aesthetic |
having to do with beauty or art, including literature, dance, music, painting, drawing, and sculpture. |
aggrandize |
to make, or cause to appear, grander in wealth, stature, power, or influence; exalt. |
bolster |
to give support with a cushion or pillow. |
captious |
inclined to petty criticism; faultfinding. |
chattel |
any article of property not attached to lands or buildings; movable property. |
compile |
to gather information together to form one written work. |
convoke |
to summon to an assembly; marshal. |
dehumanize |
to deprive of individuality, spirit, or other human qualities; render routine or mechanical. |
detachment |
a feeling or condition of being impartial or uninvolved. |
incorporeal |
without material being; bodiless; insubstantial. |
infidelity |
unfaithfulness, especially to marital vows; adultery. |
misjudge |
to hold an unjustified opinion of. |
relinquish |
to surrender, release, or let go of; give up. |
tenable |
able to be upheld, affirmed, supported, or defended; logical. |
titanic |
having enormous size, strength, or power; colossal; huge. |