1999 Quest Discussion Forum

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Definitons f-p

From: Joe R. N.J.
Category: Category 1
Date: 15 Jan 1999
Time: 12:30:05
Remote Name: client-151-198-130-45.bellatlantic.net

Comments

Feelings: 1. Emotional or moral sensitivity (especially in relation to personal principles or dignity) 2. The psychological feature of experiencing affective and emotional states Fellowship: 1. An association of people who share common beliefs or activities 2. The state of being with someone Fester: 1. A sore that has become inflamed and formed pus Firm: 1. Marked by firm determination or resolution; not shakable 2. Strong and sure 3. Not subject to revision or change 4. Securely established 5. Unwavering in devotion to friend or vow or cause 6. With resolute determination Focus: 1. The concentration of attention or energy on something 2. Maximum clarity or distinctness of an idea 3. Special emphasis attached to something Focused: 1. Focus one's attention on something 2. Bring into focus or alignment; of ideas or emotions Fondness: 1. A predisposition to like something 2. A positive feeling of liking 3. A quality proceeding from feelings of affection or love Forever: 1. Time without end 2. For a limitless time 3. (informal) for a very long or seemingly endless time 4. Seemingly without interruption; often and repeatedly Forgive: 1. Stop blaming or grant forgiveness 2. Absolve from payment Forgiveness: 1. Compassionate feelings that support a willingness to forgive 2. The act of excusing a mistake or offense Formal: 1. Being in accord with established forms and conventions and requirements 2. adhering to traditional standards of correctness and without casual, contracted, and colloquial forms Fortune: 1. An unknown and unpredictable phenomenon that causes an event to result one way rather than another 2. An unknown and unpredictable phenomenon that leads to a favorable outcome Foundation: 1. The basis on which something is grounded 2. Lowest supporting part of a structure 3. The fundamental assumptions underlying an explanation 4. Starting something for the first time Fractured: 1. Interrupt, break, or destroy 2. Break 3. Used of a break or crack or tear in bone or cartilage. 4. Broke into pieces Freedom: 1. The condition of being free; the power to act or speak or think without externally imposed restraints 2. Immunity from an obligation or duty Friend: 1. A person you know well and regard with affection and trust 2. An associate who provides assistance 3. A person with whom you are acquainted Frightened: 1. Cause fear in 2. Thrown into a state of intense fear or desperation 3. Made afraid Frustration: 1. The feeling that accompanies an experience of being thwarted in attaining your goals 2. An act of hindering someone's plans or efforts 3. A feeling of annoyance at being hindered or criticized Function: 1. What something is used for 2. The actions and activities assigned to or required or expected of a person or group G Gender: 1. The properties that distinguish organisms on the basis of their reproductive roles Genuine: 1. Not fake or counterfeit 2. Not pretended; sincerely felt or expressed Give up or agree to forego to the power or possession of another 3. Relinquish possession or control over 4. Relinquish to the power of another; yield to the control of another Go back to bad behavior Goal: 1. The state of affairs that a plan is intended to achieve and that (when achieved) terminates behavior intended to achieve it 2. Place where something (e.g., a journey or race) ends God: 1. The supernatural being conceived as the perfect and omnipotent and omniscient originator and ruler of the universe; the object of worship in monotheistic religion 2. Any supernatural being worshipped as controlling some part of the world or some aspect of life or who is the personification of a force God-awareness: 1. Goodness: 1. That which is good or valuable or useful 2. Moral excellence or admirableness 3. Expressing surprise Grafted: 1. Cause to grow together 2. In surgery Gratification: 1. The act or an instance of gratifying or satisfying 2. State of being gratified; great satisfaction Gratify: 1. Make happy or satisfied 2. Yield (to); give satisfaction to Gratitude: 1. A feeling of thankfulness and appreciation Grim: 1. Harshly ironic or sinister 2. Harshly uninviting or formidable in manner or appearance Ground: 1. Fix firmly and stable 2. Instruct someone in the fundamentals of a subject 3. Use as a basis for; found on Guidance: 1. Direction or advice as to a decision or course of action 2. The act of showing the way 3. The act of setting and holding a course Guide: 1. Someone who shows the way by leading or advising 2. Something that offers basic information or instruction 3. A model or standard for making comparisons 3. Someone who can find paths through unexplored territory Guidelines: 1. Guidance relative to setting standards or determining a course of action 2. A rule or principle that provides guidance to appropriate behavior Guilt: 1. The state of having committed an offense 2. Remorse cause by feeling responsible for some offence H Habit: 1. An established custom 2. A pattern of behavior acquired through frequent repetition 3. Excessive use of drugs Happen: 1. Come to pass; occur 2. Come into being; become reality 3. Come upon, as if by accident; meet with Happiness: 1. State of well-being characterized by emotions ranging from contentment to intense joy 2. Emotions experienced when in a state of well-being Harmed: 1. Having had pain or loss or suffering inflicted Heal: 1..recover 2. Get healthy again 3. Provide a cure for, make healthy again Heartily: 1. With gusto and without reservation Help: 1. The activity of contributing to the fulfillment of a need or furtherance of an effort or purpose 2. A person who contributes to the fulfillment of a need or furtherance of an effort or purpose 3. A resource Helplessness: 1. Powerlessness revealed by an inability to act 2. The state of needing help from something 3. A feeling of being unable to manage Higher: 1. Advanced in complexity or elaboration 2. Greater than normal in degree or intensity or amount Hit: 1: (slang) to quote a piece of N.A. literature to support a main idea or deal with a related topic being discussed. 2. A profound statement 3. Indicating something profound is going to be said next (here's the hit) Honest: 1. Not disposed to cheat or defraud; not deceptive or fraudulent 2. Worthy of being depended on 3. Habitually speaking the truth Hope: 1. The general feeling that some desire will be fulfilled 2. Someone (or something) on which expectations are centered 3. Expect with desire 3. Intend with some possibility of fulfillment Hopeless: 1. Without hope because there seems to be no possibility of comfort or success 2. Certain to fail 2. beyond hope of management or reform Hopelessness: 1. The despair you feel when you have abandoned hope of comfort or success Horrible: 1. Provoking horror Revert: 1. Go back to a previous state Horror: 1. Intense and profound fear 2. Intense aversion Hostage: 1. A prisoner who is held by one party to insure that another party will meet specified terms Hostility: 1. A state of deep-seated ill-will 2. Violent action that is hostile and usually unprovoked 3. Acts of overt warfare Hug: 1. A tight embrace 2. usually with fondness Human: 1. Relating to a person 2. Having human form or attributes as opposed to those of animals or divine beings (see nature) Humble: 1. Marked by meekness or modesty: not arrogant or prideful 2. Lower in esteem; hurt the pride of Humbly: 1. In a humble manner 2. In a miserly manner Humility: 1. A disposition to be humble; a lack of false pride 2. A humble feeling I I: 1. Used of a single unit or thing; not two or more 2. Refers to the speaker or writer Ideal: 1. Conforming to an ultimate standard of perfection or excellence; embodying an ideal Identification: 1. The act of designating or identifying something 2. The attribution to yourself of the characteristics of others 3. Evidence of identity; something that identifies a person or thing 4. The process of recognizing something or someone by remembering 5. Attribution to yourself (consciously or unconsciously) of the characteristics of another person (or group of persons) Identify: 1. Give the name or identifying characteristics of; refer to by name or some other identifying characteristic property 2. Consider (oneself) as similar to somebody else 3. Associate very closely Idle: 1. Not in action or at work 2. Without a basis in reason or fact 3. Lacking a sense of restraint or responsibility 4. Not yielding a return Ignorance: 1. The lack of knowledge or education Ignoring: 1. Refuse to acknowledge 2. Bar from attention or consideration 3. Fail to notice 4. Give little attention or respect to Illness: 1. Impairment of normal physiological function affecting part or all of an organism Illusion: 1. An erroneous mental representation 2. Something many people believe that is false 3. An illusory feat; considered magical by naive observers Impatient: 1. Restless or short of temper under delay or opposition 2. full of eagerness Imperative: 1. A mood that expresses an intention to influence the listener's behavior 2. Some duty that is essential and urgent 2. Requiring attention or action Imply: 1. Express or state indirectly 2. Suggest as a logically necessary consequence; in logic 3. Suggest that someone is guilty 4. Have as a necessary feature or consequence; entail Improve: 1. To make better in quality or more valuable; "The editor improved the manuscript with his changes." 2.Get better Impulse: 1. An instinctive motive 2. A sudden desire 3. An impelling force or strength Inability: 1. Lack of ability (especially mental ability) to do something 2. Lacking the power to perform Incapable: 1. lacking capacity or ability 3. Not being susceptible to or admitting of something Inclination: 1. An attitude of mind especially one that favors one alternative over others 2. That toward which you are inclined to feel a liking 3. A characteristic likelihood of or natural disposition toward a certain condition or character or effect Inconsiderate: 1. Lacking regard for the rights or feelings of others 2. Without proper consideration or reflection Incorporating: 1. Unite or merge with something already in existence 2. Make into a whole or make part of a whole 3. Include or contain; have as a component Increase: 1. A quantity that is added 2. Become bigger or greater in amount 3. A process of becoming larger 4. Make bigger or more Incurable: 1. A person whose disease is incurable 2. Being such that a cure is impossible 3. Without hope of cure 4. Unalterable in disposition or habits Independence: 1. Freedom from control or influence of another or others Indication: 1. A signal that serves to indicate or suggest something Indifferent: 1. Marked by a lack of interest 2. Showing no care or concern in attitude or action 3. (usually followed by 'to') unwilling or refusing to pay heed 4. Lacking importance; not mattering one way or the other; often followed by "to" 5. Fairly poor to not very good 6. Marked by no especial liking or dislike or preference for one thing over another 7. Characterized by a lack of partiality 8. Neither good nor bad 9. Neither too great nor too little Indirect: 1. Having intervening factors or persons or influences 2. Not direct in spatial dimension; not leading by a straight line or course to a destination 3. Descended from a common ancestor but through different lines 4. Extended senses; not direct in manner or language or behavior or action Indispensable: 1. Absolutely necessary; vitally necessary 2. Unavoidable Inferior: 1. One of lesser rank or station or quality 2. A character or symbol set or printed or written beneath or slightly below and to the side of another character 3. Of or characteristic of low rank or importance 4. Falling short of some prescribed norm Inflicted: 1. Impose something unpleasant Influences: 1. A power to affect persons or events esp power based on prestige etc 2. Causing something without any direct or apparent effort 3. A cognitive factor that tends to have an effect on what you do 4. The effect of one thing (or person) on another 5. One having power to influence another Injure: 1. Hurt the feelings of 2. Cause damage or affect negatively 3. Cause bodily harm to Innermost: 1. Insanity: 1. Any mental disorder characterized by temporary or permanent irrational or violent deviations from normal thinking, feeling, and behavior Insecurity: 1. The state of being subject to danger or injury 2. The anxiety you experience when you feel vulnerable and insecure Insidious: 1. Beguiling but harmful 2. Intended to entrap 3. Working or spreading in a hidden and usually injurious way Insight: 1. Clear or deep perception of a situation 2. A feeling of understanding 3. The clear (and often sudden) understanding of a complex situation 4. Grasping the inner nature of things intuitively 5. At or within a reasonable distance for seeing Instant: 1.A very short time 2. A particular point in time 3. Occurring with no delay 4. Demanding attention Instrument: 1. A device that requires skill for proper use 2. The means whereby something is accomplished 3. A person used by another to gain an end Intangible: 1. Incapable of being perceived by the senses especially the sense of touch Integrity: 1. An unreduced or unbroken completeness or totality 2. Moral soundness Intensely: 1. In an intense manner Intensity: 1. High level or degree; the property of being intense Intentionally: 1. With intention; in an intentional manner Intentions: 1. An anticipated outcome that is intended or guides your planned actions Intolerant: 1. Unwilling to tolerate difference of opinion 2. Narrow-minded about cherished opinions Inventory: 1. A detailed list of all the items in stock 2. (accounting) the value of a firm's current assets including raw materials and work in progress and finished goods Involvement: 1. Sharing the activities of a group 2. A connection of inclusion or containment 3. A sense of concern with and curiosity about someone or something Isolation: 1. A state of separation between persons or groups 2. A feeling of being disliked and alone 3. Preference for seclusion or isolation Issue: 1. An important question that is in dispute and must be settled J Jealousy: 1. Showing extreme cupidity; painfully desirous of another's advantages 2. Suspicious or unduly suspicious or fearful of being displaced by a rival Journey: 1. The act of traveling from one place to another Judge: 1. Form an opinion of or pass judgment on 2. Form an opinion about; judge tentatively; form an estimate of, esp. quantities or time Judgmental: 1. Depending on judgment Justify: 1. Show to be reasonable 2. Show to be right 3. Make excuses for K Kindness: 1. The quality of being warm-hearted and considerate and humane and sympathetic 2. Tendency to be kind and forgiving 3. A kind act Knowledge: 1. The psychological result of perception and learning and reasoning L Lend: 1. Give temporarily; let have for a limited time 2. Have certain characteristics of qualities for something; be open to Liabilities: 1. The quality of being something that holds you back Limitations: 1. A principle that limits the extent of something 2. The quality of being limited or restricted 3. The greatest amount of something that is possible or allowed 4. Limitless: 1. Without limits in extent or size or quantity 2. Having no limits in range or scope 3. Seemingly boundless in amount, number, degree, or especially extent Literature: 1. Creative writing of recognized artistic value 2. The humanistic study of a body of literature 3. Published writings in a particular style on a particular subject Loneliness: 1. The state of being alone in solitary isolation 2. Sadness resulting from being forsaken or abandoned 3. A disposition toward being alone Lovable: 1. Having characteristics that attract love or affection Loving: 1. Have a great affection or liking for 2. Feeling or showing love and affection (see caring) M Maintain: 1. Keep in a certain state, position, or activity; e.g., "keep clean" 2. Keep in perfect or unaltered condition Maintenance: 1. Activity involved in maintaining something in good working order 2. Means of maintenance of a family or group 3. The act of sustaining Manage: 1. Be successful; achieve a goal 2. Be in charge of, act on, or dispose of 3. Come to terms or deal successfully with; "We got by on just a gallon of gas." 4. Watch and direct 5. Achieve something by means of trickery or devious methods Manifest: 1. Clearly apparent or obvious to the mind or senses 2. Provide evidence for; stand as proof of Manipulating: 1. Influence or control shrewdly or deviously 2. Hold something in one's hands and move it 3. Fake or falsify 4. Influence skillfully to one's advantage Mannerisms: 1. An behavioral attribute that is distinctive and peculiar to an individual 2. A deliberate pretense or exaggerated display Meaningless: 1. Having no meaning or direction or purpose Meditate: 1. Think about at length and in depth 2. Think intently and at length, as for spiritual purposes Meditation: 1. A calm lengthy intent consideration Member: 1. One of the persons who compose a social group (especially individuals who have joined and participates in a group organization) Mental: 1. Involving an intellectual process 2. Affected by a disorder of the mind Minded: 1. An opinion formed by judging something 2. Your intention; what you intend to do 3. Knowledge and intellectual ability 4. mentally oriented toward something specified Miracle: 1. Any amazing or wonderful occurrence 2. A marvelous event manifesting a supernatural act of God Misery: 1. A state of ill-being due to affliction or misfortune 2. A feeling of intense unhappiness Moderate: 1. A person who takes a position in the political center 2. Preside over 3. Make less fast or intense 4. Lessen the intensity of; temper; hold in restraint; hold or keep within limits 5. Express less strongly 6. Restrain or temper 7. Being within reasonable or average limits; not excessive or extreme 8. Marked by avoidance of extravagance or extremes Monotonous: 1. Sounded or spoken in a tone unvarying in pitch 2. Tediously repetitious or lacking in variety Mood-altering: 1. Moral: 1. Concerned with principles of right and wrong or conforming to standards of behavior and character based on those principles 2. Arising from the sense of right and wrong 3. Psychological rather than physical or tangible in effect 4. Based on strong likelihood or firm conviction rather than actual evidence Motivate: 1. Give an incentive Motive: 1. The psychological feature that arouses an organism to action; the reason for the action 2. A theme that is elaborated on in a piece of music 3. Causing or able to cause motion 4. Impelling to action Must: 1. Be obliged, required, or forced to 2. Be logically necessary 3. Highly recommended N Narcotics Anonymous: 1. Is a nonprofit fellowship or society of men and woman for whom drugs had become a major problem. 2. People who care about desperate, dying addicts and who can , in time teach them how to live without drugs. Nature: 1. The essential qualities or characteristics by which something is recognized 2. The complex of emotional and intellectual attributes that determine a person's characteristic actions and reactions Necessary: 1. Absolutely essential 2. Unavoidably determined by prior circumstances Negative: 1. A reply of denial 2. Characterized by or displaying negation or denial or opposition or resistance; having no positive features 3. Reckoned in a direction opposite to that regarded as positive 4. Expressing or consisting of a negation or refusal or denial 5. Having the quality of something harmful or unpleasant 5. Designed or tending to discredit, especially without positive or helpful suggestions 6. Involving disadvantage or harm Newcomer: 1. Any new participant in some activity 2. A recent arrival Nonprofessional: 1. Not professional; not engaged in a profession or engaging in as a profession or for gain Nonsense: 1. A message that seems to convey no meaning 2. Having no intelligible meaning not to be used up or sacrificed O Oblivion: 1. The state of being disregarded or forgotten 2. Total forgetfulness Obsession: 1. An irrational motive for performing trivial or repetitive actions against your will 2.That fixed idea that takes us back time and time again to our particular drug or some substitute, to recapture the ease and comfort we once knew (Basic Text Pg.84) 3. The never ending stream of thoughts relating to using drugs, running out of drugs, getting more drugs, and so on (It Works How & Why Pg.6) Obstinate: 1. Stubbornly persistent in wrongdoing 2. Resistant to guidance or discipline 3. Persisting in a reactionary stand Obvious: 1. Easily perceived or understood 2. Easily perceived by the senses or grasped by the mind Omnipotence: 1. The state of being omnipotent; having unlimited power Ongoing: 1. Currently happening Only: 1. Exclusive of anyone or anything else 2. And nothing more 3. With nevertheless the final result 5. In the final outcome 6. Except that 7. Never except when 8. As recently as Open: 1. Affording unobstructed entrance and exit; not shut or closed 2. Not brought to a conclusion; subject to further thought (see minded) Open-mindedness: 1. Opinion: 1. A personal belief that is not founded on proof or certainty 2. A belief or sentiment shared by most people; the voice of the people 3. A message expressing a belief about something Oriented: 1. Determine one's position with reference to another point 2. Cause to point 3. Set or arrange in a new or different determinate position 4. Adjusted or located in relation to surroundings or circumstances; sometimes used in combination Others: 1. Not the same one or ones already mentioned or implied 2. Further or added 3. Recently past 4. Of the distant past 5. Very unusual; different in character or quality from the normal or expected Our: 1. Of or belonging to us Outrageous: 1. Grossly offensive to decency or morality; causing horror 2. Greatly exceeding bounds of reason or moderation Over-powering: 1. Overcome by superior force 2. Overcome, as with emotions or perceptual stimuli 3. So strong as to be irresistible Own: 1. Have ownership or possession of 2. Belonging to or on behalf of a specified person (especially yourself); preceded by a possessive P Panic: 1. An overwhelming feeling of fear and anxiety 2. Sudden mass fear and anxiety over anticipated events 3. Feel panic 3. Cause panic in; fill with panic Paradox: 1. (in logic) a self-contradiction Parallel: 1. Something having the property of being analogous to something else Paranoia: 1. A psychological disorder characterized by delusions of persecution or grandeur Patient: 1. Enduring trying circumstances with even temper or characterized by such endurance 2. Enduring without protest or complaint Patterns: 1. Plan or create according to a model or models 2. A customary way of operation or behavior Peace: 1. The state prevailing during the absence of war 2. Harmonious relations; freedom from disputes 3. The absence of mental stress or anxiety Perceive: 1. To become aware of through the senses 2. Become conscious of Perception: 1. The representation of what is perceived; basic component in the formation of a concept 2. A way of conceiving something 3. The process of perceiving 4. Knowledge gained by perceiving 5. Becoming aware of something via the senses Perish: 1. Pass from physical life and lose all bodily attributes and functions necessary to sustain life Perseverance: 1. Be persistent, refuse to stop Persistent: 1. Never-ceasing 2.continually recurring to the mind Personal: 1. Concerning or affecting a particular person or his or her private life and personality 2. Particular to a given individual 3. Of or arising from personality 4. Intimately concerning a person's body or physical being 5. Indicating grammatical person Personality: 1. The complex of all the attributes--behavioral, temperamental, emotional and mental--that characterize a unique individual 2. A person of considerable prominence Pitfall: 1. An unforeseen or unexpected difficulty 2. A trap in the form of a concealed hole Plagued: 1. Cause to suffer a blight 2. Annoy continually or chronically Pleasure: 1. Cause to suffer a blight 2. Annoy continually or chronically 3. troubled by or encroached upon in large numbers Possible: 1. Something that can be done 2. An applicant who might be suitable 3. Capable of happening or existing 4. Existing in possibility 5. Possible to conceive or imagine Potential: 1. The inherent capacity for coming into being 2. Existing in possibility Power: 1. One possessing or exercising power or influence or authority 2. Supply the force or power for the functioning of 3. Supplementing or replacing manual effort (see higher) Powerlessness: 1. The quality of lacking strength or power; being weak and feeble Practical: 1. Concerned with actual use or practice 2. Guided by practical experience and observation rather than theory 3. Being actually such in almost every respect 4. Having or put to a practical purpose or use Practice: 1. A customary way of operation or behavior 2. Systematic training by multiple repetitions 3. Translating an idea into action Prayer: 1. The act of communicating with a deity (especially as a petition or in adoration or contrition or thanksgiving) 2. Earnest or urgent request Preconceived: 1. (of an idea or opinion) formed beforehand; especially without evidence or through prejudice Preliminary:1. A minor match preceding the main event 2. Something that serves as a preceding event or introduces what follows 3. Designed to orient or acquaint with the a situation before proceeding Preparation: 1. The activity of preparing 2. The cognitive process of thinking about what you will do in the event of something happening 3. Activity leading to skilled behavior Pride: 1. A feeling of self-respect and personal worth 2. Satisfaction with your (or another's) achievements 3. The trait of being spurred on by a dislike of falling below your standards 4. Unreasonable and inordinate self-esteem (personified as one of the deadly sins) Primary: 1. Of first rank or importance or value; direct and immediate rather than secondhand 2. Not derived from or reducible to something else; basic 3. Most important element 4. Of or being the essential or basic part Principles: 1. A basic generalization that is accepted as true and that can be used as a basis for Privilege: 1. A special advantage or immunity or benefit not enjoyed by all Process: 1. A particular course of action intended to achieve a results 2. A sustained phenomenon or one marked by gradual changes 3. The performance of some composite cognitive activity; an operation that affects mental contents 4. A mental process that you are not directly aware of 5. Deal with in a routine way 6. Subject to a process or treatment, often with the aim of readying for some purpose 7. Shape, form, or improve something Procrastination: 1. Slowness as a consequence of not getting around to it Productive: 1. Yielding positive results 2. Marked by great fruitfulness Profound: 1.Showing intellectual penetration or emotional depths; from the depths of your being 2. Far-reaching and thoroughgoing in effect especially on the nature of something Program: 1. A system of projects or services intended to meet a public need 2. A series of steps to be carried out or goals to be accomplished 3. A course of academic studies Progress: 1. Gradual improvement or growth or development 2. The act of moving forward toward a goal 3. A movement forward Progressive: 1. Gradually advancing in extent 2. Of illness; marked by gradual deterioration of organs and cells along with loss of function 3. Advancing in severity Projection: 1. A prediction made by extrapolating from past observations 2. A planned undertaking 3. Anything that branches out from a central support 4. A defense mechanism by which your own traits and emotions are attributed to someone else Promise: 1. A verbal commitment by one person to another agreeing to do (or not to do) something in the future 2. Grounds for feeling hopeful about the future 3. Make a promise or commitment Promotion: 1. A message issued in behalf of some product or cause or institution 2. Encouragement of the progress or growth or acceptance of something 3. The advancement of some enterprise Promptly: 1. With little or no delay 2. In a punctual manner 3. At once (usually modifies an undesirable occurrence) see admit Protected: 1. Shield from danger, injury, destruction, or damage 2. Kept safe or defended from danger or injury or loss 3. Guarded from injury or destruction Proven: 1. Be shown or be found to be 2. Establish the validity of something 3. Provide evidence for 3. Prove formally; demonstrate by a mathematical, formal proof 4. Put to the test, as for its quality, or give experimental use to 5. Established beyond doubt Purpose: 1. An anticipated outcome that is intended or guides your planned actions 2. What something is used for 3. The quality of being determined to do or achieve something Pursued: 1. A person who is being chased 2. Carry out or participate in an activity; be involved in 3. Follow in or as if in pursuit 4. Carry further or advance 5. Followed with enmity as if to harm


Last changed: January 02, 2000