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1. A person, etc. who conducts, leads, guides, etc.; one who leads, guides, or escorts; a leader, guide
1 To lead, take away, or carry off1. improperly, whether by force or fraud 2.1. A leading away
Something produced by human or mechanical effort or by a natural process.
to forgive or approve
A special donation; a gift
a person or entity receiving an outright gift or donation.
donee
condone
doromania, doromaniac A compulsion to give presents.
To subtract or to take away:
5. To bring forth, bring into being or existence.
to give, given; to grant, to offer
produce, abduct, product, transducer, viaduct, aqueduct, induct, deduct, reduce, induce
1. A conduit, channel, or tube, for the conveyance of water or other liquid. 2. A pipe or tube through which air is conveyed for cooling, ventilation, etc. 3. A conduit for an electric cable or the like. 4. A tube or canal in the animal body, by which the bodily fluids are conveyed. Formerly used in a wide sense, so as to include the blood-vessels and alimentary canal, but now applied more strictly to the vessels conveying the chyle, lymph, and secretions.
1. In the United Kingdom, a university or college teacher; especially, one at the universities of Oxford or Cambridge in England. 2. A Spanish gentleman or aristocrat: "Some people remember California in the days of the dons." 3. A head of an organized crime family, especially in the Mafia. 4. Etymology: don, as a noun, comes from the 1520's, from Spanish or Portuguese don, a title of respect; which came from Latin dominus, "lord, master". The university sense is appeared in about 1660; when it was originally part of student slang. The underworld or criminal sense came about 1952, from Italian don, from Late Latin domnus, which came from Latin dominus. The feminne forms are Dona (Spanish and Portuguese) and Donna (Italian).
Dictaphone® A trademark for a small hand-held tape recorder used for dictation. dictate 1. To put into words that are to be written down; to utter, pronounce, or read aloud to a person (something which he/she is to write). 2. To prescribe (a course or object of action); to lay down authoritatively; to order, or command in express terms. 3. To use or practice dictation; to lay down the law, to give orders. dictation 1. The pronunciation of words that are to be written down. 2. The activity of taking down a passage that is read aloud by a teacher as a test of spelling, writing, or language skills. 3. Arbitrary command; the exercise of dictatorship. 4. The action of giving orders authoritatively or categorically.
2. In ancient times, a popular leader who represented the ordinay people. 3. In ancient times, a leader of the people; a popular leader or orator who espoused the cause of the people against any other party in the state.
1. In a bad sense: a leader of a popular faction, or of the mob; a political agitator who appeals to the passions and prejudices of the mob in order to obtain power or further his own interests; an unprincipled or factious popular orator.