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frequently_asked_questions_files/Oxford Thesaurus.pdf

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grave, distinguished, honourable, distingu‚, elegant, august,<br />

sedate, reserved; regal, courtly, lordly, lofty, exalted, grand:<br />

Despite the abuse, he maintained a dignified demeanour.<br />

dignify v. distinguish, ennoble, elevate, raise, exalt, glorify,<br />

upraise, lift, uplift, enhance, improve, better, upgrade: The<br />

critic wrote that he wouldn't deign to dignify the book by<br />

calling it a novel.<br />

dignitary n. personage, official, notable, worthy, magnate, power,<br />

higher-up; celebrity, lion, luminary, star, superstar, Colloq<br />

VIP, bigwig, big shot, big wheel, big name, big gun, hotshot,<br />

hot stuff, big noise, big White Chief, big Chief, big Daddy,<br />

Brit Lord or Lady Muck, high-muck-a-muck, Slang big cheese,<br />

Chiefly US Mr Big, biggie, fat cat: Anyone with a lot of money<br />

is treated today as a dignitary.<br />

dignity n. 1 nobility, majesty, gravity, gravitas, solemnity,<br />

courtliness, distinction, stateliness, formality, grandeur,<br />

eminence; hauteur, loftiness: She entered and walked with<br />

dignity to the throne. 2 worth, worthiness, nobility,<br />

nobleness, excellence, honour, honourableness, respectability,<br />

respectableness, standing, importance, greatness, glory,<br />

station, status, rank, level, position: The real dignity of a<br />

man lies not in what he has but in what he is. 3 self-respect,<br />

self-regard, amour propre, self-confidence, self-esteem, pride,<br />

self-importance: It was beneath her dignity to speak directly<br />

to a footman.<br />

digression<br />

n. 1 aside, departure, deviation, detour, obiter dictum,<br />

parenthesis, apostrophe, excursus: His numerous digressions<br />

made it difficult to focus on the main points of the speech. 2<br />

digressing, deviating, divergence, going off at a tangent,<br />

rambling, meandering, straying, wandering, deviation:<br />

Digression from the main theme of his speech only diluted his<br />

argument.<br />

dilapidated<br />

adj. ruined, broken-down, in ruins, gone to rack and ruin,<br />

wrecked, destroyed, falling apart, decrepit, derelict, battered,<br />

tumbledown, run-down, ramshackle, crumbling, decayed, decaying,<br />

rickety, shaky, shabby, Brit raddled: We shall have to fix up

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