Please Note:
The last administration of the old SAT was on 1/22/05. Beginning
3/12/05, only the New SAT will be administered. You should be studying
the New SAT book. Go there!
The 1000 Most Common SAT Words
A
- abase
- (v.)
to humiliate, degrade (After
being overthrown and abased, the deposed
leader offered to bow down to his conqueror.)
- abate
- (v.)
to reduce, lessen (The rain poured
down for a while, then abated.)
- abdicate
- (v.)
to give up a position, usually one of leadership
(When he realized that the revolutionaries would surely
win, the king abdicated his throne.)
- abduct
- (v.)
to kidnap, take by force (The
evildoers abducted the fairy princess from
her happy home.)
- aberration
- (n.)
something that differs from the norm
(In 1918, the Boston Red Sox won the World Series, but
the success turned out to be an aberration, and
the Red Sox have not won a World Series since.)
- abet
- (v.)
to aid, help, encourage (The
spy succeeded only because he had a friend on the inside to abet him.)
- abhor
- (v.)
to hate, detest (Because he always
wound up kicking himself in the head when he tried to play soccer,
Oswald began to abhor the sport.)
- abide
- 1.
(v.) to put up with (Though
he did not agree with the decision, Chuck decided to abide by
it.)
- 2. (v.)
to remain (Despite the beating
they’ve taken from the weather throughout the millennia, the mountains abide.)
- abject
- (adj.)
wretched, pitiful (After losing
all her money, falling into a puddle, and breaking her ankle, Eloise
was abject.)
- abjure
- (v.)
to reject, renounce (To prove
his honesty, the President abjured the evil
policies of his wicked predecessor.)
- abnegation
- (n.)
denial of comfort to oneself (The
holy man slept on the floor, took only cold showers, and generally
followed other practices of abnegation.)
- abort
- (v.)
to give up on a half-finished project or effort
(After they ran out of food, the men, attempting to jump
rope around the world, had to abort and go
home.)
- abridge
- 1.
(v.) to cut down, shorten (The
publisher thought the dictionary was too long and abridged it.)
- 2. (adj.) shortened
(Moby-Dick is such a long book that even
the abridged version is longer than most
normal books.)
- abrogate
- (v.)
to abolish, usually by authority (The
Bill of Rights assures that the government cannot abrogate our
right to a free press.)
- abscond
- (v.)
to sneak away and hide (In the
confusion, the super-spy absconded into the
night with the secret plans.)
- absolution
- (n.)
freedom from blame, guilt, sin (Once
all the facts were known, the jury gave Angela absolution by
giving a verdict of not guilty.)
- abstain
- (v.)
to freely choose not to commit an action
(Everyone demanded that Angus put on the kilt, but he did
not want to do it and abstained.)
- abstruse
- (adj.)
hard to comprehend (Everyone
else in the class understood geometry easily, but John found the
subject abstruse.)
- accede
- (v.)
to agree (When the class asked
the teacher whether they could play baseball instead of learn grammar
they expected him to refuse, but instead he acceded to
their request.)
- accentuate
- (v.)
to stress, highlight (Psychologists
agree that those people who are happiest accentuate the
positive in life.)
- accessible
- (adj.)
obtainable, reachable (After
studying with SparkNotes and getting a great score on the SAT, Marlena
happily realized that her goal of getting into an Ivy-League college
was accessible.)
- acclaim
- (n.)
high praise (Greg’s excellent
poem won the acclaim of his friends.)
- accolade
- (n.)
high praise, special distinction (Everyone
offered accolades to Sam after he won the
Noble Prize.)
- accommodating
- (adj.)
helpful, obliging, polite (Though
the apartment was not big enough for three people, Arnold, Mark,
and Zebulon were all friends and were accommodating to
each other.)
- accord
- (n.)
an agreement (After much negotiating,
England and Iceland finally came to a mutually beneficial accord about
fishing rights off the cost of Greenland.)
- accost
- (v.)
to confront verbally (Though
Antoinette was normally quite calm, when the waiter spilled soup
on her for the fourth time in 15 minutes she stood up and accosted the
man.)
- accretion
- (n.)
slow growth in size or amount (Stalactites
are formed by the accretion of minerals from
the roofs of caves.)
- acerbic
- (adj.)
biting, bitter in tone or taste (Jill
became extremely acerbic and began to cruelly make
fun of all her friends.)
- acquiesce
- (v.)
to agree without protesting (Though
Mr. Correlli wanted to stay outside and work in his garage, when
his wife told him that he had better come in to dinner, he acquiesced to
her demands.)
- acrimony
- (n.)
bitterness, discord (Though they
vowed that no girl would ever come between them, Biff and Trevor
could not keep acrimony from overwhelming
their friendship after they both fell in love with the lovely Teresa.)
- acumen
- (n.)
keen insight (Because of his
mathematical acumen, Larry was able to figure
out in minutes problems that took other students hours.)
- acute
- 1.
(adj.) sharp, severe (Arnold
could not walk because the pain in his foot was so acute.)
- 2. (adj.) having
keen insight (Because she was so acute,
Libby instantly figured out how the magician pulled off his “magic.”)
- adamant
- (adj.)
impervious, immovable, unyielding (Though
public pressure was intense, the President remained adamant about
his proposal.)
- adept
- (adj.)
extremely skilled (Tarzan was adept at
jumping from tree to tree like a monkey.)
- adhere
- 1.
(n.) to stick to something
(We adhered the poster to the wall
with tape.)
- 2. (n.)
to follow devoutly (He adhered to
the dictates of his religion without question.)
- admonish
- (v.)
to caution, criticize, reprove (Joe’s
mother admonished him not to ruin his appetite
by eating cookies before dinner.)
- adorn
- (v.)
to decorate (We adorned the
tree with ornaments.)
- adroit
- (adj.)
skillful, dexterous (The adroit thief
could pick someone’s pocket without attracting notice.)
- adulation
- (n.)
extreme praise (Though the book
was pretty good, Marcy did not believe it deserved the adulation it
received.)
- adumbrate
- (v.)
to sketch out in a vague way (The
coach adumbrated a game plan, but none of the
players knew precisely what to do.)
- adverse
- (adj.)
antagonistic, unfavorable, dangerous
(Because of adverse conditions,
the hikers decided to give up trying to climb the mountain.)
- advocate
- 1.
(v.) to argue in favor of something
(Arnold advocated turning left at
the stop sign, even though everyone else thought we should turn
right.)
- 2. (n.)
a person who argues in favor of something
(In addition to wanting to turn left at every stop sign,
Arnold was also a great advocate of increasing
national defense spending.)
- aerial
- (adj.)
somehow related to the air (We
watched as the fighter planes conducted aerial maneuvers.)
- aesthetic
- (adj.)
artistic, related to the appreciation of beauty
(We hired Susan as our interior decorator because she has
such a fine aesthetic sense.)
- affable
- (adj.)
friendly, amiable (People like
to be around George because he is so affable and good-natured.)
- affinity
- (n.)
a spontaneous feeling of closeness (Jerry
didn’t know why, but he felt an incredible affinity for
Kramer the first time they met.)
- affluent
- (adj.)
rich, wealthy (Mrs. Grebelski
was affluent, owning a huge house, three
cars, and an island near Maine.)
- affront
- (n.)
an insult (Bernardo was very
touchy, and took any slight as an affront to
his honor.)
- aggrandize
- (v.)
to increase or make greater (Joseph
always dropped the names of the famous people his father knew as
a way to aggrandize his personal stature.)
- aggregate
- 1.
(n.) a whole or total (The
three branches of the U.S. Government form an aggregate much
more powerful than its individual parts.)
-
2. (v.) to gather into
a mass (The dictator tried to aggregate as
many people into his army as he possibly could.)
- aggrieved
- (adj.)
distressed, wronged, injured (The
foreman mercilessly overworked his aggrieved employees.)
- agile
- (adj.)
quick, nimble (The dogs were
too slow to catch the agile rabbit.)
- agnostic
- (adj.)
believing that the existence of God cannot be proven
or disproven (Joey’s parents are very religious,
but he is agnostic.)
- agriculture
- (n.)
farming (It was a huge step in
the progress of civilization when tribes left hunting and gathering
and began to develop more sustainable methods of obtaining food,
such as agriculture.)
- aisle
- (n.)
a passageway between rows of seats (Once
we got inside the stadium we walked down the aisle to
our seats.)
- alacrity
- (n.)
eagerness, speed (For some reason,
Chuck loved to help his mother whenever he could, so when his mother
asked him to set the table he did so with alacrity.)
- alias
- (n.)
a false name or identity (He
snuck past the guards by using an alias and
fake ID.)
- allay
- (v.)
to soothe, ease (The chairman
of the Federal Reserve gave a speech to try to allay investors’
fears about an economic downturn.)
- allege
- (v.)
to assert, usually without proof (The
policeman had alleged that Marshall committed the
crime, but after the investigation turned up no evidence, Marshall
was set free.)
- alleviate
- (v.)
to relieve, make more bearable (This
drug will alleviate the symptoms of the terrible
disease, but only for a while.)
- allocate
- (v.)
to distribute, set aside (The
Mayor allocated 30 percent of the funds for
improving the town’s schools.)
- aloof
- (adj.)
reserved, distant (The scientist
could sometimes seem aloof, as if he didn’t
care about his friends or family, but really he was just thinking
about quantum mechanics.)
- altercation
- (n.)
a dispute, fight (Jason and Lionel
blamed one another for the car accident, leading to an altercation.)
- amalgamate
- (v.)
to bring together, unite (Because
of his great charisma, the presidential candidate was able to amalgamate all
democrats and republicans under his banner.)
- ambiguous
- (adj.)
uncertain, variably interpretable (Some
people think Caesar married Cleopatra for her power, others believe
he was charmed by her beauty. His actual reasons are ambiguous.)
- ambivalent
- (adj.)
having opposing feelings (My
feelings about Calvin are ambivalent because on
one hand he is a loyal friend, but on the other, he is a cruel and
vicious thief.)
- ameliorate
- (v.)
to improve (The tense situation
was ameliorated when Sam proposed a solution everyone
could agree upon.)
- amenable
- (adj.)
willing, compliant (Our father
was amenable when we asked him to drive us
to the farm so we could go apple picking.)
- amenity
- (n.)
an item that increases comfort (Bill
Gates’s house is stocked with so many amenities, he
never has to do anything for himself.)
- amiable
- (adj.)
friendly (An amiable fellow,
Harry got along with just about everyone.)
- amicable
- (adj.)
friendly (Claudia and Jimmy got
divorced, but amicably and without hard feelings.)
- amorous
- (adj.)
showing love, particularly sexual (Whenever
Albert saw Mariah wear her slinky red dress, he began to feel quite amorous.)
- amorphous
- (adj.)
without definite shape or type (The
effort was doomed from the start, because the reasons behind it
were so amorphous and hard to pin down.)
- anachronistic
- (adj.)
being out of correct chronological order
(In this book you’re writing, you say that the Pyramids
were built after the Titanic sank, which is anachronistic.)
- analgesic
- (n.)
something that reduces pain (Put
this analgesic on the wound so that the poor
man at least feels a little better.)
- analogous
- (adj.)
similar to, so that an analogy can be drawn
(Though they are unrelated genetically, the bone structure
of whales and fish is quite analogous.)
- anarchist
- (n.)
one who wants to eliminate all government
(An anarchist, Carmine wanted to dissolve
every government everywhere.)
- anathema
- (n.)
a cursed, detested person (I
never want to see that murderer. He is an anathema to
me.)
- anecdote
- (n.)
a short, humorous account (After
dinner, Marlon told an anecdote about the
time he got his nose stuck in a toaster.)
- anesthesia
- (n.)
loss of sensation (When the nerves
in his spine were damaged, Mr. Hollins suffered anesthesia in
his legs.)
- anguish
- (n.)
extreme sadness, torment (Angelos
suffered terrible anguish when he learned
that Buffy had died while combating a strange mystical force of
evil.)
- animated
- (adj.)
lively (When he begins to talk
about drama, which is his true passion, he becomes very animated.)
- annex
- 1.
(v.) to incorporate territory or space
(After defeating them in battle, the Russians annexed Poland.)
- 2. (n.) a room attached
to a larger room or space (He likes to do
his studying in a little annex attached to
the main reading room in the library.)
- annul
- (v.)
to make void or invalid (After
seeing its unforeseen and catastrophic effects, Congress sought
to annul the law.)
- anomaly
- (n.)
something that does not fit into the normal order
(“That rip in the space-time continuum is certainly a spatial anomaly,”
said Spock to Captain Kirk.)
- anonymous
- (adj.)
being unknown, unrecognized (Mary
received a love poem from an anonymous admirer.)
- antagonism
- (n.)
hostility (Superman and Bizarro
Superman shared a mutual antagonism, and often
fought.)
- antecedent
- (n.)
something that came before (The
great tradition of Western culture had its antecedent in
the culture of Ancient Greece.)
- antediluvian
- (adj.)
ancient (The antediluvian man
still believed that Eisenhower was president of the United States
and that hot dogs cost a nickel.)
- anthology
- (n.)
a selected collection of writings, songs, etc.
(The new anthology of Bob Dylan songs
contains all his greatest hits and a few songs that you might never
have heard before.)
- antipathy
- (n.)
a strong dislike, repugnance (I
know you love me, but because you are a liar and a thief, I feel
nothing but antipathy for you.)
- antiquated
- (adj.)
old, out of date (That antiquated car
has none of the features, like power windows and steering, that
make modern cars so great.)
- antiseptic
- (adj.)
clean, sterile (The antiseptic hospital
was very bare, but its cleanliness helped to keep patients healthy.)
- antithesis
- (n.)
the absolute opposite (Your values,
which hold war and violence in the highest esteem, are the antithesis of
my pacifist beliefs.)
- anxiety
- (n.)
intense uneasiness (When he heard
about the car crash, he felt anxiety because
he knew that his girlfriend had been driving on the road where the
accident occurred.)
- apathetic
- (adj.)
lacking concern, emotion (Uninterested
in politics, Bruno was apathetic about whether
he lived under a capitalist or communist regime.)
- apocryphal
- (adj.)
fictitious, false, wrong (Because
I am standing before you, it seems obvious that the stories circulating
about my demise were apocryphal.)
- appalling
- (adj.)
inspiring shock, horror, disgust (The
judge found the murderer’s crimes and lack of remorse appalling.)
- appease
- (v.)
to calm, satisfy (When the child
cries, the mother gives him candy to appease him.)
- appraise
- (v.)
to assess the worth or value of (A
realtor will come over tonight to appraise our house.)
- apprehend
- 1.
(v.) to seize, arrest (The
criminal was apprehended at the scene.)
- 2. (v.) to perceive, understand,
grasp (The student has trouble apprehending concepts
in math and science.)
- approbation
- (n.)
praise (The crowd welcomed the
heroes with approbation.)
- appropriate
- (v.)
to take, make use of (The government appropriated the
farmer’s land without justification.)
- aquatic
- (adj.)
relating to water (The marine
biologist studies starfish and other aquatic creatures.)
- arable
- (adj.)
suitable for growing crops (The
farmer purchased a plot of arable land on
which he will grow corn and sprouts.)
- arbiter
- (n.)
one who can resolve a dispute, make a decision
(The divorce court judge will serve as the arbiter between
the estranged husband and wife.)
- arbitrary
- (adj.)
based on factors that appear random (The
boy’s decision to choose one college over another seems arbitrary.)
- arbitration
- (n.)
the process or act of resolving a dispute
(The employee sought official arbitration when
he could not resolve a disagreement with his supervisor.)
- arboreal
- (adj.)
of or relating to trees (Leaves,
roots, and bark are a few arboreal traits.)
- arcane
- (adj.)
obscure, secret, known only by a few
(The professor is an expert in arcane Lithuanian
literature.)
- archaic
- (adj.)
of or relating to an earlier period in time, outdated
(In a few select regions of Western Mongolian, an archaic Chinese
dialect is still spoken.)
- archetypal
- (adj.)
the most representative or typical example of something
(Some believe George Washington, with his flowing white
hair and commanding stature, was the archetypal politician.)
- ardor
- (n.)
extreme vigor, energy, enthusiasm (The
soldiers conveyed their ardor with impassioned
battle cries.)
- arid
- (adj.)
excessively dry (Little other
than palm trees and cacti grow successfully in arid environments.)
- arrogate
- (v.)
to take without justification (The
king arrogated the right to order executions
to himself exclusively.)
- artifact
- (n.)
a remaining piece from an extinct culture or place
(The scientists spent all day searching the cave for artifacts from
the ancient Mayan civilization.)
- artisan
- (n.)
a craftsman (The artisan uses
wood to make walking sticks.)
- ascertain
- (v.)
to perceive, learn (With a bit
of research, the student ascertained that
some plants can live for weeks without water.)
- ascetic
- (adj.)
practicing restraint as a means of self-discipline,
usually religious (The priest lives an ascetic life
devoid of television, savory foods, and other pleasures.)
- ascribe
- (v.)
to assign, credit, attribute to (Some ascribe the
invention of fireworks and dynamite to the Chinese.)
- aspersion
- (n.)
a curse, expression of ill-will (The
rival politicians repeatedly cast aspersions on each
others’ integrity.)
- aspire
- (v.)
to long for, aim toward (The
young poet aspires to publish a book of verse
someday.)
- assail
- (v.)
to attack (At dawn, the war planes assailed the
boats in the harbor.)
- assess
- (v.)
to evaluate (A crew arrived to assess the
damage after the crash.)
- assiduous
- (adj.)
hard-working, diligent (The construction
workers erected the skyscraper during two years of assiduous labor.)
- assuage
- (v.)
to ease, pacify (The mother held
the baby to assuage its fears.)
- astute
- (adj.)
very clever, crafty (Much of
Roger’s success in politics results from his ability to provide astute answers
to reporters’ questions.)
- asylum
- 1.
(n.) a place of refuge, protection, a sanctuary
(For Thoreau, the forest served as an asylum from
the pressures of urban life.)
- 2.
(n.) an institution in which the insane are
kept (Once diagnosed by a certified psychiatrist,
the man was put in an asylum.)
- atone
- (v.)
to repent, make amends (The man atoned for
forgetting his wife’s birthday by buying her five dozen roses.)
- atrophy
- (v.)
to wither away, decay (If muscles
do not receive enough blood, they will soon atrophy and
die.)
- attain
- (v.)
to achieve, arrive at (The athletes
strived to attain their best times in competition.)
- attribute
- 1.
(v.) to credit, assign (He attributes all
of his success to his mother’s undying encouragement.)
- 2. (n.) a facet or
trait (Among the beetle’s most peculiar attributes is
its thorny protruding eyes.)
- atypical
- (adj.)
not typical, unusual (Screaming
and crying is atypical adult behavior.)
- audacious
- (adj.)
excessively bold (The security
guard was shocked by the fan’s audacious attempt
to offer him a bribe.)
- audible
- (adj.)
able to be heard (The missing
person’s shouts were unfortunately not audible.)
- augment
- (v.)
to add to, expand (The eager
student seeks to augment his knowledge of
French vocabulary by reading French literature.)
- auspicious
- (adj.)
favorable, indicative of good things
(The tennis player considered the sunny forecast an auspicious sign
that she would win her match.)
- austere
- (adj.)
very bare, bleak (The austere furniture
inside the abandoned house made the place feel haunted.)
- avarice
- (n.)
excessive greed (The banker’s avarice led
him to amass a tremendous personal fortune.)
- avenge
- (v.)
to seek revenge (The victims
will take justice into their own hands and strive to avenge themselves
against the men who robbed them.)
- aversion
- (n.)
a particular dislike for something (Because
he’s from Hawaii, Ben has an aversion to
autumn, winter, and cold climates in general.)
B
- balk
- (v.)
to stop, block abruptly (Edna’s
boss balked at her request for another raise.)
- ballad
- (n.)
a love song (Greta’s boyfriend
played her a ballad on the guitar during
their walk through the dark woods.)
- banal
- (adj.)
dull, commonplace (The client
rejected our proposal because they found our presentation banal and
unimpressive.)
- bane
- (n.)
a burden (Advanced physics is
the bane of many students’ academic lives.)
- bard
- (n.)
a poet, often a singer as well (Shakespeare
is often considered the greatest bard in
the history of the English language.)
- bashful
- (adj.)
shy, excessively timid (Frankie’s
mother told him not to be bashful when he refused
to attend the birthday party.)
- battery
- 1.
(n.) a device that supplies power
(Most cars run on a combination of power from a battery and
gasoline.)
- 2. (n.)
assault, beating (Her husband
was accused of assault and battery after
he attacked a man on the sidewalk.)
- beguile
- (v.)
to trick, deceive (The thief beguiled his
partners into surrendering all of their money to him.)
- behemoth
- (n.)
something of tremendous power or size
(The new aircraft carrier is among several behemoths that
the Air Force has added to its fleet.)
- benevolent
- (adj.)
marked by goodness or doing good (Police
officers should be commended for their benevolent service
to the community.)
- benign
- (adj.)
favorable, not threatening, mild (We
were all relieved to hear that the medical tests determined her
tumor to be benign.)
- bequeath
- (v.)
to pass on, give (Jon’s father bequeathed his
entire estate to his mother.)
- berate
- (v.)
to scold vehemently (The angry
boss berated his employees for failing to
meet their deadline.)
- bereft
- (adj.)
devoid of, without (His family
was bereft of food and shelter following
the tornado.)
- beseech
- (v.)
to beg, plead, implore (The servant beseeched the
king for food to feed his starving family.)
- bias
- (n.)
a tendency, inclination, prejudice (The
judge’s hidden bias against smokers led him
to make an unfair decision.)
- bilk
- (v.)
cheat, defraud (The lawyer discovered
that this firm had bilked several clients
out of thousands of dollars.)
- blandish
- (v.)
to coax by using flattery (Rachel’s
assistant tried to blandish her into accepting
the deal.)
- blemish
- (n.)
an imperfection, flaw (The dealer
agreed to lower the price because of the many blemishes on
the surface of the wooden furniture.)
- blight
- 1.
(n.) a plague, disease (The
potato blight destroyed the harvest and bankrupted
many families.)
- 2. (n.)
something that destroys hope (His
bad morale is a blight upon this entire operation.)
- boisterous
- (adj.)
loud and full of energy (The
candidate won the vote after giving several boisterous speeches
on television.)
- bombastic
- (adj.)
excessively confident, pompous (The
singer’s bombastic performance disgusted the
crowd.)
- boon
- (n.)
a gift or blessing (The good
weather has been a boon for many businesses
located near the beach.)
- bourgeois
- (n.)
a middle-class person, capitalist (Many
businessmen receive criticism for their bourgeois approach
to life.)
- brazen
- (adj.)
excessively bold, brash (Critics
condemned the novelist’s brazen attempt to plagiarize
Hemingway’s story.)
- brusque
- (adj.)
short, abrupt, dismissive (The
captain’s brusque manner offended the passengers.)
- buffet
- 1.
(v.) to strike with force (The
strong winds buffeted the ships, threatening
to capsize them.)
- 2. (n.)
an arrangement of food set out on a table
(Rather than sitting around a table, the guests took food
from our buffet and ate standing up.)
- burnish
- (v.)
to polish, shine (His mother
asked him to burnish the silverware before
setting the table.)
- buttress
- 1.
(v.) to support, hold up (The
column buttresses the roof above the statue.)
- 2. (n.) something
that offers support (The buttress supports
the roof above the statues.)
C
- cacophony
- (n.)
tremendous noise, disharmonious sound
(The elementary school orchestra created a cacophony at
the recital.)
- cadence
- (n.)
a rhythm, progression of sound (The
pianist used the foot pedal to emphasize the cadence of
the sonata.)
- cajole
- (v.)
to urge, coax (Fred’s buddies cajoled him
into attending the bachelor party.)
- calamity
- (n.)
an event with disastrous consequences
(The earthquake in San Francisco was a calamity worse
than any other natural disaster in history.)
- calibrate
- (v.)
to set, standardize (The mechanic calibrated the
car’s transmission to make the motor run most efficiently.)
- callous
- (adj.)
harsh, cold, unfeeling (The murderer’s callous lack
of remorse shocked the jury.)
- calumny
- (n.)
an attempt to spoil someone else’s reputation by spreading
lies (The local official’s calumny ended
up ruining his opponent’s prospect of winning the election.)
- camaraderie
- (n.)
brotherhood, jovial unity (Camaraderie among
employees usually leads to success in business.)
- candor
- (n.)
honesty, frankness (We were surprised
by the candor of the mayor’s speech because he
is usually rather evasive.)
- canny
- (adj.)
shrewd, careful (The canny runner
hung at the back of the pack through much of the race to watch the
other runners, and then sprinted past them at the end.)
- canvas
- 1.
(n.) a piece of cloth on which an artist
paints (Picasso liked to work on canvas rather than
on bare cement.)
- 2. (v.)
to cover, inspect (We canvassed the
neighborhood looking for clues.)
- capacious
- (adj.)
very spacious (The workers delighted
in their new capacious office space.)
- capitulate
- (v.)
to surrender (The army finally capitulated after
fighting a long costly battle.)
- capricious
- (adj.)
subject to whim, fickle (The
young girl’s capricious tendencies made it
difficult for her to focus on achieving her goals.)
- captivate
- (v.)
to get the attention of, hold (The
fireworks captivated the young boy, who had never
seen such things before.)
- carouse
- (v.)
to party, celebrate (We caroused all
night after getting married.)
- carp
- (v.)
to annoy, pester (The husband
divorced his wife after listening to her carping voice
for decades.)
- catalog
- 1.
(v.) to list, enter into a list
(The judge cataloged the victim’s
injuries before calculating how much money he would award.)
- 2. (n.) a list or
collection (We received a catalog from
J. Crew that displayed all of their new items.)
- catalyze
- (v.)
to charge, inspire (The president’s
speech catalyzed the nation and resuscitated
the economy.)
- caucus
- (n.)
a meeting usually held by people working toward the
same goal (The ironworkers held a caucus to
determine how much of a pay increase they would request.)
- caustic
- (adj.)
bitter, biting, acidic (The politicians
exchanged caustic insults for over an hour during
the debate.)
- cavort
- (v.)
to leap about, behave boisterously (The
adults ate their dinners on the patio, while the children cavorted around
the pool.)
- censure
- 1.
(n.) harsh criticism (The
frustrated teenager could not put up with anymore of her critical
mother’s censure.)
-
2. (v.) to rebuke formally
(The principal censured the head
of the English Department for forcing students to learn esoteric
vocabulary.)
- cerebral
- (adj.)
related to the intellect (The
books we read in this class are too cerebral—they don’t
engage my emotions at all.)
- chaos
- (n.)
absolute disorder (Mr. Thornton’s
sudden departure for the lavatory plunged his classroom into chaos.)
- chastise
- (v.)
to criticize severely (After
being chastised by her peers for mimicking
Britney Spears, Miranda dyed her hair black and affected a Gothic
style.)
- cherish
- (v.)
to feel or show affection toward something
(She continued to cherish her red
plaid trousers, even though they had gone out of style and no longer
fit her.)
- chide
- (v.)
to voice disapproval (Lucy chided Russell
for his vulgar habits and sloppy appearance.)
- choreography
- (n.)
the arrangement of dances (The
plot of the musical was banal, but the choreography was
stunning.)
- chronicle
- 1.
(n.) a written history (The
library featured the newly updated chronicle of
World War II.)
- 2. (v.)
to write a history (Albert’s
diary chronicled the day-to-day growth of
his obsession with Cynthia.)
- chronological
- (adj.)
arranged in order of time (Lionel
carefully arranged the snapshots of his former girlfriends in chronological order,
and then set fire to them.)
- circuitous
- (adj.)
roundabout (The bus’s circuitous route
took us through numerous outlying suburbs.)
- circumlocution
- (n.)
indirect and wordy language (The
professor’s habit of speaking in circumlocutions made
it difficult to follow his lectures.)
- circumscribed
- (adj.)
marked off, bounded (The children
were permitted to play tag only within a carefully circumscribed area
of the lawn.)
- circumspect
- (adj.)
cautious (Though I promised Rachel’s
father I would bring her home promptly by midnight, it would have
been more circumspect not to have specified
a time.)
- circumvent
- (v.)
to get around (The school’s dress
code forbidding navel-baring jeans was circumvented by
the determined students, who were careful to cover up with long
coats when administrators were nearby.)
- clairvoyant
- (adj.)
able to perceive things that normal people cannot
(Zelda’s uncanny ability to detect my lies was nothing
short of clairvoyant.)
- clamor
- 1.
(n.) loud noise (Each
morning the birds outside my window make such a clamor that they
wake me up.)
- 2. (v.)
to loudly insist (Neville’s fans clamored for
him to appear on stage, but he had passed out on the floor of his
dressing room.)
- clandestine
- (adj.)
secret (Announcing to her boyfriend
that she was going to the gym, Sophie actually went to meet Joseph
for a clandestine liaison.)
- cleave
- 1.
(v.) to divide into parts (Following
the scandalous disgrace of their leader, the entire political party cleaved into
warring factions.)
- 2. (v.)
to stick together firmly (After
resolving their marital problems, Junior and Rosa cleaved to
one another all the more tightly.)
- clemency
- (n.)
mercy (After he forgot their
anniversary, Martin could only beg Maria for clemency.)
- clergy
- (n.)
members of Christian holy orders (Though
the villagers viewed the church rectory as quaint and charming,
the clergy who lived there regarded it as
a mildewy and dusty place that aggravated their allergies.)
- cloying
- (adj.)
sickeningly sweet (Though Ronald
was physically attractive, Maud found his constant compliments and
solicitous remarks cloying.)
- coagulate
- (v.)
to thicken, clot (The top layer
of the pudding had coagulated into a thick
skin.)
- coalesce
- (v.)
to fuse into a whole (Gordon’s
ensemble of thrift-shop garments coalesced into
a surprisingly handsome outfit.)
- cobbler
- (n.)
a person who makes or repairs shoes (I
had my neighborhood cobbler replace my worn-out
leather soles with new ones.)
- coerce
- (v.)
to make somebody do something by force or threat
(The court decided that Vanilla Ice did not have to honor
the contract because he had been coerced into
signing it.)
- cogent
- (adj.)
intellectually convincing (Irene’s
arguments in favor of abstinence were so cogent that
I could not resist them.)
- cognizant
- (adj.)
aware, mindful (Jake avoided
speaking to women in bars because he was cognizant of
the fact that drinking impairs his judgment.)
- coherent
- (adj.)
logically consistent, intelligible (Renee
could not figure out what Monroe had seen because he was too distraught
to deliver a coherent statement.)
- collateral
- 1.
(adj.) secondary (Divorcing
my wife had the collateral effect of making
me poor, as she was the only one of us with a job or money.)
- 2. (n.) security
for a debt (Jacob left his watch as collateral for
the $500 loan.)
- colloquial
- (adj.)
characteristic of informal conversation
(Adam’s essay on sexual response in primates was marked
down because it contained too many colloquial expressions.)
- collusion
- (n.)
secret agreement, conspiracy (The
three law students worked in collusion to
steal the final exam.)
- colossus
- (n.)
a gigantic statue or thing (For
56 years, the ancient city of Rhodes featured a colossus standing
astride its harbor.)
- combustion
- (n.)
the act or process of burning (The
unexpected combustion of the prosecution’s evidence
forced the judge to dismiss the case against Ramirez.)
- commendation
- (n.)
a notice of approval or recognition (Jared
received a commendation from Linda, his supervisor,
for his stellar performance.)
- commensurate
- (adj.)
corresponding in size or amount (Ahab
selected a very long roll and proceeded to prepare a tuna salad
sandwich commensurate with his enormous appetite.)
- commodious
- (adj.)
roomy (Holden invited the three
women to join him in the back seat of the taxicab, assuring them
that the car was quite commodious.)
- compelling
- (adj.)
forceful, demanding attention (Eliot’s
speech was so compelling that Lenore accepted
his proposal on the spot.)
- compensate
- (v.)
to make an appropriate payment for something
(Reginald bought Sharona a new dress to compensate her
for the one he’d spilled his ice cream on.)
- complacency
- (n.)
self-satisfied ignorance of danger (Colin
tried to shock his friends out of their complacency by
painting a frightening picture of what might happen to them.)
- complement
- (v.)
to complete, make perfect (Ann’s
scarf complements her blouse beautifully, making
her seem fully dressed even though she isn’t wearing a coat.)
- compliant
- (adj.)
ready to adapt oneself to another’s wishes
(Sue had very strong opinions about what to do on a first
date, and Ted was absolutely compliant.)
- complicit
- (adj.)
being an accomplice in a wrongful act
(By keeping her daughter’s affair a secret, Maddie became complicit in
it.)
- compliment
- (n.)
an expression of esteem or approval (I
blushed crimson when Emma gave me a compliment on
my new haircut.)
- compound
- 1.
(v.) to combine parts (The
difficulty of finding a fire escape amid the smoke was compounded with
the dangers posed by the panicking crowds.)
-
2. (n.) a combination of different
parts (My attraction to Donna was a compound of
curiosity about the unknown, physical desire, and intellectual admiration.)
- 3. (n.) a walled
area containing a group of buildings (When
the fighting started, Joseph rushed into the family compound because
it was safe and well defended.)
- comprehensive
- (adj.)
including everything (She sent
me a comprehensive list of the ingredients needed
to cook rabbit soufflé.)
- compress
- (v.)
to apply pressure, squeeze together (Lynn compressed her
lips into a frown.)
- compunction
- (n.)
distress caused by feeling guilty (He
felt compunction for the shabby way he’d treated
her.)
- concede
- (v.)
to accept as valid (Andrew had
to concede that what his mother said about
Diana made sense.)
- conciliatory
- (adj.)
friendly, agreeable (I took Amanda’s
invitation to dinner as a very conciliatory gesture.)
- concise
- (adj.)
brief and direct in expression (Gordon
did not like to waste time, and his instructions to Brenda were
nothing if not concise.)
- concoct
- (v.)
to fabricate, make up (She concocted the
most ridiculous story to explain her absence.)
- concomitant
- (adj.)
accompanying in a subordinate fashion
(His dislike of hard work carried with it a concomitant lack
of funds.)
- concord
- (n.)
harmonious agreement (Julie and
Harold began the evening with a disagreement, but ended it in a
state of perfect concord.)
- condolence
- (n.)
an expression of sympathy in sorrow (Brian
lamely offered his condolences on the loss
of his sister’s roommate’s cat.)
- condone
- (v.)
to pardon, deliberately overlook (He
refused to condone his brother’s crime.)
- conduit
- (n.)
a pipe or channel through which something passes
(The water flowed through the conduit into
the container.)
- confection
- (n.)
a sweet, fancy food (We went
to the mall food court and purchased a delicious confection.)
- confidant
- (n.)
a person entrusted with secrets (Shortly
after we met, she became my chief confidant.)
- conflagration
- (n.)
great fire (The conflagration consumed
the entire building.)
- confluence
- (n.)
a gathering together (A confluence of
different factors made tonight the perfect night.)
- conformist
- (n.)
one who behaves the same as others (Julian
was such a conformist that he had to wait
and see if his friends would do something before he would commit.)
- confound
- (v.)
to frustrate, confuse (MacGuyver confounded the
policemen pursuing him by covering his tracks.)
- congeal
- (v.)
to thicken into a solid (The
sauce had congealed into a thick paste.)
- congenial
- (adj.)
pleasantly agreeable (His congenial manner
made him popular wherever he went.)
- congregation
- (n.)
a gathering of people, especially for religious services
(The priest told the congregation that
he would be retiring.)
- congruity
- (n.)
the quality of being in agreement (Bill
and Veronica achieved a perfect congruity of
opinion.)
- connive
- (v.)
to plot, scheme (She connived to
get me to give up my vacation plans.)
- consecrate
- (v.)
to dedicate something to a holy purpose
(Arvin consecrated his spare bedroom
as a shrine to Christina.)
- consensus
- (n.)
an agreement of opinion (The
jury was able to reach a consensus only after
days of deliberation.)
- consign
- (v.)
to give something over to another’s care
(Unwillingly, he consigned his mother
to a nursing home.)
- consolation
- (n.)
an act of comforting (Darren
found Alexandra’s presence to be a consolation for his
suffering.)
- consonant
- (adj.)
in harmony (The singers’ consonant voices
were beautiful.)
- constituent
- (n.)
an essential part (The most important constituent of
her perfume is something called ambergris.)
- constrain
- (v.)
to forcibly restrict (His belief
in nonviolence constrained him from taking
revenge on his attackers.)
- construe
- (v.)
to interpret (He construed her
throwing his clothes out the window as a signal that she wanted
him to leave.)
- consummate
- (v.)
to complete a deal; to complete a marriage ceremony
through sexual intercourse (Erica and Donald consummated their
agreement in the executive boardroom.)
- consumption
- (n.)
the act of consuming (Consumption of
intoxicating beverages is not permitted on these premises.)
- contemporaneous
- (adj.)
existing during the same time (Though
her novels do not feature the themes of Romanticism, Jane Austen’s
work was contemporaneous with that of Wordsworth and
Byron.)
- contentious
- (adj.)
having a tendency to quarrel or dispute
(George’s contentious personality made
him unpopular with his classmates.)
- contravene
- (v.)
to contradict, oppose, violate (Edwidge contravened his
landlady’s rule against overnight guests.)
- contrite
- (adj.)
penitent, eager to be forgiven (Blake’s contrite behavior
made it impossible to stay angry at him.)
- contusion
- (n.)
bruise, injury (The contusions on
his face suggested he’d been in a fight.)
- conundrum
- (n.)
puzzle, problem (Interpreting
Jane’s behavior was a constant conundrum.)
- convene
- (v.)
to call together (Jason convened his
entire extended family for a discussion.)
- convention
- 1.
(n.) an assembly of people
(The hotel was full because of the cattle-ranchers’ convention.)
- 2. (n.) a rule, custom
(The cattle-ranchers have a convention that
you take off your boots before entering their houses.)
- convivial
- (adj.)
characterized by feasting, drinking, merriment
(The restaurant’s convivial atmosphere
put me immediately at ease.)
- convoluted
- (adj.)
intricate, complicated (Grace’s
story was so convoluted that I couldn’t follow it.)
- copious
- (adj.)
profuse, abundant (Copious amounts
of Snapple were imbibed in the cafeteria.)
- cordial
- (adj.)
warm, affectionate (His cordial greeting
melted my anger at once.)
- coronation
- (n.)
the act of crowning (The new
king’s coronation occurred the day after
his father’s death.)
- corpulence
- (adj.)
extreme fatness (Henry’s corpulence did
not make him any less attractive to his charming, svelte wife.)
- corroborate
- (v.)
to support with evidence (Luke’s
seemingly outrageous claim was corroborated by
witnesses.)
- corrosive
- (adj.)
having the tendency to erode or eat away
(The effect of the chemical was highly corrosive.)
- cosmopolitan
- (adj.)
sophisticated, worldly (Lloyd’s
education and upbringing were cosmopolitan,
so he felt right at home among the powerful and learned.)
- counteract
- (v.)
to neutralize, make ineffective (The
antidote counteracted the effect of the poison.)
- coup
- 1.
(n.) a brilliant, unexpected act
(Alexander pulled off an amazing coup when
he got a date with Cynthia by purposely getting hit by her car.)
- 2. (n.) the overthrow
of a government and assumption of authority (In
their coup attempt, the army officers stormed
the Parliament and took all the legislators hostage.)
- covet
- (v.)
to desire enviously (I coveted Moses’s
house, wife, and car.)
- covert
- (adj.)
secretly engaged in (Nerwin waged
a covert campaign against his enemies, while outwardly
appearing to remain friendly.)
- credulity
- (n.)
readiness to believe (His credulity made
him an easy target for con men.)
- crescendo
- (n.)
a steady increase in intensity or volume
(The crescendo of the brass instruments gave
the piece a patriotic feel.)
- criteria
- (n.)
standards by which something is judged
(Among Mrs. Fields’s criteria for
good cookies are that they be moist and chewy.)
- culmination
- (n.)
the climax toward which something progresses
(The culmination of the couple’s argument
was the decision to divorce.)
- culpable
- (adj.)
deserving blame (He was culpable of
the crime, and was sentenced to perform community service for 75
years.)
- cultivate
- (v.)
to nurture, improve, refine (At
the library, she cultivated her interest
in spy novels.)
- cumulative
- (adj.)
increasing, building upon itself (The cumulative effect
of hours spent in the sun was a deep tan.)
- cunning
- (adj.)
sly, clever at being deceitful (The
general devised a cunning plan to surprise
the enemy.)
- cupidity
- (n.)
greed, strong desire (His cupidity made
him enter the abandoned gold mine despite the obvious dangers.)
- cursory
- (adj.)
brief to the point of being superficial
(Late for the meeting, she cast a cursory glance
at the agenda.)
- curt
- (adj.)
abruptly and rudely short (Her curt reply
to my question made me realize that she was upset at me.)
- curtail
- (v.)
to lessen, reduce (Since losing
his job, he had to curtail his spending.)
D
- daunting
- (adj.)
intimidating, causing one to lose courage
(He kept delaying the daunting act
of asking for a promotion.)
- dearth
- (n.)
a lack, scarcity (An eager reader,
she was dismayed by the dearth of classic
books at the library.)
- debacle
- (n.)
a disastrous failure, disruption (The
elaborately designed fireworks show turned into a debacle when
the fireworks started firing in random directions.)
- debase
- (v.)
to lower the quality or esteem of something
(The large raise that he gave himself debased his
motives for running the charity.)
- debauch
- (v.)
to corrupt by means of sensual pleasures
(An endless amount of good wine and cheese debauched the
traveler.)
- debunk
- (v.)
to expose the falseness of something
(He debunked her claim to be the
world’s greatest chess player by defeating her in 18 consecutive
matches.)
- decorous
- (adj.)
socially proper, appropriate (The
appreciative guest displayed decorous behavior toward
his host.)
- decry
- (v.)
to criticize openly (The kind
video rental clerk decried the policy of
charging customers late fees.)
- deface
- (v.)
to ruin or injure something’s appearance
(The brothers used eggs and shaving cream to deface their
neighbor’s mailbox.)
- defamatory
- (adj.)
harmful toward another’s reputation (The defamatory gossip
spreading about the actor made the public less willing to see the
actor’s new movie.)
- defer
- (v.)
to postpone something; to yield to another’s wisdom
(Ron deferred to Diane, the expert
on musical instruments, when he was asked about buying a piano.)
- deferential
- (adj.)
showing respect for another’s authority
(His deferential attitude toward
her made her more confident in her ability to run the company.)
- defile
- (v.)
to make unclean, impure (She defiled the
calm of the religious building by playing her banjo.)
- deft
- (adj.)
skillful, capable (Having worked
in a bakery for many years, Marcus was a deft bread maker.)
- defunct
- (adj.)
no longer used or existing (They
planned to turn the defunct schoolhouse into
a community center.)
- delegate
- (v.)
to hand over responsibility for something
(The dean delegated the task of
finding a new professor to a special hiring committee.)
- deleterious
- (adj.)
harmful (She experienced the deleterious effects
of running a marathon without stretching her muscles enough beforehand.)
- deliberate
- (adj.)
intentional, reflecting careful consideration
(Though Mary was quite upset, her actions to resolve the
dispute were deliberate.)
- delineate
- (v.)
to describe, outline, shed light on (She
neatly delineated her reasons for canceling the
project’s funding.)
- demagogue
- (n.)
a leader who appeals to a people’s prejudices
(The demagogue strengthened his hold
over his people by blaming immigrants for the lack of jobs.)
- demarcation
- (n.)
the marking of boundaries or categories
(Different cultures have different demarcations of
good and evil.)
- demean
- (v.)
to lower the status or stature of something
(She refused to demean her secretary
by making him order her lunch.)
- demure
- (adj.)
quiet, modest, reserved (Though
everyone else at the party was dancing and going crazy, she remained demure.)
- denigrate
- (v.)
to belittle, diminish the opinion of
(The company decided that its advertisements would no longer denigrate the
company’s competitors.)
- denounce
- (v.)
to criticize publicly (The senator denounced her
opponent as a greedy politician.)
- deplore
- (v.)
to feel or express sorrow, disapproval
(We all deplored the miserable working conditions
in the factory.)
- depravity
- (n.)
wickedness (Rumors of the ogre’s depravity made
the children afraid to enter the forest.)
- deprecate
- (v.)
to belittle, depreciate (Always
over-modest, he deprecated his contribution
to the local charity.)
- derelict
- (adj.)
abandoned, run-down (Even though
it was dangerous, the children enjoyed going to the deserted lot
and playing in the derelict house.)
- deride
- (v.)
to laugh at mockingly, scorn (The
bullies derided the foreign student’s accent.)
- derivative
- (adj.)
taken directly from a source, unoriginal
(She was bored by his music because she felt that it was derivative and
that she had heard it before.)
- desecrate
- (v.)
to violate the sacredness of a thing or place
(They feared that the construction of a golf course would desecrate the
preserved wilderness.)
- desiccated
- (adj.)
dried up, dehydrated (The skin
of the desiccated mummy looked like old paper.)
- desolate
- (adj.)
deserted, dreary, lifeless (She
found the desolate landscape quite a contrast
to the hustle and bustle of the overcrowded city.)
- despondent
- (adj.)
feeling depressed, discouraged, hopeless
(Having failed the first math test, the despondent child
saw no use in studying for the next and failed that one too.)
- despot
- (n.)
one who has total power and rules brutally
(The despot issued a death sentence
for anyone who disobeyed his laws.)
- destitute
- (adj.)
impoverished, utterly lacking (The
hurricane destroyed many homes and left many families destitute.)
- deter
- (v.)
to discourage, prevent from doing (Bob’s
description of scary snakes couldn’t deter Marcia
from traveling in the rainforests.)
- devious
- (adj.)
not straightforward, deceitful (Not
wanting to be punished, the devious girl blamed
the broken vase on the cat.)
- dialect
- (n.)
a variation of a language (In
the country’s remote, mountainous regions, the inhabitants spoke
a dialect that the country’s other inhabitants
had difficulty understanding.)
- diaphanous
- (adj.)
light, airy, transparent (Sunlight
poured in through the diaphanous curtains, brightening
the room.)
- didactic
- 1.
(adj.) intended to instruct
(She wrote up a didactic document
showing new employees how to handle the company’s customers.)
- 2. (adj.) overly
moralistic (His didactic style
of teaching made it seem like he wanted to persuade his students
not to understand history fully, but to understand it from only
one point of view.)
- diffident
- (adj.)
shy, quiet, modest (While eating
dinner with the adults, the diffident youth
did not speak for fear of seeming presumptuous.)
- diffuse
- 1.
(v.) to scatter, thin out, break up
(He diffused the tension in the
room by making in a joke.)
- 2.
(adj.) not concentrated, scattered, disorganized
(In her writings, she tried unsuccessfully to make others
understand her diffuse thoughts.)
- dilatory
- (adj.)
tending to delay, causing delay (The
general’s dilatory strategy enabled the enemy to
regroup.)
- diligent
- (adj.)
showing care in doing one’s work (The diligent researcher
made sure to check her measurements multiple times.)
- diminutive
- (adj.)
small or miniature (The bullies,
tall and strong, picked on the diminutive child.)
- dirge
- (n.)
a mournful song, especially for a funeral
(The bagpipers played a dirge as
the casket was carried to the cemetery.)
- disaffected
- (adj.)
rebellious, resentful of authority (Dismayed
by Bobby’s poor behavior, the parents sent their disaffected son
to a military academy to be disciplined.)
- disavow
- (v.)
to deny knowledge of or responsibility for
(Not wanting others to criticize her, she disavowed any
involvement in the company’s hiring scandal.)
- discern
- (v.)
to perceive, detect (Though he
hid his emotions, she discerned from his
body language that he was angry.)
- disclose
- (v.)
to reveal, make public (The CEO disclosed to
the press that the company would have to fire several employees.)
- discomfit
- (v.)
to thwart, baffle (The normally
cheery and playful children’s sudden misery discomfited the
teacher.)
- discordant
- (adj.)
not agreeing, not in harmony with (The
girls’ sobs were a discordant sound amid
the general laughter that filled the restaurant.)
- discrepancy
- (n.)
difference, failure of things to correspond
(He was troubled by the discrepancy between
what he remembered paying for the appliance and what his receipt
showed he paid for it.)
- discretion
- (n.)
the quality of being reserved in speech or action;
good judgment (Not wanting her patient to
get overly anxious, the doctor used discretion in
deciding how much to tell the patient about his condition.)
- discursive
- (adj.)
rambling, lacking order (The
professor’s discursive lectures seemed to
be about every subject except the one initially described.)
- disdain
- 1.
(v.) to scorn, hold in low esteem
(Insecure about their jobs, the older employees disdained the
recently hired ones, who were young and capable.)
- 2. (n.) scorn, low
esteem (After learning of his immoral actions,
Justine held Lawrence in disdain.)
- disgruntled
- (adj.)
upset, not content (The child
believed that his parents had unjustly grounded him, and remained disgruntled for
a week.)
- disheartened
- (adj.)
feeling a loss of spirit or morale (The
team was disheartened after losing in the
finals of the tournament.)
- disparage
- (v.)
to criticize or speak ill of (The
saleswoman disparaged the competitor’s products to
persuade her customers to buy what she was selling.)
- disparate
- (adj.)
sharply differing, containing sharply contrasting elements
(Having widely varying interests, the students had disparate responses
toward the novel.)
- dispatch
- (v.)
to send off to accomplish a duty (The
carpenter dispatched his assistant to fetch wood.)
- dispel
- (v.)
to drive away, scatter (She entered
the office as usual on Monday, dispelling the
rumor that she had been fired.)
- disperse
- (v.)
to scatter, cause to scatter (When
the rain began to pour, the crowd at the baseball game quickly dispersed.)
- disrepute
- (n.)
a state of being held in low regard (The
officer fell into disrepute after it was learned
that he had disobeyed the orders he had given to his own soldiers.)
- dissemble
- (v.)
to conceal, fake (Not wanting
to appear heartlessly greedy, she dissembled and
hid her intention to sell her ailing father’s stamp collection.)
- disseminate
- (v.)
to spread widely (The politician disseminated his
ideas across the town before the election.)
- dissent
- 1.
(v.) to disagree (The
principal argued that the child should repeat the fourth grade,
but the unhappy parents dissented.)
- 2. (n.) the act of
disagreeing (Unconvinced that the defendant
was guilty, the last juror voiced his dissent with
the rest of the jury.)
- dissipate
- 1.
(v.) to disappear, cause to disappear
(The sun finally came out and dissipated the haze.)
- 2. (v.) to waste
(She dissipated her fortune on a
series of bad investments.)
- dissonance
- (n.)
lack of harmony or consistency (Though
the president of the company often spoke of the company as reliant
solely upon its workers, her decision to increase her own salary
rather than reward her employees revealed a striking dissonance between
her alleged beliefs and her actions.)
- dissuade
- (v.)
to persuade someone not to do something
(Worried that he would catch a cold, she tried to dissuade him
from going out on winter nights.)
- distend
- (v.)
to swell out (Years of drinking
beer caused his stomach to distend.)
- dither
- (v.)
to be indecisive (Not wanting
to offend either friend, he dithered about
which of the two birthday parties he should attend.)
- divine
- (adj.)
godly, exceedingly wonderful (Terribly
fond of desserts, she found the rich chocolate cake to be divine.)
- divisive
- (adj.)
causing dissent, discord (Her divisive tactics
turned her two friends against each other.)
- divulge
- (v.)
to reveal something secret (Pressured
by the press, the government finally divulged the
previously unknown information.)
- docile
- (adj.)
easily taught or trained (She
successfully taught the docile puppy several
tricks.)
- dogmatic
- (adj.)
aggressively and arrogantly certain about unproved
principles (His dogmatic claim
that men were better than women at fixing appliances angered everyone.)
- dormant
- (adj.)
sleeping, temporarily inactive (Though
she pretended everything was fine, her anger lay dormant throughout
the dinner party and exploded in screams of rage after everyone
had left.)
- dour
- (adj.)
stern, joyless (The children feared
their dour neighbor because the old man would take
their toys if he believed they were being too loud.)
- dubious
- (adj.)
doubtful, of uncertain quality (Suspicious
that he was only trying to get a raise, she found his praise dubious.)
- duplicity
- (n.)
crafty dishonesty (His duplicity involved
convincing his employees to let him lower their salaries and increase
their stock options, and then to steal the money he saved and run the
company into the ground.)
- duress
- (n.)
hardship, threat (It was only
under intense duress that he, who was normally
against killing, fired his gun.)
- dynamic
- (adj.)
actively changing (The parents
found it hard to keep up with the dynamic music scene
with which their children had become very familiar.)
E
- ebullient
- (adj.)
extremely lively, enthusiastic (She
became ebullient upon receiving an acceptance letter
from her first-choice college.)
- eclectic
- (adj.)
consisting of a diverse variety of elements
(That bar attracts an eclectic crowd: lawyers,
artists, circus clowns, and investment bankers.)
- ecstatic
- (adj.)
intensely and overpoweringly happy (The
couple was ecstatic when they learned that
they had won the lottery.)
- edict
- (n.)
an order, decree (The ruler issued
an edict requiring all of his subjects to
bow down before him.)
- efface
- (v.)
to wipe out, obliterate, rub away (The
husband was so angry at his wife for leaving him that he effaced all
evidence of her presence; he threw out pictures of her and gave
away all her belongings.)
- effervescent
- (adj.)
bubbly, lively (My friend is
so effervescent that she makes everyone smile.)
- efficacious
- (adj.)
effective (My doctor promised
me that the cold medicine was efficacious,
but I’m still sniffling.)
- effrontery
- (n.)
impudence, nerve, insolence (When
I told my aunt that she was boring, my mother scolded me for my effrontery.)
- effulgent
- (adj.)
radiant, splendorous (The golden
palace was effulgent.)
- egregious
- (adj.)
extremely bad (The student who
threw sloppy joes across the cafeteria was punished for his egregious behavior.)
- elaborate
- (adj.)
complex, detailed, intricate (Dan
always beats me at chess because he develops such an elaborate game
plan that I can never predict his next move.)
- elated
- (adj.)
overjoyed, thrilled (When she
found out she had won the lottery, the writer was elated.)
- elegy
- (n.)
a speech given in honor of a dead person
(At the funeral, the widow gave a moving elegy describing
her love for her husband.)
- elicit
- (v.)
to bring forth, draw out, evoke (Although
I asked several times where the exit was, I elicited no
response from the stone-faced policeman.)
- eloquent
- (adj.)
expressive, articulate, moving (The
priest gave such an eloquent sermon that most
churchgoers were crying.)
- elucidate
- (v.)
to clarify, explain (I didn’t
understand why my friend was so angry with me, so I asked Janine
to elucidate her feelings.)
- elude
- (v.)
to evade, escape (Despite an
intense search, the robber continues to elude the
police.)
- emaciated
- (adj.)
very thin, enfeebled looking (My
sister eats a lot of pastries and chocolate but still looks emaciated.)
- embellish
- 1.
(v.) to decorate, adorn (My
mom embellished the living room by adding
lace curtains.)
- 2. (v.)
to add details to, enhance (When
Harry told me that he had “done stuff” on his vacation, I asked
him to embellish upon his account.)
- embezzle
- (v.)
to steal money by falsifying records
(The accountant was fired for embezzling $10,000
of the company’s funds.)
- emend
- (v.)
to correct or revise a written text (If
my sentence is incorrect, the editor will emend what
I have written.)
- eminent
- 1.
(adj.) distinguished, prominent, famous
(Mr. Phillips is such an eminent scholar
that every professor on campus has come to hear him lecture.)
- 2. (adj.) conspicuous
(There is an eminent stain on that
shirt.)
- emollient
- (adj.)
soothing (This emollient cream
makes my skin very smooth.)
- emote
- (v.)
to express emotion (The director
told the actor he had to emote, or else the
audience would have no idea what his character was going through.)
- empathy
- (n.)
sensitivity to another’s feelings as if they were one’s
own (I feel such empathy for my
sister when she’s in pain that I cry too.)
- empirical
- 1.
(adj.) based on observation or experience
(The scientist gathered empirical data
on the growth rate of dandelions by studying the dandelions behind
his house.)
- 2. (adj.)
capable of being proved or disproved by experiment
(That all cats hate getting wet is an empirical statement:
I can test it by bathing my cat, Trinket.)
- emulate
- (v.)
to imitate (I idolize Britney
Spears so much that I emulate everything
she does: I wear her outfits, sing along to her songs, and date
a boy named Justin.)
- enamor
- (v.)
to fill with love, fascinate, usually used in passive
form followed by “of” or “with” (I grew enamored of
that boy when he quoted my favorite love poem.)
- encore
- (n.)
the audience’s demand for a repeat performance; also
the artist’s performance in response to that demand
(At the end of the concert, all the fans yelled, “Encore!
Encore!” but the band did not come out to play again.)
- encumber
- (v.)
to weigh down, burden (At the
airport, my friend was encumbered by her luggage,
so I offered to carry two of her bags.)
- enervate
- (v.)
to weaken, exhaust (Writing these
sentences enervates me so much that I will
have to take a nap after I finish.)
- enfranchise
- (v.)
to grant the vote to (The Nineteenth
Amendment enfranchised women.)
- engender
- (v.)
to bring about, create, generate (During
the Olympics, the victories of U.S. athletes engender a
patriotic spirit among Americans.)
- enigmatic
- (adj.)
mystifying, cryptic (That man
wearing the dark suit and dark glasses is so enigmatic that
no one even knows his name.)
- enmity
- (n.)
ill will, hatred, hostility (Mark
and Andy have clearly not forgiven each other, because the enmity between
them is obvious to anyone in their presence.)
- ennui
- (n.)
boredom, weariness (I feel such ennui that
I don’t look forward to anything, not even my birthday party.)
- entail
- (v.)
to include as a necessary step (Building
a new fence entails tearing down the old
one.)
- enthrall
- (v.)
to charm, hold spellbound (The
sailor’s stories of fighting off sharks and finding ancient treasures enthralled his
young son.)
- ephemeral
- (adj.)
short-lived, fleeting (She promised
she’d love me forever, but her “forever” was only ephemeral:
she left me after one week.)
- epistolary
- (adj.)
relating to or contained in letters (Some
people call me “Auntie’s boy,” because my aunt and I have such a
close epistolary relationship that we write
each other every day.)
- epitome
- (n.)
a perfect example, embodiment (My
mother, the epitome of good taste, always dresses
more elegantly than I do.)
- equanimity
- (n.)
composure (Even though he had
just been fired, Mr. Simms showed great equanimity by
neatly packing up his desk and wishing everyone in the office well.)
- equivocal
- (adj.)
ambiguous, uncertain, undecided (His
intentions were so equivocal that I didn’t know
whether he was being chivalrous or sleazy.)
- erudite
- (adj.)
learned (My Latin teacher is
such an erudite scholar that he has translated
some of the most difficult and abstruse ancient poetry.)
- eschew
- (v.)
to shun, avoid (George hates
the color green so much that he eschews all
green food.)
- esoteric
- (adj.)
understood by only a select few (Even
the most advanced students cannot understand the physicist’s esoteric theories.)
- espouse
- (v.)
to take up as a cause, support (I
love animals so much that I espouse animal
rights.)
- ethereal
- (adj.)
heavenly, exceptionally delicate or refined
(In her flowing silk gown and lace veil, the bride looked ethereal.)
- etymology
- (n.)
the history of words, their origin and development
(From the study of etymology, I
know that the word “quixotic” derives from Don
Quixote and the word “gaudy” refers to the Spanish
architect Gaudí.)
- euphoric
- (adj.)
elated, uplifted (I was euphoric when
I found out that my sister had given birth to twins.)
- evanescent
- (adj.)
fleeting, momentary (My joy at
getting promoted was evanescent because I discovered
that I would have to work much longer hours in a less friendly office.)
- evince
- (v.)
to show, reveal (Christopher’s
hand-wringing and nail-biting evince how
nervous he is about the upcoming English test.)
- exacerbate
- (v.)
to make more violent, intense (The
gruesome and scary movie I saw last night exacerbated my
fears of the dark.)
- exalt
- (v.)
to glorify, praise (Michael Jordan
is the figure in basketball we exalt the
most.)
- exasperate
- (v.)
to irritate, irk (George’s endless
complaints exasperated his roomate.)
- excavate
- (v.)
to dig out of the ground and remove (The
pharaoh’s treasures were excavated by archeologists
in Egypt.)
- exculpate
- (v.)
to free from guilt or blame, exonerate
(My discovery of the ring behind the dresser exculpated me
from the charge of having stolen it.)
- excursion
- (n.)
a trip or outing (After taking
an excursion to the Bronx Zoo, I dreamed
about pandas and monkeys.)
- execrable
- (adj.)
loathsome, detestable (Her pudding
is so execrable that it makes me sick.)
- exhort
- (v.)
to urge, prod, spur (Henry exhorted his
colleagues to join him in protesting against the university’s hiring
policies.)
- exigent
- (adj.)
urgent, critical (The patient
has an exigent need for medication, or else
he will lose his sight.)
- exonerate
- (v.)
to free from guilt or blame, exculpate
(The true thief’s confession exonerated the man
who had been held in custody for the crime.)
- exorbitant
- (adj.)
excessive (Her exorbitant praise
made me blush and squirm in my seat.)
- expedient
- (adj.)
advisable, advantageous, serving one’s self-interest
(In his bid for reelection, the governor made an expedient move
by tabling all controversial legislation.)
- expiate
- (v.)
to make amends for, atone (To expiate my
selfishness, I gave all my profits to charity.)
- expunge
- (v.)
to obliterate, eradicate (Fearful
of an IRS investigation, Paul tried to expunge all incriminating
evidence from his tax files.)
- expurgate
- (v.)
to remove offensive or incorrect parts, usually of
a book (The history editors expurgated from
the text all disparaging and inflammatory comments about the Republican Party.)
- extant
- (adj.)
existing, not destroyed or lost (My
mother’s extant love letters to my father
are in the attic trunk.)
- extol
- (v.)
to praise, revere (Violet extolled the
virtues of a vegetarian diet to her meat-loving brother.)
- extraneous
- (adj.)
irrelevant, extra, not necessary (Personal
political ambitions should always remain extraneous to
legislative policy, but, unfortunately, they rarely are.)
- extricate
- (v.)
to disentangle (Instead of trying
to mediate between my brother and sister, I extricated myself
from the family tension entirely and left the house for the day.)
- exult
- (v.)
to rejoice (When she found out
she won the literature prize, Mary exulted by
dancing and singing through the school’s halls.)
F
- fabricate
- (v.)
to make up, invent (When I arrived
an hour late to class, I fabricated some
excuse about my car breaking down on the way to school.)
- façade
- 1.
(n.) the wall of a building
(Meet me in front of the museum’s main façade.)
- 2. (n.) a deceptive
appearance or attitude (Despite my smiling façade,
I am feeling melancholy.)
- facile
- 1.
(adj.) easy, requiring little effort
(This game is so facile that even
a four-year- old can master it.)
- 2.
(adj.) superficial, achieved with minimal
thought or care, insincere (The business was
in such shambles that any solution seemed facile at
best; nothing could really helpit in the long-run.)
- fallacious
- (adj.)
incorrect, misleading (Emily
offered me cigarettes on the fallacious assumption that
I smoked.)
- fastidious
- (adj.)
meticulous, demanding, having high and often unattainable
standards (Mark is so fastidious that
he is never able to finish a project because it always seems imperfect
to him.)
- fathom
- (v.)
to understand, comprehend (I
cannot fathom why you like that crabby and
mean-spirited neighbor of ours.)
- fatuous
- (adj.)
silly, foolish (He considers
himself a serious poet, but in truth, he only writes fatuous limericks.)
- fecund
- (adj.)
fruitful, fertile (The fecund tree
bore enough apples to last us through the entire season.)
- felicitous
- 1.
(adj.) well suited, apt (While
his comments were idiotic and rambling, mine were felicitous and
helpful.)
- 2. (adj.)
delightful, pleasing (I spent
a felicitous afternoon visiting old friends.)
- feral
- (adj.)
wild, savage (That beast looks
so feral that I would fear being alone with
it.)
- fervent
- (adj.)
ardent, passionate (The fervent protestors
chained themselves to the building and shouted all night long.)
- fetid
- (adj.)
having a foul odor (I can tell
from the fetid smell in your refrigerator
that your milk has spoiled.)
- fetter
- (v.)
to chain, restrain (The dog was fettered to
the parking meter.)
- fickle
- (adj.)
shifting in character, inconstant (In
Greek dramas, the fickle gods help Achilles
one day, and then harm him the next.)
- fidelity
- (n.)
loyalty, devotion (Guard dogs
are known for the great fidelity they show
toward their masters.)
- figurative
- (adj.)
symbolic (Using figurative language,
Jane likened the storm to an angry bull.)
- flabbergasted
- (adj.)
astounded (Whenever I read an
Agatha Christie mystery novel, I am always flabbergasted when
I learn the identity of the murderer.)
- flaccid
- (adj.)
limp, not firm or strong (If
a plant is not watered enough, its leaves become droopy and flaccid.)
- flagrant
- (adj.)
offensive, egregious (The judge’s
decision to set the man free simply because that man was his brother
was a flagrant abuse of power.)
- florid
- (adj.)
flowery, ornate (The writer’s florid prose
belongs on a sentimental Hallmark card.)
- flout
- (v.)
to disregard or disobey openly (I flouted the
school’s dress code by wearing a tie-dyed tank top and a pair of
cut-off jeans.)
- foil
- (v.)
to thwart, frustrate, defeat (Inspector
Wilkens foiled the thieves by locking them
in the bank along with their stolen money.)
- forage
- (v.)
to graze, rummage for food (When
we got lost on our hiking trip, we foraged for berries
and nuts in order to survive.)
- forbearance
- (n.)
patience, restraint, toleration (The
doctor showed great forbearance in calming down
the angry patient who shouted insults at him.)
- forestall
- (v.)
to prevent, thwart, delay (I forestalled the
cold I was getting by taking plenty of vitamin C pills and wearing
a scarf.)
- forlorn
- (adj.)
lonely, abandoned, hopeless (Even
though I had the flu, my family decided to go skiing for the weekend
and leave me home alone, feeling feverish and forlorn.)
- forsake
- (v.)
to give up, renounce (My New
Year’s resolution is to forsake smoking and
drinking.)
- fortitude
- (n.)
strength, guts (Achilles’ fortitude in
battle is legendary.)
- fortuitous
- (adj.)
happening by chance, often lucky or fortunate
(After looking for Manuel and not finding him at home,
Harriet had a fortuitous encounter with him
at the post office.)
- forum
- (n.)
a medium for lecture or discussion (Some
radio talk-shows provide a good forum for political
debate.)
- foster
- (v.)
to stimulate, promote, encourage (To foster good
health in the city, the mayor started a “Get out and exercise!”
campaign.)
- fractious
- (adj.)
troublesome or irritable (Although
the child insisted he wasn’t tired, his fractious behavior—especially
his decision to crush his cheese and crackers all over the floor—convinced
everyone present that it was time to put him to bed.)
- fraught
- (adj.)
(usually used with “with”) filled or accompanied with
(Her glances in his direction were fraught with
meaning, though precisely what meaning remained unclear.)
- frenetic
- (adj.)
frenzied, hectic, frantic (In
the hours between night and morning, the frenetic pace
of city life slows to a lull.)
- frivolous
- (adj.)
of little importance, trifling (Someday,
all that anxiety about whether your zit will disappear before the
prom will seem totally frivolous.)
- frugal
- (adj.)
thrifty, economical (Richard
is so frugal that his diet consists almost
exclusively of catfish and chicken liver—the two most inexpensive
foods in the store.)
- furtive
- (adj.)
secretive, sly (Jane’s placement
of her drugs in her sock drawer was not as furtive as she
thought, as the sock drawer is the first place most parents look.)
G
- garish
- (adj.)
gaudy, in bad taste (Mrs. Watson
has poor taste and covers every object in her house with a garish gold
lamé.)
- garrulous
- (adj.)
talkative, wordy (Some talk show
hosts are so garrulous that their guests
can’t get a word in edgewise.)
- genial
- (adj.)
friendly, affable (Although he’s
been known to behave like a real jerk, I would say that my brother
is an overall genial guy.)
- gluttony
- (n.)
overindulgence in food or drink (Ada’s
fried chicken tastes so divine, I don’t know how anyone can call gluttony a
sin.)
- goad
- (v.)
to urge, spur, incite to action (Jim
may think he’s not going to fight Billy, but Billy will goad Jim
on with insults until he throws a punch.)
- gourmand
- (n.)
someone fond of eating and drinking (My
parents, who used to eat little more than crackers and salad, have
become real gourmands in their old age.)
- grandiloquence
- (n.)
lofty, pompous language (The
student thought her grandiloquence would make
her sound smart, but neither the class nor the teacher bought it.)
- grandiose
- (adj.)
on a magnificent or exaggerated scale
(Margaret planned a grandiose party, replete
with elephants, trapeze artists, and clowns.)
- gratuitous
- (adj.)
uncalled for, unwarranted (Every
morning the guy at the donut shop gives me a gratuitous helping
of ketchup packets.)
- gregarious
- (adj.)
drawn to the company of others, sociable
(Well, if you’re not gregarious,
I don’t know why you would want to go to a singles party!)
- grievous
- (adj.)
injurious, hurtful; serious or grave in nature
(Electrocuting the inmate without being sure of his guilt
would be a truly grievous mistake.)
- guile
- (n.)
deceitful, cunning, sly behavior (Because
of his great guile, the politician was able
to survive scandal after scandal.)
H
- hackneyed
- (adj.)
unoriginal, trite (A girl can
only hear “I love you” so many times before it begins to sound hackneyed and
meaningless.)
- hallowed
- (adj.)
revered, consecrated (In the hallowed corridors
of the cathedral, the disturbed professor felt himself to be at
peace.)
- hapless
- (adj.)
unlucky (My poor, hapless family
never seems to pick a sunny week to go on vacation.)
- harangue
- 1.
(n.) a ranting speech (Everyone
had heard the teacher’s harangue about gum chewing
in class before.)
- 2. (v.)
to give such a speech (But this
time the teacher harangued the class about
the importance of brushing your teeth after chewing gum.)
- hardy
- (adj.)
robust, capable of surviving through adverse conditions
(I too would have expected the plants to be dead by mid-November,
but apparently they’re very hardy.)
- harrowing
- (adj.)
greatly distressing, vexing (The
car crash was a harrowing experience, but
I have a feeling that the increase in my insurance premiums will
be even more upsetting.)
- haughty
- (adj.)
disdainfully proud (The superstar’s haughty dismissal
of her costars will backfire on her someday.)
- hedonist
- (n.)
one who believes pleasure should be the primary pursuit
of humans (Because he’s such a hedonist,
I knew Murray would appreciate the 11 cases of wine I bought him
for his birthday.)
- hegemony
- (n.)
domination over others (Britain’s hegemony over
its colonies was threatened once nationalist sentiment began to
spread around the world.)
- heinous
- (adj.)
shockingly wicked, repugnant (The
killings were made all the more heinous by the
fact that the murderer first tortured his victims for three days.)
- heterogeneous
- (adj.)
varied, diverse in character (I
hate having only one flavor so I always buy the swirled, or should
I say heterogeneous, type of ice cream.)
- hiatus
- (n.)
a break or gap in duration or continuity
(The hiatus in service should last
two or three months—until the cable lines are repaired .)
- hierarchy
- (n.)
a system with ranked groups, usually according to social,
economic, or professional class (Women found
it very difficult to break into the upper ranks of the department’s hierarchy.)
- hypocrisy
- (n.)
pretending to believe what one does not
(Once the politician began passing legislation that contradicted
his campaign promises, his hypocrisy became
apparent.)
- hypothetical
- (adj.)
supposed or assumed true, but unproven
(Even though it has been celebrated by seven major newspapers,
that the drug will be a success when tested in humans is still hypothetical.)
I
- iconoclast
- (n.)
one who attacks common beliefs or institutions
(Jane goes to one protest after another, but she seems
to be an iconoclast rather than an activist
with a progressive agenda.)
- idiosyncratic
- (adj.)
peculiar to one person; highly individualized
(I know you had trouble with the last test, but because
your mistakes were highly idiosyncratic,
I’m going to deny your request that the class be given a new test.)
- idolatrous
- (adj.)
excessively worshipping one object or person
(Xena’s idolatrous fawning over the
band—following them on tour, starting their fan club, filming their
documentary—is really beginning to get on my nerves.)
- ignominious
- (adj.)
humiliating, disgracing (It was
really ignominious to be kicked out of the dorm
for having an illegal gas stove in my room.)
- illicit
- (adj.)
forbidden, not permitted (The
fourth-grader learned many illicit words
from a pamphlet that was being passed around school.)
- immerse
- (v.)
to absorb, deeply involve, engross (After
breaking up with her boyfriend, Nancy decided to immerse herself
in her work in order to avoid crying.)
- immutable
- (adj.)
not changeable (The laws of physics
are immutable and constant.)
- impassive
- (adj.)
stoic, not susceptible to suffering (Stop
being so impassive; it’s healthy to cry every
now and then.)
- impeccable
- (adj.)
exemplary, flawless (If your
grades were as impeccable as your sister’s,
then you too would receive a car for a graduation present.)
- impecunious
- (adj.)
poor (“I fear he’s too impecunious to
take me out tonight,” the bratty girl whined.)
- imperative
- 1.
(adj.) necessary, pressing
(It is imperative that you have
these folders organized by midday.)
- 2.
(n.) a rule, command, or order
(Her imperative to have the folders
organized by midday was perceived as ridiculous by the others.)
- imperious
- (adj.)
commanding, domineering (The imperious nature
of your manner led me to dislike you at once.)
- impertinent
- (adj.)
rude, insolent (Most of your
comments are so impertinent that I don’t
wish to dignify them with an answer.)
- impervious
- (adj.)
impenetrable, incapable of being affected
(Because of their thick layer of fur, many seals are almost impervious to
the cold.)
- impetuous
- (adj.)
rash; hastily done (Hilda’s hasty
slaying of the king was an impetuous, thoughtless
action.)
- impinge
- 1.
(v.) to impact, affect, make an impression
(The hail impinged the roof, leaving
large dents.)
- 2. (v.)
to encroach, infringe (I apologize
for impinging upon you like this, but I really need
to use your bathroom. Now.)
- implacable
- (adj.)
incapable of being appeased or mitigated
(Watch out: once you shun Grandma’s cooking, she is totally implacable.)
- implement
- 1.
(n.) an instrument, utensil, tool
(Do you have a knife or some other sort of implement that
I could use to pry the lid off of this jar?)
-
2. (v.) to put into effect,
to institute (After the first town curfew
failed to stop the graffiti problem, the mayor implemented a
new policy to use security cameras to catch perpetrators in the
act.)
- implicate
- (v.)
to involve in an incriminating way, incriminate
(Even though Tom wasn’t present at the time of the shooting,
he was implicated by the evidence suggesting
that he had supplied the shooters with guns.)
- implicit
- (adj.)
understood but not outwardly obvious, implied
(I know Professor Smith didn’t actually say not to write
from personal experience, but I think such a message was implicit in her
instruction to use scholarly sources.)
- impregnable
- (adj.)
resistant to capture or penetration (Though
the invaders used battering rams, catapults, and rain dances, the
fortress proved impregnable and resisted
all attacks.)
- impudent
- (adj.)
casually rude, insolent, impertinent
(The impudent young man looked the princess
up and down and told her she was hot even though she hadn’t asked
him.)
- impute
- (v.)
to ascribe, blame (The CEO imputed the
many typos in the letter to his lazy secretary.)
- inane
- (adj.)
silly and meaningless (Some films
are so inane that the psychology of the characters makes
absolutely no sense.)
- inarticulate
- (adj.)
incapable of expressing oneself clearly through speech
(Though he spoke for over an hour, the lecturer was completely inarticulate and
the students had no idea what he was talking about.)
- incarnate
- 1.
(adj.) existing in the flesh, embodied
(In the church pageant, I play the role of greed incarnate.)
- 2. (v.) to give human
form to (The alien evaded detection by incarnating himself in
a human form.)
- incendiary
- 1.
(n.) a person who agitates
(If we catch the incendiary who
screamed “bomb” in the middle of the soccer match, we’re going to
put him in jail.)
- 2. (adj.)
inflammatory, causing combustion (Gas
and lighter fluid are incendiary materials
that should be kept out of hot storage areas.)
- incessant
- (adj.)
unending (We wanted to go outside
and play, but the incessant rain kept us indoors
for two days.)
- inchoate
- (adj.)
unformed or formless, in a beginning stage
(The country’s government is still inchoate and,
because it has no great tradition, quite unstable.)
- incisive
- (adj.)
clear, sharp, direct (The discussion
wasn’t going anywhere until her incisive comment
allowed everyone to see what the true issues were.)
- inclination
- (n.)
a tendency, propensity (Sarah
has an inclination to see every foreign film
she hears about, even when she’s sure that she won’t like it.)
- incontrovertible
- (adj.)
indisputable (Only stubborn Tina
would attempt to disprove the incontrovertible laws
of physics.)
- incorrigible
- (adj.)
incapable of correction, delinquent (You
can buy Grandma nicotine gum all you want, but I think that after
sixty-five years of smoking she’s incorrigible.)
- increment
- (n.)
an enlargement; the process of increasing
(The workmen made the wall longer, increment by
increment.)
- incumbent
- 1.
(n.) one who holds an office
(The incumbent senator is already
serving his fifth term.)
- 2.
(adj.) obligatory (It
is incumbent upon this organization to offer
aid to all who seek it.)
- indefatigable
- (adj.)
incapable of defeat, failure, decay (Even
after traveling 62 miles, the indefatigable runner
kept on moving.)
- indigenous
- (adj.)
originating in a region (Some
fear that these plants, which are not indigenous to the
region, may choke out the vegetation that is native to the area.)
- indigent
- (adj.)
very poor, impoverished (I would
rather donate money to help the indigent population
than to the park sculpture fund.)
- indignation
- (n.)
anger sparked by something unjust or unfair
(I resigned from the sorority because of my indignation at
its hazing of new members.)
- indolent
- (adj.)
lazy (Why should my indolent children,
who can’t even pick themselves up off the couch to pour their own
juice, be rewarded with a trip to the mall?)
- indomitable
- (adj.)
not capable of being conquered (To
be honest, Jim, my indomitable nature means
I could never take orders from anyone, and especially not from a
jerk like you.)
- induce
- (v.)
to bring about, stimulate (Who
knew that our decision to boycott school lunch would induce a
huge riot?)
- ineffable
- (adj.)
unspeakable, incapable of being expressed through words
(It is said that the experience of playing with a dolphin
is ineffable and can only be understood through
direct encounter.)
- inept
- (adj.)
not suitable or capable, unqualified
(She proved how inept she was when
she forgot three orders and spilled a beer in a customer’s lap.)
- inexorable
- (adj.)
incapable of being persuaded or placated
(Although I begged for hours, Mom was inexorable and
refused to let me stay out all night after the prom.)
- inextricable
- (adj.)
hopelessly tangled or entangled (Unless
I look at the solution manual, I have no way of solving this inextricable problem.)
- infamy
- (n.)
notoriety, extreme ill repute (The infamy of
his crime will not lessen as the decades pass.)
- infusion
- (n.)
an injection of one substance into another; the permeation
of one substance by another (The infusion of
Eastern religion into Western philosophy created interesting new schools
of thought.)
- ingenious
- (adj.)
clever, resourceful (Her ingenious use
of walnuts instead of the peanuts called for by the recipe was lauded
by the other garden club members who found her cake delicious.)
- ingenuous
- (adj.)
not devious; innocent and candid (He
must have writers, but his speeches seem so ingenuous it’s
hard to believe he’s not speaking from his own heart.)
- inhibit
- (v.)
to prevent, restrain, stop (When
I told you I needed the car last night, I certainly never meant
to inhibit you from going out.)
- inimical
- (adj.)
hostile, enemylike (I don’t see
how I could ever work for a company that was so cold and inimical to
me during my interviews.)
- iniquity
- (n.)
wickedness or sin (“Your iniquity<
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