concur |
to share the same opinion; agree. |
condign |
well-deserved or fitting, especially of punishment or reprimand. |
electuary |
a drug mixed with honey, syrup, or the like to form a paste to be smeared on the teeth or gums of a sick animal. |
festoon |
a decorative chain or strip of ribbons, flowers, leaves, or the like, suspended at the ends and hung in a curve. |
homily |
any discourse offering moral advice or admonitions. |
indistinct |
not clearly perceived or perceiving. |
inquest |
a legal investigation, usually involving a jury, especially a coroner's investigation of a suspicious death. |
intransigence |
refusal to alter one's ideas or position in response to the wishes of others. |
jubilate |
to feel joyful; rejoice; exult. |
ostentation |
a showy display to impress others. |
panegyric |
a formal speech or piece of writing devoted to publicly praising a person or thing. |
relict |
a plant, animal, or geological feature that has survived in a considerably changed environment. |
reprisal |
injury inflicted in retaliation for injury received, as in war; revenge. |
reprobate |
an evil or lawless person, often beyond hope of redemption. |
stochastic |
of, or arising from chance or probability. |