Glasser Final Vocab
Terms
undefined, object
copy deck
- Abate
-
Verb
Become or make less, diminish, weaken - Agape
-
Adjective
Gaping, open mouthed - Alien
-
Adjective
Belonging to a different group, different in nature - Amorphous
-
Adjective
Without shape or form - Assuage
-
Verb
Calm or smoothe, appease - Altrocity
-
Noun
The quality or state of being extremely wicked, cruel or brutal - Beacon
-
Noun
Warning or guiding signal station, lighthouse, light - Boisterous
-
Adjective
Loud, lively, noisily exuberant, rowdy - Carnal
-
Adjective
Of or relating ot the flesh, relating to crude bodily pleasures - Conflageration
-
Noun
A great and destructive fire - Consternation
-
Noun
Sudden fear or amazement - Disdain
-
Noun
Feeling of hatred for what is beneath a person - Endured
-
Verb
Having experienced a hardship or difficult time - Ephemerel
-
Adjective
Fleeting, momentary - Fantatic
-
Noun
A person who is excessively enthusiastic or uncritical in devotion - Felicitous
-
Adjective
Well chosen, apt, appropriate behavior - Frugal
-
Adjective
Sparing or economical especially as regards to food; meager; costing little - Futile
-
Adjective
Useless, ineffective, frivolous - Gaunt
-
Adjective
Lean, haggard, desolate, grim - Hedonism
-
Noun
The belief that pleasure or happiness is the only good in life - Homage
- Expression of high regard or respect
- Inert
-
Adjective
Without action, lifeless, without power or action - Inscrutable
-
Adjective
Incapable of being understood, mysterious - Lethargy
-
Noun
Abnormal drowsiness, sluggishness, laziness - Mettlesome
-
Ajective
Full of spirit - Miasma
-
Noun
A foul vapor or odor thought to cause disease - Opaque
-
Adjective
Cloudy, blocking the passage of light or sun - Opulent
-
Adjective
Wealthy, amply provided for - Permeated
-
Verb
Seeped through - Petulant
-
Adjective
Rude and insolent in speech - Prefecture
-
Noun
An area of designated land - Profuse
-
Adverb
Many in number, extravagant - Pugnacity
-
Noun
Disagreeable, quarrelsome in nature - Raucous
-
Adjective
Loud, disorderly, boisterous - Remorse
-
Noun
A feeling of sadness or guilt for past wrongs - Resilient
-
Adjective
Tending to recover froms hock or upset, bouncing back into shape - Respite
-
Noun
Interval or rest or relief, break - Reverence
-
Noun
To hold in deep respect or regard - Scrutiny
-
Noun
Critical examination, close investigation - Slatternly
-
Adverb
Messy, dirty, sloppy, untidy - Stout
-
Adjective
1- brave
2- large in size, fat, corpulent - Succinct
-
Adjective
Concise, brief - Suppurated
-
Verb
Formed puss, festered as infected - Taciturn
-
Adjective
Quiet, reserved in speech, saying little - Timitidity
-
Noun
Fear, fright, shyness - Tranquil
-
Adjective
Pacific, peaceful - Tumulus
-
Noun
Ancient burial mound - Unerringly
-
Adverb
Without error or mistake - Vibrant
-
Adjective
Filled with life or vigor - Vivacious
-
Adjective
Lively in temper, conduct, or spirit - Volition
-
Noun
An act of making a choice or decision - Xenophobia
-
Noun
Fear of strangers or people of different backgrounds or cultures - Indigenous
-
Adjective
Native to, having originated in or being produced in the native area - Impudent
-
Adjective
Rude, impertinent