audacity |
courage or boldness often combined with daring or recklessness. |
bourgeois |
of, related to, or characteristic of the middle class. |
cater |
to supply food or other service. |
circuitous |
having or taking a long and winding course or procedure; roundabout; indirect. |
debit |
an amount of money taken out of or owed on an account, or the record of that amount. |
dissolution |
the annulment or severance of a bond or tie, especially a formal or contractual connection. |
dogmatist |
one who asserts opinions or beliefs as though they were facts. |
impassioned |
full of strong emotion. |
manifold |
abundant and varied. |
palatable |
acceptable or pleasing to the sense of taste. |
presumptive |
affording a reasonable basis for belief. |
ruminate |
to think at length; meditate. |
surveillance |
a close watch or observation, especially of a person or group of people under suspicion. |
uninitiated |
combined form of initiated. |
unintelligible |
not able to be understood, as spoken or written language. |