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honey
noun
-
honey
a
thick
,
sweet
,
golden
liquid
made
by
bees
from
flower
nectar
,
often
eaten
as
food
or
used
to
sweeten
drinks
β’
Grandma
drizzled
honey
over
the
warm
pancakes
.
Grandma
drizzled
honey
over
the
warm
pancakes
.
β’
Bees
store
honey
in
waxy
combs
inside
their
hive
.
Bees
store
honey
in
waxy
combs
inside
their
hive
.
Old
English
β
hunig
,β
of
Germanic
origin
;
related
to
Dutch
β
honing
β
and
German
β
Honig
β.
noun
a
friendly
or
affectionate
way
of
addressing
someone
you
love
or
like
,
such
as
a
partner
,
child
,
or
close
friend
β’
β
Thanks
for
carrying
the
groceries
,
honey
.β
β
Thanks
for
carrying
the
groceries
,
honey
.β
β’
A
father
knelt
and
tied
his
daughter's
shoe
,
saying
, β
Are
you
ready
to
go
,
honey
?β
A
father
knelt
and
tied
his
daughter's
shoe
,
saying
, β
Are
you
ready
to
go
,
honey
?β
Extension
from
the
sweet
food
to
a
person
considered
sweet
,
recorded
in
English
since
the
14th
century
.
noun
something
or
someone
that
is
very
good
,
impressive
,
or
attractive
β’
That
new
sports
car
is
a
real
honey
.
That
new
sports
car
is
a
real
honey
.
β’
He
landed
a
honey
of
a
job
at
the
design
firm
.
He
landed
a
honey
of
a
job
at
the
design
firm
.
Evolved
from
the
idea
of
honey
as
something
sweet
and
pleasant
;
informal
use
recorded
in
American
English
since
the
late
19th
century
.
honor
noun
deep
respect
for
honesty
and
good
moral
character
β’
He
always
acts
with
honor
even
when
no
one
is
watching
.
He
always
acts
with
honor
even
when
no
one
is
watching
.
β’
Serving
the
community
is
a
matter
of
honor
for
her
family
.
Serving
the
community
is
a
matter
of
honor
for
her
family
.
from
Anglo-French
β
honur
β,
from
Latin
β
honor
β
meaning
β
esteem
,
dignity
β
verb
to
show
great
respect
or
recognition
to
someone
or
something
β’
The
city
will
honor
the
firefighters
with
a
parade
.
The
city
will
honor
the
firefighters
with
a
parade
.
β’
We
gathered
to
honor
our
teacher
on
her
retirement
.
We
gathered
to
honor
our
teacher
on
her
retirement
.
from
noun
sense
of
β
honor
β,
first
used
as
a
verb
in
14th
century
noun
great
respect
and
admiration
for
someone
or
something
β’
The
soldiers
saluted
the
flag
to
show
their
deep
honor
.
The
soldiers
saluted
the
flag
to
show
their
deep
honor
.
β’
Winning
the
scholarship
was
an
honor
she
never
expected
.
Winning
the
scholarship
was
an
honor
she
never
expected
.
Middle
English
honour
,
from
Old
French
honor
,
from
Latin
honΕs
β
esteem
,
dignity
β.
verb
-
honor
,
honoring
,
honors
,
honored
to
show
great
respect
to
someone
or
something
,
or
to
keep
a
promise
or
agreement
β’
The
city
will
honor
the
firefighters
with
a
parade
.
The
city
will
honor
the
firefighters
with
a
parade
.
β’
Please
honor
your
promise
to
call
me
.
Please
honor
your
promise
to
call
me
.
From
the
noun
honor
;
earliest
verb
use
recorded
in
the
14th
century
.
honour
noun
high
respect
shown
through
honest
and
moral
behaviour
β’
She
defended
her
family's
honour
in
court
.
She
defended
her
family's
honour
in
court
.
β’
For
the
samurai
,
dying
with
honour
was
better
than
living
with
shame
.
For
the
samurai
,
dying
with
honour
was
better
than
living
with
shame
.
from
Middle
English
β
honour
β,
via
Old
French
,
from
Latin
β
honor
β
verb
to
show
great
respect
or
public
recognition
to
someone
or
something
β’
The
queen
will
honour
the
athletes
at
the
palace
.
The
queen
will
honour
the
athletes
at
the
palace
.
β’
They
planted
a
tree
to
honour
their
late
friend
.
They
planted
a
tree
to
honour
their
late
friend
.
verb
use
traced
to
late
Middle
English
,
influenced
by
French
β
honorer
β
noun
great
respect
and
admiration
for
someone
or
something
β’
Receiving
the
medal
was
the
highest
honour
of
his
career
.
Receiving
the
medal
was
the
highest
honour
of
his
career
.
β’
She
felt
it
an
honour
to
sing
at
the
royal
wedding
.
She
felt
it
an
honour
to
sing
at
the
royal
wedding
.
Middle
English
honour
,
from
Anglo-French
honour
,
from
Latin
honΕs
.
verb
-
honour
,
honouring
,
honours
,
honoured
to
show
great
respect
to
someone
or
something
,
or
to
keep
a
promise
or
agreement
β’
The
council
will
honour
the
author
with
a
blue
plaque
.
The
council
will
honour
the
author
with
a
blue
plaque
.
β’
He
always
honours
his
commitments
.
He
always
honours
his
commitments
.
From
the
noun
honour
;
verb
sense
attested
since
Middle
English
.
honest
adjective
always
telling
the
truth
and
not
cheating
,
stealing
,
or
hiding
facts
β’
My
dad
is
an
honest
mechanic
who
always
tells
customers
the
truth
.
My
dad
is
an
honest
mechanic
who
always
tells
customers
the
truth
.
β’
The
boy
returned
a
lost
wallet
because
he
wanted
to
stay
honest
.
The
boy
returned
a
lost
wallet
because
he
wanted
to
stay
honest
.
From
Middle
English
honest
,
via
Old
French
honeste
,
from
Latin
honestus
meaning
β
honorable
,
respectable
β.
adjective
earned
,
obtained
,
or
done
in
a
fair
,
legal
,
and
straightforward
way
β’
After
years
of
honest
work
,
his
small
farm
finally
made
a
profit
.
After
years
of
honest
work
,
his
small
farm
finally
made
a
profit
.
β’
She
prefers
to
earn
an
honest
living
rather
than
take
shortcuts
.
She
prefers
to
earn
an
honest
living
rather
than
take
shortcuts
.
interjection
used
to
emphasize
that
what
you
are
saying
is
completely
true
β’
Honest
!
I
finished
my
homework
on
time
.
Honest
!
I
finished
my
homework
on
time
.
β’
I
didn't
touch
your
phone
,
honest
.
I
didn't
touch
your
phone
,
honest
.
honestly
adverb
in
a
truthful
and
sincere
way
,
without
lying
or
cheating
β’
Please
tell
me
honestly
β
did
you
eat
the
last
cookie
?
Please
tell
me
honestly
β
did
you
eat
the
last
cookie
?
β’
She
answered
the
police
officer
honestly
about
what
she
saw
.
She
answered
the
police
officer
honestly
about
what
she
saw
.
Derived
from
the
adjective
"
honest
"
+
adverbial
suffix
"
-ly
";
first
recorded
in
Middle
English
around
the
14th
century
.
adverb
used
to
emphasize
that
what
you
are
saying
is
true
or
to
introduce
a
frank
opinion
β’
Honestly
,
I
think
this
is
the
best
pizza
in
town
.
Honestly
,
I
think
this
is
the
best
pizza
in
town
.
β’
You
should
honestly
try
talking
to
your
parents
about
it
.
You
should
honestly
try
talking
to
your
parents
about
it
.
interjection
an
exclamation
showing
annoyance
,
disbelief
,
or
impatience
β’
Honestly
!
Can
you
stop
making
so
much
noise
?
Honestly
!
Can
you
stop
making
so
much
noise
?
β’
Honestly
,
these
buses
are
always
late
.
Honestly
,
these
buses
are
always
late
.
phone
noun
a
device
you
use
to
talk
to
or
send
messages
to
people
who
are
far
away
β’
Mia
forgot
her
phone
at
home
and
couldn't
take
any
pictures
.
Mia
forgot
her
phone
at
home
and
couldn't
take
any
pictures
.
β’
The
phone
rang
just
as
we
sat
down
for
dinner
.
The
phone
rang
just
as
we
sat
down
for
dinner
.
Shortened
from
β
telephone
,β
which
comes
from
Greek
tele-
β
far
β
+
phΕnΔ
β
voice
,
sound
.β
verb
-
phone
,
phoning
,
phones
,
phoned
to
call
someone
using
a
phone
β’
I'll
phone
you
when
I
arrive
at
the
station
.
I'll
phone
you
when
I
arrive
at
the
station
.
β’
She
phoned
her
grandmother
every
Sunday
.
She
phoned
her
grandmother
every
Sunday
.
Back-formation
from
the
noun
β
phone
,β
itself
a
shortened
form
of
β
telephone
.β
telephone
noun
a
device
with
a
mouth-piece
and
an
earpiece
that
lets
people
talk
to
each
other
even
when
they
are
far
apart
,
by
turning
their
voices
into
electrical
signals
and
back
again
β’
Maya
picked
up
the
telephone
and
called
her
grandmother
.
Maya
picked
up
the
telephone
and
called
her
grandmother
.
β’
The
old
telephone
on
his
desk
still
had
a
rotary
dial
.
The
old
telephone
on
his
desk
still
had
a
rotary
dial
.
from
Greek
tele-
β
far
β
+
phΕnΔ
β
voice
,
sound
β;
invented
name
used
by
Alexander
Graham
Bell
in
the
19th
century
noun
the
whole
network
and
technology
that
carries
spoken
messages
over
wires
or
radio
waves
so
people
can
talk
to
each
other
across
distances
β’
The
telephone
changed
the
way
businesses
communicated
around
the
world
.
The
telephone
changed
the
way
businesses
communicated
around
the
world
.
β’
Strong
winds
knocked
out
the
village
β
s
telephone
for
two
days
.
Strong
winds
knocked
out
the
village
β
s
telephone
for
two
days
.
developed
from
the
device
name
to
describe
the
entire
system
that
carries
calls
verb
-
telephone
,
telephoning
,
telephones
,
telephoned
to
call
someone
and
speak
to
them
using
a
telephone
β’
I
will
telephone
you
as
soon
as
I
arrive
.
I
will
telephone
you
as
soon
as
I
arrive
.
β’
She
telephoned
the
doctor
for
an
appointment
.
She
telephoned
the
doctor
for
an
appointment
.
back-formation
from
the
noun
;
first
used
as
a
verb
soon
after
the
device
was
invented
iPhone
noun
a
touchscreen
smartphone
made
by
Apple
Inc
.
β’
Maria
proudly
showed
her
friends
the
photos
she
had
taken
on
her
new
iPhone
.
Maria
proudly
showed
her
friends
the
photos
she
had
taken
on
her
new
iPhone
.
β’
During
the
train
ride
,
James
listened
to
music
on
his
iPhone
to
pass
the
time
.
During
the
train
ride
,
James
listened
to
music
on
his
iPhone
to
pass
the
time
.
Launched
by
Apple
Inc
.
in
2007
,
combining
the
words
β
internet
β
and
β
phone
β
to
emphasize
its
web
capabilities
alongside
traditional
calling
.
shine
verb
-
shine
,
shining
,
shines
,
shone
,
shined
to
give
off
or
reflect
light
so
that
something
is
bright
β’
At
night
,
the
full
moon
shines
over
the
quiet
lake
.
At
night
,
the
full
moon
shines
over
the
quiet
lake
.
β’
The
polished
car
hood
shone
like
a
mirror
in
the
afternoon
sun
.
The
polished
car
hood
shone
like
a
mirror
in
the
afternoon
sun
.
Old
English
β
scΔ«nan
β,
of
Germanic
origin
,
related
to
German
β
scheinen
β,
meaning
β
to
appear
,
shine
β.
verb
-
shine
,
shining
,
shines
,
shone
to
perform
exceptionally
well
and
stand
out
because
of
great
ability
β’
Maya
always
shines
in
mathematics
and
finishes
every
test
early
.
Maya
always
shines
in
mathematics
and
finishes
every
test
early
.
β’
During
the
championship
game
,
the
rookie
player
shone
when
the
team
needed
him
most
.
During
the
championship
game
,
the
rookie
player
shone
when
the
team
needed
him
most
.