cion
31co|er|cion|ist — «koh UR shuh nihst», noun. a person who advocates or supports government by coercion …
32co|er|cion — «koh UR shuhn», noun. 1. the use of force; compulsion; constraint: »Dictators rule by coercion. A merger as such involves no necessary connotations of coercion, dominance, or lack of effective competitive pressures (Wall Street Journal).… …
33Mar|cion|ism — «MAHR shuh nihz uhm», noun. the beliefs and doctrines of the Marcionites …
34Mar|cion|ist — «MAHR shuh nihst», noun, adjective. = Marcionite. (Cf. ↑Marcionite) …
35Mar|cion|ite — «MAHR shuh nyt», noun, adjective. –n a member or adherent of a Gnostic sect founded in Rome in the 100 s A.D., which rejected most of the Bible and regarded the Biblical God as an imperfect divinity, the supreme God being manifested in Jesus… …
36sus|pi|cion|al — «suh SPIHSH uh nuhl», adjective. 1. of or having to do with suspicion. 2. having to do with or characterized by morbid or insane suspicions …
37ASUN`CION — or ASSUMPTION (18), the capital of Paraguay, on the left bank of the Paraguay, so called from having been founded by the Spaniards on the Feast of the Assumption in 1535 …
38sus|pi|cion — …
39ciongliai — ×cioñgliai (l. ciągle) adv., ciongliai Jnšk dažnai, ištisai, nuolat: Jie cioñgliai į miestą važiuoja Lbv. Cioñgliai skauda ir skauda Vl …
40cionglius — ×cioñglius (plg. l. ciągłość) sm. (2) nuolatumas, nenutrūkstamumas: Kaip stotį padirbs, čia atsidarys didelis cioñglius (judėjimas) Slnt …