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frequently_asked_questions_files/Oxford Thesaurus.pdf

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exhausting, tiring, wearying, fatiguing, wearing, taxing,<br />

demanding, burdensome, back-breaking, torturous: Laying railway<br />

track was the most punishing job I ever had. This punishing<br />

schedule is beginning to tell on me.<br />

punishment<br />

n. 1 chastisement, chastising, castigation, castigating,<br />

discipline, disciplining, chastening, scolding, rebuke, reproof,<br />

dressing-down, admonishment, admonition, correction, punitive<br />

measures: Every society must continually revise its approach to<br />

the punishment of criminals. 2 penance, penalty, sentence,<br />

sentencing, just deserts; imprisonment, incarceration, jailing<br />

or Brit also gaoling; lashing, flogging, beating, whipping,<br />

scourging, spanking, caning, birching, US paddling; exile,<br />

banishment, excommunication, cashiering; hanging, execution,<br />

electrocution, drawing and quartering: Her punishment is to<br />

perform 20 hours a week of public service for a year. Stop<br />

whimpering and take your punishment like a man. 3 injury, harm,<br />

damage, abuse, maltreatment, mauling, beating, thrashing,<br />

trouncing, manhandling, battering, torture: How are<br />

professional wrestlers able to withstand so much punishment?<br />

punitive adj. chastening, castigatory, disciplinary, retributive,<br />

punitory, retaliatory, correctional: A punitive expedition was<br />

sent there to quell the colonists' uprising.<br />

punk n. 1 ruffian, hoodlum, hooligan, delinquent, tough, thug,<br />

vandal, yahoo, barbarian, Colloq goon, mug: A couple of young<br />

punks were standing at the bar, trying to look important.<br />

--adj. 2 inferior, rotten, unimportant, worthless, bad, poor,<br />

awful, Colloq lousy: I thought that the lead in the play was a<br />

punk actor.<br />

punt v. 1 bet, wager, stake, gamble, speculate, lay a bet or stake<br />

or wager: Herbert spends all the grocery money punting at the<br />

races.<br />

--n. 2 bet, wager, stake, gamble: In roulette, Janet always<br />

placed her punt on number 14.<br />

punter n. 1 Brit better or US also bettor, gambler, gamester, player,<br />

speculator, backer, wagerer, Brit punt, Colloq crap-shooter:

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