aesthetic |
having to do with beauty or art, including literature, dance, music, painting, drawing, and sculpture. |
astral |
of, concerning, emanating from, or resembling the stars; stellar. |
conniption |
(informal) an outburst or fit of anger, hysteria, or the like. |
culminate |
to arrive at a climax or conclusion (usually followed by "in"). |
delude |
to cause to hold a false belief; mislead; deceive. |
dowdy1 |
not at all stylish; shabby or dull. |
efficacy |
the ability to produce desired results; effectiveness. |
fester |
to become filled with pus; become infected. |
irrevocable |
impossible to take back, undo, or cancel. |
morass |
something that hinders passage or engulfs an unwary person. |
oracular |
of, like, pertaining to, of having the nature of divine wisdom; prophetic; wise. |
ramify |
to have or produce effects or consequences that make some original matter more complex. |
suture |
the act or process of surgically joining or sewing together the edges of a wound, incision, or the like. |
utopia |
(often capitalized) an imagined or proposed place or society that is ideal, especially in its laws, ethics, and treatment of humanity. |
voluptuous |
full of or characterized by sensual pleasures. |