Try one of these
i like materialize
arise, arrive, attend, be present, be within view, blow in, bob up, break through, breeze in, check in, clock in, come, come forth, come into view, come out, come to light, crop up, develop, drop in, emerge, expose, issue, loom, make the scene, materialize, occur, pop in, pop up, present, punch in, punch the clock, recur, ring in, rise, roll in, show, show up, spring, surface, time in, turn out, turn up
i hope this helps
No. Thin is an adjective. Thinly is an adverb
muffle means to keep something quiet or at least quieter than it would be. Silence means to quiet something that is already making a sound.
mist
I remember this answer by remembering the word 'cave' as in 'concave'. The answer is Concave.
The lenth of something
fake
Diopter is a unit of measurement of the power of a lens. The word "Magnify" is a verb that is defined as making something appear larger than it is with a lens or microscope.
For a word to mean something in the Bible, it must appear in the Bible. In the King James version the word - kia - does not appear at all.
Making a written copy of something.
It is where something will appear when you start typing or if you paste something. It is in effect the place where something will be inserted.
Futrel does not appear to be an English word. Do you mean "futile" or something similar?
Allusion means making an indirect reference to something.
the word looked is a verb. it is the act of doing something. a noun is a person place or thing. an adjective is a word to describe something, like thin,fat,ugly,pretty.
The Latin word for "thin" is tenuis.
exagerating
Anglicization is the process of making something, particularly a word within language or culture, more English.
The word slender is an adjective. It describes something that is thin.