| abject | utterly hopeless, miserable, humiliating, or wretched: abject poverty. |
| bane | a person or thing that ruins or spoils: Gambling was the bane of his existence. |
| bestial | without reason or intelligence; brutal; inhuman: bestial treatment of prisoners. |
| malice | desire to inflict injury, harm, or suffering on another, either because of a hostile impulse or out of deep-seated meanness: |
| plagarism | the unauthorized use or close imitation of the language and thoughts of another author and the representation of them as one's own original work. |
| surreptitious | obtained, done, made, etc., by stealth; secret or unauthorized; clandestine: |
| vilify | to speak ill of; defame; slander. |
| Standards | something considered by an authority or by general consent as a basis of comparison; an approved model |
| deduction | the act or process of deducting; subtraction. |
| congeal | to change from a soft or fluid state to a rigid or solid state, as by cooling or freezing: |
| intoxicating | causing or capable of causing intoxication: |
| permeate | to pass into or through every part of: |
| insatiable | not satiable; incapable of being satisfied or appeased |
| insipid | without distinctive, interesting, or stimulating qualities; vapid: |
| palatable | acceptable or agreeable to the palate or taste; savory |
| satiate | to supply with anything to excess, so as to disgust or weary; surfeit. |
| subsist | to exist; continue in existence. |