490 lines
26 KiB
JSON
490 lines
26 KiB
JSON
{
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"pioneer":{
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"antonyms":[
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"begin",
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"constitute",
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"establish",
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"found",
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"inaugurate",
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"initiate",
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"innovate",
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"institute",
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"introduce",
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"launch",
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"plant",
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"set up",
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"start"
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],
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"definitions":{
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": a member of a military unit usually of construction engineers":[],
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": a person or group that originates or helps open up a new line of thought or activity or a new method or technical development":[],
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": a plant or animal capable of establishing itself in a bare, barren, or open area and initiating an ecological cycle":[],
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": one of the first to settle in a territory":[],
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": original , earliest":[],
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": to act as a pioneer":[
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"pioneered in the development of airplanes"
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],
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": to originate or take part in the development of":[]
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},
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"examples":[
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"Noun",
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"the pioneers who settled in the American West in the 19th century",
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"the hardships that the pioneers endured while taming the wilderness",
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"Verb",
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"a painter who pioneered a new art form",
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"The new method of cancer treatment was pioneered by an international team of researchers.",
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"He helped pioneer a new route to the West.",
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"He pioneered in the development of airplanes.",
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"Adjective",
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"the nation's pioneer institution for the education of African-Americans",
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"Recent Examples on the Web: Noun",
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"Norman Giller, who died in 2008, was a pioneer of Miami Modernism, a regional style of architecture that emerged in the post-World War II era. \u2014 Sergio Carmona, Sun Sentinel , 10 June 2022",
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"The German producer was a pioneer of international co-productions and helped such international auteurs as Aki Kaurismaki, Olivier Assayas, Emir Kusturica and Kim Ki-duk get their movies made. \u2014 Scott Roxborough, The Hollywood Reporter , 10 June 2022",
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"Along with Twenty Tap, Fat Dan\u2019s Deli and The Jazz Kitchen steps away, The Bulldog is set to up the bar and dining factor in the area in which its predecessor had been a pioneer . \u2014 Cheryl V. Jackson, The Indianapolis Star , 9 June 2022",
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"While Redbox was a pioneer , its business never really took off. \u2014 Scott Nover, Quartz , 24 May 2022",
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"Priesand had wanted to be a teacher and ended up being a pioneer . \u2014 Jeff Suess, The Enquirer , 17 May 2022",
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"The lovers never reunited, but their daughter, Ine, was a pioneer . \u2014 Rob Goss, Smithsonian Magazine , 13 May 2022",
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"To be a pioneer of my own sounds and to learn about my fans and myself through this journey. \u2014 Spin Staff, SPIN , 12 May 2022",
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"Dylan had been an early acolyte of Guthrie, who was a pioneer of American folk music. \u2014 Annie Gowen, Anchorage Daily News , 6 May 2022",
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"Recent Examples on the Web: Verb",
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"Issaoun, an observational astronomer at the Center for Astrophysics at Harvard & Smithsonian and a member of the black hole-imaging Event Horizon Telescope collaboration, helped pioneer new technology to discover what happens near a black hole. \u2014 Curtis Silver, Forbes , 6 May 2022",
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"The dinner had other serious moments, with tributes to pioneer journalists of color, aspiring student reporters as well as a dedication to the journalists detained, injured or killed during the coverage of the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine. \u2014 Farnoush Amiri And Will Weissert, Chron , 2 May 2022",
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"In 2020, the group teamed up with Mercer University to bring back Capricorn Sound Studios, where artists can use original analog equipment while channeling Duane Allman, or pioneer something new, amid the shag carpeting and groovy, psychedelic art. \u2014 Candice Dyer, ajc , 2 May 2022",
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"The dinner had other serious moments, with tributes to pioneer journalists of color, aspiring student reporters as well as a dedication to the journalists detained, injured or killed during the coverage of the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine. \u2014 Will Weissert, Fortune , 1 May 2022",
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"The dinner had other serious moments, with tributes to pioneer journalists of color, aspiring student reporters as well as a dedication to the journalists detained, injured or killed during the coverage of the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine. \u2014 CBS News , 30 Apr. 2022",
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"Vanguard helped pioneer the rise of passive investing through low-cost index funds. \u2014 Dawn Lim, WSJ , 11 Oct. 2021",
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"Robert Dooling of the University of Maryland helped to pioneer the study of fine structure in birdsong. \u2014 Adam Fishbein, Scientific American , 1 May 2022",
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"And it\u2019s a gender-norm-flouting movement that Fleetwood and his peers helped pioneer in the late \u201960s and \u201970s. \u2014 Los Angeles Times , 7 Mar. 2022"
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],
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"first_known_use":{
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"1523, in the meaning defined at sense 1":"Noun",
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"1780, in the meaning defined at intransitive sense":"Verb",
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"1836, in the meaning defined at sense 1":"Adjective"
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},
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"history_and_etymology":{
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"Middle French pionier , from Old French peonier foot soldier, from peon foot soldier, from Medieval Latin pedon-, pedo \u2014 more at pawn":"Noun"
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},
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"pronounciation":[
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"\u02ccp\u012b-\u0259-\u02c8nir"
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],
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"synonym_discussion":"",
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"synonyms":[
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"colonial",
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"colonist",
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"colonizer",
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"frontiersman",
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"homesteader",
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"settler"
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],
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"time_of_retrieval":"20220707-034942",
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"type":[
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"adjective",
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"noun",
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"verb"
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]
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},
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"pious":{
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"antonyms":[
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"disloyal",
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"faithless",
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"false",
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"fickle",
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"inconstant",
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"perfidious",
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"recreant",
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"traitorous",
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"treacherous",
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"unfaithful",
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"untrue"
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],
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"definitions":{
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": deserving commendation : worthy":[
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"a pious effort"
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],
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": marked by conspicuous religiosity":[
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"a hypocrite\u2014a thing all pious words and uncharitable deeds",
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"\u2014 Charles Reade"
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],
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": marked by or showing reverence for deity and devotion to divine worship":[],
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": marked by self-conscious virtue : virtuous":[],
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": marked by sham or hypocrisy":[],
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": sacred or devotional as distinct from the profane or secular : religious":[
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"a pious opinion"
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],
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": showing loyal reverence for a person or thing : dutiful":[]
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},
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"examples":[
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"We must ask to what extent, and at however unconscious a level, a conflict arises in the pious political mind when it is sworn to uphold the civil religion of the Constitution. \u2014 E. L. Doctorow , Free Inquiry , October/November 2008",
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"But our problem is the lack of any shared or coherent attitude toward the rest of the world, without which, as Judt acknowledges, Europe exists in pieces, an outsize Switzerland held together by nothing more solid than pious sentiment. \u2014 Nicholas Fraser , Harper's , May 2006",
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"The other side of the masonry block was covered with a web of ancient graffiti, she said, left by pious visitors to the tomb. \u2014 Tom Mueller , Atlantic , October 2003",
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"The news offered so many occasions for pious or ribald commentary that any chance of agreement about what any of it meant was lost in a vast din of clucking and sniggering. \u2014 Lewis H. Lapham , Harper's , August 1997",
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"Japanese schools have another eccentricity, which is the pious , Sunday-school-like enthusiasm of students and teachers alike for education about values. Teachers sometimes sound so saccharine that they would make Mr. Rogers look like a cynic. \u2014 Nicholas D. Kristof , New York Times Magazine , 17 Aug. 1997",
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"They lived a quiet, pious life.",
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"I'm tired of hearing politicians making pious pronouncements about their devotion to the people.",
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"Recent Examples on the Web",
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"Ferdinand\u2019s life in recovery is spent in occasional erections, unending pain, and grimacing irony at the attempts at pious reassurance from the doctors who have received him to treat him before he is sent to London for recovery. \u2014 Adam Gopnik, The New Yorker , 15 June 2022",
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"The tenor here feels pious , as though somehow the whole process has reverted to the religious origins of incarceration. \u2014 New York Times , 7 June 2022",
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"Far from shutting down those protests, Trudeau actually participated in them, making a pious spectacle out of himself. \u2014 Kevin D. Williamson, National Review , 16 Feb. 2022",
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"Religious practice is simultaneously at the heart of this book and a surface phenomenon: in the West, a pious varnish on imperialist prejudices, or in the East, a state of false consciousness that blinds believers to their own subjugation. \u2014 Washington Post , 28 Jan. 2022",
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"Jonathan Franzen delivered a pious page-turner, Spider-Man saved the COVID-19-stricken box office, and Adele gave us a whole new album of breakup ballads to weep over. \u2014 Melissa Ruggieri, USA TODAY , 4 Jan. 2022",
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"An earnest and pious honors graduate of New England\u2019s prestigious Dartmouth College, the 18-year-old cut a fine figure. \u2014 Peter Cozzens, WSJ , 18 Feb. 2022",
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"The air of pious condemnation that suddenly fills the air is both shocking and sadly familiar. \u2014 Los Angeles Times , 17 Feb. 2022",
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"Under the Banner of Heaven (which will stream on Hulu) asks some very hard questions of its own, starting as a gripping murder mystery set in a seemingly pious , quiet Mormon community. \u2014 Angie Han, The Hollywood Reporter , 25 Apr. 2022"
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],
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"first_known_use":{
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"15th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a":""
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},
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"history_and_etymology":{
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"Middle English, from Latin pius":""
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},
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"pronounciation":[
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"\u02c8p\u012b-\u0259s"
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],
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"synonym_discussion":"",
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"synonyms":[
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"constant",
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"dedicated",
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"devoted",
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"devout",
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"down-the-line",
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"faithful",
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"fast",
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"good",
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"loyal",
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"staunch",
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"stanch",
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"steadfast",
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"steady",
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"true",
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"true-blue"
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],
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"time_of_retrieval":"20220706-234842",
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"type":[
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"adjective",
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"adverb",
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"noun"
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]
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},
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"piousness":{
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"antonyms":[
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"disloyal",
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"faithless",
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"false",
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"fickle",
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"inconstant",
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"perfidious",
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"recreant",
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"traitorous",
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"treacherous",
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"unfaithful",
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"untrue"
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],
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"definitions":{
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": deserving commendation : worthy":[
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"a pious effort"
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],
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": marked by conspicuous religiosity":[
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"a hypocrite\u2014a thing all pious words and uncharitable deeds",
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"\u2014 Charles Reade"
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],
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": marked by or showing reverence for deity and devotion to divine worship":[],
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": marked by self-conscious virtue : virtuous":[],
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": marked by sham or hypocrisy":[],
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": sacred or devotional as distinct from the profane or secular : religious":[
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"a pious opinion"
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],
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": showing loyal reverence for a person or thing : dutiful":[]
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},
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"examples":[
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"We must ask to what extent, and at however unconscious a level, a conflict arises in the pious political mind when it is sworn to uphold the civil religion of the Constitution. \u2014 E. L. Doctorow , Free Inquiry , October/November 2008",
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"But our problem is the lack of any shared or coherent attitude toward the rest of the world, without which, as Judt acknowledges, Europe exists in pieces, an outsize Switzerland held together by nothing more solid than pious sentiment. \u2014 Nicholas Fraser , Harper's , May 2006",
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"The other side of the masonry block was covered with a web of ancient graffiti, she said, left by pious visitors to the tomb. \u2014 Tom Mueller , Atlantic , October 2003",
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"The news offered so many occasions for pious or ribald commentary that any chance of agreement about what any of it meant was lost in a vast din of clucking and sniggering. \u2014 Lewis H. Lapham , Harper's , August 1997",
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"Japanese schools have another eccentricity, which is the pious , Sunday-school-like enthusiasm of students and teachers alike for education about values. Teachers sometimes sound so saccharine that they would make Mr. Rogers look like a cynic. \u2014 Nicholas D. Kristof , New York Times Magazine , 17 Aug. 1997",
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"They lived a quiet, pious life.",
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"I'm tired of hearing politicians making pious pronouncements about their devotion to the people.",
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"Recent Examples on the Web",
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"Ferdinand\u2019s life in recovery is spent in occasional erections, unending pain, and grimacing irony at the attempts at pious reassurance from the doctors who have received him to treat him before he is sent to London for recovery. \u2014 Adam Gopnik, The New Yorker , 15 June 2022",
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"The tenor here feels pious , as though somehow the whole process has reverted to the religious origins of incarceration. \u2014 New York Times , 7 June 2022",
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"Far from shutting down those protests, Trudeau actually participated in them, making a pious spectacle out of himself. \u2014 Kevin D. Williamson, National Review , 16 Feb. 2022",
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"Religious practice is simultaneously at the heart of this book and a surface phenomenon: in the West, a pious varnish on imperialist prejudices, or in the East, a state of false consciousness that blinds believers to their own subjugation. \u2014 Washington Post , 28 Jan. 2022",
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"Jonathan Franzen delivered a pious page-turner, Spider-Man saved the COVID-19-stricken box office, and Adele gave us a whole new album of breakup ballads to weep over. \u2014 Melissa Ruggieri, USA TODAY , 4 Jan. 2022",
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"An earnest and pious honors graduate of New England\u2019s prestigious Dartmouth College, the 18-year-old cut a fine figure. \u2014 Peter Cozzens, WSJ , 18 Feb. 2022",
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"The air of pious condemnation that suddenly fills the air is both shocking and sadly familiar. \u2014 Los Angeles Times , 17 Feb. 2022",
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"Under the Banner of Heaven (which will stream on Hulu) asks some very hard questions of its own, starting as a gripping murder mystery set in a seemingly pious , quiet Mormon community. \u2014 Angie Han, The Hollywood Reporter , 25 Apr. 2022"
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],
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"first_known_use":{
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"15th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a":""
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},
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"history_and_etymology":{
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"Middle English, from Latin pius":""
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},
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"pronounciation":[
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"\u02c8p\u012b-\u0259s"
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],
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"synonym_discussion":"",
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"synonyms":[
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"constant",
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"dedicated",
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"devoted",
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"devout",
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"down-the-line",
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"faithful",
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"fast",
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"good",
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"loyal",
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"staunch",
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"stanch",
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"steadfast",
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"steady",
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"true",
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"true-blue"
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],
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"time_of_retrieval":"20220707-111854",
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"type":[
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"adjective",
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"adverb",
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"noun"
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]
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},
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"pion":{
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"type":[
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"adjective",
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"noun"
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],
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"definitions":{
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": a meson that is a combination of up and down quarks and antiquarks, that may be positive, negative, or neutral, and that has a mass about 270 times that of the electron":[]
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},
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"pronounciation":[
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"\u02c8p\u012b-\u02cc\u00e4n"
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],
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"synonyms":[],
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"antonyms":[],
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"synonym_discussion":"",
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"examples":[
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"Recent Examples on the Web",
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"When a very fast pion crashes into a hydrogen atom, the energy held within this force is released all at once, similar to a snapping rubber band. \u2014 Elizabeth Fernandez, Forbes , 19 Sep. 2021",
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"In 2019, Alberg and Miller calculated what SeaQuest should observe based on the pion cloud idea. \u2014 Quanta Magazine , 24 Feb. 2021",
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"An early triumph in which Chew\u2019s students used the bootstrap to predict the mass of the rho meson \u2014 a particle made of pions that are held together by exchanging rho mesons \u2014 won many converts. \u2014 Quanta Magazine , 23 Feb. 2017",
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"The Xi decays into a particle called the lambda baryon and three lighter particles, the K- (or kaon) and two pions . \u2014 Fox News , 11 July 2017",
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"The most famous of these two-quark particles are kaons and pions . \u2014 Adam Mann, WIRED , 17 June 2013"
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],
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"history_and_etymology":{
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"contraction of pi-meson":""
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},
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"first_known_use":{
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"1950, in the meaning defined above":""
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},
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"time_of_retrieval":"20220710-053301"
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},
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"pious hope/wish":{
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"type":[
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"noun"
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],
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"definitions":{
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": something that is hoped for but will probably not happen":[
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"His speech contained no practical solutions, just the pious hope that the war would end soon."
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]
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},
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"pronounciation":[],
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"synonyms":[],
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"antonyms":[],
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"synonym_discussion":"",
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"examples":[],
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"history_and_etymology":{},
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"first_known_use":{},
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"time_of_retrieval":"20220710-182920"
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},
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"Piozzi":{
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"type":[
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"biographical name"
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],
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"definitions":{
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"Hester Lynch 1741\u20131821":[
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"Mrs. Thrale \\ \u02c8thr\u0101l \\"
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],
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"English writer":[
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"Mrs. Thrale \\ \u02c8thr\u0101l \\"
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]
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},
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"pronounciation":[
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"p\u0113-\u02c8\u022ft-s\u0113"
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],
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"synonyms":[],
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"antonyms":[],
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"synonym_discussion":"",
|
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"examples":[],
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"history_and_etymology":{},
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"first_known_use":{},
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"time_of_retrieval":"20220710-192717"
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},
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"piolet":{
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"type":[
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"noun"
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],
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"definitions":{
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": a two-headed ice ax used in mountaineering (as in Switzerland)":[]
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},
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"pronounciation":[
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"\u00a6p\u0113\u0259\u00a6l\u0101"
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],
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"synonyms":[],
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"antonyms":[],
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"synonym_discussion":"",
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"examples":[],
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"history_and_etymology":{
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"French, from French dialect (Valais canton, Switzerland & Piedmont), diminutive of piola small ax, from (assumed) Middle French dialect, from Old Proven\u00e7al, diminutive of apcha, abcha battle-ax, of Germanic origin; akin to Old High German h\u0101ppa sickle, pruning knife":""
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},
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"first_known_use":{},
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"time_of_retrieval":"20220711-000925"
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},
|
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"PIO":{
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"type":[
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"abbreviation"
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],
|
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"definitions":{
|
|
"public information office; public information officer":[]
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},
|
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"pronounciation":[],
|
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"synonyms":[],
|
|
"antonyms":[],
|
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"synonym_discussion":"",
|
|
"examples":[],
|
|
"history_and_etymology":{},
|
|
"first_known_use":{},
|
|
"time_of_retrieval":"20220711-160829"
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},
|
|
"pioneering":{
|
|
"type":[
|
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"adjective",
|
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"noun",
|
|
"verb"
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|
],
|
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"definitions":{
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": a member of a military unit usually of construction engineers":[],
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": a person or group that originates or helps open up a new line of thought or activity or a new method or technical development":[],
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": one of the first to settle in a territory":[],
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": a plant or animal capable of establishing itself in a bare, barren, or open area and initiating an ecological cycle":[],
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": to act as a pioneer":[
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"pioneered in the development of airplanes"
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],
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": to originate or take part in the development of":[],
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": original , earliest":[]
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},
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"pronounciation":[
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"\u02ccp\u012b-\u0259-\u02c8nir"
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],
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"synonyms":[
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"colonial",
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"colonist",
|
|
"colonizer",
|
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"frontiersman",
|
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"homesteader",
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"settler"
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],
|
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"antonyms":[
|
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"begin",
|
|
"constitute",
|
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"establish",
|
|
"found",
|
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"inaugurate",
|
|
"initiate",
|
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"innovate",
|
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"institute",
|
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"introduce",
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"launch",
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"plant",
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"set up",
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"start"
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],
|
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"synonym_discussion":"",
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"examples":[
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"Noun",
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"the pioneers who settled in the American West in the 19th century",
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"the hardships that the pioneers endured while taming the wilderness",
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"Verb",
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"a painter who pioneered a new art form",
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"The new method of cancer treatment was pioneered by an international team of researchers.",
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"He helped pioneer a new route to the West.",
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"He pioneered in the development of airplanes.",
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"Adjective",
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"the nation's pioneer institution for the education of African-Americans",
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"Recent Examples on the Web: Noun",
|
|
"Mighty Mark, as many know him now, went on to become a famous DJ and producer, as well as a pioneer of Baltimore club music. \u2014 Sanya Kamidi, Baltimore Sun , 3 July 2022",
|
|
"Getting a foot into video games is a start, but actually being a pioneer in creation within the metaverse is essential to building momentum. \u2014 Alison Bring\u00e9, Forbes , 1 July 2022",
|
|
"The hair stylist, chemist, entrepreneur, author, and inventor of both the Afro pick and a pioneer of the Jheri Curl hair style, died at his home, surrounded by his family, on June 22. \u2014 Morgan Cook, San Diego Union-Tribune , 30 June 2022",
|
|
"Andy Bowers, a pioneer in podcast production and technology, says Hollywood was bound to catch on. \u2014 Lynn Elber, ajc , 27 June 2022",
|
|
"In January 2013, just weeks after a gunman killed 26 people at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut, Daniel Webster, a pioneer in the field of gun violence research, convened a two-day summit on reducing gun violence. \u2014 Sheryl Gay Stolberg, BostonGlobe.com , 26 June 2022",
|
|
"In January 2013, just weeks after a gunman killed 26 people at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut, Daniel Webster, a pioneer in the field of gun violence research, convened a two-day summit on reducing gun violence. \u2014 Sheryl Gay Stolberg, New York Times , 26 June 2022",
|
|
"Bruton Smith, a key promoter and track operator and a pioneer in auto racing, died at 95, NASCAR reported and Speedway Motorsports Inc. announced Wednesday afternoon. \u2014 Mike Hembree, USA TODAY , 22 June 2022",
|
|
"Desi Arnaz, Lucie\u2019s father and a trailblazing pioneer in Latin American representation on television. \u2014 Hilton Dresden, The Hollywood Reporter , 16 June 2022",
|
|
"Recent Examples on the Web: Verb",
|
|
"Issaoun, an observational astronomer at the Center for Astrophysics at Harvard & Smithsonian and a member of the black hole-imaging Event Horizon Telescope collaboration, helped pioneer new technology to discover what happens near a black hole. \u2014 Curtis Silver, Forbes , 6 May 2022",
|
|
"The dinner had other serious moments, with tributes to pioneer journalists of color, aspiring student reporters as well as a dedication to the journalists detained, injured or killed during the coverage of the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine. \u2014 Farnoush Amiri And Will Weissert, Chron , 2 May 2022",
|
|
"In 2020, the group teamed up with Mercer University to bring back Capricorn Sound Studios, where artists can use original analog equipment while channeling Duane Allman, or pioneer something new, amid the shag carpeting and groovy, psychedelic art. \u2014 Candice Dyer, ajc , 2 May 2022",
|
|
"The dinner had other serious moments, with tributes to pioneer journalists of color, aspiring student reporters as well as a dedication to the journalists detained, injured or killed during the coverage of the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine. \u2014 Will Weissert, Fortune , 1 May 2022",
|
|
"The dinner had other serious moments, with tributes to pioneer journalists of color, aspiring student reporters as well as a dedication to the journalists detained, injured or killed during the coverage of the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine. \u2014 CBS News , 30 Apr. 2022",
|
|
"Vanguard helped pioneer the rise of passive investing through low-cost index funds. \u2014 Dawn Lim, WSJ , 11 Oct. 2021",
|
|
"Robert Dooling of the University of Maryland helped to pioneer the study of fine structure in birdsong. \u2014 Adam Fishbein, Scientific American , 1 May 2022",
|
|
"And it\u2019s a gender-norm-flouting movement that Fleetwood and his peers helped pioneer in the late \u201960s and \u201970s. \u2014 Los Angeles Times , 7 Mar. 2022"
|
|
],
|
|
"history_and_etymology":{
|
|
"Middle French pionier , from Old French peonier foot soldier, from peon foot soldier, from Medieval Latin pedon-, pedo \u2014 more at pawn":"Noun"
|
|
},
|
|
"first_known_use":{
|
|
"1523, in the meaning defined at sense 1":"Noun",
|
|
"1780, in the meaning defined at intransitive sense":"Verb",
|
|
"1836, in the meaning defined at sense 1":"Adjective"
|
|
},
|
|
"time_of_retrieval":"20220712-205120"
|
|
},
|
|
"Pioneer Day":{
|
|
"type":[
|
|
"noun"
|
|
],
|
|
"definitions":{
|
|
": July 24 observed as a legal holiday in Utah in commemoration of the arrival of Brigham Young on the present site of Salt Lake City in 1847":[],
|
|
": June 15 formerly observed as a legal holiday in Idaho as the anniversary of the acceptance of the Oregon treaty by the president and the senate in 1846":[]
|
|
},
|
|
"pronounciation":[],
|
|
"synonyms":[],
|
|
"antonyms":[],
|
|
"synonym_discussion":"",
|
|
"examples":[],
|
|
"history_and_etymology":{},
|
|
"first_known_use":{},
|
|
"time_of_retrieval":"20220712-231145"
|
|
},
|
|
"pioneer gold":{
|
|
"type":[
|
|
"noun"
|
|
],
|
|
"definitions":{
|
|
": private gold":[]
|
|
},
|
|
"pronounciation":[],
|
|
"synonyms":[],
|
|
"antonyms":[],
|
|
"synonym_discussion":"",
|
|
"examples":[],
|
|
"history_and_etymology":{},
|
|
"first_known_use":{},
|
|
"time_of_retrieval":"20220713-002756"
|
|
},
|
|
"pioneer tunnel":{
|
|
"type":[
|
|
"noun"
|
|
],
|
|
"definitions":{
|
|
": a small tunnel parallel to a main tunnel and well in advance of the completed main tunnel so that by crosscuts to the line of the main tunnel several headings can be exposed and work expedited":[]
|
|
},
|
|
"pronounciation":[],
|
|
"synonyms":[],
|
|
"antonyms":[],
|
|
"synonym_discussion":"",
|
|
"examples":[],
|
|
"history_and_etymology":{},
|
|
"first_known_use":{},
|
|
"time_of_retrieval":"20220713-010233"
|
|
}
|
|
} |