adjacent |
near or next to. |
authentic |
real, genuine, or true. |
baroque |
(often capitalized) the style or period in art, music, and architecture prevailing in Europe following the Renaissance, characterized by bold and elaborate forms of ornamentation. |
commend |
to speak of with praise for some act or service. |
compassionate |
filled with care for another's suffering; sympathetic. |
crave |
to need or desire very much. |
descriptive |
using or full of description. |
fanciful |
exhibiting use of the imagination; whimsical or imaginative. |
knack |
a natural talent for something. |
offensive |
not pleasant; disagreeable. |
ordain |
to admit to the clergy as a priest, minister, or rabbi in a formal ceremony. |
oversight |
a lack of paying attention to what one is doing. |
temptation |
the condition of being lured or enticed by the possibility of pleasure to do something unwise or wrong. |
theory |
a reasonable, widely accepted explanation for why something happens. |
transitional |
of or pertaining to a change from one position, stage, or situation to another. |