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frequently_asked_questions_files/Oxford Thesaurus.pdf

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are extremely complicated. 2 (job) security, permanence,<br />

permanency: After five years he was automatically guaranteed<br />

tenure.<br />

tepid adj. 1 lukewarm, warmish: The gelatine should be tepid before<br />

refrigerating it. 2 lukewarm, unenthusiastic, cool,<br />

indifferent, apathetic, uninterested, unconcerned, nonchalant,<br />

uncaring, neutral, blas‚: How can he remain tepid on an issue<br />

like apartheid?<br />

term n. 1 name, title, designation, appellation; word, expression,<br />

locution, phrase: The term for that is venturi tube. Habeas<br />

corpus is a term of art in law. 2 semester; time, period (of<br />

time), interval, length of time, span (of time), duration,<br />

spell, stretch, while: During the summer term we played cricket<br />

every Saturday. He was sentenced to a long term of imprisonment.<br />

3 sitting, stint, session, course; incumbency, administration:<br />

During their latest term of office, interest rates were raised<br />

twice. 4 Often, terms. condition(s), provision(s), article(s),<br />

clause(s), proviso(s); stipulation(s), qualification(s),<br />

assumption(s): According to the terms of the will, proceeds<br />

from the patent go into a trust fund. 5 come to terms. agree,<br />

come to or reach an agreement or an arrangement or an<br />

understanding, reconcile, arrange, settle, compromise: Can we<br />

come to terms on the price? He will simply have to come to terms<br />

with his conscience. 6 in terms of. concerning, regarding, as<br />

regards, with regard to, in relation to, relative to, relating<br />

to, in the matter of: The psychiatrist offered little in terms<br />

of direct solutions to my problems. 7 terms. a payment,<br />

schedule, rates: What terms have they offered to settle the<br />

debt? b standing, position, basis, relationship, relations,<br />

footing: I always thought you two were on good terms.<br />

--v. 8 call, name, label, designate, denominate, entitle,<br />

title, style, dub; nickname: Abraham Lincoln was termed, among<br />

other things, 'The Great Emancipator'.<br />

terminal adj. 1 closing, concluding, terminating, ending, final,<br />

ultimate, extreme; maximum, greatest: Spencer wrote that the<br />

human being is at once the terminal problem of biology and the<br />

initial factor of sociology. 2 deadly, mortal, fatal, lethal,<br />

incurable: The cancer was diagnosed as terminal.

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