to abandon; to fail; to desert; to forsake
trouble; bother; trouble; difficulty; care; attention
to lead (a) life (usu. preceded by the type of life)
idea; notion; sense (e.g. of duty); resignation; preparedness; observation and contemplation
to turn; to rotate; to pass around; to send around; to move (someone or something to where its needed); to send; to turn (to a new use)
reproachful; hateful; bitter
being about to cry; the verge of tears
to be at wits' end; to be greatly perplexed; to be troubled
uncertain; vague; ambiguous
effect; effectiveness; efficacy; effects (e.g. sound effects, visual effects, special effects)
response (felt in the hands); resistance; reaction; response; effect
to greet; to call out (to); to invite; to get in touch (with); to cheer (on); to give vocal support (to)
to create; to bring forth; to invent; to think up and bring into being; to give birth to; to bear
please; somehow or other; one way or another
cannot (do); it is impossible that...; it is (highly) unlikely that...
to recognise; to recognize; to know by sight; to become acquainted with
to rewrite; to overwrite; to renew; to transfer
to gather in a circle; to form a circle
rotation (usu. around something); revolution; turning
whirlpool; swirl; eddy; vortex; maelstrom
to smoke; to breathe in; to suck; to sip; to absorb; to soak up
well then ...; in that situation; in which case
to overlook; to fail to notice; to miss (seeing)
elder sister; effeminate man
once and for all; completely; spotlessly
to express in a refined fashion; to weave a web of words
one-by-one; separately; in detail
dots; spots; bit by bit; little by little; here and there; scattered
carelessly; thoughtlessly; inadvertently
to squash; to crush; to flatten
leaving out; omitting; skipping; (beating) in succession; in a row
to forget something ever existed; to pretend something didn't happen; to put something behind one; to forgive (something)
to spin; to make yarn; to spin (a tale); to assemble (e.g. words); to put together
to be needed; to be wanted
pompom; pompon; pom-pom; pom-pon
to place both hands on the ground (to express respect, apology or to present a request)