civilize |
to bring education and training to, especially in the arts, science, and government. |
congressional |
(sometimes capitalized) of or pertaining to a legislative congress, especially the U.S. Congress. |
critic |
anyone who judges or evaluates. |
dwindle |
to become or cause to become gradually smaller or less until almost nothing remains; shrink. |
encrusted |
covered with a hard or crisp layer of something. |
ethics |
the rules of conduct or moral principles of an individual or a group. |
hoax |
an act meant to trick or deceive. |
implementation |
the act, process, or way of carrying something out or putting something into effect. |
mislead |
to guide in a wrong direction. |
mutilate |
to destroy by cutting or tearing off a necessary part. |
prime |
first in importance. |
rant |
to speak or complain loudly and vehemently. |
scrounge |
to seek out and gather, especially by salvaging scraps (often followed by "up" or "together"). |
stealth |
secretive, surreptitious, or covert movement or procedure; sneakiness; furtiveness. |
velocity |
speed. |