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frequently_asked_questions_files/Oxford Thesaurus.pdf

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avant-garde<br />

adj. innovative, advanced, progressive, experimental, original,<br />

new, ground-breaking, pioneering, precedent-setting;<br />

revolutionary, extreme, extremist, Colloq far-out, way-out: We<br />

disapprove of your avant-garde notions of teaching. Some modern<br />

art, avant-garde not very long ago, seems quite conventional<br />

today.<br />

avarice n. greed, acquisitiveness, cupidity, craving, covetousness,<br />

desire, greediness, rapacity, selfishness; stinginess, meanness,<br />

miserliness, parsimony, tight-fistedness, close-fistedness,<br />

niggardliness, penuriousness: The classic tale of avarice is<br />

that of King Midas, whose touch turned everything to gold.<br />

avaricious<br />

adj. greedy, acquisitive, grasping, covetous, mercenary,<br />

selfish; penny-pinching, stingy, miserly, mean, parsimonious,<br />

tight-fisted, close-fisted, niggardly, penurious, tight: She<br />

fell into the clutches of an avaricious lawyer.<br />

average n. 1 mean, norm, usual, standard: The Bell Inn is certainly<br />

far above average in accommodation, food quality, and service. 2<br />

on average. in the main, generally, normally, usually,<br />

ordinarily, typically, customarily, as a rule, for the most<br />

part: On average, I go abroad twice a year on business.<br />

--adj. 3 normal, common, usual, customary, general, typical,<br />

ordinary, regular: On an average day, the museum has about<br />

2,000 visitors. 4 mediocre, middling, run-of-the-mill,<br />

commonplace, common, ordinary, undistinguished, unexceptional,<br />

Colloq so so: Boris is only an average violinist, but he's a<br />

virtuoso on the harmonica.<br />

averse adj. disinclined, unwilling, reluctant, resistant, loath,<br />

opposed, anti, antipathetic, ill-disposed, indisposed: He does<br />

not appear to be averse to your suggestion: in fact, he seems<br />

quite keen on it.<br />

aversion n. 1 dislike, abhorrence, repugnance, antipathy, antagonism,<br />

animosity, hostility, loathing, hatred, odium, horror;<br />

disinclination, unwillingness, reluctance, dislike, distaste:<br />

Does Anne have an aversion to people who smoke? Your aversion to

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