amenity |
(plural) social courtesies; agreeable manners; pleasantries. |
caricature |
a depiction, in a drawing or verbal description, that deliberately exaggerates or distorts some features of the person or thing represented to produce a comic or grotesque appearance. |
dint |
force or impact. |
endemic |
native to or restricted to a given place or population. |
extant |
still in existence; current; not extinct, destroyed, or lost. |
fatuous |
smugly foolish or stupid. |
grievous |
causing emotional or physical suffering; painful. |
infatuation |
the condition of being deprived of judgment by an irrational or foolish attachment to someone or something. |
potable |
fit for drinking. |
receptive |
open and willing to accommodate new thoughts and ideas. |
reproach |
to express disapproval of or disappointment with (someone); censure. |
reticence |
the state or quality of being hesitant to speak out; reserve. |
superficial |
of, pertaining to, or located on the surface. |
theorem |
a proposition or idea that can be proven by other formulas or propositions in mathematics, or deduced from accepted premises or assumptions in logic. |
unregulated |
not subject to rules or constraints. |