amenity |
(plural) social courtesies; agreeable manners; pleasantries. |
avid |
having or showing great enthusiasm. |
charismatic |
having unusually strong personal allure or appeal. |
chastise |
to punish, often corporally. |
dapple |
to mark or be marked with spots or mottling. |
emaciate |
to waste away the flesh of, usually by starvation or disease; make extremely thin. |
incorporeal |
without material being; bodiless; insubstantial. |
prepossess |
to inspire or impress favorably beforehand. |
profusion |
an abundant supply or display. |
propaganda |
information or opinions that are made public to promote or attack a movement, cause, or person. |
repulsion |
extreme distaste, disgust, or aversion. |
sensual |
related to or providing pleasure from the ways humans perceive stimuli, such as through touch, taste, or smell. |
suffice |
to meet the needs, goals, or the like of; be adequate for. |
susceptible |
easily influenced or impressed (usually followed by "to"). |
unobservable |
not able to be seen; not detectable. |