aesthetic |
having to do with beauty or art, including literature, dance, music, painting, drawing, and sculpture. |
chaste |
not having committed fornication or adultery. |
contention |
a point asserted in argument or debate. |
deferential |
respectfully submissive to the desires, opinions, or judgments of others. |
entourage |
a group of people who accompany another person as attendants or associates; retinue. |
equity |
the quality of being fair and reasonable; fairness. |
hubris |
the pride associated with arrogance; pride considered as sin. |
hydraulic |
of, concerning, operated by, or moved by water or another liquid under pressure. |
intimacy |
the condition of being close in friendship or otherwise intimate. |
invocation |
the act or process of calling out to a god, muse, or the like, for help, support, or inspiration. |
multifarious |
of or having a great variety of parts, forms, or kinds; many and varied. |
unintelligible |
not able to be understood, as spoken or written language. |
unvaried |
marked by a lack of diversity; never changing. |
usurp |
to take and hold (a right, position, office, or the like) illegally, wrongfully, or by force. |
vogue |
a popular fashion or style. |