front 1 accountable | back 1 Adj. Being answerable to a given superior Adj. Responsible for some action, job or task |
front 2 anecdote | back 2 N. An account of a real incident or person, often humorous or interesting N. A lesson that can be derived from a story or experience |
front 3 brazen | back 3 Adj. Bold, audacious, and without shame Adj. Not disguised, plainly visible |
front 4 circumspect | back 4 Adj. Not clearly visible or attracting attention Adj. Having or showing shrewdness and good judgment |
front 5 confidant | back 5 N. A person with whom one shares a secret or private matter, trusting them not to repeat it to others N. A person who provides guidance or mentorship to others |
front 6 debase | back 6 V. To harm or ruin the reputation or dignity of V. To decrease the value, character, or quality of |
front 7 deride | back 7 V. To harshly mock or ridicule |
front 8 egregious | back 8 Adj. Conspicuously or obviously bad or wrong Adj. Overly excessive in amount or degree |
front 9 engimatic | back 9 Adj. Difficult to interpret or understand Adj. Having a strange, curious or mysterious nature |
front 10 extraneous | back 10 Adj. Irrelevant or unrelated to the subject being dealt with Adj. Not essential or necessary for a given task or purpose |
front 11 gimmick | back 11 N. A trick or device intended to attract attention, publicity, or trade N. A strategy to promote a product or boost sales |
front 12 hypocrisy | back 12 N. The claim or pretense of holding beliefs, feelings, standards, qualities, opinions, or virtues that one does not actually possess |
front 13 inception | back 13 N. The creation or beginning of something |
front 14 infirmity | back 14 N. A state of being weak or lacking physical strength |
front 15 insatiable | back 15 Adj. Incapable of being satisfied or appeased |
front 16 nominal | back 16 Adj. Significantly unimportant and deserving of little to no attention |
front 17 phishing | back 17 N. Deceptive online practice involving spoofing to obtain valuable information |
front 18 procrastinate | back 18 V. To delay taking action V. To postpone or assign to a later time or date |
front 19 resuscitate | back 19 V. To give new life to, or to restore to a healthy condition V. To restore (someone) to a state of consciousness |
front 20 susceptible | back 20 Adj. Likely or liable to be influenced or harmed by a particular thing |