apathy |
lack of interest or feeling. |
detachment |
a feeling or condition of being impartial or uninvolved. |
financier |
a person skilled in or occupied in financial operations, usually on a large scale. |
ire |
anger or wrath. |
kinetic |
of, concerning, or caused by motion. |
Lilliputian |
(often lower case) very tiny; extremely small. |
neutrality |
the foreign policy of a nation that refuses to take sides in an international dispute. |
pallor |
unnatural lack of color, especially of the face. |
progeny |
a descendant, or descendants collectively; offspring. |
receptive |
open and willing to accommodate new thoughts and ideas. |
solicit |
to try to obtain (business, recruits, donations, help, or the like) by persuasion, formal request, or pleading. |
subvert |
to overthrow or destroy, or cause the destruction of (an established authority, especially a national government). |
surreptitious |
made, performed, or achieved by stealth or in secret. |
venerate |
to treat or regard with great respect, honor, or reverence. |
wanton |
lacking restraint in the pursuit of sexual pleasure. |