assume |
to suppose (something) to be true without knowing the actual facts; take for granted. |
bride |
a woman who is about to be married or was just married. |
clutter |
to fill or litter with a messy collection of things. |
conference |
a meeting to discuss a particular matter. |
culprit |
a person who is charged with or is guilty of doing something wrong. |
detail |
a small item; a particular. |
essential |
necessary, needed. |
grid |
parallel horizontal and vertical lines that cross each other to form squares of equal size. Grids are used to locate points on a map or to make diagrams. |
groggy |
confused, dizzy, or feeling unable to wake up. |
lawyer |
one whose job is to help people with legal matters and represent them in court; attorney. |
marriage |
the state of two people being joined by law, having pledged to be faithful to one another all their lives as a couple. |
poker1 |
a pointed metal rod for stirring up a fire. |
prevention |
the act or process of keeping something unwanted or dangerous from happening. |
triple |
three times as much; three times as many. |
vaccine |
a substance used to protect people and animals from very serious diseases. Vaccines contain germs of a particular disease--these germs been killed or changed in a certain way in a laboratory to make them safe. A vaccine goes into a person's body in a shot that is given by a doctor or nurse. After a vaccine is put into a person's body, that person will not get that disease or will get only a mild case. |