appoint |
to name to a particular office or duty. |
available |
able to be used or possible to get. |
conform |
to act in a way that agrees with a rule or standard. |
festival |
a ceremony or celebration that involves special activities and amusements and often occurs once a year. |
frisk |
to leap or skip in a lively and happy way. |
grace |
beauty or charm in form, style, or motion. |
grammar |
the rules for forming the words and sentences of a language. Some of these rules have to be learned. Other rules are already in the head of a native speaker. For example, a native English speaker would not say, "I a cat bitten by was," because the grammar does not make sense. When one learns a new language, most of the rules of its grammar have to be learned. |
liquid |
a form of matter that flows easily and is neither a solid nor a gas. Liquid can take on the shape of any container it is poured into. Water that is neither vapor nor ice is a liquid. |
massage |
to treat by rubbing, stroking, or kneading the body. |
multiple |
having or made of more than one part; many. |
nudge |
to push gently or touch with the elbow to attract attention. |
rotate |
to cause to turn around on an axis. |
stretch |
to spread out or reach out to the full length in order to make loose and flexible. |
tissue |
a group of cells in an animal or plant body that are like each other and do similar things. |
ultimately |
at the farthest or last point in a progression; finally; in the end. |