| Term | Definition |
|
Ignominy |
Deep personal humiliation and disgrace |
|
Placid |
Pleasantly calm or peaceful; unruffled; tranquil; serenely quiet or undisturbed |
|
Imp |
A little devil or demon; an evil spirit |
|
Anathemas |
A person or thing detested or loathed |
|
Malice |
Desire to inflict injury, harm, or suffering on another, either because of a hostile impulse or out of deep-seated meanness |
|
Invariably |
Something that is invariable; a constant |
|
Caprice |
A tendency to change one'smind without apparent or adequate notice; whimsicality |
|
Imbibes |
To receive and absorb into the mind |
|
Forlorn |
Lonely and sad; forsaken |
|
Inextricable |
From which one cannot extricate oneself |
|
Lurid |
Glaringly vivid or sensational; shocking |
|
Edifice |
A building of large size or imposing appearance |
|
Besmirch |
To stain; sully |
|
Sagacity |
Acuteness of mental discernment |
|
Phantasmagoric |
Series of shifting images, like those seen in dreams |
|
Inscrutable |
Incomprehensible |
|
Assimilate |
To absorb |
|
Succor |
Help |
|
Physiognomies |
Facial features |
|
Mutability |
Prone to change, inconstant |
|
Vindicate |
To provide justification or defense |
| Add or remove terms from this set |