administrative |
of or pertaining to matters of management or to people involved in the daily running of institutions or businesses. |
cancellation |
the act of omission, deletion, or invalidation. |
conspicuous |
easily seen; obvious. |
critic |
anyone who judges or evaluates. |
democrat |
a member of the Democratic Party of the United States. |
devotion |
strong affection or loyalty. |
dwell |
to think, write, or speak about over and over again for a long time (often followed by "on" or "upon"). |
gape |
to stare in surprise, awe, or wonder, especially with the mouth open. |
induction |
the act, process, or result of deriving general principles from particular facts or examples. |
legendary |
having to do with or like a legend. |
martyr |
a person who suffers or is killed for defending some belief or cause. |
omission |
the act of leaving out or the condition of being left out. |
royalty |
a member of a king or queen's family, or all such persons as a group. |
sculpture |
an object of art or craft made by carving, chiseling, or molding. |
silhouette |
any dark figure seen against a light background, so that details are hard to see. |