n. idiosyncrasy (a) someone to whom private matters are confided (b) a behavioral attribute that is distinctive and peculiar to an individual; mannerism (c) lawlessness (d) someone who is married to two or more people at the same time
n. chagrin (a) strong feelings of embarrassment; mortification (b) a deliberate and vigorous gesture or motion (c) the branch of anthropology that deals with the division of humankind into races and with their origins and distribution (d) facial features
n. fauna (a) encouraging; helpful (b) manifestation of a deity or spirit in an earthly form (c) a living organism characterized by voluntary movement; beast; brute; creature (d) the elevation of a person (as to the status of a god)
n. titter (a) clarity as a consequence of being perspicuous; plainness (b) brick that is laid sideways at the top of a wall; cope (c) a nervous restrained laugh (d) transposition of initial consonants in a pair of words
n. ambivalence (a) a state of extreme poverty or destitution; pauperism; pauperization (b) a stupid foolish person; ninny (c) a reeling sensation; lightheadedness (d) mixed feelings or emotions |
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n. raiment (a) the trait of merry joking; merriness; humorousness (b) especially fine or decorative clothing; regalia (c) shaving the crown of the head by priests or members of a monastic order (d) wandering from the main path of a journey
n. spatula (a) a hand tool with a thin flexible blade used to mix or spread soft substances (b) journey (c) assault; mighty attack (d) a feeling of profound respect for someone or something; veneration
n. resignation (a) act of quitting a position; relinquishment (b) a stipulated condition (c) the property of being extremely abundant; richness; cornucopia (d) a warmness resembling the temperature of the skin; tepidness
n. fulcrum (a) inappropriate levity (b) the pivot about which a lever turns (c) goods whose importation or exportation or possession is prohibited by law (d) a treatise advancing a new point of view resulting from research
n. conceit (a) a point conceded or yielded (b) a member of an Aegean people who settled ancient Philistia around the 12th century BC (c) a short pithy instructive saying; apophthegm (d) the trait of being unduly vain; vanity |