Hyperonyms
(has_hyperonym)
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02339171-v:
be the cause or source of
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Related
(related_to)
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14485249-n:
opportunity especially for employment or promotion
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Verbs
(causes)
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00540101-v:
become available
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Glosses
(gloss)
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00120316-v:
give certain properties to something
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Glosses
(gloss)
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00183053-a:
obtainable or accessible and ready for use or service
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Glosses
(rgloss)
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00036299-n:
an initial accomplishment that opens the way for further developments
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Glosses
(rgloss)
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00649757-v:
open up and explore a new area
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Glosses
(rgloss)
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01645421-v:
open up an area or prepare a way
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Glosses
(rgloss)
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02395996-v:
open to public use, as of a highway, park, or building
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Glosses
(rgloss)
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10918119-n:
American chemist who with Richard Smalley and Harold Kroto discovered fullerenes and opened a new branch of chemistry (born in 1933)
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Glosses
(rgloss)
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11077762-n:
Dutch physician who opened the first birth control clinic in the world in Amsterdam (1854-1929)
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Glosses
(rgloss)
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11111335-n:
British chemist who with Robert Curl and Richard Smalley discovered fullerenes and opened a new branch of chemistry (born in 1939)
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Glosses
(rgloss)
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11127996-n:
Italian pope from 1878 to 1903 who was interested in the advancement of learning and who opened the Vatican secret archives to all scholars
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Glosses
(rgloss)
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11230402-n:
United States admiral who led a naval expedition to Japan and signed a treaty in 1854 opening up trade relations between United States and Japan; brother of Oliver Hazard Perry (1794-1858)
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Glosses
(rgloss)
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11304912-n:
American chemist who with Robert Curl and Harold Kroto discovered fullerenes and opened a new branch of chemistry (born in 1943)
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Glosses
(rgloss)
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11353510-n:
French modeler (resident in England after 1802) who made wax death masks of prominent victims of the French Revolution and toured Britain with her wax models; in 1835 she opened a permanent waxworks exhibition in London (1761-1850)
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Glosses
(rgloss)
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11397271-n:
United States businessman who opened a shop in 1879 selling low-priced goods and built it into a national chain of stores (1852-1919)
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