boorish |
rude; ill-mannered; crude. |
debouch |
to advance out of a confined or narrow space such as a canyon into open country. |
decedent |
in law, one who has died. |
divergence |
the act of separating and moving or leading in different directions. |
epicure |
a person who has cultivated tastes, as in food or wine; connoisseur. |
hagiography |
an admiring and uncritical biography of anyone. |
indulgent |
gratifying, or being inclined to gratify or yield to others' wishes, especially rather than enforcing discipline or strictness. |
ineptitude |
incompetence; lack of skill. |
maladroit |
not skillful; clumsy; tactless. |
malaise |
a state or condition of feeling generally unwell, mentally depressed, sluggish, or uneasy. |
maunder |
to speak in an aimless or foolish way; babble. |
parturient |
giving birth or about to give birth; in labor. |
quadrant |
any of the four parts that result when an area is divided by two lines, real or imaginary, that intersect each other at right angles. |
repine |
to express or feel unhappiness; complain; fret. |
uxorious |
excessively or foolishly devoted to one's wife, and often thereby submissive to her. |