When Dumbledore first realized that he was sexually attracted to Grindewald, he felt such an inner turmoil that it was as if a great, dolorous schism had splintered his soul in two.
And even if he already knew that, in the end, he would have to choose what is right over his heart's desire, it didn't make the quandary less dire. Because if the rapacious quality to the glint in Grindewald's eyes was testimony enough to the man's folly, Dumbledore also knew the charm of his indolent looks.
And this is why Dumbledore closed one eye when people, made gregarious by fear, first flocked to support Grindelwald's more extreme fancies. And why he closed the other when people started to voice that death was the only condign fate for muggles.
But hiatus from reality were always temporal, and there was no escaping eternally from the ominous presages cogent to a dark future.
And when, after nearly a decade of qualm, the simple deductive reasoning which led him to predict a bellicose end for the two of them finally proved true, he couldn't help but think that to him then on everything would feel banal.
2007-11-05 12:43:57
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answer #1
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answered by cixi 2
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Firstly, I'd try creating a paagraph. a brief story involving all these words. This is indeed a Qaundary, but someone as gregarious as you should find that your answer isn't too banal.
Although this task may seem ominous, even somewhat presage, your desire for a rapacious answer stems from a temporal hiatus in your concentration. It is therefore deductive to me that you as an individual lack a bellicose attitude towards the task ahead. Infact, some may describe you as indolent towards the task you have been set, or that it makes you somewhat rather dolorous.
I hope that you feel that this has been cogent condign answer for you for you, and that it doesn't create a schism for all your other tasks ahead of you
2007-11-05 20:18:54
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answer #2
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answered by Chris W 1
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Yes, I can create sentences using 14 of those words, but I don't have any homework; you do. There's one I don't know, and I therefore suspect is not a word.
Get off Y!A and get busy doing your own work!! And you'll probably need a dictionary.
As I've read many times before on this site, this is homework help, not homework do.
Sheesh!
2007-11-05 20:12:13
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answer #3
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answered by Carlos R 5
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Yes, I could make a sentence for each of these words, but I don't even do my 8 year old son's homework for him. Look up the words & make your own sentences. It's not that hard. LUCK
2007-11-05 20:15:50
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answer #4
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answered by drews_mama_jama 2
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I can get them all into one sentence...
My vocabulary words for the week are schism, dolorous, quandary, rapacious, indolent, gregaroius, candign, temporal, presage, hiatus, deductive, ominous, cogent, bellicose, and banal.
2007-11-05 20:10:59
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answer #5
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answered by bh 3
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Sorry, I finished my homework back in 1975. I've been a free woman for 32 years! Man, I'm getting up there!
2007-11-05 20:13:53
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answer #6
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answered by Ruthinia 6
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No, it would take me 15 minutes just looking all of them up. Then You'd just end up with a run-on sentence anyway.
2007-11-05 20:08:37
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answer #7
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answered by Lost Poet 6
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Yes I can. But I'm not doing your homework for you.
By the way, gregarious and condign are misspelled in your list.
2007-11-05 20:10:04
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answer #8
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answered by curtisports2 7
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Look them up in a dictionary. You can write sentences for your own homework.
2007-11-05 20:08:36
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answer #9
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answered by Amelia 6
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You can make them all one sentence....
"My vocabulary words are..." then list the words.
2007-11-05 20:08:24
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answer #10
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answered by DaddyBoy 4
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