concord |
a state of agreement or harmony between persons or things. |
emend |
to correct or improve (written text), especially by removing errors; edit. |
fervent |
having or expressing warmth, depth, or intensity of feeling. |
illicit |
not permitted by custom or law; illegitimate. |
ingest |
to take in to the body through the mouth. |
laud |
to praise. |
Lilliputian |
(often lower case) very tiny; extremely small. |
limbo1 |
(often capitalized) in theology, a place neither in heaven nor hell for souls neither saved nor condemned, such as those of unbaptized infants. |
lummox |
(informal) someone who is especially clumsy, slow, and unintelligent. |
preclude |
to prevent from happening by means of prior action or previously established condition. |
progenitor |
an ancestor or forebear. |
succulent |
full of juice or sap; juicy. |
tensile |
of or relating to tension. |
verisimilitude |
the appearance or semblance of truth or reality. |
volatility |
the quality or condition of being highly changeable or inconsistent. |