abolition |
the act of doing away with or putting an end to; the act of abolishing. |
acknowledgment |
the act of acknowledging. |
baron |
a very powerful financier or industrialist in a particular field. |
conceive |
to give shape to in the mind. |
freshman |
a student in the first year of high school, college, or university. |
inhabit |
to live in; use as a dwelling. |
intensity |
strength or energy of thought or action. |
narrator |
a person or character who tells a story. |
occasional |
happening now and then or not too often. |
onward |
toward a point or position ahead in space or time. |
primitive |
having to do with an early stage or a condition that is not developed. |
seminar |
a small class at a university, usually for advanced students, for study and discussion. |
separation |
the act of dividing or keeping apart or the condition of being kept apart. |
specific |
pertaining to a particular thing or person and to nothing else of the same kind; particular. |
yearn |
to have a strong desire, craving, or wish for something. |