appose |
to place next to or side by side; juxtapose. |
barrage |
a great number of things coming one after another very quickly. |
beatify |
to admire or exalt as superior. |
coddle |
to simmer in water that is almost at the boiling point. |
coeval |
coinciding in time of origin or existence; contemporary. |
condone |
to pardon, disregard, or overlook voluntarily or without condemning. |
epigraph |
a pertinent quotation or motto, especially found at the beginning of a literary work or of a chapter. |
epistolary |
established or continued through letters. |
euphoria |
a strong feeling of well-being or elation, sometimes unrealistic or unwarranted, and able to be induced by certain drugs. |
garrulous |
given to talking excessively. |
insipid |
having a bland or uninteresting flavor; tasteless. |
peripatetic |
walking or traveling around; going from place to place; itinerant. |
pungency |
sharpness or bite in taste or smell. |
sartorial |
of or pertaining to tailors or tailored clothing, especially men's clothing. |
Saturnalia |
an occasion of unrestrained revelry. |