deference |
respect for and submission to the desires, opinions, or judgments of another. |
deity |
a god or goddess. |
efficacy |
the ability to produce desired results; effectiveness. |
idealist |
a person with high or noble principles, goals, or codes of action. |
loquacity |
the quality or an instance of talking a great deal or excessively; talkativeness. |
phenomenal |
amazing or extraordinary. |
recourse |
that which may be turned to for assistance, protection, or a way out of a difficult situation. |
reinstate |
to put back into a former position, condition, or state of effectiveness. |
sermonize |
to preach, or to speak as if doing so. |
stipend |
any periodic payment of money, such as a salary or allowance. |
stupor |
a state of unconsciousness, insensibility, or torpor. |
subpoena |
in law, a formal written order summoning a witness to give testimony or requiring that specified evidence be submitted. |
totality |
the state or quality of being total. |
tryst |
a meeting held at a specified time and place, especially a secret meeting of lovers; rendezvous. |
uninitiated |
combined form of initiated. |