tr. & intr. v. To go beyond or over set limits; to break a rule
According to the Bible, Adam and Eve ____ God's command when they are Fruit from the tree of knowledge.
Transgress
Transgression n.
n. Environment; the surrounding atmosphere.
Many writers have described the ____ of Venice: its canals and gondolas, its squares and palaces.
Ambience
n. Straying from what is normal or accepted.
The fourth daughter became a lawyer, an ____ in this family of doctors.
Aberration
aberrant, adj.
n. An incident in a person's life or in a story or play.
The ____ in the Secret Garden where lonely MAry Lennox discovers a hidden garden that occurs in friendship
Episode
episodic, adj, episodically adv.
adj. Describing an action carried from subject to verb to object; needing a direct object to complete the meaning of the verb.
The following sentence contains a ____ verb: "The tornado destroyed the town."
Transitive
n. Notice of a death with biographical information.
The ____ of Harriet Beecher Stowe included mention of her 9 children and her novel Uncle Tom's Cabin.
Obituary
adj. Irregular or inconsistent in movement, habit, quality or ideas.
Because Alice meet strange characters like the Queen of Hearts and the Mad hatter, her journey is highly ____.
Erratic
erratically, adv.
N. Mass departure or emigration.
The Spanish Civil War in the 1930s caused an ____ of refugees escaping France.
Exodus
adj. Lasting for only a short while.
In comedy,problems are ____: misfortune ends and conflicts are resolved.
Transitory
adj. 1. Passing quickly; transitory
Summer vacations are all to ____.
Tansient.
adj. Permitting light to pass through, but not transparent.
Sunlight through the ____ stained glass windows made colorful designs on the white walls.
Translucent
n. Staying only a short time.
Youth hotels cater to ____ guests.
Transient
n. A person or thing having a short stay.
Canada geese are only ___ in the Midwest, resting on their migration to the North.
Transient
transience n.