advocate |
to speak or act in favor of. |
audacity |
courage or boldness often combined with daring or recklessness. |
bereavement |
the condition or fact of being deprived of something or someone, especially by the death of a loved one. |
delineate |
to describe or portray in precise or vivid detail. |
disuse |
the state or condition of not being used or practiced any longer. |
efficacy |
the ability to produce desired results; effectiveness. |
haggle |
to bargain or argue over petty differences in price, terms, or point of view. |
intolerant |
not able or not willing to accept different opinions, beliefs, customs, or people; not tolerant. |
larceny |
the stealing of another's personal property; theft. |
noncommittal |
not revealing what one's preference, feeling, or opinion is. |
paltry |
small, trifling, or worthless. |
plausible |
seeming to be true or reasonable; credible. |
reconcile |
to heal differences and restore a good relationship between. |
syncopate |
in music, to make (a rhythm) more complex as by accenting beats that are not normally accented or employing rests where accented beats would be expected. |
tempestuous |
characterized by disturbance or commotion; stormy; turbulent. |