administrative |
of or pertaining to matters of management or to people involved in the daily running of institutions or businesses. |
autonomy |
freedom and independence; self-governance. |
clarity |
the state or condition of being clear or being understood. |
complimentary |
expressing or giving praise. |
compress |
to press into less space; squeeze closely together. |
confront |
to meet, face, or stand up to boldly. |
dictate |
to state or order with authority. |
dislodge |
to remove or force out of a fixed position. |
exempt |
to free from something that others are always required to do; excuse. |
forfeit |
something demanded or given up as a penalty for not acting as required by law, contract, or rules. |
obsolete |
no longer in use. |
philosophical |
of or pertaining to the nature and principles of knowledge, truth, existence, and moral and aesthetic values. |
preventative |
designed to serve as a hindrance or method of prevention. |
recuperate |
to become healthy again after being ill. |
scrounge |
to seek out and gather, especially by salvaging scraps (often followed by "up" or "together"). |