Across
- 2. — a cause of great trouble or suffering:
- 3. — a countless or extremely great number:
- 9. of a monster: • (of a person or an action) inhumanly or outrageously evil or wrong:
- 10. — an effusively enthusiastic or ecstatic expression of feeling: rhapsodies of praise. • Music a free instrumental composition in one extended movement, typically one that is emotional or exuberant in character:
- 12. — in an acutely disturbed state of mind resulting from illness or intoxication and characterized by restlessness, illusions, and incoherence of thought and speech:
- 14. — in a distrustful way that expresses a belief that people are motivated purely by self-interest:
- 18. — (of something regarded as unpleasant) continuing without pause or interruption:
- 19. — spread or cause to spread over a wide area or among a large number of people:
- 22. — a feeling of being perplexed and confused:
- 23. — a stupid or careless mistake:
- 24. — performed or occurring as a result of a sudden inner impulse or inclination and without premeditation or external stimulus:
- 25. — a paid teacher of philosophy and rhetoric in ancient Greece, associated in popular thought with moral skepticism and specious reasoning. • a person who reasons with clever but fallacious arguments.
- 29. — luminous quality; brightness:
- 32. — childishly silly and trivial:
- 33. — tending to bring harm to a reputation:
- 34. Tempter — an inexperience demon.
- 35. — work extremely hard or incessantly:
Down
- 1. — savagely cruel; exceedingly brutal:
- 4. — severe mental or physical pain or suffering:
- 5. — enthusiastic or passionate:
- 6. — the action of asking or begging for something earnestly or humbly:
- 7. —torment or tease (someone) with the sight or promise of something that is unobtainable:
- 8. (Person) — English poet, critic, and philosopher. His Lyrical Ballads (1798), written with William Wordsworth, marked the start of English romanticism and included “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.”Other notable poems: “Christabel” and “Kubla Khan”(both 1816).
- 11. having the ugly or frightening
- 13. — To lack regularity. To not do frequently.
- 15. — burn or scorch the surface of (something) with a sudden, intense heat:
- 16. — existing in something as a permanent, essential, or characteristic attribute:
- 17. — unskillful; inept:
- 20. — (of a person) avoiding work; lazy:
- 21. — a strong supporter of a party, cause, or person:
- 26. — made up of various parts or elements:
- 27. — stare in an angry or fierce way: [with object] express (a feeling, especially defiance) by staring in an angry way:
- 28. — existing or occurring at or on the surface: appearing to be true or real only until examined more closely:
- 30. — having no particular interest or sympathy; unconcerned:
- 31. — causing great horror or fear; frightful or macabre:
