Review this list of words and context sentences to find the word that matches the definition below.
        
        A perfect or typical example
        
absolve  (ăb-zŏlv) -verb
  - Our dog, Rufus, was absolved of stealing Mom's glasses when they were found safe in her purse.
 
  - Accused of taking bribes, the mayor said, “In the end, I’ll clear my name and be absolved of any wrongdoing.”
 
adamant  (ădə-mənt) -adjective
- Ron is adamant about not changing plans. He insists we should still camp out even though the weather report now says it will be cold and rainy.
 
- Adamant in his support of gun control, Senator Keen won’t give in to pressure from powerful opponents.
 
amiable  (āmē-ə-bəl) -adjective
 
- My amiable dog greets both strangers and old friends with a happy yip and energetic tail-wagging.
 - At first, our history teacher doesn’t seem very friendly, but once you get to know her, she shows her amiable side.
 
amoral  (ā-mŏrəl) -adjective
- Jerry is almost totally amoral. He cares only about making money and having fun and couldn’t care less about right or wrong.
 - A former president of Uganda, Idi Amin, was truly amoral. He jailed, tortured, and killed innocent opponents without the slightest feeling of guilt.
 
animosity   (ăn′ə-mŏsə-tē) -noun
  - The animosity between fans of the soccer teams was so strong that fights broke out all over the stadium.
 
  - The bad feelings between the two families go back so many generations that nobody remembers what originally caused the animosity.
 
antagonist  (ăn-tăgə-nĭst) -
noun
- At the divorce hearing, the husband and wife were such bitter antagonists that it was hard to believe they had once loved each other.
 - In the ring, the two boxers were antagonists, but in their private lives, they were good friends.
 
eccentric  (ĭk-sĕntrĭk) -adjective
 
- Bruce is quite eccentric. For example, he lives in a circular house and rides to work on a motorcycle, in a three-piece suit.
 - Florence Nightingale, the famous nursing reformer, had the eccentric habit of carrying a pet owl around in one of her pockets.
 
encounter  (ĕn-kountər) -noun
- My encounter with Malik in a Los Angeles supermarket surprised me, since I thought he still lived in Chicago.
 - I dislike returning to my small hometown, where I am likely to have encounters with people who knew me as a troubled kid.
 
epitome  (ĭ-pĭtə-mē)  -noun
- To many, the epitome of cuteness is a furry, round-eyed puppy.
 - The great ballplayer and civil rights leader Jackie Robinson was the epitome of both physical and moral strength.
 
malign  (mə-līn)  -verb
- That vicious Hollywood reporter often maligns movie stars, forever damaging their public images.
 - Stacy refuses to malign her ex-husband, even though he was the one who insisted on the divorce.