Question | Answer | |
Agast | Filled with amazement, disgust, fear, or terror | |
Ample | More than enough, large, spacious | |
Apparition | A ghost or ghostly figure; an unexplained or unusual appearance | |
Assert | To declare or state as truth, maintain or defend, put forward forcefully | |
Cower | To crouch or shrink away in fear or shame | |
Disdain | To look upon with scorn; to refuse scornfully; a feeling of contempt | |
Epitaph | A brief statement written on a tomb or gravestone | |
Facetious | Humorous, not meant serioously | |
Inaudible | Not able to be heard | |
Indiscriminate | Without restraint or control, unselective | |
Intrigue | (n) Crafty dealings, underhanded plots (v) to form and carry out plots; to puzzle or excite the curiosity | |
Jurisdiction | An area of authority or control; the right to administer justice | |
Plausible | Appearing true, reasonable, or fait | |
Plebeian | (adj) Common, vulgar, belonging to the lower class, (n) a common person, member of the lower class | |
Prodigal | (adj) Wastefully extravagagenerously; lavishly or generously abundant (n) one who is wasteful and self indulgent | |
Proximity | Nearness, closeness | |
Pulverize | To grind or pound to a powder or dust; to destroy or overcome | |
Sequel | That which follows, a result; a literary work or film continuing the story of one written or made earlier | |
Volatile | Highly changeable, fickly, tending to become violent or explosive, changing readily from the liquid to the gaseous state | |
Ethical | Having to do with morals, right and wrong; in accordance with standards of right conduct; requiring a prescription for purchase | |