Dictionary

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Ranging
  1. wandering freely; "at night in bed...his slowly ranging thoughts...encountered her"
  2. assign a rank or rating to; "how would you rank these students?"; "The restaurant is rated highly in the food guide"
  3. let eat; "range the animals in the prairie"
  4. lay out orderly or logically in a line or as if in a line; "lay out the clothes"; "lay out the arguments"
  5. feed as in a meadow or pasture; "the herd was grazing"
  6. move about aimlessly or without any destination, often in search of food or employment; "The gypsies roamed the woods"; "roving vagabonds"; "the wandering Jew"; "The cattle roam across the prairie"; "the laborers drift from one town to the next"; "They rolled from town to town"
  7. range or extend over; occupy a certain area; "The plants straddle the entire state"
  8. change or be different within limits; "Estimates for the losses in the earthquake range as high as $2 billion"; "Interest rates run from 5 to 10 percent"; "The instruments ranged from tuba to cymbals"; "My students range from very bright to dull"
  9. have a range; be capable of projecting over a certain distance, as of a gun; "This gun ranges over two miles"
Re-Created
  1. created anew; "this re-created literalness"
Regenerating
  1. that are generating anew; "regenerating fibers"
  2. restore strength; "This food revitalized the patient"
  3. undergo regeneration
  4. form or produce anew; "regenerate hatred"
  5. be formed or shaped anew
  6. replace (tissue or a body part) through the formation of new tissue; "The snake regenerated its tail"
  7. return to life; get or give new life or energy; "The week at the spa restored me"
  8. bring, lead, or force to abandon a wrong or evil course of life, conduct, and adopt a right one; "The Church reformed me"; "reform your conduct"
  9. amplify (an electron current) by causing part of the power in the output circuit to act upon the input circuit
  10. reestablish on a new, usually improved, basis or make new or like new; "We renewed our friendship after a hiatus of twenty years"; "They renewed their membership"
Ridged
  1. having a ridge or shaped like a ridge or suggesting the keel of a ship; "a carinate sepal"
  2. form into a ridge
  3. spade into alternate ridges and troughs; "ridge the soil"
  4. throw soil toward (a crop row) from both sides; "He ridged his corn"
  5. plough alternate strips by throwing the furrow onto an unploughed strip
  6. extend in ridges; "The land ridges towards the South"
Roughly
  1. (of quantities) imprecise but fairly close to correct; "lasted approximately an hour"; "in just about a minute"; "he's about 30 years old"; "I've had about all I can stand"; "we meet about once a month"; "some forty people came"; "weighs around a hundred pounds"; "roughly $3,000"; "holds 3 gallons, more or less"; "20 or so people were at the party"
  2. with rough motion as over a rough surface; "ride rough"
  3. with roughness or violence (`rough' is an informal variant for `roughly'); "he was pushed roughly aside"; "they treated him rough"
Rather
  1. to some (great or small) extent; "it was rather cold"; "the party was rather nice"; "the knife is rather dull"; "I rather regret that I cannot attend"; "He's rather good at playing the cello"; "he is kind of shy"
  2. to a degree (not used with a negative); "quite tasty"; "quite soon"; "quite ill"; "quite rich"
  3. on the contrary; "rather than disappoint the children, he did two quick tricks before he left"; "he didn't call; rather (or instead), he wrote her a letter"; "used English terms instead of Latin ones"
  4. more readily or willingly; "clean it well, preferably with warm water"; "I'd rather be in Philadelphia"; "I'd sooner die than give up"
Really
  1. used as intensifiers; `real' is sometimes used informally for `really'; `rattling' is informal; "she was very gifted"; "he played very well"; "a really enjoyable evening"; "I'm real sorry about it"; "a rattling good yarn"
  2. in accordance with truth or fact or reality; "she was now truly American"; "a genuinely open society"; "they don't really listen to us"
  3. in fact (used as intensifiers or sentence modifiers); "in truth, moral decay hastened the decline of the Roman Empire"; "really, you shouldn't have done it"; "a truly awful book"
  4. in actual fact; "to be nominally but not actually independent"; "no one actually saw the shark"; "large meteorites actually come from the asteroid belt"
Rarely
  1. not often; "we rarely met"
Reasonably
  1. to a moderately sufficient extent or degree;
  2. with good sense or in a reasonable or intelligent manner; "he acted sensibly in the crisis"; "speak more sanely about these affairs"; "acted quite reasonably"
Regrettably
  1. by bad luck; "unfortunately it rained all day"; "alas, I cannot stay"