adversity |
a condition of trouble or difficulty. |
ambulatory |
able to walk about. |
exuberance |
the condition or quality of being vigorously happy or high-spirited. |
fervent |
having or expressing warmth, depth, or intensity of feeling. |
gesticulation |
the act or an instance of using hand movements, as to add emphasis or expressiveness to speech. |
gouge |
a cut or hole made with something sharp. |
imperturbable |
not easily excited or disturbed; calm. |
mundane |
of or pertaining to what is common and everyday; ordinary; commonplace. |
plight1 |
a state or situation, especially an unhappy or unlucky one; predicament. |
profess |
to claim or state as true. |
rancorous |
feeling or showing bitter resentment; hateful. |
theocracy |
a form of government in which a god or gods are acknowledged as the ultimate authority. |
travail |
strenuous and often painful or exhausting work; toil. |
ungovernable |
unable to be governed, ordered, or controlled; uncontrollable. |
unspoken |
assumed without being expressed or spoken; implied. |