People would use the word "revealing" in a present tense. For example, Austin, "I am revealing my greatest weakness." This would mean he is speaking in present tense.
The word for revealing one's innermost intentions by mistake is "inadvertently."
The word for admitting to doing something wrong is "confess." This term often implies acknowledging a fault or a mistake, particularly in a moral or legal context. Confession can also denote a sense of vulnerability or honesty in revealing one's actions.
It can be either, depending on context. Birdbath, as an object, is one word, a bird taking a bath would be two words
An estimate is one, particularly when there are facts or figures. Another word would be a hypothesis, and it is used more in a scientific context.
In the context "this setup works great!", it is one word. In the context "I have to set up the table still", it is two words. In the context, "it was a set-up, I am innocent!", it is hyphenated.
It depends on the context. In the context of "a teardrop came from her eye", it is one word. In the context of "he watched the tear drop to the floor", it is two words.
In the context of "overall the service was good", it is one word. In the context of "he chose this one over all the rest", it is two words.
It is one word, lunchtime (midday mealtime).
Used in the context "these landforms are ancient", it is one word. Used in the context "and because of this, the land forms around the lake", it is two words.
One can approach many sources to first define the word aminoglycosides. One considerable source could be Wikipedia which would also give more than the definition such as the context and history of the word.
one word meaning lacking detail depending on the context of its use would be "spacey." as in "that explanation was kinda spacey." ~VAGUE is a good word meaning "Lacking Detail"~
The word applying has many different definitions depending on the context one uses it. One definition of apply would be the act of placing a substance on an object such as someone putting oil on a pan.