alacrity |
willing promptness. |
ambulatory |
able to walk about. |
befall |
to happen to. |
chaste |
not having committed fornication or adultery. |
chasten |
to awaken conscience or bring about moral improvement through suffering, discipline, or punishment. |
disavow |
to deny having (knowledge, intention, or the like). |
euphony |
a pleasing, harmonious quality of sounds, especially words. |
frolicsome |
full of high spirits, gaiety, or merriment; playful. |
inexhaustible |
unable to be used up; endless. |
omnivorous |
living on a diet of both plant and animal food. |
restitution |
the payment of money in order to compensate for damage, loss, or injury. |
sear1 |
to burn or scorch the outside of. |
shroud |
to screen or conceal. |
statute |
a law made by a legislature, as opposed to one established by the courts. |
subsidiary |
assisting or supplementing. |