anarchist |
a person who believes in, desires, or tries to realize a society or state without a government. |
atrophy |
a gradual wasting away of a body part, especially from insufficient use or nourishment. |
bivouac |
a temporary encampment, especially military, without protecting shelter. |
immutable |
not subject to change; unchanging or unchangeable. |
inclement |
of weather, violent or disagreeable. |
monologue |
a long speech or reading given by a single speaker. |
refraction |
the bending of rays or waves of light, heat, sound, or the like when passed obliquely from one medium to another with a different rate of transmission. |
reinstate |
to put back into a former position, condition, or state of effectiveness. |
reiterate |
to say again. |
residue |
a substance or quantity that remains after a part has been removed or after a process has been completed. |
secular |
of or concerning the world and material concerns as opposed to religious or spiritual concerns; temporal. |
slake |
to satisfy or relieve (thirst, appetite, lust, or the like) by decreasing the strength or intensity of. |
statute |
a law made by a legislature, as opposed to one established by the courts. |
vindicate |
to free from an accusation, suspicion, or doubt by indisputable proof. |
whimsical |
characterized by or resulting from a sudden desire or fancy. |