amity |
friendly and peaceful relations; good will. |
coalesce |
to grow together or unite to form a single body or organization; unify; fuse. |
coir |
the fiber made from coconut husks, used for matting, rope, or the like. |
condone |
to pardon, disregard, or overlook voluntarily or without condemning. |
contumely |
contemptuous insolence; rudeness. |
Draconian |
(often lower case) harshly cruel or rigorous. |
gadfly |
a persistent critic, especially of established institutions and policies. |
idiosyncrasy |
a characteristic of temperament, habit, or physical structure particular to a given individual or group; peculiarity. |
incessant |
never stopping; constant. |
intersperse |
to place or scatter among other things. |
obscurantism |
a deliberate lack of clarity or directness of expression, as in certain styles of art or literature. |
peripatetic |
walking or traveling around; going from place to place; itinerant. |
reprise |
repetition of a musical phrase or theme in an identical or slightly altered way. |
splenetic |
ill-tempered or spiteful. |
unadulterated |
unmixed with or undiluted by additives or extraneous elements; pure; complete. |