cessation |
a pausing or stopping; discontinuance. |
conductive |
having the ability to allow the passage of electricity |
disembark |
to put or go ashore from a ship. |
elliptical |
tending toward or characterized by an economy of expression that creates ambiguity or obscurity, often purposefully. |
expulsion |
an act or instance of forcing out, or the state of being forced out. |
fallacious |
based on unsound logic; in error; illogical. |
finicky |
exceptionally fussy or hard to satisfy. |
frugality |
prudent or sparing use of resources, especially money. |
intolerance |
inability or unwillingness to accept the existence or validity of opinions, beliefs, customs, and practices different from one's own. |
namesake |
one who has been named after another. |
nostalgia |
a longing for the past. |
plausible |
seeming to be true or reasonable; credible. |
rebate |
a part of a payment that is returned. |
sodden |
drenched with liquid; saturated; soaked. |
uniformity |
the state or quality of being uniform; overall sameness. |