deity |
a god or goddess. |
dexterity |
grace and easy quickness in using the hands or body; skill. |
fallible |
capable of making mistakes; liable to error. |
forage |
food for animals such as horses or cattle. |
frivolous |
unworthy of serious consideration or merit; trivial or silly. |
invocation |
the act or process of calling out to a god, muse, or the like, for help, support, or inspiration. |
lionize |
to view or treat (someone) as a celebrity or extraordinary person. |
optic |
of or concerning the eye or the sense of sight. |
perfunctory |
done quickly and as a matter of routine; performed without care. |
personify |
to be a perfect or typical example of; embody. |
populist |
a person, especially a political leader, who represents, or claims to represent, the interests and concerns of the common people rather than the privileged, the politically powerful, or the intelligentsia. |
propitious |
offering favorable circumstances or conditions; opportune; promising. |
secrete |
to produce a fluid or other substance and release it into or out of the body. |
superfluous |
being beyond a sufficient amount; excessive. |
therapeutic |
of, pertaining to, or capable of healing; curative. |