auditory |
having to do with or referring to hearing or the sense of hearing. |
discretion |
the freedom or authority to use one's own judgment. |
egotism |
excessive self-promotion; boastfulness or conceitedness. |
epigram |
a short, pithy, often paradoxical sentence. |
harangue |
a long, vehement, and often pompous speech or piece of writing, especially such a speech delivered in public; tirade. |
incorporate |
to include as part of a larger thing; blend. |
landlocked |
without any access to the sea. |
orator |
a person who delivers a public speech, or one skilled at formal public speaking. |
ornamentation |
decoration; embellishment. |
pallid |
pale or whitened; lacking color. |
preventable |
having the possibility of being prevented; capable of being stopped or kept from happening. |
sate |
to fill to excess, especially with food; glut. |
stoical |
showing little or no emotion in reaction to painful or pleasant experiences. |
subpoena |
in law, a formal written order summoning a witness to give testimony or requiring that specified evidence be submitted. |
utopia |
(often capitalized) an imagined or proposed place or society that is ideal, especially in its laws, ethics, and treatment of humanity. |