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down, downward | extending or moving from a higher to a lower place | |
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down | being or moving lower in position or less in some value | |
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down | paid in cash at time of purchase | |
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down | away from a more central or a more northerly place | |
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down | being put out by a strikeout | |
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down | not functioning (temporarily or permanently) | |
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down | a rolling treeless highland with little soil | |
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down | [in american_football] a complete play to advance the football | |
V2 |
consume, down, go through, devour | eat immoderately | |
V2 |
polish, refine, fine-tune, down | improve or perfect by pruning or polishing | |
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down | in an inactive or inoperative state | |
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down | from an earlier time | |
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depressed, down | lower than previously | |
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down | shut | |
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down | to a lower intensity | |
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blue, grim, gloomy, depressed, dispirited, down, downcast, downhearted, down in the mouth, low, low-spirited | filled with melancholy and despondency | |
V2 |
down, pop, kill, bolt down, toss off, belt down, pour down, drink down | drink down entirely | |
V2 |
down | [in sport] bring down or defeat (an opponent) | |
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down | becoming progressively lower | |
V2 |
shoot down, land, down | shoot at and force to come down | |
V2 |
knock down, cut down, push down, down, pull down | cause to come or go down | |
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down, down feather | soft fine feathers | |
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down, pile | fine soft dense hair (as the fine short hair of cattle or deer or the wool of sheep or the undercoat of certain dogs) | |
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down, down pat, mastered | understood perfectly | |
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down, downward, downwards, downwardly | spatially or metaphorically from a higher to a lower level or position | |
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Down, John L. H. Down | English physician who first described Down's syndrome (1828-1896) |