amenable |
willing to respond, agree, or submit; agreeable; pliable. |
contemptuous |
feeling or expressing angry disgust, as at something unworthy or wicked; scornful. |
encroachment |
the act of exceeding proper or intended limits, as of territory or property. |
exhilaration |
intense high spirits. |
fictitious |
intended to deceive; not genuine; imaginary. |
ingénue |
an inexperienced or artless girl or the role of a such a girl in a dramatic presentation. |
odium |
hatred, strong dislike, or repugnance. |
profiteer |
a person who gains excessive profits, especially by selling scarce commodities at very high prices. |
proxy |
a person who is authorized to act for or on behalf of another, especially as a voter; substitute. |
psyche |
the mental makeup of a person or group. |
rehabilitate |
to restore to good health or to an otherwise improved state of being. |
reparation |
the act or process of making amends for wrongdoing or injury. |
salvageable |
able to be saved or rescued from damage or destruction. |
succumb |
to give in or give way to a fatal illness, superior force, overwhelming desire, or the like; yield. |
vertigo |
a sensation of unsteadiness or dizziness, such that one's surroundings seem to be whirling around. |