abolition |
the act of doing away with or putting an end to; the act of abolishing. |
affordable |
able to be obtained without excessive sacrifice of money or without incurring serious consequences. |
bachelor |
a man who has not married. |
cameo |
a stone carved so as to leave a slightly raised image of one color and a background of another, often worn as jewelry. |
covenant |
a usually formal agreement between two or more parties to engage in or refrain from something. |
depression |
a state of deep sadness or hopelessness that can persist for months or years and is not necessarily triggered by any particular external events. |
deprive |
to take away from; not allow to have. |
devastate |
to destroy or ruin. |
heckler |
one who disrupts a performance or public address with annoying remarks or questions. |
livelihood |
means of earning or getting what is needed to live. |
morality |
general beliefs concerning what is right or wrong. |
practitioner |
a person working in a trade, occupation, or profession. |
spatial |
of, relating to, or occurring in space. |
subjective |
affected or shaped by personal experience, beliefs, and feelings. |
unavoidable |
impossible to avoid or escape; inevitable. |