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Etymologies
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Examples
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The fact that they exist at all is a slap in the face of the American polity, so they're treated like a shameful excresence on the ass of American society.
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July 2003 2003
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$RANDOM IZE betsy mediate mens seaweed bhutan croupier poked microfilms tapers criminally excresence mechanized antony berkeley evaporate telekinesis mazes arcturus scrambling cow corresponding
Spam of the Week 2003
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The means of it must be exquisite, so that when the truth of it could at last be proclaimed to the world the expunging of that excresence would be told and retold for centuries.
Conan The Triumphant Jordan, Robert, 1948- 1983
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Although he had never been below the deck in this sector before, he knew the plans well enough to recall that they had specified no such excresence.
Cities In Flight Blish, James 1957
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He was a short, _squab_ man, with a bulbous excresence growing out from between his shoulders, that I suppose passed for a head, though it looked like a wen;
The Knickerbocker, or New-York Monthly Magazine, January 1844 Volume 23, Number 1 Various
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'Mine bring it gin belonging to me,' he announced with dignity, making an introductory gesture towards what appeared almost an excresence upon the black trunk of a gidia tree except for an old red blanket slung round one shoulder, which only half covered a woman's dusky form.
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This consisted of a circular padded excresence above the cockpit immediately behind the pilot's head, which gradually tapered off into the top surface of the fuselage.
A History of Aeronautics Evelyn Charles Vivian 1914
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Louvre; the rest is mere excresence, intended to unite the main building with the Tuileries, which lay some hundreds of yards to the west of it.
Seeing Europe with Famous Authors, Volume 3 France and the Netherlands, Part 1 Various 1885
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The notorious Code of Blue laws, for example, was not even a natural excresence upon the body; the sickly production of a renegade minister from the Church of England, it had an irregular. existence, and then sank into contempt.
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