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frequently_asked_questions_files/Oxford Thesaurus.pdf

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cargoes of spices, sailing towards us.<br />

heavy-handed<br />

adj. 1 awkward, clumsy, inept, maladroit, unskilful,<br />

ungraceful, graceless, bungling: She made a heavy-handed<br />

attempt to apologize. 2 autocratic, imperious, magisterial,<br />

overbearing, despotic, dictatorial, tyrannical, oppressive,<br />

domineering, iron-handed, harsh, severe: For more than 30 years<br />

he exercised heavy-handed control over the country.<br />

heckle v. badger, pester, annoy, irritate, bother, nettle, bait,<br />

harass, harry, plague, hector, taunt, jeer, Colloq hassle, bug,<br />

Brit and Australian and New Zealand barrack: One man kept<br />

heckling the speaker with persistent interruptions.<br />

hectic adj. feverish, excited, agitated, busy, bustling, rushed,<br />

hyperactive, over-active, frenzied, frantic, chaotic, wild, mad,<br />

frenetic, riotous: What with the new baby and everyone else<br />

having the flu, I've had a pretty hectic week.<br />

heed v. 1 pay attention to, attend, (take or make) note (of), listen<br />

to, mark, consider, bear in mind; take, follow, obey, mind,<br />

respect, accept, abide by: I wish I had heeded her suggestions<br />

for redecorating the house. Heeding his advice, I joined the<br />

army.<br />

--n. 2 attention, notice, ear, mind, notice, respect,<br />

consideration, thought: Let us give heed to the speaker's<br />

admonitions.<br />

heedless adj. inattentive, uncaring, unmindful, neglectful, unobservant,<br />

regardless; oblivious, deaf, blind: Heedless of tradition, they<br />

replaced the older buildings with council housing.<br />

heel° n. 1 end, butt or tail or fag (end), stump, remainder, remnant,<br />

rind, crust: You can always freeze the heel of a loaf to use at<br />

some later date for breadcrumbs. 2 cad, scoundrel, swine, rogue,<br />

scamp, philanderer, Old-fashioned worm, knave, Chiefly Brit<br />

blackguard, Colloq Brit rotter, Old-fashioned bounder, Slang<br />

bastard, Brit sod: He's an absolute heel - he got her pregnant<br />

and then left her. 3 down at heel. US also down at the heels;<br />

poor, destitute, impoverished, down and out, on (one's) uppers,<br />

in straitened circumstances; shabby, seedy, dowdy, run-down,

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