Childrens Illustrated Thesaurus

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

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a b c d e g h i j k l m p q r s t u v w x y z


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f


mend
verb to repair something
broken
▲ SEE ABOVE

mention^1
verb to talk about something
briefly » I mentioned the party
to Lisa, but I don’t know if
she’ll come.
allude to, bring up, broach,
hint, intimate, refer to,
touch on, touch upon

mention^2
noun a brief comment about
something » There was no
mention in the programme of
my role in the show.
allusion, reference

merciful^1
adjective showing kindness
» The merciful king treated
his subjects with kindness.
compassionate, humane,
kind
antonym: merciless

merciful^2
adjective showing forgiveness
» The merciful teacher gave us
no homework over the holidays.
forgiving, lenient
antonym: merciless

merciless
adjective showing no kindness
or forgiveness » The airport
staff were merciless when
I forgot my passport and
wouldn’t let me on the plane.
callous, cruel, heartless,
implacable, ruthless,
hard-hearted, pitiless,
unforgiving
antonym: merciful

mercy^1
noun the quality of kindness
» The wrestler showed no
mercy to his opponent.
compassion, kindness,
pity, benevolence, charity

mercy^2
noun the quality of forgiveness
» The criminal threw himself
upon the mercy of the court.
forgiveness, leniency,
clemency, forbearance

merit^1
noun worth or value
» Our PE teacher said that a
keen attitude had as much
merit as natural talent.
excellence, value,
virtue, worth

merit^2
noun a good quality that
something has » They
discussed the merits of
the different cakes on offer.
advantage, asset, strength,
strong point, virtue

merit^3
verb to deserve something
» Buying a new camera merits
careful consideration.
be entitled to, be worthy of,
deserve, earn, warrant

mess^1
noun a state of untidiness
» The room was in a mess
after the party.
chaos, disarray, disorder

mess^2
noun a situation that is full of
problems » How are we going
to get out of this mess?
fix (informal), jam (informal),
muddle, turmoil

mess^3 : mess up
verb to spoil something
» He messed up his career.
botch, bungle, make a hash
of (informal), muck up (slang),
ruin, screw up (slang), spoil

The room was in a mess
after the party.

mess


mend
verb to repair something broken
» He mended the bicycle.

darn
She darned the hole
in her sock.

fix
She fixed the leak
in the car engine.

patch
He patched the roof where
the rain came in.

renovate
They renovated the old ship.

repair
When will you get around
to repairing the broken chair?

restore
She liked to restore
antique furniture.

137-145_M.indd 141 13/01/17 12:24 pm

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