birth |
the act or fact of being born. |
childhood |
the period or state of being young and not fully grown. |
collaboration |
a cooperative effort by which people or organizations work together to accomplish a common project or mission. |
deceit |
the act of lying or cheating. |
discontent |
not satisfied; unhappy. |
enable |
to give means or power to; make able; allow. |
independent |
not ruled by another; ruling oneself. |
jumble |
to put or throw together in a confused pile. |
mutate |
to display or cause to display a physical trait or characteristic that is different from one's parent or parents as a result of a change within a gene or chromosome. |
noose |
a loop that passes through a knot in the end of a rope or other line. When the rope is pulled, the loop becomes smaller. |
persecute |
to continually treat in a cruel or harsh way because of race, religion, political ideas, or some other difference. |
pledge |
a serious promise; vow. |
profession |
a job or type of work that needs special training or study. |
remarkable |
unusual or exceptional. |
scholar |
a person who has much knowledge, usually acquired from research and study. |