| Abstemious: Sparing in consumption of especially food and drink | 
		
			| They are used to leading an abstemious life. | 
		
			| Decadence: The state of being degenerate in mental or moral qualities | 
		
			| He lived a life of total decadence. | 
		
			| Derogatory: Expressive of low opinion | 
		
			| He passed derogatory comments about everyone who came in contact with him. | 
		
			| Desultory: Marked by lack of definite plan or regularity or purpose | 
		
			| We made some desultory conversation while waiting for the bus. | 
		
			| Disparate: Fundamentally different or distinct in quality or kind | 
		
			| A disparate group of people across the city protested against the rise in prices. | 
		
			| Edifice: A structure that has a roof and walls and stands more or less permanently in one place | 
		
			| She was armed with a list of historical edifices which she must not fail to visit. | 
		
			| Extant: Still in existence; not extinct or destroyed or lost | 
		
			| The oldest extant copy is dated 1492. | 
		
			| Levity: Feeling an inappropriate lack of seriousness | 
		
			| Levity during working hours was not tolerated by his boss. | 
		
			| Lugubrious: Excessively mournful | 
		
			| He plays the violin so slowly that it becomes lugubrious. | 
		
			| Maudlin: Effusively or insincerely emotional | 
		
			| He turned maudlin after three drinks. | 
		
			| Nebulous: Lacking definite form or limits | 
		
			| We glimpsed a nebulous figure through the mist. | 
		
			| Obsequious: Attempting to win favour from influential people by flattery | 
		
			| He bowed in an obsequious manner. | 
		
			| Puissant: Powerful | 
		
			| The puissant Red Indian chief was not open to discussion. | 
		
			| Redolent: Having a strong pleasant odour | 
		
			| The redolent aroma of the pines filled the air. | 
		
			| Repose: Freedom from activity | 
		
			| He took his repose by the swimming pool. | 
		
			| Reviled: Spread negative information about | 
		
			| Some of us admire them, some revile them, but most people can't imagine joining their ranks. | 
		
			| Scion: A descendent or heir | 
		
			| He was the scion of an aristocratic family that lost their fortune in the revolution. | 
		
			| Sultry: Characterized by oppressive heat and humidity | 
		
			| Summers are usually sultry and oppressive. | 
		
			| Supplication: A prayer asking God's help as part of a religious service | 
		
			| He raised his arms in a gesture of supplication. | 
		
			| Trenchant: Characterized by or full of force and vigour | 
		
			| He was shattered by the trenchant criticism. | 
		
			| Vicissitudes: A variation in circumstances or fortune | 
		
			| He was continuously stiffening himself to withstand life’s vicissitudes. |