dispassionate |
without strong feeling or bias; calm; impartial. |
empathy |
identification with or sharing of another's feelings, situation, or attitudes. |
entail |
to call for or bring about as a necessary accompaniment; necessarily involve. |
exhort |
to advise, urge, or incite with great seriousness. |
gibberish |
written or spoken words that are unintelligible, needlessly obscure, or without coherent meaning. |
hubris |
the pride associated with arrogance; pride considered as sin. |
libel |
in law, written or printed matter that is false, damages a person's reputation or material well-being, and arises from malice or extreme negligence. |
motley |
made up of a contrasting variety of types, appearances, or the like; very heterogeneous. |
pique |
to cause (a feeling or action) to be aroused or incited. |
posterior |
located behind or toward the back of something. |
rigorous |
showing strictness or sternness. |
slur |
to speak of disparagingly; belittle. |
stalwart |
steady and loyal; reliable. |
sunder |
to tear, force, or break apart; divide. |
undercut |
to act so as to lessen the effectiveness or influence of; undermine or thwart. |