| obliterate | | adj - done or chosen without a reason; random |
| ravenous | | n - in a plant, a grain or seed; often edible and found inside the plant |
| despite | | v - to cheat; to gain something dishonestly, as through a lie, deception, or confidence game |
| deity | | v - to lay or be enclosed comfortably; to snuggle |
| kernel | | n - the action of the President of the United States, according to the provision in the constitution, to reject a law passed by Congress |
| inaudible | | adj - having two sides |
| juncture | | n - many; a large number; countless |
| phonetic | | v - to break something down into its parts in order to explain or understand it; especially to break apart a sentence into words and phrases, describing each part |
| queue | | adj - stubborn; holding fast to a belief or goal |
| writhe | | adj - belonging to, occurring in, or related to the nightime |
| havoc | | n - an exaggerated or deliberate mannerism |
| partition | | n - an opinion that is agreed upon by all members or a group of people |
| handwriting | | n - something which separates two parts or areas |
| underworld | | adj - careless or unwise; unheeding of danger |
| cudgel | | n - a permanency; a person or thing remaining fixed, in the same position |
| consensus | | n - the act of falling from a righteous or just position; a slight or temporary moral failure |
| bilateral | | n - a world beneath or below the normal world, especially a criminal world such as mafia society or a world of the dead such as Hades |
| scuttle | | n - a change in form or shape, often from one stage of development to another, as a caterpillar turning into a butterfly |
| thearchy | | adj - moving or bending easily; graceful and fluid in motion |
| beseech | | n - resentment based on a feeling of having been injured |
| reckless | | v - to beg or plead |
| veto | | v - to destroy; to break down into nothing; to eliminate |
| aspire | | v - to move uncomfortably; to twist around, especially to express pain |
| lithe | | n - honesty or straightforwardness, especially being honest about something unpleasant |
| effrontery | | v - to sink a ship by creating a hole or holes in the ship beneath the water line; also to destroy or wreck |
| prolong | | n - chaos or large-scale destruction |
| candor | | n - a joint or seam, where two parts meet |
| opulence | | n - a short, thick blunt weapon; a club |
| somnolent | | n - boldness; audacity |
| arbitrary | | v - to drink a liquid; to absorb or take in something |
| abdicate | | adj - unable to be heard |
| parse | | prep - in spite of |
| elude | | v - to decline or reject a powerful position, such as a kingship |
| hesitant | | n - loyalty; fidelity |
| tenacious | | n - a harsh or stern rigidity; unyielding |
| censorious | | n - a disease, illness, or medical condition, especially a serious or chronic condition |
| defraud | | adj - extremely hungry; filled with hunger that cannot be satisfied |
| nocturnal | | n - a god or goddess |
| affectation | | n - a government ruled by the leaders of a religion or by the power of a god or gods |
| fixture | | adj - drowsy or inclined to sleep |
| imbibe | | v - to make something last longer; to extend a period of time |
| rigor | | adj - lacking decisiveness; uncertain or unwilling to make a decision |
| nestle | | n - riches or affluence, especially as shown by expensive or ostentatious possessions or lifestyle |
| unbrage | | adj - finding fault; judging harshly |
| myriad | | v - to strive for a goal; to want or desire something excellent or far beyond the current state |
| fealty | | n - a line; a group of people waiting in order |
| lapse | | adj - of, relating to, or representing the sounds of speech |
| necessitate | | v - to make something necessary |
| metamorphosis | | n - the character or style of a person's writing by hand; cursive writing |
| malady | | v - to escape from someone or something giving chase or searching; especially to use clever tactics to escape from pur |