admiration |
a feeling of wonder, awe, or deep respect. [2 definitions] |
admire |
to hold in high esteem; respect. [2 definitions] |
admirer |
a person who holds another person or a thing in high esteem. [2 definitions] |
admissible |
capable or deserving of being admitted or conceded; allowable, esp. in a legal sense. |
admission |
the act, process, or result of allowing entry. [4 definitions] |
admit |
to grant entry. [4 definitions] |
admittance |
the act or process of entering or admitting. [2 definitions] |
admittedly |
by the willing confession, admission, or acknowledgment (of the speaker). |
admix |
to mix with or into something else; make an admixture with. |
admixture |
the act of mixing or the condition of being mixed. [2 definitions] |
admonish |
to caution or warn. [3 definitions] |
admonition |
a mild but serious warning, correcting, or urging. [3 definitions] |
admonitor |
one who admonishes. |
admonitory |
expressing admonition. |
ad nauseam |
until one is sick of the thing being done, told, or the like. |
ado |
excited activity; fuss. |
adobe |
a building material of sun-dried clay mixed with straw, usu. made into bricks. [3 definitions] |
adolescence |
the period between puberty and adulthood. [2 definitions] |
adolescent |
of the period between puberty and adulthood. [3 definitions] |
Adolf Hitler |
Austrian-born chancellor and dictator of Nazi Germany from 1933 to 1945 (b.1889--d.1945). |
Adonis |
in Greek mythology, a young man loved by Aphrodite because of his great beauty. [2 definitions] |