![]() ![]() substantive, substantial hypostatic personal, bodily, tangible &c. 316 corporeity, element, essential nature, groundwork, materiality, substantialness, vital part. substantiality, hypostasis person, being, thing, object, article, item something, a being, an existence creature, body, substance, flesh and blood, stuff, substratum matter &c. extinct, exhausted, gone, lost, vanished, departed, gone with the wind defunct &c. unborn, uncreated, unbegotten, unconceived, unproduced, unmade. unreal, potential, virtual baseless, in nubibus unsubstantial &c. 187, insubstantial, shadowy, spectral, visionary. 1 negative, blank missing, omitted absent &c. annihilate, render null, nullify abrogate &c. ![]() 449 melt away, dissolve, leave not a rack behind 1 pass away, perish be extinct, become extinct &c. (destruction) 162 extinguishment, extirpation, Nirvana, obliteration. nullity nihility, nihilism tabula rasa, blank abeyance absence &c. inexistence nonexistence, nonsubsistence nonentity, nil negativeness &c. ens rationis ergo sum cogito: "thinkest thou existence doth depend on time?". in fact, in point of fact, in reality indeed de facto, ipso facto. well-founded well-grounded unideal, unimagined not potential &c. 494 substantial, substantive self-existing, self-existent essential. real, actual, positive, absolute true &c. extant afloat, afoot, on foot, current, prevalent undestroyed. abide, continue, endure, last, remain, stay. (be converted) 144 bring into existence &c. consist in, lie in be comprised in, be contained in, be constituted by. (event) 151 have place, prevail find oneself, pass the time, vegetate. subsist, live, breathe, stand, obtain, be the case occur &c. center of life, essence, inmost nature, inner reality, vital principle. fact, matter of fact, sober reality truth &c. existence, being, entity, ens, esse, subsistence reality, actuality positiveness &c. ![]() There's a bad smell from that stagnant water, and besides the mosquitoes are coming in.ROGET'S THESAURUS OF ENGLISH WORDS AND PHRASES CLASS I WORDS EXPRESSING ABSTRACT RELATIONS SECTION I. SCENE 1 OLD WOMAN: Come my darling, close the window. 12, 13: Windows, with stools, left and right. To the left, going upstage from the proscenium, there are three doors, a window with a stool in front of it, opposite the window on the right, then a blackboard and a dais. In the center of the back wall of the recess, a large double door, and two other doors facing each other and bracketing the main door: these last two doors, or at least one of them, are almost hidden from the audience. ![]() Then a window with a stool in front of it then another door. To the right, going upstage from the proscenium, three doors. THE CHAIRS A Tragic Farce The Characters OLD MAN, aged 95 OLD WOMAN, aged 94 THE ORATOR, aged 45 to 50 And many other characters SCENE: Circular walls with a recess upstage center. ![]()
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