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| bleak | 
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| a. [ہولناک] cold or cheerless; unlikely to be favorable The frigid, inhospitable Aleutian Islands are bleak military outposts. | 
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| bloated | 
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| a. [فولا] swollen or puffed as with water or air Her bloated stomach came from drinking so much water. | 
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| bluff | 
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| n. [بلف] the pretense of strength; mislead or deceive If only, I thought, he had called our bluff from the start and told us firmly that he knew the figures but wouldn't say. | 
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| blunt | 
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| a. [کند] having a dull edge or end; not sharp; lacking in feeling; insensitive Public employee unions are demanding in blunt terms that Democrats make the tax code more progressive. | 
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| blurt | 
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| v. [زور سے بولنا] utter suddenly and impulsively Before she can stop you, you should blurt out the news. | 
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| bode | 
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| v. [بویشیودانی] foreshadow; indicate by signs; be an omen of; predict The gloomy skies and the odors from the mineral springs seemed to bode evil to those who settled in the area. | 
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| bogus | 
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| a. [بوگس] counterfeit or fake; not authentic; not genuine The police quickly found the distributors of the bogus twenty-dollar bills. | 
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| bolt | 
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| v. [بولٹ] dash or dart off; move or jump suddenly Jack was set to bolt out the front door. | 
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| booming | 
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| a. [booming] deep and resonant; flourishing; thriving 'Who needs a microphone?' cried the mayor in his booming voice. | 
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| boundless | 
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| a. [اسیم] being without boundaries or limits; infinite; vast Mike's energy was boundless: the greater the challenge, the more vigorously he tackled the job. | 
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| bourgeois | 
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| a. [بائیکاٹ] middle class; selfishly materialistic; dully conventional Technically, anyone who belongs to the middle class is bourgeois, but most people resent it if you call them that. | 
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| boycott | 
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| v. [بائیکاٹ] refrain from buying or using Cesar Chavez called for consumers to boycott grapes to put pressure on grape growers to stop using pesticides that harmed the farm workers' health. | 
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| brazen | 
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| a. [broach] having loud, usually harsh, resonant sound; shameless His entire premiership has become an exercise in brazen dishonesty. | 
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| breach | 
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| n. [شکنی] breaking of contract or duty; breaking of waves or surf; fissure or gap Jill sued Jack for breach of promise, claiming he had broken his promise to marry her. | 
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| brittle | 
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| a. [آسانی سے ٹوٹنے والی] easily broken; having little elasticity My employer's self-control was as brittle as an egg-shell. | 
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| brochure | 
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| n. [بروشر] pamphlet; small book usually having a paper cover The Department of Agriculture issued this brochure on farming. | 
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| brooch | 
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| n. [بروچ] ornamental clasp;  decorative pin worn by women The brooch was a gift from Burton, and she wore it when she wed him. |