- Aberrant: Departing from the right, normal, or usual course; deviating from the ordinary, usual, or normal type; exceptional; abnormal
- Acumen: Keen insight; shrewdness; expertise
- Amiable: Having or showing pleasant, good-natured personal qualities; affable; friendly; sociable; agreeable; willing to accept the wishes, decisions, or suggestions of another or others
- Apodictic: Incontestable because of having been demonstrated or proved to be demonstrable; necessarily true or logically certain
- Bemuse: To bewilder or confuse (someone)
- Circumspect: Careful to consider all consequences and possible consequences; prudent
- Cloister: To seclude from the world in or as if in a cloister (a place or state of seclusion)
- Confounded: Bewildered; confused; perplexed
- Copacetic: Fine; completely satisfactory; OK
- Deluge: A great flood of water; inundation; flood; a drenching rain; downpour; anything that overwhelms like a flood
- Diadem: A crown; Royal dignity or authority
- Discern: To detect; to recognize or identify as separate and distinct : discriminate
- Dulcet: Sweet to the taste; pleasing to the ear; generally pleasing or agreeable
- Ebb: To flow back or away, as the water of a tide; to decline or decay; fade away
- Effusive: Unduly demonstrative; lacking reserve; pouring out; overflowing
- Elation: A feeling or state of great joy or pride; exultant gladness; high spirits
- Emulate: To try to equal or excel; imitate with effort to equal or surpass
- Gregarious: Fond of the company of others; sociable; living in flocks or herds, as animals
- Inconceivable: Unimaginable; unthinkable; unbelievable; incredible
- Lissom(e): Lithe; easily flexed; nimble
- Odious: Deserving or causing hatred; hateful; detestable; highly offensive; repugnant; disgusting
- Placid: Pleasantly calm or peaceful; unruffled; tranquil; serenely quiet or undisturbed
- Preamble: An introductory statement; preface; introduction; the introductory part of a statute, deed, or the like, stating the reasons and intent of what follows; a preliminary or introductory fact or circumstance
- Pule: To whine or whimper
- Reiterate: To say or do again or repeatedly; repeat, often excessively
- Rigorous: Characterized by strictness, severity, or harshness, as in dealing with people, rules, or discipline; severely exact or accurate; precise
- Rudimentary: Consisting in first principles; fundamental; of a primitive kind
- Stoic: Impassive; characterized by a calm, austere fortitude; unmoved by joy or grief
- Superable: Capable of being overcome; surmountable
- Toilsome: Involving hard work; difficult
- Transmogrify: To change in appearance or form, especially strangely or grotesquely; transform
- Transpose: To change the relative position, order, or sequence of; cause to change places; interchange
- Umbrage: A feeling of pique or resentment at some often fancied slight or insult
- Venerate: To regard with reverential respect or with admiring deference; to honor
- Whodunit: A mystery or detective book or story