abduct |
to carry off or lead away by force; kidnap. |
correspondent |
a person who reports news or contributes articles regularly to a newspaper, magazine, TV network, or the like, from a distant area. |
frank1 |
honest, direct, and open. |
ingredient |
one of the parts of a mixture. |
intensity |
strength or energy of thought or action. |
legitimate |
allowed by the law or by rules; legal. |
obese |
very fat. |
off-key |
not on the right musical note or pitch; flat or sharp. |
resistant |
capable of opposing or willing to oppose. |
seminar |
a small class at a university, usually for advanced students, for study and discussion. |
statistics |
(used with a singular verb) the mathematical study of numerical information, especially representative information about a limited portion of a population that is used to make generalized conclusions about the whole. |
stealth |
secretive, surreptitious, or covert movement or procedure; sneakiness; furtiveness. |
synthesize |
to bring together or combine (separate elements) to form a whole. |
thesis |
a statement or proposition put forward and supported by proof or argument. |
vengeance |
injury or damage done to a person in return for injury or damage inflicted by him or her; retribution. |