to get angry; to get mad; to tell someone off; to scold; to be angular; to be square
common knowledge; being well-known; making (something) well-known
to indulge in; to give oneself up to; to be obsessed by; to be engrossed in; to be lost in; to be absorbed in
the minute (that) ...; no sooner than ...; as soon as; whether or not
(at) high speed; as fast as one can; with lightning speed
to satisfy oneself (by doing); to find relief (in doing)
sweet (e.g. young girls, flowers blooming); touchingly lovely; cute; pitiful; pitiable
older employee who does not have much actual work
mischief; prank; pastime; hobby; playing with (a lighter, etc.); fooling around with
hide-and-seek (game); hide-and-go-seek
bargaining; haggling; tactics; strategy
thump-thump; bang-bang; pit-a-pat; to beat fast (of one's heart); to throb; to pound
blood spilt from the body; blood circulating within the body (often as a metaphor for strong emotion or hot-bloodedness)
ecstatically; spellbound; with rapt attention; abstractedly; absentmindedly; absorbedly
to harm; to hurt; to injure; to miss one's chance to (do something); to fail to (do what one ought to have done)
to rebuke; to scold; to tell off; to question persistently (in order to criticize or find fault with somebody)
orpiment; gamboge; falsification; alteration
to catch; to capture; to grab; to clutch; to catch hold of (someone); to stop (e.g. a stranger in the street)
snare; trap (for catching wild game, etc.); trap (i.e. ruse, subterfuge, etc.)
to be arranged (flowers, etc.); to be on display; to be buried
unbecoming; unsuitable; disgraceful; wrong for one's age; unworthy of one's years; thoughtless for one's age
excitement; stimulation; agitation; arousal
child; kid; (one's) child; offspring; young (animal); young woman; offshoot
to pin down; to knock down; to push (and hold) somebody down (esp. with sexual connotations)
Emmanuel de Grouchy, Marquis de Grouchy
(field) marshal; (fleet) admiral; general of the army
appointment; nomination; ordination; commission; designation
Battle of Waterloo (1815)
adherence (to custom, tradition)
perhaps; probably; generous; many; much
management of an organization; organizational management; organizational operation
strict; severe; stern; rigid; rigorous; tough
layman; believer; adherent; follower; laity
eradication; extermination; destruction; suppression
meritocracy; merit system
belief; faith; adherence; espousal