acrimony |
bitterness or sharpness in speech or behavior. |
amenable |
willing to respond, agree, or submit; agreeable; pliable. |
anonymous |
having an unknown name or identity. |
askew |
not straight; crooked. |
cadaverous |
of or resembling a corpse; pale and thin or emaciated. |
eventuality |
something that might happen; contingent occurrence. |
expedient |
suitable or advantageous for the purpose or in the circumstances. |
facile |
acting or working in an easy, effortless manner. |
generalize |
to come to a broad idea or rule about something after considering particular facts. |
lethal |
intended to cause or capable of causing death or extreme harm; deadly. |
psyche |
the mental makeup of a person or group. |
revelry |
noisy merrymaking. |
subside |
to become less; decrease. |
throe |
(usually plural) any convulsive or anguished struggle, or great exertion. |
untested |
not having been tried or used in a way that would prove or disprove effectiveness or validity. |