appellative |
a descriptive name or title, as "Terrible" in "Ivan the Terrible". |
comity |
mutual courtesy and respectful treatment among people or nations. |
demarcate |
to set apart or separate, as if with boundaries. |
gloaming |
late evening; dusk; twilight. |
indolence |
the tendency to avoid exertion or effort; laziness. |
ineluctable |
impossible to be avoided; inescapable. |
intransigence |
refusal to alter one's ideas or position in response to the wishes of others. |
lupine2 |
fierce; greedy. |
proselytize |
to convert or try actively to convert (others) to one's own beliefs or religion. |
pungent |
sharp and strong in taste or smell. |
reconnaissance |
the act or process of examining an area, especially to gain militarily useful information. |
saturnine |
gloomy, sullen, or cynical in temperament or appearance. |
supine |
lying with the face upward. |
unabashed |
not feeling or showing embarrassment, uneasiness, or shame. |
welter |
to roll about or wallow, as in mud or the open sea. |