Grumpy.
A hellion
No, the proper noun 'Wuthering Heights' (the title of a novel) is third person, the thing spoken about. A word in the first person is the person speaking. The first person normally uses pronouns: I, me, we, us.
Hypsos, pl. hypsi
I know acrophobia is a fear of heights. 'Acro' is a Greek root meaning 'summit' and 'phobia' means 'fear'.
ricios
The word contrariety appears in chapter 21 of Wuthering Heights.
The apostrophe can be found in the title of the book "Wuthering Heights." It is placed between the 'g' and 's' in the word "Heights."
A hellion
No, the proper noun 'Wuthering Heights' (the title of a novel) is third person, the thing spoken about. A word in the first person is the person speaking. The first person normally uses pronouns: I, me, we, us.
spiritual (Apex)
"Bar graph" is the word for the relative frequencies shown by heights.
height = ראמא (rama)heights - ראמאן (raman)
Any classic books will work -- when I write word search puzzles, I like to use some that have odd letters, like Wuthering Heights, and some with lots of ordinary ones, like A Tale of Two Cities. Here's a link to 100 classic book titles!
A word that describes a noun is an adjective
The word that best describes me is special.
high = gavo'a (גבוה) place = makom (מקום) heights = ramah (רמה)
Hypsos, pl. hypsi