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. To relax in a countryside far away from the, humdrum of town- Rusticate, , . The most capable part of a group, town or, place- Elite, , . One who flaunts newly acquired wealthParvenu, , . The intelligent and educated group or class of, a society or country- Intelligentsia, , . Weariness of and sadness for life and worldWeltschmerz, , . Boredom and frustration- Ennui, , . Shy, timid, unwilling to face a situationDiffident, , . One who looks at everything from a personal, point of view- Egocentric, , . One who is chivalrous, idealistic and, unpractical- Quixotic, , 0. One who is grave and gloomy- Saturnine, , 1. One who gets pleasure in others trouble and, pain- Sadistic, , 2. The act of enjoying or having an experience, indirectly- Vicariously, , 3. The tendency to postpone things for futureProcrastination, , 4. The art of effective speaking- Elocution, , 5. To spend life without purpose and initiativeVegetate, , 6. One who is interested in the welfare of other, people- Altruist, , 7. One who believes in keeping things as they, are- Conservative, , 8. A girl who flirts egregiously- Coquette, , 9. A woman who lures men to destroy themCirce, , 0. A tall, strong, masculine kind of womanVirago, , 1. A traitor who can sell out even his friend, Judas, , A person with vulgar taste- Vulgarian, , . A person who flaunts learning all the time, Pedant, , 4. Understanding without the interference of, feelings- Empathy, , 5. An embarrassing mistake- A faux pas, , 6. A medley or heterogeneous mixture of great, , variety- Potpourri, , A slang of the underworld- Argot, , , , , , 28., , 29., 30., , Sle, , 32., , 33., , 34., , 35., , 36., , 37, , 40., , 41., , 42., , 43., , 44, , 46, , 48., , 49., , 50., , 51, , A language of a region having its own usageDialect, , A language of a special group- Patois, , The ascribing of human motivation,, characteristic or behaviour to inanimate, objects, animal or natural phenomenaAnthropomorphism, , A payment not legally binding but for which, some moral obligation is felt- Ex gratia, , One who gives direction from behind the, scene on a stage- Prompter, , A washing or cleansing of the body especially, in a religious ceremony- Ablution, Something perfectly neat and tidyImmaculate, , A legal defence by which an accused person, tries to show that he was somewhere else, when the crime was committed- Alibi, , The money that a court ask a man to pay to, his divorced or legally separated wifeAlimony, , . A treatise on one subject- Monograph, 38., 39., , A speech uttered by one person- Monologue, Mental derangement confined to one ideaMonomania, , An airplane with one pair of wingsMonoplane, , Exclusive possession or control of anyone, thing- Monopoly, , The group, especially in the arts, regarded as, being the most experimental- Avant-grade, Words or action showing deliberate contempt, for sacred things- Blashphemy, , . An official bulletin- Communique, 45., , An agreement entered between two or more, parties- Convenant, , . A passage with only one end- Cul-de-sac, 47., , Something very brightly colourfulFlamboyant, , The art of painting on a plaster surfaceFresco, , A record or table showing the descent of a, person or a family- Genealogy, , A connoisseur of food and drink- Gourmet, , . A person or thing that goes before and, , announces the coming of somethingHarbinger