accolade |
an expression or mark of approval; honor; award. |
adulation |
extreme or excessive praise. |
affinity |
a strong sense of liking; a natural attraction or sympathy. |
depersonalize |
to cause to lose individual identity or characteristics. |
disuse |
the state or condition of not being used or practiced any longer. |
dulcet |
pleasing to the ear; melodious. |
epigram |
a short, pithy, often paradoxical sentence. |
incise |
to cut into the surface of. |
libel |
in law, written or printed matter that is false, damages a person's reputation or material well-being, and arises from malice or extreme negligence. |
nemesis |
that which one cannot beat, conquer, or succeed at; cause or agent of one's often repeated downfall. |
ramification |
a consequence or related aspect of something; offshoot. |
refute |
to demonstrate the falseness or error of; disprove. |
regression |
the act or condition of return to an earlier form or less advanced state; biological or psychological reversion. |
sensual |
related to or providing pleasure from the ways humans perceive stimuli, such as through touch, taste, or smell. |
verity |
the quality or condition of being true or real. |