levitatelévətèɪt
Rise or cause to rise and hover in the air, typically by means of supposed magical powers.
"massive sherbet balls that make you levitate a few inches off the ground while you’re sucking them" english HirotoShishido
furtivefˈɚːṭɪv
Attempting to avoid notice or attention, typically because of guilt or a belief that discovery would lead to trouble; secretive.
‘they spent a furtive day together’
'the cars was driven by a furtive-looking wizard' english HirotoShishido
huffyhˈʌfi
Annoyed or irritated and quick to take offence at petty things.
‘ask writers for more than a second draft and they get huffy’
"oh that's nice" Ginny said huffily. english HirotoShishido
disgruntleddɪsgrˈʌnṭld
Angry or dissatisfied.
'Harry was just persuading disgruntled Hedwig to get back' english HirotoShishido
prodprάd
Poke with a finger, foot, or pointed object.
‘he prodded her in the ribs’ english HirotoShishido
insolentíns(ə)lənt
Showing a rude and arrogant lack of respect; <impertinent, <impudent, cheeky, ill-mannered, disrespectful, insubordinate, contemptuous
'she hated the insolent tone of his voice'
'He's insolent to his customers' english HirotoShishido
exuberantɪgzúːb(ə)rənt
Full of energy, excitement, and cheerfulness.
‘a noisy bunch of exuberant youngsters’ english HirotoShishido
jinx(verb)dʒíŋks
Bring bad luck to; cast an evil spell on.
'the play is jinxed'
'Two past Defense Against the Dark Arts teachers had lasted only one year. There were rumors that the job was jinxed.' english HirotoShishido
beckonbék(ə)n
Make a gesture with the hand, arm, or head to encourage or instruct someone to approach or follow.
'Miranda beckoned to Adam'
'Tom beckoned Fudge toward the passage that led from the bar' english HirotoShishido
fodderfάdɚ
A person or thing regarded only as material for a specific use.
‘young people ending up as factory fodder’
'this is all good fodder for you to request a sit-down with Gus' english HirotoShishido
untenableʌnténəbl
not able to be maintained or defended against attack or objection.
‘this argument is clearly untenable’
'you are here because the circumstances with the cartel are untenable' english HirotoShishido
fairgroundAn outdoor area where a fair is held.
as modifier ‘fairground attractions’
A person who derives advantage from something, especially a trust, will, or life insurance policy.
‘Australia would be the beneficiary of a policy it did not have to underwrite.’ english HirotoShishido
creditorkrédɪtər
A person or company to whom money is owing.
‘he sold his Ferraris to pay off his creditors’ english HirotoShishido
leewayThe amount of freedom to move or act that is available.
‘the government had greater leeway to introduce reforms’
'We have an hour's leeway to catch the express.' english HirotoShishido
trade offA balance achieved between two desirable but incompatible features; a compromise.
‘a trade-off between objectivity and relevance’ english HirotoShishido
fumblefˈʌmbl
Do or handle something clumsily; grope, search blindly, feel about, rummage
‘she fumbled with the lock’ english HirotoShishido
階段を頭を下にして転落するhe fell headfirst(eg, backward) down a flight of stairs
According to friends who witnessed the fall, the patient landed on his head but did not lose consciousness english HirotoShishido