ancient |
very old; existing for many years. |
commotion |
a noisy confusion; disorder. |
confide |
to share secrets or personal information (usually followed by "in"). |
confusion |
the state of not understanding clearly or of being mixed up. |
devour |
to eat or swallow in a greedy way. |
diagnose |
to determine the identity of (a disease) by examination. |
evidence |
something that gives proof or a reason to believe. |
glamour |
the quality of being exciting, charming, and very attractive. |
investigation |
the act of examining carefully and closely. |
lag |
to fall behind an expected pace. |
marvelous |
causing wonder or amazement. |
repair |
to put in good condition again after damage has been done; fix. |
tunic |
an article of clothing that is loose and hangs to the knees. Tunics sometimes do not have sleeves and are sometimes belted. The ancient Greeks and Romans wore tunics. |
utter1 |
to give forth with the voice. |
worthy |
deserving (often followed by "of"). |