abrogate |
to abolish, repeal, or nullify by authority. |
appose |
to place next to or side by side; juxtapose. |
cognomen |
a last name; surname. |
concur |
to share the same opinion; agree. |
disabuse |
to free (a person) from misconception or deception; set straight. |
disencumber |
to remove burdens or hindrances from. |
inadvertent |
not planned or intended; unintentional. |
ingenuous |
having or showing simplicity and lack of sophistication; artless. |
oblique |
not direct or straightforward in intent, means, or achievement; indirect or devious. |
pedagogy |
the act, process, or profession of teaching. |
pungency |
sharpness or bite in taste or smell. |
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. |
quondam |
having been in the past; former. |
sanctimony |
a pretense of righteousness or piety; feigned devotion or holiness. |
saturnine |
gloomy, sullen, or cynical in temperament or appearance. |