| smell
| verb
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| to have an odor.
| The barn smelled of hay.
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| smell
| noun
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| the odor of something, usually unpleasant.
| What a smell!
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| snap
| verb
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| to break suddenly
| She snapped the stick in half
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| snap
| verb
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| to talk in a quick, angry way
| “Why haven’t you done your homework?” he snapped.
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| sniff
| verb
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| to breathe in through your nose, trying to smell something.
| Dogs find out about things by sniffing them.
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| society
| noun
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| a club or an organization.
| An animal welfare society.
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| soft
| adjective
| v0
| gentle or smooth to the touch.
| A soft ball of yarn.
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| soft
| adjective
| v0
| not harsh or loud.
| A soft sound.
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| sole
| noun
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| the bottom of a shoe.
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| sole
| noun
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| an edible type of flat fish.
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| solid
| adjective
| v0
| firm or strongly made.
| They built a solid wall around the castle.
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| solution
| noun
| v0
| a liquid that has something dissolved in it.
| A solution of salt and water.
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| some
| adjective
| v0
| part of, but not all.
| I ate some cake.
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| sort
| noun
| v0
| What sort of vacation will you take this year?
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| speech
| noun
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| a talk given to an audience.
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| spend
| verb
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| to pass time.
| We spent two weeks camping in the forest.
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| spin
| verb
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| to produce threads.
| Spiders and silkworms spin threads by producing them from their bodies. People spin raw cotton and wool to make threads.
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| spine
| noun
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| one of the stiff, sharp points on an animal, like a porcupine, or on a plant, like a cactus
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| spine
| noun
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| the part of a book where the pages are joined and that holds the book together.
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| spirit
| adjective
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| a being, such as a ghost, that does not have a body
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| split
| verb
| v0
| to tear or crack, perhaps by mistake
| The bag split open.
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| jtoy
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| spoil
| verb
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| to give a child so much that he or she becomes demanding and unpleasant
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| spot
| noun
| v0
| a place.
| It was a perfect picnic spot.
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| spring
| noun
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| a coil of thin metal that jumps back into shape after it has been pressed together or pulled apart.
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| spring
| noun
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| a place where water flows out of the ground.
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| spring
| noun
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| to appear or grow quickly
| New houses sprang up all over the hillside.
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| squash
| verb
| v0
| to squeeze together.
| We all squashed onto the sofa
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| stage
| noun
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| a point reached in the progress of something.
| They made the long journey in several stages.
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| stalk
| noun
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| a long, thin part of an animal
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| stall
| noun
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| a table used to display and sell goods, usually at a market.
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