| Question   | Answer   | 
        
        |  start learning so as to float without being either moored or steered.  |  |  |  |  | 
|  start learning a mark of disgrace associated with a particular circumstance, quality, or person.  |  |   The stigma of having gone to prison will always be with me. |  |  | 
|  start learning so as be centered in or preoccupied with oneself and the gratification of one's own desires  |  |   We're of service to something greater than ourselves and our own selfish, egoistic needs. |  |  | 
|  start learning vain; boastful; opinionated, having over-elevated opinion of one self  |  |   In “The Exhibitionist,” a family lives in the shadow of a blustering, egotistic, once important painter. |  |  | 
|  start learning Showing excessive pride and self-satisfaction in one's achievements, possessions, or abilities.  |  |   He always seemed to be rather boastful and above himself |  |  | 
|  start learning the feeling that a person or a thing is worthless or beneath consideration  |  |   Pam stared at the girl with total contempt |  |  | 
|  start learning giving an appearance or impression different from the true one; misleading  |  |   He put the question with deceptive casualness |  |  | 
|  start learning The amount of money you have to pay yourself towards a claim before the insurance company pays the rest.  |  |   The insurance policy has an excess of £500, meaning the policyholder will pay the first £500 of any claim. |  |  | 
|  start learning ex. failing to pay off a loan |  |   Many student loans have gone delinquent over time. |  |  | 
|  start learning Synonym of flooding, more formal, academic  |  |   Egypt is currently experiencing the annual inundation of the Nile. |  |  | 
|  start learning A reduction or lessening of a problem  |  |   Our rapidly expanding disparities show no signs of abatement |  |  | 
|  start learning The subjection of someone or something to contemptuous and dismissive language or behaviour  |  |   He is held up as an object of ridicule |  |  | 
|  start learning the quality of being clever, original, and inventive  |  |   Considerable ingenuity must be employed in writing software |  |  | 
|  start learning make (an action or process) easy or easier  |  |   Everything possible should be done to facilitate the learning process. |  |  | 
|  start learning a person or organization that is immature, inexperienced, or underdeveloped.  |  |   This is a crucial question for the fledgling democracy that is the European Union. |  |  | 
|  start learning (of an argument or statement) not seeming reasonable or probable; failing to convince  |  |   This argument is pretty implausible, because of the fact that journalists are notorious for their lack of expertise in any academic area |  |  | 
|  start learning fierce criticism or opposition  |  |   Downvoted because bashing MMT doesn't substitute a meaningful argument. |  |  |