new; novel; fresh; recent; latest; up-to-date
heart; guts; nerve; central part
knee; lap; knee and thigh (while sitting)
to put on; to wear; to be clad in; to twine around; to twist around; to coil around
heap; pile; stack; full measure
happiness; good fortune; luck; blessing
verbal gaffe; verbal slip; slip of the tongue; using improper words
considerably; not a little; in no small numbers
to like; to be pleased with; to be delighted with; to take a liking to; to suit one's fancy
to live; to exist; to make a living; to subsist; to be in effect; to be in use
sad; miserable; unhappy; sad; lamentable; deplorable
to keep away; to keep at a distance
common orient clam (Meretrix lusoria)
to stick; to paste; to stretch; to spread; to form (e.g. ice on a pond); to fill; to swell
to be furnished with; to be provided with; to be possessed of; to be endowed with; to be among; to be one of
twenty-third day of the month; twenty-three days
top; summit; twelve o'clock (usu. midnight); top of one's head; top of a helmet
to step over; to step across; to stride over; to stretch over; to span; to bridge
suspicious; dubious; doubtful; unsure; untrustworthy; unreliable; strange
vast; extensive; immense; huge; large; grand
eastern part; the east (of a region)
scissors; shears; clippers; hole punch
to sink (into one's seat, etc.); to leap to one's death (by drowning); to be reduced to (esp. working as a prostitute)
to steal; to rob; to deceive; to trick; to graze (in passing); to skim; to appear and quickly disappear (a thought, a smile, etc.)
point (of a sword, etc.); pointed verbal attack
stomach (esp. a pig's stomach or a cow's rumen); pork stomach
wobbling; tottering; wavering (e.g. over a decision); dithering; boiling up; dizzily
personal affair; one's own affair
any moment now; any minute now; as soon as possible; right away
large; big; older; senior; final; ultimate
shell (of crab, tortoise, etc.); carapace; person's back; years of experience
to separate; to part; to divide; to keep apart
break (rest); break (tennis, boxing, snooker, etc.); suddenly becoming popular; becoming a hit
series of battles; successive battles