accommodate |
to have room for. |
accurately |
correctly or precisely; without making any mistakes. |
alleged |
claimed, usually with some amount of evidence, to be as described, although not proven so. |
endow |
to give money or property to. |
ethics |
the rules of conduct or moral principles of an individual or a group. |
famine |
a great lack of food over a wide area. |
harassment |
behavior that threatens, attacks, or offends another person repeatedly. |
lament |
to mourn for or regret. |
maim |
to hurt badly by destroying a part of the body or making it useless. |
mirage |
an illusion in which something is seen in the distance but is not really there. |
motherly |
of or like a female parent. |
reinforce |
to add strength to or increase the effect of. |
spiritual |
of or pertaining to the soul or matters of the soul, the part of a human being that is believed to be the higher or deeper self and not part of the body. |
tart1 |
sour or acid in taste; sharp; biting. |
withstand |
to resist or stand up to; bear. |