Harpies | | a road, street, or the like, that leads at each end into another street |
Veiled | | a woman who sells goods services |
Apothecary | | desirous or excelling = filled with emulation |
Ivy | | in fact, in reality, in truth, truly (used for emphasis, to confirm and amplify a previous statement, to indicate a concession or admission, or interrogatively, to obtain confirmation) |
Lean | | a dark, dull, or dirty color or aspect, lacking brightness or freshness |
Misdeeds | | a complete horizontal section of a building, having one continuous or practically continuous floor. |
Dusty | | a wrong or illegal deed (a wrongdoing) |
Kinsman | | causing sadness or gloom |
Rugged | | covered or concealed by, or as if by a veil |
Moldings | | to give forth or glow with light, shed or cast light |
Demeanour | | An embellishment in strip form, made of wood or other structural material, that is used to decorate or finish a surface, such as the wall of a room or building or the surface of a door or piece of furniture |
Thoroughfare | | to incline or bend from a vertical position |
Emulously | | conduct, behavior, deportment |
Indeed | | unusually intelligent; able to learn quickly and easily |
Acquaintance | | Adjective how mean small in size |
Austere | | filled, covered, or clouded with or as with dust |
Aptness | | Classical Mythology a ravenous, filthy monster having a woman's head and a bird's body. |
Dreary | | severe in manner or appearance, uncompromising, strict |
Storey | | a person of the same nationality or ethnic group |
Saleswoman | | a person know to one but usually not a close friend |
Shone | | One that prepares and sells drugs and other medicines; a pharmacist |
Dingy | | having a roughly broken, rocky, hilly or jagged surface |
Scanty | | any of various other climbing or trailing plants |