cognition |
the mental acts or processes by which knowledge is acquired or processed. |
commitment |
a pledge or obligation to fulfill an act or function. |
degradation |
the act or process of bringing down or lowering in character or moral purpose. |
dispense |
to give out in portions; distribute. |
enthrall |
to hold the complete attention of; fascinate. |
exempt |
to free from something that others are always required to do; excuse. |
induction |
the act, process, or result of deriving general principles from particular facts or examples. |
innovate |
to propose or implement a new method, approach, idea, or the like; make inventive changes. |
parental |
of or relating to the role of a mother or father. |
precede |
to come before in time. |
respondent |
a person who gives a reply or answer, especially to a survey or poll. |
sovereignty |
supreme power or authority, especially over a state or other political body. |
synonym |
a word having the same or nearly the same meaning as another word of the same language. |
unacceptable |
not approved of or permissible because of not meeting certain standards or expectations. |
unstable |
likely to change suddenly. |