lordly, noble, great, respected, honoured, honourable,<br />

important, glorious, august, illustrious, estimable, creditable,<br />

eminent, prominent, distinguished, reputable, worthy, notable,<br />

noted, noteworthy: His will always be a proud name in British<br />

military history. 4 stately, majestic, magnificent, splendid,<br />

grand: Proud Edinburgh earned the sobriquet, 'Athens of the<br />

north'.<br />

prove v. 1 verify, authenticate, confirm, make good, corroborate,<br />

demonstrate, show, validate, establish, substantiate, certify,<br />

affirm; support, sustain, back (up), uphold: Prove that he lied<br />

under oath, and we shall have him for perjury. If you cannot<br />

prove her guilt, she must be presumed innocent. 2 try, test,<br />

examine, check, analyse, assay: Division can easily be proved<br />

by multiplication, and vice versa. The proving ground for<br />

military vehicles is off limits to the public. Come live with<br />

me and be my love, And we shall all the pleasures prove. 3 turn<br />

out, be found, be shown, be established, end up; develop,<br />

result: The child proved to be his long-lost grandson. 4 show,<br />

evince, demonstrate: He proved his love many times over during<br />

their fifty years of marriage.<br />

provender n. 1 provisions, food, supplies, victuals, rations, foodstuffs,<br />

groceries, eatables, edibles, comestibles, aliment, nourishment,<br />

sustenance, Colloq grub, eats: The armies relied for their<br />

provender on farms they passed on the march. 2 fodder, forage,<br />

feed, hay, silage, corn, grain: Provender for the livestock was<br />

running low because of the long winter.<br />

proverb n. saying, maxim, aphorism, saw, adage, apophthegm or apothegm,<br />

axiom, moral, moralism, homily, dictum, gnome, epigram,

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