alteration |
the state or process of altering. |
authoritative |
accepted as correct and true; reliable as a source of information because said or written by an expert or authority. |
censor |
an official who decides what art, movies, or books may be published. A censor works for a government, religion, or other organization, and promotes its ideas. |
crusade |
(often capitalized) any of the wars between European Catholics and Middle Eastern Muslims between 1095 and 1291. During these wars, the Catholics tried to take territory away from the Muslims. |
entrust |
to hand over to for the care or protection of. |
fabrication |
a statement, document, or the like that is false or invented to deceive. |
holistic |
handling or dealing with an entity in its entirety or wholeness rather than with emphasis on its parts or various aspects. |
intensive |
highly concentrated in a small space or interval of time. |
intentional |
done on purpose; deliberate. |
intermediate |
being or happening between two things, stages, positions, or persons; being in the middle. |
psychological |
of or having to do with psychology. |
scholarly |
of or appropriate to a student or a learned person. |
testify |
to state or affirm as fact or truth, especially under oath. |
trio |
a group of three people who sing or play musical instruments together. |
woe |
great suffering or sorrow. |