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more info Financial Management Service, n.
the federal agency in the Treasury Department that manages the government's disbursement and collection systems and provides central accounting and financial reporting
<noun.group>

more info Fingal's Cave, n.
a large cave with basaltic pillars on Staffa island in Scotland
<noun.object>

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part holonym
instance hypernym
more info Finger Lakes, n.
a geographical area in central New York State that is named for a series of narrow glacial lakes that lie parallel in a north-south direction
<noun.location>

more info Finland, n.
more info Finn, n.
a native or inhabitant of Finland
<noun.person>

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member holonym
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more info Finnbogadottir, n.
former president of Iceland; first woman to be democratically elected head of state (born in 1930)
<noun.person>

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instance hypernym
more info Finnic, n.
one of two branches of the Finno-Ugric languages; a family of languages including Finnish and Estonian (but not Hungarian)
<noun.communication>

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hyponym
more info Finnish, adj.
of or relating to or characteristic of Finland or the people of Finland
<adj.pert>

sample sentences

"Finnish architecture"
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derivationally related form
derived from/pertains to
more info Finnish, n.
the official language of Finland; belongs to the Baltic Finnic family of languages
<noun.communication>

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derivationally related form
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hypernym
more info Finnish capital, n.
the capital and largest city of Finland; located in southern Finland; a major port and commercial and cultural center
<noun.location>

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instance hypernym
part holonym
more info Finnish mark, n.
formerly the basic unit of money in Finland
<noun.quantity>

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hypernym
part meronym
more info Finnish monetary unit, n.
monetary unit in Finland
<noun.quantity>

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hypernym
hyponym
more info Finno-Ugrian, n.
a family of Uralic languages indigenous to Scandinavia and Hungary and Russia and western Siberia (prior to the Slavic expansion into those regions)
<noun.communication>

more info Finno-Ugric, n.
a family of Uralic languages indigenous to Scandinavia and Hungary and Russia and western Siberia (prior to the Slavic expansion into those regions)
<noun.communication>

more info Finno-Ugric-speaking, adj.
able to communicate in a Finno-Ugric language
<adj.all>

semantic pointers
similar to
more info Firenze, n.
a city in central Italy on the Arno; provincial capital of Tuscany; center of the Italian Renaissance from 14th to 16th centuries
<noun.location>

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instance hypernym
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member meronym
more info Firmiana, n.
more info Firmiana simplex, n.
deciduous tree widely grown in southern United States as an ornamental for its handsome maplelike foliage and long racemes of yellow-green flowers followed by curious leaflike pods
<noun.plant>

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member holonym
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more info First Amendment, n.
an amendment to the Constitution of the United States guaranteeing the right of free expression; includes freedom of assembly and freedom of the press and freedom of religion and freedom of speech
<noun.communication>

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instance hypernym
part holonym
domain of synset (topic)
more info First Baron Beveridge, n.
British economist (born in India) whose report on social insurance provided the basis for most of the social legislation on which the welfare state in the United Kingdom is based (1879-1963)
<noun.person>

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instance hypernym
more info First Baron Kelvin, n.
British physicist who invented the Kelvin scale of temperature and pioneered undersea telegraphy (1824-1907)
<noun.person>

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instance hypernym
more info First Baron Lytton, n.
English writer of historical romances (1803-1873)
<noun.person>

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more info First Baron Macaulay, n.
English historian noted for his history of England (1800-1859)
<noun.person>

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more info First Baron Marks of Broughton, n.
English businessman who created a retail chain (1888-1964)
<noun.person>

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more info First Baron Passfield, n.
English sociologist and economist and a central member of the Fabian Society (1859-1947)
<noun.person>

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member holonym
instance hypernym
more info First Baron Rutherford, n.
British physicist (born in New Zealand) who discovered the atomic nucleus and proposed a nuclear model of the atom (1871-1937)
<noun.person>

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instance hypernym
more info First Baron Rutherford of Nelson, n.
British physicist (born in New Zealand) who discovered the atomic nucleus and proposed a nuclear model of the atom (1871-1937)
<noun.person>

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instance hypernym
more info First Baron Tennyson, n.
Englishman and Victorian poet (1809-1892)
<noun.person>

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instance hypernym
more info First Council of Constantinople, n.
the second ecumenical council in 381 which added wording about the Holy Spirit to the Nicene Creed
<noun.group>

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hypernym
more info First Council of Lyons, n.
the council of the Western Church in 1245 that excommunicated Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II and planned a new crusade against the Holy Land
<noun.group>

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hypernym