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81 chamwaried
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82 chamwariem
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83 chamwarien
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84 chamwariet
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85 chamwariff
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86 chamwariodd
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87 chamwariom
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88 chamwariont
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89 chamwarir
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90 chamwarit
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91 chamwarith
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92 chamwariwyd
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93 chamwariwyf
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94 gamdreuli
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95 gamdreuliaf
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96 gamdreuliai
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97 gamdreuliais
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98 gamdreuliaist
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99 gamdreulian
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100 gamdreuliant
См. также в других словарях:
squander — squan‧der [ˈskwɒndə ǁ ˈskwɑːndər] verb [transitive] to spend money or use your time carelessly on things that are not useful: • The bank squandered $500 million playing the U.S. bond market. squander something on something • He squandered the… … Financial and business terms
Squander — Squan der (skw[o^]n d[ e]r), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Squandered} ( d[ e]rd); p. pr. & vb. n. {Squandering}.] [Cf. Scot. squatter to splash water about, to scatter, to squander, Prov. E. swatter, Dan. sqvatte, Sw. sqv[ a]tta to squirt, sqv[ a]ttra to … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
squander a chance — squander a chance/an opportunity ► to fail to use a chance to become successful or to achieve something: »According to one member of the board of directors: We have squandered the opportunity to become a major player in the industry . Main Entry … Financial and business terms
squander a chance/an opportunity — ► to fail to use a chance to become successful or to achieve something: »According to one member of the board of directors: We have squandered the opportunity to become a major player in the industry . Main Entry: ↑squander … Financial and business terms
squander an opportunity — squander a chance/an opportunity ► to fail to use a chance to become successful or to achieve something: »According to one member of the board of directors: We have squandered the opportunity to become a major player in the industry . Main Entry … Financial and business terms
squander — 1580s (implied in squandering), to spend recklessly or prodigiously, of unknown origin; Shakespeare used it 1593 in Merchant of Venice with a sense of to be scattered over a wide area. Squander bug, a British symbol of reckless extravagance and… … Etymology dictionary
squander — [skwän′dər] vt. [prob. a specialized use of dial. squander, to scatter, popularized after Shakespeare s Merchant of Venice, I, iii, 22] to spend or use wastefully or extravagantly vi. to be wasteful or extravagant n. Rare a squandering;… … English World dictionary
Squander — Squan der, n. The act of squandering; waste. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Squander — Squan der, v. i. 1. To spend lavishly; to be wasteful. [1913 Webster] They often squandered, but they never gave. Savage. [1913 Webster] 2. To wander at random; to scatter. [R.] [1913 Webster] The wise man s folly is anatomized Even by… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
squander — index consume, lose (be deprived of), misemploy, mishandle (mismanage), overdraw Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. B … Law dictionary
squander — vb *waste, dissipate, fritter, consume Analogous words: *scatter, disperse, dissipate, dispel: *spend, expend, disburse … New Dictionary of Synonyms