amenity |
(plural) social courtesies; agreeable manners; pleasantries. |
discreet |
reserved and judicious, especially in talking about or otherwise revealing confidential matters; circumspect. |
elegy |
a sorrowful or mournful poem or musical composition, especially a lament for the dead. |
encumber |
to hinder the normal progress, performance, or use of. |
expendable |
considered able to be replaced, given up, or sacrificed. |
foray |
a quick raid or sudden advance, usually military and often to take forage or plunder. |
insurrection |
an act or instance of open rebellion against a government or other authority; uprising. |
litigious |
inclined to bring lawsuits. |
migratory |
changing habitat or location periodically, as in response to changes in climate or job opportunities. |
mundane |
of or pertaining to what is common and everyday; ordinary; commonplace. |
obscene |
offensive and not decent. |
patrician |
of, concerning, or belonging to an aristocratic class. |
redolent |
suggesting or recalling (usually followed by "of"). |
turpitude |
moral baseness; depravity. |
unassailable |
not open to attack, doubt, or denial. |