amity |
friendly and peaceful relations; good will. |
apposite |
fitting; pertinent; appropriate. |
argot |
the vocabulary or jargon characteristic of a specific group or class, especially of criminals. |
chary |
not dispensing freely. |
coalesce |
to grow together or unite to form a single body or organization; unify; fuse. |
conduction |
the transmission or transfer, as of heat, electrical charges, or nervous impulses, through a medium. |
euphoria |
a strong feeling of well-being or elation, sometimes unrealistic or unwarranted, and able to be induced by certain drugs. |
hirsute |
covered with hair or stiff hairs; hairy or shaggy. |
indistinct |
not clearly perceived or perceiving. |
lachrymose |
weeping, tending to weep readily, or being on the point of tears; tearful. |
lenitive |
mitigating pain, discomfort, or distress; soothing. |
parsimonious |
excessively frugal; stingy. |
recurve |
to bend or curve back or backward, as the ends of certain shooting bows. |
topography |
the shape of the earth's surface across an area or region. The topography of an area includes the size and location of hills and dips in the land. |
voluble |
characterized by a steady flow of words; fluent; talkative. |