adequate |
enough for the situation or need. |
balk |
to stop suddenly and refuse to go on. |
ballad |
a poem or song that tells a story. |
cultivate |
to make fit for growing plants by plowing, weeding, or adding fertilizer. |
fuse2 |
to become merged by or as if by melting together; amalgamate; coalesce. |
inhibition |
the condition of being held back or prevented from acting, as by one's own fear or embarrassment. |
maim |
to hurt badly by destroying a part of the body or making it useless. |
methodology |
a body of procedures, principles, and rules used for a specific activity or branch of knowledge. |
obese |
very fat. |
overall |
including nearly all; general. |
presume |
to take for granted; assume. |
rehabilitation |
the act of bringing back to a healthier, stronger, or more socially respectable condition. |
sage |
a very wise person. |
speculate |
to make guesses or wonder about something (often followed by "on" or "about"). |
treacherous |
betraying or likely to betray trust; false. |