front 1 Erode (verb) | back 1 to slowly reduce or destroy something: Sudden movements in exchange and interest rates can erode profit margins. |
front 2 Multifaceted (adj) | back 2 having many different parts or sides: It's a multifaceted business, offering a range of services. |
front 3 Withhold (verb) | back 3 to refuse to give something or to keep back something: Police are withholding the dead woman's name until her relatives have been informed. |
front 4 Susceptible (adj) | back 4 easily influenced or harmed by something: Some people are more susceptible to peer pressure than others. |
front 5 Impede (verb) | back 5 to slow something down: Shortages of medicine were impeding the effort to control diseases. |
front 6 Frost (noun) | back 6 a deposit of small white ice crystals formed on the ground or other surfaces when the temperature falls below freezing. |
front 7 Impair (verb) | back 7 to spoil something or make it weaker: Lack of sleep impaired her ability to think clearly. |
front 8 Wistful (adj) | back 8 sad and thinking about something impossible or in the past: She spoke wistfully of their early years together. |
front 9 Hing on (phr. verb) | back 9 to depend on something completely: Everything hinges on the outcome of these talks. |
front 10 Retrace (verb) | back 10 to go back over something, for example, a path or a series of past actions: When he realized he had lost his keys, he retraced in his mind his movements that day. |
front 11 To set apart (phr. verb) | back 11 to make someone or something different from or better than others: Her elegant style sets her apart from other journalists. |
front 12 Populist (adj) | back 12 trying to be popular with ordinary people and to represent their ideas and opinions: He's a populist who promised to end tax breaks for the rich and break up monopolies. |
front 13 Nostalgia (noun) | back 13 a wistful or excessively sentimental yearning for a return to or of some past period or irrecoverable condition: Hearing that song again filled him with nostalgia. |
front 14 Manifest | back 14 to show something clearly, through signs or actions: The workers chose to manifest their dissatisfaction in a series of strikes. |
front 15 Vilify | back 15 speak or write about in an abusively disparaging manner: He was vilified by the press as a monster. |
front 16 Asymmetric | back 16 Unequal, uneven, irregular, disproportionate, unbalanced, lopsided |
front 17 To rectify | back 17 to correct something or make something right: I am determined to take whatever action is necessary to rectify the situation. |
front 18 decency, political rifts, usurpation, mockery, fugitive, absurdity, defy | back 18 no data |