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Word List / A :.

76. anchority (ăn'chôr'ĭ-tē)

  1. a. (n.) A group's final, hard-fought decision on what toppings to order on a pizza.

77. ancieverknowledgetale (ān-shĕv'ər-nŏl'ĭj-tāl)

  1. a. (n.) Any story about the "Good Old Days" told by an adult or elderly person.

78. animane (ăn'ə-măn)

  1. a. (adj.) To treat animals with kindness and respect since one cannot treat an animal humanely. Because they aren't human, you can only treat them animanely.

79. animositous (ăn'ə-mŏs'ĭ-təs)

  1. a. (adj.) Describing the atmosphere which pertains between two people who do not like each other.

    Example: Relations between Jill and John have been distinctly animositous since she shot his cat.
  2. b. (adj.) Describing one's feelings or behavior toward someone they do not like.

    Example: I was feeling so animositous towards you, I could have screamed.

80. animostic (ān'ə-mŏs'tĭk)

  1. a. (adj.) Something that is salty and nasty; having animosity.

    Example: why are you so animostic?

81. annerving (ə-nûr-vĭng)

  1. a. (adj.) Describing someone who is both annoying and getting on another's nerves. Beyond being a simple pest.

82. annoyitate (ə-noi'ə-tāt')

  1. a. (v.tr.) Using one's ability to annoy and irritate, at the same time.

83. antalixic (ăn'tə'lĭks'ĭk)

  1. a. (n.) One who passes over licorice jellybeans.

84. anticappoint (ăn-tĭs'ə-point')

  1. a. (v.tr.) To have a highly anticipated event fail to satisfy.
  2. b. (v.tr.) To have high hopes met with disappointment. Similarly: anticappointed, anticappointing, anticappoints.

85. anticillation (ăn-tĭs'l-ā'shən)

  1. a. (n.) A feeling of anticipated superficial stimulation while waiting for something exciting to happen.

86. anticiparcellate (ăn-tĭs'ə-pär'sə-lāt')

  1. a. (v.) Waiting until the mailman is several houses down the street before picking up the mail, so as not to appear too anxious.

87. anticiprecipitate (ăn-tĭs'ə-prĭ-sĭp'ĭ-tāt')

  1. a. (v.) Looking out a window persistently while anticipating a change in the weather that is to one's liking.

88. anticiprecipitation (ăn-tĭs'ə-prĭ-sĭp'ĭ-tā'shən)

  1. a. (n.) Any instance of anticiprecipitating. An expectation describing one who looks out a window in a persistent manner to see if there has been a change in the weather that is to their liking.

89. anticitickle (ăn'tĭs'ə)

  1. a. (v.) When one instinctively reacts to being tickled, before the tickle has actually occurred. Often, one is considered telepathically or telekinetically ticklish in cases like this.
  2. b. (v.) When the anticipation of being tickled causes the afflicted to flinch and jerk around.

90. anticluistic (ăn'tē-klü'ĭs'tĭk)

  1. a. (adj.) Describing a person who actively repels any attempt at getting a clue.

91. anticompanionize (ăn'tī-kəm-păn'yən-īz')

  1. a. (v.) One's constant rejection of their boyfriend's or girlfriend's companion animal, or generally hating their partner's cat or dog for absolutely no reason at all.

92. antigravisnot (ăn'tē-grăv'ĭ-snŏt)

  1. a. (n.) The ability of snot to run down one's face while their head is tilted back.

93. anxieapeek (ăng-zĭ'ĭ-pĕk)

  1. a. (n.) The cautious opening of an envelope containing semester grades or other possibly dangerous material.

94. apatheist (ăp'ə-thē-ĭst)

  1. a. (n.) One who denies the possible existence of a supreme being only because they have a lack of interest in discovering this for oneself. Often mistaken with an atheist who openly denies the existence of God or gods, and refuses to say otherwise.

95. apatheticist (ap'ə-thĕ'tĭ-cĭst)

  1. a. (n.) One who advocates apathy as the only logical response towards unanswerable questions or ineluctable problems. Similarly: apatheticism (philos.)

96. apostrophascist (ə-pŏs'trə-fă'cĭst)

  1. a. (n.) One of the army of self-righteous goons that jumps on others as soon as they veer even slightly away from the hideously outdated English grammar and punctuation standards laid down by the Victorians when they realized their mother tongue was a mutated to the point that it would never have the elegance of Latin or the precision of High German.

97. appendasm (ə-pĕn-dăz'əm)

  1. a. (n.) The twitching, uncomfortable sensation that passes through a limb when it is awakened from an appendoze. Appendasms may last for some time and can be quite intense depending on the length and depth of the appendoze.

98. appendoze (ə-pĕn-dōz)

  1. a. (v.) The phenomena in which a part of the body seems to go to sleep. This is due to the body part having restricted blood flow for an extended period. The re-awakening of the ailing limb is achieved by re-positioning it.

99. applicating (ăp'lĭ-kāt'ĭng)

  1. a. (v.tr.) The act of submitting applications.

100. appointed (ə-poin'tĭd)

  1. a. (adj.) To be thoroughly satisfied with something; the opposite of disappointed.

    Example: He was most appointed by the meal.

 

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