SAT Vocabulary I
exorcised [The owners of the old castle have exorcised the demons supposed to have been haunting it.]
Freed from evil spirits by chanted words or other rites
prevaricator [Truth means nothing to the prevaricator as long as he gets what he wants]
One who evades the truth; a liar
trajectory [Artillery is directed by determining the trajectory of each shell fired.]
The arc which marks the path of an object that is hurled or fired but not otherwise propelled or guided
subterfuge [He wouldn't admit he was unprepared and used a subterfuge to get out of the competition.]
a baffling or devious method for avoiding difficulty or unpleasantness
pulsation [The pulsation of the artery was very apparent.]
a beat or throb; rhythmic vibration
conflagration [No one knows who set the blaze but the conflagration destroyed the building.]
a raging fire
deviation [Any deviation from the original plans will involve great expense.]
a turning away or departure from; a divergence
coalition [No one party could gain majority, so a coalition government was formed from two parties.]
a union or joining together; a temporary alliance
pittance [The admission price to the entertainment was a mere pittance.]
a very small amount; a barely sufficient portion or allowance
ablution [He had to perform his daily ablution in cold water this morning.]
a washing or cleansing
nonplussed [We were nonplussed by his actions because we had never seen him behave that way before.]
baffled; confused; puzzled
lithe [The lithe body of the acrobat swung from ring to ring.]
bending easily and gracefully; supple; flexible limber
sinuous [The weary travelers followed the sinuous path of the river although they feared that they were lost.]
bending in and out; undulating; winding
placid [The placid scene had a calming effect upon his jangled nerves.]
calm; serene; peaceful
feasible [I am inclined to accept your record of experience as feasible. With those talents you can do the job, but it's not feasible for me.]
capable of being accomplished; practicable; workable; likely; probable
circumspect [He was always circumspect before making a decision.]
cautiously attentive to everything; watchful against error or impropriety; wary; (literally: looking around)
metamorphosis [The caterpillar undergoes a metamorphosis to become a butterfly.]
change in structure or form; transformation of characteristics, circumstances, etc.
enunciation [Enunciation is a very important quality in public speaking. She gave an enunciation of her political position.]
clear pronunciation; articulation; a declaration
limpid [We could easily see the bottom through the limpid water.]
clear; transparent
orthodox [He questions most orthodox opinions until he finds personal reasons to accept them.]
conforming with usual and generally accepted beliefs or doctrines; conventional; proper
castigated [All of the students were castigated by the headmaster for their improper behavior.]
criticized severely; punished verbally; chastised or rebuked strongly
truncated [When you truncated the paragraph you left out important details.]
cut off; shortened
aridity [The aridity of the soil prevented the development of the crops.]
dryness; barrenness; the state of being dull, without interest
torpor [A hot summer day and a dull speech can equally produce torpor in me.]
dullness; sluggishness; apathy; stupor
respectively [The landscape, the seascape, and the portrait were labeled one, two, and three respectively.]
each in order as named; as relating to each other
corroded [The acid was so strong that it corroded any metal it touched.]
eaten into; destroyed gradually - as by a chemical process; impaired in strength, character, etc.
primeval [One wonders what the earth was like in the primeval period.]
from the first age; primitive; prehistoric
herbivorous [Cows are herbivorous animals.]
grass eating; living on plants
equivocal [He gave an equivocal reply to the question to avoid answering directly.]
having a double meaning; ambiguous; uncertain
astute [She could see through our excuses and was too astute to be deceived by them.]
having keen insight and good judgment in practical matters; shrewdly competent; perspicacious
chaotic [The chaotic condition of his room shows how careless he is.]
in a state of chaos; extremely mixed up; very confused or disorderly
cadaverous [After the ordeal he had a cadaverous look, but he was still alive.]
like a corpse; ghastly
bovine [His bulk and his slowness made him seem bovine.]
like a cow or ox; stolid; slow; patient; dull
barrister [If you're going to sue somebody, you need to hire a barrister.]
loosely - an attorney or lawyer (in England, a lawyer who pleads cases in courts .....a solicitor advises and prepares cases.0
amnesia [Amnesia victim suddenly remembered her name.]
loss of memory
impalpable [As she glided through the room she seemed as impalpable as a dream.]
not able to be felt; not able to be perceived easily
inimitable [Many writers have tried to copy him, but his style is inimitable.]
not able to be imitated; unequaled; unparalleled; unique
emolument [The work was difficult, but the emolument was small.]
payment; salary; remuneration
germane [Omit what is not germane to the discussion.]
pertinent or fitting to the issue; relevant
petulant [She is so petulant about losing that no one wants to play with her.]
pettily or childishly peevish; irritable; fretful; obstinate; impatient
prolific [My bookshelves are full of the works of this prolific writer.]
producing a great deal; reproducing rapidly
sacrilege [Burning the church was vandalism but using it first for a dance hall was sacrilege.]
profanatory or irreverent treatment of holy things; desecration
volatile [He has such a volatile personality that one never knows what kind of mood he will be in.]
quickly evaporating; unstable; quickly changeable; influenced easily; fickle
iridescent [The northern lights put on a display of iridescent beauty.]
showing a play of colors like that of a rainbow
solicitous [In trying to answer the questions the boy was annoyed by the solicitous prompting of his mother.]
showing concern, careful attention or protectiveness; eagerly desirous, willing
extemporary [After receiving the unexpected award he gave a short, extemporary speech.]
spoken or performed without prior practice or memorization; "off the top of one's head"; extemporaneous
pendent [Our suggestions are still pendent; it seems that they will never be acted upon.]
suspended from above; hanging; in suspense; undecided
transcend [The pleasure of accomplishment transcends that of the work to achieve it.]
the go beyond or rise above in degree or excellence; to favorably exceed a limitation
intelligentsia [He had so little education that he felt uncomfortable among the intelligentsia.]
the highly educated and cultured
jargon [A lawyer probably would not understand all the jargon of doctors.]
the language or vocabulary of a particular group, profession, trade, etc.
estuary [The boat race was not on the open sea nor upriver, but in the estuary.]
the wide mouth of a river where it merges with an ocean or sea
teem [The pages of the book seemed to teem with new ideas.]
to be overflowing; to abound with; to be full of
deign She is so arrogant now that she will not deign to speak to her former friends.]
to consider fitting to oneself; to lower oneself to another's level; to condescend
impinge [I will not permit him to impinge upon my rights.]
to infringe or encroach upon
entail [Success will usually entail a great amount of work.]
to involve necessarily; to require as a part of
relegate [The poor relations were relegated to a back seat during the wedding ceremony.]
to put back or consign to an inferior condition; to banish; to pass for decision
emit [The geysers emit boiling water several times a day.]
to put out or give off light, heat, sound, etc.; to utter sounds, expression, etc.
pervade [The sweet odor of the roses seemed to pervade the whole house.]
to spread throughout; to permeate
incredulity [We listened to his story with incredulity, but he finally convinced us that it was true.]
unwillingness to believe; disbelief; skepticism
probity [Because of his probity the man was entrusted with a responsible position.]
uprightness; reliability; integrity; strict honesty
acquiesced [After much arguing he finally acquiesced to his parent's demands.]
yielded; gave in; assented
deferential [When your ideas are not like mine, I can be deferential for the sake of harmony.]
yielding or deferring to the wishes, ideas, etc. of another; respectful; courteous
gyration [The gyrationof the ballerina made me dizzy]
A revolving action around an axis; a whirling or spinning motion
dromedary [The dromedary can travel swiftly across the desert.]
Arabian or one-humped camel
subservient [His wife criticized him for acting in such a subservient manner toward his employer.]
In inferior capacity; acting as a servant to; submissive; servile
pariah [He does not seem to have any friends; in fact, he seems to be a pariah among his fellow students.]
One who is rejected or shunned by nearly everybody; an outcast from society
absolution [Good friends make us feel absolution for our human faults.]
The forgiving of sin; a freeing from guilt and penalty; forgiveness
onomatopoeia [The words pop, buzz, and tinkle are all examples of onomatopoeia.
The formation and use of words that imitate the sounds associated with meaning; such a word
etymology [A course in etymology will help you to increase your vocabulary]
The study of word origins, development and changes in accepted meaning; such a history of a word
subversive [The FBI devotes particular attention to groups that seem subversive.]
Undermining and destructive or corruptive; a person who so acts
tyro [She is an experienced, professional actress but her understudy is a tyro.]
a beginner or learner; a novice; an amateur
advent [The advent of nuclear power occurred at the end of World War II.]
a beginning or coming into being; a first appearance or arrival of significance
ligature [A loose ligature won't stop bleeding and fancy ligature may impede your reading.]
a binding or a bond; the sign for letters or musical notes to be tied together; a grouping of such notes or letters; to fasten with a ligature
colander [The cook used a colander to strain the vegetables.]
a bowl-shaped sieve with handles; a strainer
eruption [With two such hotheads holding opposite views, an eruption was inevitable.]
a bursting forth or out, as of lava from a volcano; a sudden outburse, as of emotion or social discontent; a breaking out in a rash; a rash
harbinger [The robin is a traditional harbinger of spring.]
a carrier or indicator of the future; a forerunner; a presager
affront [His brazen, slurring remarks were an affront to the president's dignity.]
a challenging insult; an insolent confrontation; to offend by such
aberration [His misconduct is certainly an aberration; he is usually well behaved.]
a change or departure from the usual, normal, prescribed, etc.; a disorder of the mind
category [We have two kinds of questions here that should be grouped in separate categories.]
a class; a classification; a division
anthology [He has an anthology of Frost's poems.]
a collection of literary works
welter [The escaping prisoner was caught in a welter of violence, and then was made to welter in the sweat of close confinement.]
a commotion of confused action; a tumultuous tumbling; to surge and tumble; to wallow in; to be uncomfortably immersed in
coercion [The employers were charged with coercion in attempting to get the workers to accept their terms.]
a compelling or forcing; forced restraint or constraint; control or government by force
imbroglio [An imbroglio developed among the representatives of the nations because of an error in translation.]
a complicated disagreement; a misunderstanding with serious consequences
compendium [He published a compendium of all of Shakespeare's plays
a comprehensive and concise summary
impasse [The discussion reached an impasse when the question of dividing the property came up.]
a condition or situation that stops progress, accomplishment or escape; a blockage, stalemate or deadlock
fissure [A large fissure appeared in the hillside after the earthquake.]
a crack, crevice or narrow opening
shibboleth [Showing special respect to elders is an Oriental shibboleth. If you don't know the new shibboleth, you can't get past our guard.]
a custom or phrase distinctive of a particular group, class, etc.; a password or watchword
rebate [She had expected the usual discount but this generous rebate astonished her.]
a deduction or discount; a return of part of the amount paid; to allow such
aspersion [The witness cast aspersion on the good name of the defendant.]
a discrediting, disrespectful or injurious remark or report; a slandering; calumny; defamation
blight [A blight destroyed the farmer's corn crop. Her uncooperativeness will blight our plans for success.]
a disease which destroys plants; anything destructive of growth, hopes, character, etc.; to cause such effects
aura [Saints and hardened criminals each have their distinctive auras of good or evil.]
a distinctive and characterizing quality or atmosphere surrounding something or someone
lineament [The graceful lineaments of her face attracted the artist.]
a distinctive facial contour or feature; a marked or distinguishing characteristic
schism [Once we had a solid organization, but now a schism has occurred.]
a division or separation of a group into opposing or differing groups; a rift
motif [The hero's riding off into the sunset is a familiar motif in western movies.]
a dominant, recurrent, and characterizing theme, pattern, or feature
declivity [If my brakes fail on this declivity, we will roll down into the lake.]
a downward slope
pewter [The pewter dish didn't shine like the silver tray on which it sat.]
a dull silver-colored metal used for making dishes, pans, etc.
calumny [If we believed your opponent's calumny we would not trust you as we do.]
a false and injurious accusation or statement; slander; defamation
vantage [From my place of vantage, I could observe and understand all that was going on.]
a favorable or advantageous position; a condition permitting clear understanding, advantage or superiority
antipathy [His antipathy for our cause was demonstrated by his working against us. Because she opposed our principles so rudely, she was the antipathy of our group.]
a feeling of aversion or strong dislike; the opposite of sympathy; the object of such feeling
metaphor [In a famous metaphor, Shakespeare compares "all the world" to a stage.]
a figure of speech calling one thing something else to imply likeness (without using "like," "as," etc., which creates a simile)
simile [In Burns's famous simile, he describes his love as "like a red, red rose.']
a figure of speech likening one thing to another using "as," "like," etc.
confluence [There was a confluence of ideas at our conference. The water is rough at the confluence of rivers.].
a flowing together; a merging; the place or instance of merging
torque [An amazing amount of torque was required to drive in those screws.]
a force that rotates and twists or wrenches
crustacean [Lobsters and shrimps are crustacean.]
a form of marine life having a crust-like shell
panacea [The committee's suggestion was only a panacea: it did nothing to solve the real problem.]
a glib or facetious remedy for anything and everything; a supposed universal cure; a cure-all
regression [Fortunately, the disease is in regression, and the patient should recover completely.]
a going back; a withdrawing or returning; (opposite of progression)
arabesque [The table covering contained an attractive arabesque design.]
a gracefully elaborate design with interwoven lines; such a form in ballet or music
ruddy [His ruddy complexion suggested that he had been exercising recently.]
a healthy reddish color
parody [Everybody except the headmaster laughed at the student's parody of his lecture.]
a humorous and ridiculing imitation; a farce; a poor imitation; to act in such a manner
paean [On Easter morning the stirring paean could be heard even outside the cathedral.]
a hymn or song of joy, triumph or praise
amazon [She has the physique of an amazon but the voice of a small child.]
a large and athletic or strong woman; a woman with masculine characteristics; a woman warrior
treatise [He wrote a learned treatise on the science of government.]
a long and formal written work on a non-fictional subject
virago [Rip Van Winkle's wife was a virago from whom any man would try to escape.]
a loud-mouthed, bad-tempered, overbearing woman
winch [It took two men to crank the winch and lift the stone from the quarry.]
a machine with a cylinder which, when revolved, winds rope or cable about it to hoist attached objects; to hoist with such
mausoleum [The coffin was placed in the mausoleum after the ceremony.]
a magnificent tomb
tenet [Every religion has its tenets which members are supposed to believe and support.]
a major belief or idea; a recognized principle; a dogma
felony [He was found guilty of a felony and sent to the penitentiary.]
a major crime
morass [This sticky problem is as much a morass as Farmer Jones' swamp.]
a marsh or bog; a difficult place or situation to get out of
virtuoso [His complete command of the piano proved him to be a virtuoso.]
a master of a particular art, skill or technique; an expert
megalomania [The senator is so obsessed with power that he must suffer from megalomania.]
a mental disorder causing delusions of grandeur or power; a tendency to grossly exaggerate
potpourri [Her book is a potpourri of poems, essays and witticisms on at least fifty different subjects.]
a mixture of various things or subjects
bimetallism [The worth of goods and services in that country is based on bimetallism.]
a monetary standard based on fixed, related values of two metals, usually gold and silver
impetus [He lacked the impetus to start the project.]
a moving or stimulating force; a stimulus to action; motivation
propensity [She has a propensity for quiet study and reading, but she must force herself to exercise.]
a natural tendency, disposition or inclination
obituary [He reads the obituary column every day to see if anyone he knows has died.]
a newspaper account of a death, usually including biographical information
sinecure [The vice president has no sinecure, for she does a lot of important work.]
a paid position that requires little or no work or responsibility
component [We cannot construct the model until we have received all its components. This component gear helps make the machine operate.]
a part or element of a whole; serving as such a part
millennium [In the days of prosperity mankind thinks the millennium has arrived.]
a period of 1,000 years; any long period of wellbeing; the thousand-year period after the second coming of Christ
tenure [During the past headmaster's tenure many changes were effected.]
a period of time during which something is held or kept; the right or the act of possessing
epoch [The atomic bomb is an epoch-making discovery.]
a period or point in time marked by noteworthy developments, events or circumstances
anathema [Because of his opposition to the Archbishop's edict, the King was declared anathema.]
a person or thing greatly detested, cursed or damned; a person excommunicated; a curse
anesthetist [Toward the end of the operation the anesthetist substituted ether for gas.]
a person trained to administer anesthetics 麻醉師
idiosyncracy [His idiosyncracy in dress made him stand out in any group with ordinary tastes.]
a personal peculiarity, habit or mannerism; an eccentricity
peccadillo [This is the first time you have been late for work, so this time I will ignore the peccadillo.]
a petty fault; a minor offense
dermatologist [If you get very badly sunburned, see a dermatologist.]
a physician who specializes in skin diseases
labyrinth [It was fun to watch him try to find his way out of the labyrinth.]
a place full of intricate passageways; a complex and confusing situation or idea
machination [The machinations of unprincipled office seekers have cast an unfavorable light on upright politicians.]
a plot or scheme to do harm; such thinking or doing
bard [Shakespeare is called the immortal bard.]
a poet
predilection [She has a predilectionfor outdoor sports and is not interested in the debating team.]
a preference; a liking for; a leaning towards; a favorable bias
bias [He showed a definite bias toward one party.]
a prejudice; a preference; a tendency; a diagonal line stitched or cut in cloth
warder [The warder of the jail was most exact in the performance of his duty.]
a prison official; a keeper or guard
exigency [Your problem is not urgent; it can wait until I attend to these exigencies.]
a problem or situation requiring immediate attention; a state of urgency
decadence [In a period of decadence, high ideals are scoffed at.}
a process, condition or time of cultural or moral decline; deterioration; decay
ruction [A simple disagreement soon degenerated into a ruction.]
a quarrel; a disturbance; an uproar; a riot
travesty [There was so much evidence of guilt that the verdict seemed a travesty of justice.]
a ridiculous, absurd or grotesque imitation
tether [The cowboy tethered his horse to the rail and went into the saloon for a drink.]
a rope, chain, etc., used to restrict movement; to tie up or confine with such an object
monograph [The professor published a monograph on the working habits of bees.]
a scholarly or formal writing on a single subject
shrew [She is such a shrew that her husband simply let her.]
a scolding, brawling woman
archipelago [Can you locate the Greek archipelago on the map?]
a sea with many islands; such a group of islands
condiment [Without condiments, some foods are not very savory.]
a seasoning or relish for food, such as pepper, mustard, sauces, etc.
cloister [Many students at boarding schools feel that they live in a cloister.]
a secluded or isolated place; a monastery or convent; a roofed walkway within a courtyard; to shut off from the world; to seclude or sequester
inhibition [She will never do it because her inhibition outweighs her desire.]
a self imposed inner restraint; that which blocks or restrains; a restraining or inhibiting
trilogy [She has published two books about her hometown, and is working on the final one in her trilogy.]
a series of three literary or dramatic works related by a common subject or theme
dogma [Although he is not an atheist, he cannot accept the dogma of any particular religious group.]
a set of specific ideas or beliefs; a doctrine
repercussion [The repercussion of your doing that will be very serious indeed; you may even go to jail.]
a severe indirect or delayed reaction; aftereffect; reverberation; echo
epigram [He characterized the tone of the whole story with one amusing and appropriate epigram.]
a short, pithy, witty expression
buffet [Suddenly the wind buffeted the little ship and scattered the buffet dinner.]
a sideboard; a meal set out on a sideboard rather than on a table; to knock about, push or force roughly
modicum [Everyone expects at least a modicum of praise for his accomplishment.]
a small quantity or portion
postern [The front doors are blocked, so you'll have to use a postern entrance.]
a small rear gate or door; at the rear
hamlet [He was born in a hamlet, many miles from the nearest city.]
a small village
scalpel [A surgeon must be expert with the scalpel.]
a small, light, straight knife with a very sharp blade, used in surgery and in anatomical dissections
emollient [Cold cream is an emollient for chapped hands.]
a softener; a soothing cream; relaxing; soothing; softening
hiatus [His historical composition was marred by a hiatus between two important dates.]
a space or gap where something is missing; an interruption in activity or progress
dispersion [A teacher's function is more than just the dispersion of information.]
a spreading or scattering or separating
criterion [Respect is an obvious criterion for leadership.]
a standard for judging; a recognized requirement; a model or essential measure
reverie [In her reverie, she appeared not to see me and did not respond to my question.]
a state of daydreaming, being lost in thought or musing; a daydream
stupor [He was suddenly aroused from his stupor and continued his conversation exactly where he had left off.]
a state of unawareness; intellectual or moral dullness or lack of feeling; a daze
platitude [The speaker's platitudes about the meaning of life soon bored us.]
a statement that is commonplace, dull, insipid or trite; a common and self evident truth
allegory [The conflict between good and evil is frequently treated in allegory.]
a story or play in which characters and events portray moral principles and abstract truths.
apparition [He swears that he saw an apparition near the cemetary last night.]
a strange or startling visual phenomenon; a ghost or phantom
swath [The attackers cut a swath through our army like a mower in a wheat field.]
a strip or path cleanly cut or mowed
virus [A virus is harder to identify than a living germ - and either one can make you sick.]
a submicroscopic agent or substance which causes and transmits disease; any bad or corrupting influence
minion [Until Lancelot betrayed Arthur, he was the king's minion.]
a submissive dependent or favorite; an official subordinate to another
debacle [What would have been a mere defeat turned into a debacle.]
a sudden and utter breakdown; an overwhelming and ruinous turn of events; a rout; a calamity
paroxysm [As he began to speak he was afflicted with a paroxysm of coughing.]
a sudden and violent physical or emotional outburst; a spasm; a convulsion; a fit
buttress [The walls of the cathedral were reinforced by buttresses.]
a support or prop for a wall, etc.; to prop up or bolster
aureole [On misty nights the moon is surrounded by an aureole.]
a surrounding radiance or fringe of light; a halo
oscillation [Her oscillation between the two choices was like the oscillation of a pendulum.]
a swinging back and forth; indecision or wavering
mnemonics [The rhyme about days in the month ("Thirty days hath September...") and naming music notes ("Every good boy does fine.") ar forms of mnemonics.]
a system for memory improvement; devices fro aiding memory
galaxy [A galaxy of movie stars appeared in one picture.]
a system of celestial bodies; a group of notable people
pedagogue [We can learn much from pedagogue if we ignore his fussiness about trivial things.]
a teacher; a pedantic scholar
aphorism [A minister may often use an aphorism to summarize the essence of his sermon.]
a terse saying embodying truth; an adage; a maxim.
filament [Several filaments from the cloth were found on the floor.]
a thin, threadlike object
conduit [The law requires all electric wires be placed in a conduit.]
a tube, pipe, channel, etc. through which something passes
capillary [Although there was some bleeding, only a capillary had been damaged and not an artery or vein.]
a very small and slender tube; a tiny blood vessel
shuffle [We could detect the sound of his peculiar shuffle all the way down the hall.]
a walk characterized by scraping or sliding of the feet; to walk in such manner
undulation [The old roof was full of undulations, sagging and bulging like a tin ocean.]
a wave-like rising and falling or bending; a wave
alabaster [The precious ointment was placed in an alabaster jar.]
a whitish, translucent, workable mineral (gypsum or calcite).
euphemism ["Passed away" is a euphemism for "died"]
a word or expression used to avoid the bluntness or offensiveness of one that is more accurate; the use of such words or expressions
corrigible [In spite of his bad reputation, he proved to be a very corrigible boy.]
able to be corrected; willing to improve
tenable [We have enough facts to make our theory tenable.]
able to be maintained or held; defendable
conversant [He knows very little about mathematics but he is conversant in many other fields of study.]
able to discuss meaningfully; well acquainted; knowledgeable; familiar; informed
imminent [When he realized that defeat was imminent, he surrendered.]
about to happen; threatening to occur; impending
plenitude [He received the plenitude of power with his new appointment.]
abundance; fullness; plentiness; completeness
copious [They studied together, using his few scribblings and her copious class notes.]
abundant; profuse
diatribe [The senator's diatribe against his opponent was unfair and also untrue.]
abusive speech; harsh denunciation
propitious [On this propitious occasion, we honor our successful athletes, confident that they will keep on winning.]
accompanied by favorable circumstances and implications; auspicious
emancipation [Lincoln proclaimed the emancipation of all slaves.]
act of setting fee; a state of freedom; liberation
ascribed [Several plays ascribed to Shakespeare may not actually have been written by him.]
alleged to come from or belong to; attributed to; assigned to
translucent [Through the translucent glass we could distinguish only the outlines of people in the next room.]
allowing light to pass through but obscuring clear vision
diaphanous [She selected diaphanous material for the curtains.]
allowing light to show through; transparent or transluscent
paltry [The congregation was not generous and the Sunday offering was paltry.]
almost worthless; trifling; petty; insignificant
interstellar [The astronomer is interested in interstellar space.]
among the stars; between the stars
precedent [The proposal was voted down because it would have set an undesirable precedent.]
an action that may justify or serve as a standard for future ones; a guiding principle; preceding; former
hallmark [Our school's hallmark is the high grade average of all students, year after year.]
an actual mark on objects or a characteristic indicating high quality, excellence or genuineness
mummery [The student play was a mummery of school traditions and in very bad taste.]
an affected, pretentious or hypocritical performance; a performance using action and gestures but no dialogue; a pantomime
altercation [An altercation broke out in the parking lot over an insult.]
an angry dispute; a heated argument - often leading to a fistfight
invocation [The chaplain pronounced the invocation at the beginning of the program.]
an appeal or calling upon for help or inspiration; an opening prayer for a ceremonious occasion
stipple [The light and shadow effect in the drawing was produced entirely by stippling.]
an arrangement of dots or speckles; to use or produce an area or pattern of such
defamation [He was an upstanding citizen, but defamation by his opponent ruined his chances of election.]
an attack on good reputation; malicious and harmful talk; aspersion; calumny; slander
edict [When the mayor issues an edict, all citizens should respect it and comply with it.]
an authoritative order issued publicly; a decree
ordinance [A city ordinance forbids parking on this street.]
an authoritative rule or regulation; a statute or law of a town or city
canon [Every large organization has its canons which describe its reasons for existence.]
an established rule, law, principle or criterion; a religious law or laws; a list or catalog of rules or books; a choral work featuring many overlapping voices
soiree [The soiree at the fraternity house was the outstanding social function of the year.]
an evening party or celebration
malediction [She didn't realize how much he hated her until she heard his shocking malediction.]
an evil and damaging statement; a curse; calumny; slander; such speaking or writing; (opposite of benediction).
prerogative [The professor, and not the student, has the prerogative of deciding when the test will be given.]
an exclusive right or privilege, particularly of some specific group, class, position or rank
connoisseur [He was a connoisseur of wine.]
an expert in distinguishing and judging values, especially in fine arts, fine foods, wines, etc.
effigy [An effigy of the president was hanged in the town square.]
an image or statue; a figure made to represent someone who is disliked
increment [If I do not receive an increment to my salary, I shall have to find another job.]
an increase or addition; the amount of income
concordance [Use a concordance to locate and learn about ancient cities in the Bible.]
an index of the significant words and the phrases containing them in a book; agreement; concord
sycophant [The king was followed by his usual retinue of sycophants, each hoping to be shown some favoritism.]
an insincere flatterer; someone who attempts to curry favor; a parasite
avocation [The doctor's avocation was collecting stamps.]
an interest or casual occupation in addition to one's vocation; a hobby; a diversion
adage [Adages often sound simple but have deep meaning when you think about them.]
an old saying of instructive value; a proverb
facade [She actually hates to see us and the happiness she shows is only a facade.]
an outwardly favorable appearance concealing the truth or something inferior; a false front; the face of a building
cliché [I suppose it is a cliché to say that I felt exactly as you do when I was your age.]
an overused expression; a trite or hackneyed saying; anything overused or overly familiar
animadversion [He was less concerned over the animadversions of his colleagues than over the jokes they made about his plan.]
an unfavorable remark; adverse criticism; blame
allegation [The governor denied the allegation that he had accepted bribes.]
an unproven accusation, assertion or charge of guilt
seraphic [The seraphic countenances of the little children caused him great joy.]
angelic; heavenly
abrogated [The rule was abrogated by the committee after it was clear that it would not be effective.]
annulled; repealed; abolished; cancelled
nectar [He called the wine the nectar of the gods.]
any very pleasant-tasting drink; the drink of the gods in mythology; plant secretion used by bees to make honey.
incubus [Her grades have been poorer lately and her incubus is fear of failure.]
anything greatly oppressive or discouraging; a mental burden; a nightmare; a mythological, night-visiting evil spirit
cincture [The monk used a simple piece of rope as a cincture for his robe.]
anything that encircles; a belt or sash; to encircle with such an object
vesture [The bishop could be clearly distinguished by his vesture.]
apparel; clothes; (an archaic word not often in current use).
specious [We really wanted to believe him but his reasoning was found to be specious.]
apparently but not actually just, sound, correct, etc.; suspect; deceiving
propitiated [The ancients propitiated the gods with human sacrifice.]
appeased; satisfied; gained favor; favorably disposed
polemical [A polemical discussion is not likely to change anybody's mind.]
argumentative; controversial; disputatious; formally debatable; an argument or controversy; (polemic is used interchangeably)
invidious [His invidious proposal set one faction against the other and made everybody detest him.]
arousing dislike or ill will; offensive because of discrimination
lascivious [Modest people in love avoid lascivious displays in public.]
arousing sensual desires; lustful; lewd
erotic [Some authors just infer sexual activity, while others use erotic descriptions.]
arousing sexual feelings; related to sexual arousal
panoramic [You can get a panoramic view of the whole campus from this tower. Your panoramic book leaves out no detail of your subject.]
as seen or viewable from all directions; comprehensive as in review or coverage
postulated [His conclusions may be sound but they ar postulated upon unproven theories.]
assumed or claimed as true or self-evident; taken for granted
comely [Not only is she a particularly comely girl, but she also has a delightful personality.]
attractive or pleasing in person; pretty; handsome; fair
mandatory [It is mandatory that we go to this meeting, so we should better do it.]
authoritatively required; obligatory
ostracized [He was ostracized by polite society because of his scandalous behavior]
banished; excluded; shut out
empirical [We need empirical evidence to judge this matter, not assumptions.]
based on observation or direct experience only and not on theory, speculation, hearsay, etc.
hypothetical [She has a long time yet to study, so her prediction of failure is merely hypothetical.]
based only on theory or supposition; assumed but not proved
obsolescent [Let's replace the obsolescent word processor before it becomes completely outdated and useless.]
becoming obsolete; growing useless, becoming unused, going out of fashion
mendicants [The mendicants lined the path of the king, hoping for handouts.]
beggars
Incipience [The riot was stopped in its incipience by the quick action of the police.]
beginning; first stage; inception
credible [Sometimes we doubt his wild stories, but this one contains facts to make it credible.]
believable; trustworthy; reliable
truculent [Don't offend that truculent person or you may get physically hurt. Her truculent remarks made everybody feel insulted.]
belligerent; fierce; hostile; ferocious; cruel; harsh; scathing
salubrious [The salubrious climate helped him to regain his strength.]
beneficial; healthful
exorbitant [That is an exorbitant price to ask for that object.]
beyond reasonable limits; excessive
irreparable [Her accusations caused irreparable damage to his reputation.]
beyond repair or correction; not capable of being remedied or made whole
sardonic [He never praises anything we do but is always sardonic about our efforts.]
bitterly scornful; mocking; cynical; derisive
consanguinity [Not even the ties of friendship are as strong as those of consanguinity.]
blood relationship
ramifications [He had not considered the many ramifications of his simple refusal to abide by the rules.]
branches; offshoots; subdivisions; results or consequences
respite [We worked in the fields for hours without respite.]
brief and temporary relief; rest; postponement
roseate [His remarks on present conditions were indicative of a roseate future.]
bright; optimistic; promising; rose-colored; rosy
adduced [The jury had to decide whether the claims he adduced were true or false.]
brought out or offered for consideration or proof; alleged
corpulent [I have become rather corpulent because I do not exercise as much as I used to.]
bulky; fat
onerous [The research assignment was not merely difficult, but onerous to the young students.]
burdensome; oppressive
venal [The gangsters counted on the venal politician to vote as he was paid to.]
capable of being bought or bribed; mercenary; corrupt
ductile [Wire is made from ductile metal.]
capable of being drawn thin or worked with without breaking
perceptible [His pulse is barely perceptible, but I think he will survive.]
capable of being perceived; noticeable; discernable
compatible [I hope you will get a compatible roommate.]
capable of existing together; easy to get along with; agreeable; congenial
advisement [The manager took the various opinions of the entire staff under advisement.]
careful consideration
descried [The sentry descried enemy troops moving over the top of the hill.]
caught sight of; discerned; spied
dilatory [The reporter was so dilatory in completing his assignment that he missed the deadline.]
causing or characterized by delay; tardy; slow
soporific [The lullaby had a soporific effect upon the baby.]
causing sleepiness; drowsy; sleepy
vitriolic [As he became more angry, his insulting remarks became more vitriolic.]
caustic; bitter; cutting
estranged [They were once an affectionate family, but she and her parents have now been estranged for many years.]
changed from a close and friendly relationship to a distant and hostile one; alienated; separated
garbled [His account of the game was so garbled that we did not know who won.]
changed in such a way as to mislead; mixed up; confused; distorted
commuted [The death sentence was commuted to life in prison.]
changed to something less severe; substituted; travelled frequently between two points
sagacious [He is recognized as the most sagacious of the professors. Let's ask him.]
characteristic of a sage; having good judgment; wise; knowing
capricious [One cannot trust his judgment: he is too capricious.]
characterized by impulsive or whimsical change; unpredictable; erratic
sedentary [He walks to work for exercise because his job is so sedentary.]
characterized by sitting or lack of activity; inactive
tawdry [The tawdry decorations were an embarrassment.]
cheap looking; shoddy; vulgar
sanguine [He has such a sanguine temperament that he always makes me feel better. The cold wind had given him a sanguine complexion.]
cheerful; hopeful; optimistic; of the color of blood; ruddy
puerile [His puerile behavior when he was thwarted was surprising in one who seemed so mature.]
childish; immature; juvenile
articulation [You need to concentrate on articulation when you give your speech before an audience.]
clear and precise pronunciation; enunciation; a joining together of parts
lucid [We never mistake her lucid instructions. He was struck hard on the head but remained lucid.]
clear; shining; distinct; easily understood; mentally alert; rational
habiliments [The faculty appeared at Commencement in full academic habiliments.]
clothing; garb; attire
turbid [After the incident his thoughts were so turbid that he could not decide what to do.]
cloudy; dense; stirred up; in a confused state
nebulous [His explanation was too nebulous for the students to follow.]
cloudy; vague; not clear
cumbersome [The box was not heavy, but it was too cumbersome for one person to carry.]
clumsy or difficult to manage; unwieldy
collated [She collated the pages before she stapled them.]
collected and arranged in order; compared critically
extraneous [Leave extraneous details out of your report and tell me only truly related facts.]
coming from the outside; foreign; not pertinent; irrelevant
innate [An innate sense of duty prompted him to obey the law.]
coming naturally from within; inborn; natural
abortive [The revolution proved to be abortive because the government troops had been alerted.]
coming to nothing; unsuccessful; fruitless
imperious [We will cooperate to meet the imperious requirement without your being so lordly and imperious about it.]
commanding; domineering; arrogant; imperative; urgent
hackneyed [He uses many hackneyed expressions in his writings.]
commonplace; trite; overused
fiasco [The meeting turned out to be a fiasco; no one could agree on anything.]
complete or ridiculous failure
eradicated [The mistake was easily eradicated on the word processor.]
completely erased; wiped out
impervious [He was impervious to all the criticism levied against him.]
completely resistant to penetration; unaffected; unreceptive; immune
myriad [On a clear night we can see myriad stars in the heavens.]
composed of a countless number; innumerable; a vast, countless number
imperative [It is imperative to have work in on time to get a good grade.]
compulsory; absolutely necessary; of greatest importance; a command
pathological [The reseach scientist spent much time in the pathological laboratory seeking a cure for cancer.]
concerned with the study of disease; disease related
succinct [His phone message, although succinct, gave the hospital all significant details.]
concise; brief but meaningful; terse
terse [She wasted no words in her terse answer and we knew exactly what she meant.]
concise; to the point; brief
ethical [Cheating in a competition is not ethical.]
conforming to accepted or prescribed standards of conduct
decorum [The raucous behavior of a few students can upset the decorum of a whole classroom.]
conformity to accepted and appropriate standards and customs; propriety; seemliness
baffled [We became baffled in our progress by unexpected problems. It is less noisy in here since they baffled the air condition.
confused; perplexed; foiled; frustrated; impeded; fixed to control the flow of air, sound, etc.
amenities [Our hosts provided us with many amenities, as well as room and board.]
considerate and courteous acts or expressions; pleasing features or conveniences; civilities
chronic [He found no relief for his chronic ailment.]
continuing for a long time; recurrent
perennial [Good planning must be perennial and not just occasional.]
continuing or existing through the year or for years; unceasing; a plant that lives and blooms for several years.
incessant [That incessant noise will drive me mad.]
continuing with no interruption; never ceasing; continuous
preposterous [Your wild story is so preposterous that it is insulting to expect me to believe it.]
contrary to common sense; absurd; ridiculous
cogent [He presented a cogent reason for not following the crowd.]
convincing to the mind; compelling
connived [No one knew what they were up to while they connived to rob the bank.]
cooperated secretly; plotted; schemed
congruent [It is easy to recognize the congruent themes in the two plays.]
corresponding; matching; coinciding
caustic [His caustic reply made her cry.]
corrosive; destructive; sarcastic; biting
craven [The captain's craven actions on the battlefield were despised by his men.]
cowardly
pusillanimous [A pusillanimous person fears to undertake any action of importance.]
cowardly; weak spirited; timid
choreography [The music for the ballet was superb but the dancers stumbled through the choreography.]
dancing, esp. ballet dancing; the art of devising or the specificatios for ballet dances
jeopardy [You are in jeopardy of losing your scholarship if you do not bring your grades up.]
danger; risk; exposure to harm
duplicity [Honesty and duplicity are impossible companions.]
deception; deceitfulness; double-dealing
depreciation [The depreciation on his car was so great that it was not worth reselling.]
decrease in value as a result of being used, aging, etc.; belittling; disparagement
contrite [Because he was not contrite, the judge gave him the maximum sentence.]
deeply sorry for wrong doing; repentant; penitent
contumacy [Everyone else obeys company rules and if you do not, you can be fired by contumacy.]
defiance of authority; rebelliousness; insubordination
disparaging [We were surprised by her disparaging remarks about her roommate; they seemed to get along so well.]
degrading; depreciating; "cutting down"; belittling
filigree [The filigree border added greatly to the beauty of the cover.]
delicate ornamental work of intertwined wire; anything delicately fanciful and ornamental; to produce such works
delectable [You should be proud of your cooking for every dish you serve is delectable.]
delightful; enjoyable; good-tasting
contingent [Your grade will be contingent upon the rest of your work this semester. A contingent of teachers and students presented their views to the principal.]
dependent upon but uncertain; a group or delegation
nemesis [His failure to notice his opponent's strength proved to be his nemesis.]
deserved punishment or its source; anything or anyone that always seems certain to defeat or frustrate
culpable [Those who encouraged the vandals were considered equally culpable.]
deserving blame or censure; blameworthy
despicable [He was such a despicable character that I refused to work with him.]
deserving to be despised; contemptible; detestable
contemned [Before the Revolution, the French aristocracy contemned the peasants.]
despised; scorned; treated with contempt
adjudicated [Until the case has been adjudicated, the defendant is presumed innocent.]
determined in court; judged
adamant [I pleaded with my father to let me take the car, but he was adamant in his refusal.]
determined; unyielding; uncompromising; immovable
execrable [Such an execrable performance will bring disgrace to the class.]
detestable; revolting; abominable; deserving to be cursed
henchmen [The king had his henchmen do his "dirty work" in order to keep his own name clear.]
devoted and trusted followers, often considered unscrupulous
ponderous [This is such a ponderous book that I shall never finish it.]
difficult to deal with because of size, weight, scope or complexity; heavy; unwieldy; dull and labored
cryptic [None of us knew the meaning of the cryptic message.]
difficult to understand; puzzling; mystifying; secret
squalid [The squalid conditions in the tenement were reported to the city commission.]
dirty; foul; wretched; low class
opprobrium [Even though he was found innocent, he was subjected to bitter opprobrium.]
disagree; shame; reproach
raucous [A raucous voice is anything but pleasing.]
disagreeably harsh and loud; strident
askance [After his improper remark, his father looked at him askance.]
disapprovingly; disdainfully; distrustfully; with a side glance
disheveled [He was so disheveled that he looked as though he had slept in his clothes.]
disarranged; untidy; tousled; rumpled
deprecatory [One should be deprecatory of unethical practices.]
disparaging; belittling; disapproving
derogatory [The teacher's derogatory remarks were resented by the students.]
disparaging; defaming; belittling
explicit [How could she possibly misunderstand such explicit directions?]
distinctly stated; specific; exact
eminent [He may be the most eminent lawyer in town, but he is not the most competent.]
distinguished; renowned; outstanding; prominent; projecting; lofty
grotesque [He appeared at the ball in a grotesque costume.]
distorted; strangely ugly; outlandish; bizarre
reciprocal [The two countries have made a reciprocal trade agreement. Either this part or that will fit just as well: they are reciprocals.]
done or given responsively or in return; affecting both parties; mutual; a counterpart
skeptical {He no longer was skeptical when he saw what they were talking about.]
doubtful; unbelieving
wizened [The wizened old woman frightened the children, who thought she was a witch.]
dried up; shriveled; withered
alacrity [He didn't complain or hesitate, but obeyed with alacrity.]
eager and cheerful willingness or readiness
aborigines [The aborigines were driven from their original habitat by the colonists.]
earliest known inhabitants of a country
supple [Acrobats have supple bodies. He's so supple that he never refuses our requests. She is supple enough to appreciate our viewpoint.]
easily bent; lithe; limber; easily manipulated; pliant; of adaptable mind; compliant
reverberations [The reverberations of the shot were loud and sharp.]
echoes; reboundings; vibrations
rhetoric [Sometimes his speeches made sense but sometimes his rhetoric just sounded convincing.]
effective and convincing use of words, speech that sounds impressive but is rather meaningless
efficacious [He tried very hard, but his efforts were not very efficacious.]
effective; producing results
urbane [Her husband is rather coarse in manner but, in contrast, she is urbane.]
elegant in manner; well bred; refined; polite
vested [By the authority vested in him by law he could grant requests.]
endowed with power or authority; fixed; settled; certain
indued [He had no rights to settle the matter alone, until the committee indued him with them.]
endowed; invested; provided; equipped; (also spelled: endued)
convivial [Our convivial mood was ruined by the bad news.]
enjoying company; sociable; festive
prodigious [The construction of the Panama Canal was a prodigious undertaking which many thought could never be completed.]
enormous; amazing; extraordinary
berserk [He went berserk when he heard the news and had to be restrained by several men,]
enraged to action; frenzied and destructive; violent and out of control
inveigled [He wouldn't respond to an invitation, so we inveigled him into coming to the party.]
enticed or induced by cunning or flattery; coaxed with insincerity; cajoled
gamut [He ran the gamut of crime before he was caught.]
entire range or extent of
commensurate [The salary for his position will be commensurate with the applicant's experience.]
equal in measure; properly proportionate
tantamount [His assisting the enemy is tantamount to treason.]
equivalent in value; meaning or effect; the same as
extirpated [Our school is peaceful now that the troublemakers have been extirpated.]
eradicated; exterminated; erased; uprooted
protocol [The distinguished guests were seated by rank according to protocol, and the president read to them a new protocol on international trade.]
established ceremonial form and etiquette, especially in government; a draft of a treaty or other governmental agreement
circumlocution [The teacher resorted to circumlocution because he did not really understand the subject.]
evasion of the main point by indirect or roundabout speaking or writing; any such expression 托詞
equanimity [She preserved her equanimity despite the slurring remarks made about her.]
evenness of mind; calmness of temper; composure
punctilious [In his punctilious housekeeping, everything must be in its proper place.]
exact in detail; precise; fastidious; scrupulous
antithetical [We don't expect the two groups, ever to agree because their goals are antithetical.]
exactly opposite; directly opposed; in strong contrast
scrutinized [He scrutinized the face of the man but could not recognize him.]
examined in detail; closely studied
supernumerary [Although he was but a supernumerary he prided himself on being in the play.]
exceeding the number needed; a person or thing available but not essential; an "extra"
verbiage [Your verbiage takes too long to read and it hides your main ideas.]
excess of words; verbosity
palaver [Irked by the freshman's palaver, the teacher finally yelled, "Silence!"]
excessive and idle talk; chatter; to talk in such manner
avarice [Avarice made his bank account grow larger and his personality grow meaner.]
excessive desire to get and keep riches; greed; covetousness
bathos [His book lost its seriousness by the recurrence of bathos.]
excessive or trivial sentimentality; that which arouses insincere sorrow or pity; an unimportant anticlimax
melancholic [Let's see if we can get here to cheer up, be happy and stop being so melancholic.]
excessively and unreasonably brooding; chronically depressed; despondent; causing or suggesting such feelings; (melancholy is used interchangeably0.
lugubrious [The lugubrious expression on his face aroused our sympathy.]
excessively dismal; mournful
fulsome [Everyone appreciates a compliment but fulsome praise is disgusting.]
excessively flattering; distastefully insincere
munificent [The king gave munificent gifts to his knights.]
excessively generous; very liberal; lavish
obsequious [The obsequious waiter got on his nerves after a short time.]
excessively servile; overly obedient or attentive; fawning
venial [His employer ignored John's many venial offenses, and then fired him when he broke a major rule.]
excusable; forgivable; pardonable
impunity [I warn you: if you break the rule it will not be with impunity.]
exemption or freedom from punishment or harm
latent [He did not discover his latent musical talent until he was in his thirties.]
existing but not energized; capable of later full development; dormant
elucidation [That statement is so vague that it calls for elucidation.]
explanation; clarification
sententious [His short, sententious essays say more than do many whole books.]
expressing or expressive of much meaning in few words; pithy; axiomatic; pompously and often tritely moralizing
laudatory [The senior class had worked hard to earn the headmaster's laudatory remarks.]
expressing praise; commendatory
hyperbole [It is the largest house in town, but to call it a castle is a hyperbole.]
extreme exaggeration is expression; overstatement
cupidity [His action was motivated by cupidity, not generosity.]
extreme selfishness; avarice; greed
heinous [How could any human being have committed such a heinous crime?]
extremely bad; atrocious; despicable
garish [Garish cloths in church are inappropriate.]
extremely bright; overly ornate; tastelessly overdone; showy; gaudy
parsimonious [The miser was parsimonious in dealing out gifts to the poor.]
extremely frugal; stingy
lavish [She lavished money on her only niece and also gave her a lavish party.]
extremely generous; extravagant; to give or bestow without restraint
virulent [His insulting remarks were as virulent as any poison.]
extremely harmful, malignant or noxious; malicious; rancorous; acrimonious
ravenous [He has ravenous appetite for science fiction novels.]
extremely hungry; eagerly and intensely desirous; voracious
stentorian [The sergeant's stentorian command was readily heard by all.]
extremely loud
excruciating [He suffered excruciating pain as a result of the accident.]
extremely painful; agonizing
fallacious [Although his conclusion was sound, his reasoning was fallacious.]
false; misleading
infamous [The F.B.I. finally captured one of the most infamous criminals on its ten-most-wanted list.]
famous for bad qualities; notorious; vile
utopian [Your idea of a world in which everyone is kind, thoughtful and completely happy is utopian.]
fancifully or theoretically perfect; idealistic; one who pursues unachievable ideals; a visionary; an idealist
rococo [She doesn't like rococo decorations; she prefers simple designs.]
fancy style of ornamentation with curves and shell work
enthralled [The beauty of the scene enthralled him.]
fascinated; enchanted; captivated
querulous [Please give ocnstructive comments and don't be querulous in front of the class.]
fault finding; complaining; argumentative; peevish
captious [He could give us helpful advice but, instead, he's just being captious.]
fault finding; disposed to criticize; argumentative
auspicious [His beginning in the business was auspicious, but he turned out a dismal failure.]
favorable; fortunate; of good omen; propitious
nepotism [We could hardly accuse him of nepotism: his nephew really is the best qualified candidate for the job.]
favoritism shown to relatives, especially in job appointments.
intimidation [They threatened to cause trouble, but we were not influenced by their intimidation.]
fear, restraint or discouragement caused by threat; the act of causing such
trepidation [He expected to be punished and approached the principal's office with trepidation.]
fearfulness; alarm; agitation; trembling from such cause
intrepid [The intrepid hero was given a great ovation when he came home.]
fearless; dauntless
cascaded [The vast crowd cascaded toward the exists.]
fell as from a waterfall; poured over; rushed down or out
vicarious [She experienced a vicarious joy in her son's success.]
felt as one's own experience by imagining that of another; done or experienced in substitution
stereotyped [Those stereotyped characters in the book were boring]
following a pattern; unoriginal; conventional; trite; formalized
quixotic [His idea was noble in its intention, but it was too quixotic to be of practical use.]
foolishly idealistic or romantic; well meaning but impractical; (literally: like Don Quixote唐奇歌德)
officious [A good administrator is available but not officious]
forcing one's service or attention upon another; overly meddlesome or attentive
ominous [The ominous clouds on the horizon almost made them cancel the trip.]
foreboding; threatening; menacing
oracular [The fortune teller's oracular utterances all came true.]
forecasting the future; prophetic
encomium [Because of their blameless life they are deserving of high encomium.]
formal expression of praise.
erstwhile [Since I have graduated, my erstwhile professor has become my good friend.]
former; formerly
impeccable [Although he was very loud and vulgar, he was dressed with impeccable taste.]
free from fault, blemish or error; flawless; unerring
amity [It is difficult for people in close contact to live in perfect amity.]
friendship; good will
vivacious [She is so vivacious that it is impossible to imagine her depressed.]
full of life; high spirited; lively; animated
redolent [The air was redolent with the aromas of fall.]
full of pleasant odor; smelling of; suggestive of
satiety [For the first time in several days he ate to the point of satiety.]
fullness beyond normal; the state of being glutted or filled to excess
obsequies [The obsequies included a service in the church as well as one at the graveside.]
funeral rites
animated [He seemed especially animated by the good news.]
given life, motion or inspiration; full of life; spirited; active; inspired
presages [The high team spirit today presages a victory tomorrow.]
gives an indication of something in the future; portends; foreshadows; (presage, n: an omen or portent0.
luminous [The white limbs of the birch tree were luminous among its darker leaves. Your luminous example clarifies the problem.]
giving forth light; bright; shining; easily understood
personification [Trees speak and think in the personification by that writer. She is a fine person, the personification of kindness.]
giving human qualities to an inanimate object or idea; any example of such; an embodiment or personal showing of some quality
morose [She is usually cheerful but her recent problems have made her morose.]
gloomy; dejected; sullen; ill-humored
retrograde [We must either advance or retrograde; we can't stand still.]
going backwards; worsening; declining; to recede; to grow worse; to degenerate
antecedent [To understand the plot of this story, we must know about certain antecedent actions.]
going before; that which goes before
itinerant [In the fall itinerant workers travel from farm to farm looking for work.]
going from place to place; homeless; such a person
felicitations [They sent felicitations to those who were celebrating their birthdays.]
good wishes; congratulations
oligarchy [In contrast with an oligarcy, a democracy is a form of government in which all the citizens participate.]
government by the few; the limited group of ruling persons; a country so governed
rapacious [He was never satisfied with modest savings, but was rapacious in becoming rich.]
grasping; seizing; ravenous; plundering; predatory
affluence [Affluence makes some people misers and others generous.]
great material abundance; wealth; opulence
verdant [A verdant landscape attracts the poet as well as the botanist.]
green with vegetation
macabre [Edgar Allan Poe was well known for his macabre stories.]
gruesome; ghastly; horrible
simulated [With this training device, you can experience simulated flying. He is not attentive; his interest is merely simulated.
had the appearance but not the actuality of; imitated; pretended; feigned
hirsute [The customer was so hirsute that the barber charged him extra.]
hairy
fortuitous [He didn't plan on getting rich; it was a fortuitous occurrence.]
happening by chance; accidental
ebullient [Her ebullient spirits told us that she had won.]
happily excited; exuberant; bubbling or boiling up
rancor [What she felt for her opponent was not mere dislike, but rancor.]
hard feelings; ill will; spitefulness; bitter hatred; malice
noisome [The decaying flowers give off a noisome odor.]
harmful; offensive to smell; disgusting
innocuous [Although the spider's bite was painful, it was innocuous.]
harmless; without harmful effect or qualities
strident [Her voice is so strident that it actually hurts my ears.]
harsh sounding; grating; shrill
scathing [His scathing remarks about the organization showed how much he hated it.]
harshly critical; extremely severe; caustic
acrimony [Although he was angry, the teacher refrained from acrimony when he addressed the class.]
harshness or bitterness of speech or manner; expression of great dislike or deep resentment
hauteur [The hauteur of the supercilious waiter cost him many tips.]
haughtiness; arrogance; scornful pride
supercilious [His supercilious attitude toward his subordinates discouraged them.]
haughty; contemptuous; arrogant; disdainful
cognizant [He is cognizant of all the factors that enter the contract.]
having knowledge; perceptive; aware; comprehending
multifarious [His multifarious activities included banking, horse racing, painting and politics]
having many parts or elements; of great variety; diverse
impecunious [I am rather impecunious right now; could you lend me a thousand dollars?]
having no money
tangible [He expects to receive some tangible reward for his work, not just our thanks.]
having physical existence; able to be perceived physically
sentient [Sometimes trees seem almost sentient to the nature lover.]
having sensation and feeling; aware; conscious
nauseous [He helped the accident victims, but seeing their injuries made him nauseous.]
having the urge to vomit; queasy; causing nausea; disgusting; sickening
martial [The country's martial attitude will probably lead to a declaration of war.]
having to do with the military; war-like
therapeutic [The treatment has had no therapeutic value as far as I can see; I am still in pain.]
health inducing; healing; curing
viscosity [The engineers tested the viscosity of the oil.]
heavy, gluey quality
chary [She was chary in accepting the gift from a stranger. He was chary in handing out praise.]
hesitant; cautious; wary; particular; fastidious; frugal; sparing
eulogy [The eulogy spoken at the senator's funeral was a fitting tribute to his greatness.]
high praise in speech or writing, great commendation - often for a deceased person
zenith [He reached the zenith of his career when he was elected president.]
highest point; summit; peak
aperture [He is careful that the aperture in the camera is properly set.]
hole; opening
bellicose [The bellicose attitudes of the two countries will probably result in war.]
hostile; warlike; aggressive
choleric [He is so choleric that he reacts violently to the most innocent joking.]
hot-tempered; easily angered
scurried [The students scurried to their seats when the teacher entered the room.]
hurried briskly; scampered
infirm [The old and infirm must be evacuated first.]
ill; feebly irresolute
vitiated [His supposedly generous acts were vitiated by selfishness.]
impaired in worth; invalidated; spoiled; contaminated; corrupted
gnome [Long ago, people considered capturing a gnome to be a "get rich quick" scheme.]
in folklore, an old, gnarled cave-dwelling dwarf who guards the earth's treasures.
nominal [He is only a nominal president; he does not have any real powers. Her fee is so nominal that she will never get rich from it.]
in name only, not in fact; relatively trifling or quite small in value
titular [She has real duties to perform, not just a titular position.]
in name only; having a title but no responsibilities
incontrovertible [The evidence against the accused was not just hearsay; it was incontrovertible.]
incapable of being disputed; not debatable; undeniable
inscrutable [The inscrutable countenance of a good poker player helps him win the game.]
incapable of being searched into and understood
imperturbable [In spite of the mob's threats, the sheriff remains imperturbable.]
incapable of being upset or disturbed; calm; serene
irrevocable [The judge's decision was irrevocable; he would not even consider changing it.]
incapable of being withdrawn, revoked, repealed, called back, undone, etc.
trenchant [The student's trenchant comments about the novel showed that he truly understood the subject.]
incisive; perceptive; to the point; keen; vigorous; forceful
vacillating [It is difficult to know what she really wants because she is so vacillating.]
indecisive; wavering; fluctuating
lethargy [He was so overcome by lethargy that he could not accomplish anything.]
indifference; apathy; inactivity; dullness
apathetic [It is difficult to arouse the interest of an apathetic student.]
indifferent; unconcerned; unemotional
natatorium [The swimming match was held in the school natatorium.]
indoor swimming pool
callow [It is not wise to trust a callow youth with such an important responsibility.]
inexperienced; immature
mercenary [The consultant's motives were purely mercenary; he did not care about the success of the plan.]
influenced by desire for money; acting only for pay; greedy; one who is hired, esp.: a soldier hired by a foreign government
intrinsic [Some things are priced by supply and demand, and some, like education, have a greater, intrinsic value.]
inherent; part of the basic nature of; fundamental
edification [He did that for our edification, not our amusement.]
instruction for improvement; enlightenment; clarification
didactic [His didactic story illustrated the responsibilities of good citizenship.]
instructive; teaching a moral lesson
miscegenation [Husbands and wives of different races think about family affairs and not the technicality of "miscegenation".
intermixing of races by marriage or sexual relations
ingenious [When all the rest of us were completely baffled, he was ingenious enough to solve the problem.]
inventive; resourceful; clever; made or done in such manner
sporadic [Because his studying was sporadic, there are many gaps in his knowledge.]
isolated in occurrence; occasional; intermittent
blithe [Shelly referred to the skylark as a "blithe spirit" because his song sounded so happy.]
joyous; joyful; cheerful; mirthful
succulent [succulent fruits were served as dessert.]
juicy; full of juice
salient [A salient feature of his character is the ease with which he meets people.]
jutting out; extending forward; most significant; prominent; conspicuous; a fortified angle or extension
perspicacity [He is noted for his perspicacity in analyzing a problem.]
keen judgment; ability to see into and understand; penetrating discernment
insouciance [He assumed an attitude of insouciance, although he really was very much concerned.]
lack of concern; the state of being light-hearted or carefree
candor [She didn't try to mask her problems, but talked about them with remarkable candor.]
lack of deceit; honesty; openness; frankness
dissonance [Dissonance among friends and dissonance in music are both disturbing.]
lack of harmony; lack of agreement; discord; incongruity
levity [Levity is not permitted in a solemn courtroom.]
lack of seriousness; inappropriate lightheartedness; frivolity
lassitude [An overwhelming feeling of lassitude prevented his completing the assignment.]
lack of vigor or spirit; weariness; languor
diffident [He was so diffident in his request for a raise that he was denied it.]
lacking confidence; timid; shy
flaccid [It took some days before the flaccid muscles became strong.]
lacking firmness or force; not stiff; limp
banal [His conversation is so banal that he lulls one to sleep.]
lacking freshness or vigor; commonplace; trite
Superficial [His answers are so superficial that it is clear he did not read the assignment.]
lacking true significance or importance; on the surface; shallow
ephemeral [Flowers soon fade and dry up, and their fragrance is ephemeral.]
lasting only a short time; short lived; transitory
clement [Her attitude toward the rowdy class was as clement as the warm, sunny day.]
lenient; compassionate; merciful; mild
largesse [Her father is wealthy and can well afford his largesse to her school.]
liberal giving; a generous gift; (also spelled: largess)
ethereal [The classical piano concerto was ethereal compared with the cacophony of some modern music.]
light and airy; celestial; heavenly
feline [Kitty is aptly named because of her feline grace.]
like a cat; of the cat family; a cat
enigmatic [It is difficult to understand his enigmatic statements.]
like a riddle; puzzling; obscure
inimical [Our plans were thwarted by inimical forces.]
like an enemy; hostile; unfriendly; opposing
fallible [Whenever you're tempted to criticize, remember that everyone is fallible.]
likely to fail or be in error; capable of making mistakes or being deceived
temporal [This is a temporal problem that we can laugh about next month. Let's let the courts settle this temporal question and not involve the church.]
limited by time; transitory; secular or civil rather than religious or spiritual
concatenated [In her novel, the major events were concatenated with each other to support the conclusion.]
linked together; united in chain or series.
lackadaisical [He is so lackadaisical about getting things done that we decided not to depend on him.]
listless; not interested; not animated
diminutive [Her husband is tall but she is diminutive. ] ["Billy" is a diminutive for William.]
little; small; diminished or diminishing; a word expressing smallness, familiarity, etc.
mercurial [His personality is so mercurial that one never knows what kind of response to expect.]
lively; quick; changeable; volatile; fickle; pertaining to or having the qualities of mercury
gregarious [Sheep are, in general, gregarious animals]
living in groups; sociable
nostalgic [When you are far from home and friends, it's easy to become nostalgic.]
longing for something past or far away; homesick; pensive; causing such feelings
sumptuous [A sumptuous banquet was served on the occasion of the royal visit.]
luxurious; lavish; magnificent
perjury [He was found guilty of perjury on the witness stand.]
lying or willful withholding of facts in court; violation of an oath to be truthful
mendacious [She is known to be so mendacious that I doubt anyone will believe her.]
lying; dishonest; deceitful; false; untrue
precluded [His failure to register precluded his attending classes.]
made impossible or ineffective; kept from happening; prevented
invalidated [The government has invalidated his passport until he pays his back taxes.]
made no longer valid; nullified; cancelled; deprived of legal importance
brazen [That was a brazen lie he told to get that job.]
made of or resembling brass; impudent; bold; shameless; defiantly reckless; to act in such a manner
hermetically [Hermetically sealed jars will preserve food for a long time.]
made or treated so as to become airtight
piqued [I was just a bit piqued by her being late again, but she had an excuse that piqued my curiosity.]
made resentful; irritated; vexed; provoked; stimulated or arroused
synchronized [The pilots all synchronized their watches at 0830 hours.]
made to happen at the same time or to agree in time; made to occur in unison; made to coincide
heterogeneous [A heterogeneous group would probably be more interesting at a party than a group with similar interests and lifestyles.]
made up of unlike parts; differing in kind or quality; dissimilar
improvised [He sat at the piano and improvised some pleasing melodies.]
made up without preparation; provided offhand; performed extemporaneously
gist [I do not have time to listen to the entire speech. Can you give me just the gist of it?]
main point; basic idea; the substance or essence of
pedantic [He is not pompous or boring, never pedantic when he lectures.]
making a show of learning; being formal or precise about minor matters in scholarship
dastardly [His character was dastardly, quite the opposite of noble and brave.]
mean; base; cowardly
inane [Her inane suggestions simply wasted our time.]
meaningless; pointless; asinine
esoteric [Those classical references in the poem are too esoteric for most college students to understand.]
meant for or understood by a select few; beyond normal comprehension; secret
dulcet [The dulcet tones of the organ were most pleasing.]
melodious; pleasing to the ear; soothing; pleasant
distraught [The mother was distraught by the absence of her daughter.]
mentally agitated; emotionally upset; worried and bewildered
clemency [The judge showed clemency because the culprit was so young.]
mercy; leniency
raillery [She has had enough of your raillery over her innocent mistake, so let's get back to serious business.]
mild ridicule; good natured teasing
knavish [The king hired several knavish types to do his "dirty work'.]
mischievous; untrustworthy; deceitful
malfeasance [The tax collector could not explain the missing funds and was finally proven guilty of malfeasance.]
misconduct or wrongful action, especially while in a position of trust
turpitude [Although he committed no actual crime, he was certainly guilty of moral turpitude.]
moral corruption; baseness; vileness; depravity
depraved [He has such a depraved sense of humor that he enjoys hurting small animals.]
morally corrupt; base; wicked
superfluous [Use commas as needed in your theme but eliminate those that are superfluous.]
more than is necessary; excessive; redundant
altruistic [He works at the hospital without pay, for altruistic reasons only.]
motivated by or showing concern for others; unselfish; benevolent
receded [The lake had receded several feet since I had seen it last.]
moved back or downward; became more distant; faded away; withdrew
transient [It was difficult to determine a census count because of the transient population in the city.]
moving from place to place; not permanent; brief; one or something that stays temporarily
interstices [They were careful to fill all the interstices.]
narrow spaces between things; small gaps
vicissitude [He was ultimately destroyed by the vicissitudes of fortune, even though he had tried to adjust.]
natural but unanticipated change; variation of fortune; element of chance in daily life
habitat [The habitat of the polar bear is the Arctic region.]
natural place of living
prone [He was prone to laziness because he never had to work.]
naturally inclined or disposed; having a tendency; predisposed; lying face down
indigenous [Palm trees are indigenous to the soil of the tropics.]
naturally occurring or existing in a specific place; native; natural
moribund [Let's record the moribund mountain songs before they disappear entirely.]
near death or termination; dying
propinquity [Their marriage was not approved because of their close propinquity.]
nearness or closeness; kinship; affinity; proximity
derelict [Society may be considered derelict when many derelicts are found sleeping in derelict cars.]
neglectful or remiss in duty; deserted or abandoned; property abandoned by the owner; a homeless and penniless person; a vagrant
remiss [Because he had so many problems on his mind, he was remiss in performing his duties.]
negligent; careless
skittish [The skittish animal approached the stranger with caution.]
nervous; easily frightened; "high strung."
magnanimous [He showed no anger at their insults but, instead, remained magnanimous.]
noble in spirit; without resentment or envy; generous in forgiving
insulation [Insulation in the attic saves on fuel bills. His insulation of the attic is wise. Insulation from distractions helps her think better.}
nonconducting material which prevents passage of electricity, heat, etc; the act of insulating; the state of being separated or isolated from
extrinsic [The mobility of my hand is an intrinsic part of it; my ring is extrinsic to the use of my hand.]
not a natural or inherent part of; extraneous; nonessential; (opposite of intrinsic)
indefatigable [He was an indefatigable worker for any charitable cause.]
not able to be fatigued; never tiring; unflagging
impregnable [The fortress was supposed to be impregnable, but its walls were easily battered down.]
not able to be penetrated by force; unyielding; unconquerable
quiescent [Animals that are hibernating are in a quiescent state.]
not agitated or anxious; at rest; inactive; quiet
devoid [He is devoid of a sense of humor.]
not containing or possessing; empty; without
niggardly [He was niggardly in his contribution to the campaign for funds.]
not generous; stingy
spurious [Several plays attributed to Shakespeare seem to be spurious.]
not genuine; counterfeit
taciturn [He is so taciturn that one wonders if he understands the language.]
not given to conversation; silent; reserved
discordant [Several discordant notes spoiled the concert. They have discordant opinions even about the time of day.]
not harmonious; jarring to the ear; harsh; not in agreement; conflicting
unbridled [He kept his temper for a long time, and then exploded in unbridled wrath.]
not held in check; unrestrained; uncontrolled
synthetic [Synthetic rubber is frequently used instead of the natural product.]
not natural; man-made; artificial
stark [The stark reality of the situation did not occur to him until later.]
not ornamented; bleak; plain; absolute; downright
reticent [Although he talks constantly at home, he is extremely reticent in class.]
not outspoken; uncommunicative; taciturn
improvident [He was so improvident in his youth that he has nothing left for his retirement.]
not providing for the future; not thrifty
opaque [He made the window opaque by painting it black. Your explanation is unclear and the subject is still opaque to me.]
not reflecting or admitting light; not transparent or transluscent; difficult to understand; obscure
facetious [Your facetious remarks were not appropriate on such a solemn occasion.]
not serious; flippantly humorous
moot [Some standards cannot be changed, but the ones you present are still moot.]
not settled and open to discussion; debatable arguable; hypothetical
unremitting [Their unremitting dedication to the cause helped bring about its success.]
not stopping or relaxing or submitting; not changing in attitude; inxssant; persistent
inalienable [Inalienable rights are guaranteed by the Constitution.]
not subject to being taken away; not transferable; fixed
cursory [There is more here than can be read in a cursory glance.]
not thorough; superficial; hasty
peremptory [Her answers were so peremptory that we gave up trying to get her to listen to reason.]
not to be debated or denied; decisive; final; commanding; imperious; dogmatic
egregious [You lost several points because of egregious errors in spelling.]
noticeably bad; flagrant
arrant [His actions prove that he is more than a little foolish; he is an arrant fool.]
notorious; unmitigated; downright; thorough; out-and-out
obnoxious [He is such an obnoxious person that everyone shuns him.]
objectionable; offensive
perverse [She has no good reason to argue with us; she is simply being perverse.]
obstinately contrary; deviating from convention; willfully nonconforming
blatant [A little mistake may go unnoticed but a blatant error demands attention.]
obvious; conspicuous; offensively loud
biennial [In two years our new chairman can run for another biennial term of office.]
occurring every two years; lasting two years
vernal [The vernal flowering of plants shows that winter is over.]
occurring in or pertaining to spring; springlike; fresh; young
vagaries [She can be objective and forthright but she is also known for her amusing vagaries.]
odd or eccentric ideas; impulsive or capricious actions
archaic [The head of a modern school should not have archaic ideas.]
of an earlier or primitive time; ancient; no longer in popular use; outdated
benign [That he is a good person is evidenced by his benign appearance. The growth proved to be benign and not cancerous.]
of gentle disposition; kindly; not harmful; not malignant
titanic [Titanic machines were needed to build the huge structure.]
of gigantic proportions or strength; enormous; huge; powerful
momentous [In crossing the Rubicon, Julius Caesar made a momentous decision.]
of great importance or consequence
shoddy [They have been selling us these shoddy products long enough; from now on we go elsewhere.]
of inferior material; lacking the quality claimed; sham
motley [The different languages, clothing and education of the workers made them a motley crew, indeed.[
of many different colors or varied characteristics; heterogeneous
diurnal [The sun moves from east to west in its diurnal course]
of the daytime; during the course of a day; daily
terrestrial [As a geologist he was more concerned with terrestrial problems than celestial ones.]
of the land or the earth (as opposed to celestial: of the skies or stars)
homogeneous [Some groups consist of different things and some groupings are homogeneous.]
of the same kind, quality or degree
dual [Vehicles intended for operator instruction are usually equipped with dual controls.]
of two; having or composed of two parts; double; twofold
apocryphal [I think his story is apocryphal because I've never heard or read any proof concerning it.]
of uncertain authenticity; suspect; spurious
umbrage [Do not take umbrage at my criticism; it is intended to be helpful.]
offense; resentment
fetid [The wrong combination of these chemicals will produce a fetid odor.]
offensive to sense of smell; stinking
candelabrum [Several candlesticks overcrowded the table, so we used a candelabrum instead.]
one large candleholder with branches supporting several candles; (singular form of candelabra)
precursor [The Scriptures call St. John the Baptist the precursor of Christ.]
one or that which goes or occurs in advance and foretells the future; a forerunner; a predecessor
artisan [Engravers are artisans known for the precision and quality of their work.]
one trained in a particular art or trade; a skilled craftsman
prodigy [The experts called her a prodigy after she played a Mozart concerto at the age of seven
one who accomplishes extraordinary things at an early age; something extremely admirable or awe inspiring
intercessor [The misunderstanding between a student and a teacher was resolved by a friendly intercessor.]
one who acts between two parties, a mediator
gourmet [She is a gourmet who never buys cheap wine and never hurries through a good dinner.]
one who appreciates and is a good judge of fine food and drinks
iconoclast [Our new principal is an iconoclast whose new rulers are wiping out old school customs.]
one who attacks and defies established traditions, ideas or institutions; (literally: a breakder of images.)
cynic [He is such a cynic that we could never persuade him to trust us.]
one who believes that all humans are insincere and selfish; a sneering and sarcastic person
raconteur [He was an amusing raconteur, with a story for almost every occasion.]
one who can tell stories well
procrastinator [She is such a procrastinator that she will never finish her paper on time.]
one who delays or puts off
renegade [That renegade is giving away our secrets!]
one who deserts a party, side, idea, etc. and joins the opposition; a traitor; traitorous
dissenter [When everyone else agreed on the proposal, Mr. Brown was the lone dissenter.]
one who dissents, disagrees, differs in principle; one who refuses to assent to established doctrine
misanthrope [His bitter satires on human nature show him to be a misanthrope.]
one who hates or constantly distrusts mankind
dilettante [Although he spends a great deal of money on paintings, he is only a dilettante.]
one who is superficially interested; a dabbler; a lover of fine art without deep knowledge of it
hypochondriac [If he ever has a real and serious illness, perhaps he will stop being a hypochondriac.]
one who is unduly anxious over personal health; one who imagines illnesses
recluse [The old man was such a recluse that no one knew when he had died.]
one who lives shut off from others; a hermit
charlatan [The doctor who claimed that he could cure your cold was obviously a charlatan.]
one who pretends to have knowledge that he does not have; an imposter; a quack
caterer [The party will be disaster unless the caterer arrives soon.]
one who provides food and services for parties, receptions, etc
demagogue [A political demagogue avoids real issued and caters to current passions.]
one who stirs the emotions of others for self interest; an unprincipled politician; a rabble rouser
ghoul [He is so mean and repulsive that some people call him a ghoul.]
one who takes pleasure in terrible things; one who is repugnant in character or appearance; a grave robber; a legendary creature that feeds on corpses
somnambulist [When a somnambulist awakens, he often does not know where he is.]
one who walks and performs other actions during sleep
reprobate [The rest of the family disowned the reprobate because of his evil conduct.]
one whose conduct is reproachful, a scoundrel; unprincipled; depraved
averse [He is averse to war even though he is an excellent soldier.]
opposed or unwilling to; not favorable toward
prosaic [We heard nothing new or exciting in the governor's prosaic speech, and soon lost interest in it.]
ordinary; dull; insipid
demeanor [Some people in the crowd became rowdy, but her demeanor remained calm and proper.]
outward behavior; personal bearing; deportment; conduct
fastidious [He is fastidious in his housekeeping, overlooking nothing that can be cleaned or dusted.]
overly concerned about detail; attentive to minor points; fussy
hypercritical [Nothing seems to satisfy that hypercritical person.]
overly critical; faultfinding; carping
maudlin [Instead of being a serious drama, the play was completely maudlin.]
overly sentimental; emotionally silly
inundated [Since we placed the advertisement in the paper, we have been inundated by applications for the job.]
overwhelmed by excess; flooded
ecstatic [She was ecstatic at the idea of being accepted to Princeton.]
overwhelmingly happy; intensely delighted; rapturious
analgesic [A generous portion of analgesic balm was applied to the bruise.]
pain relieving; soothing
scrupulous [She is so scrupulous in her work that you can trust it to be complete and correct in every detail.]
painstakingly thorough and exact; carefully precise; reliable to do what is right; conscientious
inherent [The ability to inspire is an inherent quality of any good leader.]
part of the essential character of; established within; inborn
discursive [The old man's conversation was so discursive that we could not follow it.]
passing from one subject to another
pinnacle [After many years of hard work he reached the pinnacle of success.]
peak; summit; zenith; highest point of achievement
assiduous [Others may "watch the clock," but you can depend on her to be assiduous about her work.]
persisting; unremitting; diligent; devotely attentive
cajolery [Sometimes cajolery is more successful than force.]
persuasion by flattery, coaxing or artfulness
pragmatic [His plan is too idealistic; hers is more pragmatic.]
pertaining or attentive to all related causes and effects; practical or workable based on full study
magisterial [A magisterial teacher demands obedience, while a good teacher earns respect.]
pertaining to a master; pompously assured and commanding; authoritative; dictatorial
aesthetic [Their aesthetic taste was evident in the fine design and exquisite furnishings of their home.]
pertaining to beauty; sensitive to or appreciative of beauty in the arts, nature, etc.; (also spelled esthetic).
chromatic [Art students practice making soft or vivid chromatic effects; and piano students practice similar chromatic scales.]
pertaining to colors; pertaining to certain specific and colorful combinations of musical notes
equestrian [Polo, fox hunting, and steeplechasing are popular equestrian sports.]
pertaining to horses or horsemanship; on horseback; one who rides or performs on horseback
conjugal [Their long conjugal association is a model for many younger married couples.]
pertaining to marriage relationships; connubial
fiscal [We must balance our company books and compute profit and loss at the end of our fiscal year.]
pertaining to money matters; financial
alimentary [We have been hungry long enough, and now it's time to attend to alimentary needs.]
pertaining to nourishment or food; nourishing
parochialism [The parochialism of the civic club made it distasteful to many citizens.]
pertaining to only one group; narrowness of interest
communal [To have a clean city demands a communal effort.]
pertaining to or belonging to a community or group; public
sacerdotal [The young pastor always put sacerdotal duties ahead of his continued interest in sports.]
pertaining to priests or priesthood
metaphysical [Philosophers and students of religion are concerned with metaphysical matters.]
pertaining to speculation about ultimate reality; beyond the physical world and traditional sciences; extremely abstract or subtle
plebeian [He is far too plebeian to be considered for membership in such an elite club.]
pertaining to the common people; crude or low class; one of the common people
rustic [As he became older he began to prefer the rustic life of the backwoods to the life of the city.]
pertaining to the country; rural; not refined; simple; one who lives in the country; a simple or unrefined person
lapidary [Before the diamond can be set in a ring, the lapidary must do his work.]
pertaining to the cutting, engraving, polishing of gem stones; one who does such work
filial [His parents will never be destitute because of his filial devotion.]
pertaining to the relationship between children and their parents
maritime [Maritime law regulates all the activities of navigation.]
pertaining to the sea
littoral [swimmers have littered the whole littoral area with debris from their beach parties.]
pertaining to the seashore or coastal region; a shore and the are nearby
addicted [It did not take long before he became addicted to smoking.]
physiologically or psychologically dependent upon; completely self subjected to some habit, practice, etc.
ensconced [Ensconced in an easy chair, he enjoyed his pipe and book.]
placed or settled snugly or securely
badinage [One person misunderstood the badinage and it turned into bitter accusations and insults.]
playful talk or joking back and forth; good natured arguing and jesting; raillery; teasing
debonair [John is rough and uncouth while, in contrast, Charles is debonair.]
pleasant and gracious; refined; suave; urbane
savory [They served many savory dishes at the banquet. If you associate with good people you reputation will become more savory.]
pleasing to the taste or smell; appetizing; respectable; reputable
venomous [His insults can be as venomous as the bite of a rattlesnake.]
poisonous; deadly; spiteful; malicious
grandiloquent [Lincoln's Gettysburg Address was simple and powerful, and anything but grandioquent.]
pompous in speech; bombastic; flamboyant
calligraphy [The lettering on the diploma was in calligraphy.]
precise and decorative handwriting or hand-printing; handwriting in general; (also spelled: caligraphy)
precocious [Most of the class found the precocious student annoying.]
prematurely developed; matured earlier than is normal; mentally advanced beyond one's years
omnipresent [Only God can truly be omnipresent.]
present everywhere at once; (ubiquitous is sometimes used as a synonym)
ostensible [His ostensible motives concealed his real ones.]
presented as real or genuine; avowed; seeming
unctuous [The king's councilor gave him only unctuous flattery, and no useful advice at all.]
pretending earnestness; overly suave; smooth-talking; oily; greasy
cardinal [Love of one's fellow man is considered a cardinal virtue.]
principal; most important; chief; an ecclesiastical official in the Roman Catholic Church; a red bird; scarlet
attrition [Without firing anyone, we will have fewer employees next year because of attrition.]
process of rubbing or wearing down; gradual loss from normal causes or natural circumstances
insidious [He was so insidious that it took us a long time to find out he was an enemy.]
progressing harmfully but hardly noticed; deceitful in a subtle way; wily; treacherous.
tutelary [A student's advisor should function in a tutelary capacity, checking on the student's academic and social progress from time to time.]
protecting; having guardianship; watching over; instructively caring
obtrusive [His obtrusive manner of involving himself in other people's business is his greatest fault.]
pushing forward or outward; intruding or forcing in an unwarranted manner
promulgated [The results of the deliberation were promulgated throughout the nation.]
put into effect officially and publicly; openly declared; proclaimed
feint [The boxed made a feint with his left and landed a solid right.]a false or deceptive movement; a pretended attach meant to distract from a real one elsewhere; to act in such a manner.]
puzzlingly detailed; complicated, involved; complex
contentious [They are so contentious that we simply can't reason with them.]
quarrelsome; argumentative; uncooperative
effulgence [The effulgence of the sun on Easter morning was especially symbolic.]
radiance; splendor; brightness; shining
concurred [The members of the jury concurred with the foreman's opinion.]
reached the same conclusion; agreed; occurred at the same time
winced [The nurse said it wouldn't hurt, but the patient winced as the needle touched his arm.]
reacted quickly with facial contortion as if in pain; flinched
profligate [His profligate spending of money soon made him a poor man.]
recklessly extravagant or wasteful; not virtuous or decent; such a person
wanton [The cruelty of the invaders was wanton, as they ignored all decency and human rights.]
recklessly ignoring what is right; unprovoked and excessive; immoral; dissolute; such a person
commendatory [His willingness to sacrifice himself was commendatory.]
reflecting praise or recommendation; worthy of praise
sanctuary [A bird sanctuary has been added to the zoo.]
refuge; safety; a place of refuge or safety
intransigent [The intransigent senator adhered to his original stand on the question.]
refusing to come to terms; uncompromising; unyielding; one who acts in such a manner
revered [The old priest was revered by everyone in his parish because of his saintly life.]
regarded with reverence or deep respect
histrionic [There is subtle meaning in the story but her histrionic presentation ruined it.]
related to acting or actors; theatrical; overly dramatic
pertinent [We are talking about a party, so your remarks about a vacation are not pertinent.]
related to the matter at hand; relevant
arterial [The new arterial highway will connect several major cities.]
related to the tubes carrying blood from the heart; serving as a major carrier, channel or thoroughfare
pastoral [The pastoral scene was painted by a noted landscape artist. The priest's pastoral duties kept him busy caring for his flock.]
relating to rural life and the countryside, simple and peaceful; relating to shepherds; relating to pastors, the clergy
relevant [The information she gave was useful but not relevant to the discussion topic.]
relating to the matter at hand; pertinent; applicable
tactile [The tactile quality of this fabric is so rough that I doubt anyone would wear it.]
relating to the sense of touch; able to be touched
abjured [He abjured his U.S. citizenship when he defected to Russia.]
relinquished completely; renounced; disavowed; retracted; recanted
reminiscent [That song is particularly reminiscent of my college days.]
reminding or suggestive of the past; remembering; dwelling on the past
expunged [He requested that his remarks be expunged from the records.]
removed completely; wiped out; erased; deleted
alliteration ["Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers: is a nearly perfect alliteration.]
repetition of beginning sounds in several words in a phrase or line
incumbent [It is incumbent upon each of us to do his best. The incumbent is doing a better job than our last principal.]
required as one's duty or obligation; one holding an office or position
prerequisite [Freshman English is a prerequisite to all advanced English courses.]
required beforehand in conjunction with something to follow; anything so required
stringent [If the stringent dress code is adopted, the students can no longer wear anything they choose.]
requiring very close compliance; strict; rigid; severe
assonance [The rhyme may not be perfect but the assonance makes the poem sound appealing.]
resemblance of vowel sounds resulting in partial rhyme (lake--mate); rough likeness; approximation
demure [How could such a demure girl have such aggressive, obnoxious parents?}
reserved; unassuming; modest; unaffected
recalcitrant [He is so recalcitrant that none of the teachers will accept him in class.]
resistant to control; stubborn; defiant, rebellious; such a person
amenable [We won't agree with anything that's illegal, but we are amenable to any other suggestion you may have.]
responsible and responsive to what is right; willing to comply with; persuadable; submissive
ludicrous [His comment was so ludicrous that we did not think he was serious.]
ridiculously humorous; absurd
gnarled [One of the Rembrandt's paintings features the gnarled hands of an old man.]
rough and weather worn; knotted; twisted
circuitous [You can go directly from here to there, or you can take a circuitous route.]
roundabout; indirect
rotund [his rotund face resembles a full moon. His rotund voice filled the auditorium.]
rounded; full; plump; deep and rich in sound
doleful [That doleful look on his face aroused my sympathy.]
sad; sorrowful; mournful
reiterated [He reiterated his suggestion to make sure we understood.]
said or done again; repeated
brackish [When they drank the brackish water it made them rather ill and more thirsty than ever.]
salty; distasteful
mordant [Her feelings were deeply hurt by his well-intended, but mordant, observations.]
sarcastic; caustic; biting
exiguous [The exiguous growth on the hillside was hardly enough to feed a herd of sheep.]
scanty; small; insufficient
dearth [We planned a complex project and now our dearth of some talents keeps us from completing it.]
scarcity; lack
disseminated [The information was disseminated over the radio.]
scattered; spread widely; broadcast
savants [This sort of decision should be made by savants, not by uneducated people.]
scholars; learned persons
berated [The judge berated the criminal for his evil deeds.]
scolded severely; rebuked harshly
cauterized [The physician cauterized the tissue around the wound.]
seared with a hot iron or acid
collusion [Their months-long collusion resulted in their defrauding an associate.]
secret cooperation for a wrongful purpose
covert [The covert activities of the CIA were revealed to the public through the press.]
secret; hidden; undercover
clandestine [The conspirators held a clandestine meeting to plot their actions.]
secret; hidden; undercover; surreptitious; furtive
surreptitious [Their planning was so surreptitious that everyone was taken by surprise.]
secret; stealthy; clandestine
ubiquitous [The radio has made that popular tune ubiquitous.]
seeming to be everywhere at once; (omniprsent is sometimes used as a synonym)
plausible [He had no proof but his explanation was plausible; so we accepted it.]
seeming to be probable or likely; apparently trustworthy or believable
aplomb [If the speaker was nervous she didn't show it, facing the audience with aplomb.]
self assurance; self confidence; self possession; poise
ascetic [Monks should be men of ascetic tastes.]
self denying; lacking all pleasure or comfort; austere; one who lives in such manner
autonomous [Some countries once governed by others have now become autonomous.]
self governing; independent
exemplary [Her conduct is exemplary; I wish all my students were so well behaved.]
setting an example; admirable; commendable
austere [He led the austere life of a monk, denying himself any of the pleasures of the world. He looks austere but he's really very kind.]
severe; stern; grave; lacking luxury; very simple and without adornment
amorphous [The potter begins his work with a piece of amorphous clay.]
shapeless; with no special form
pungent [A pungent odor of burning leaves reminds us that autumn is here.]
sharp or striking to the sense of smell; acrid; piquant
poignant [Pictures in a photo album can be poignant reminders of happy times long gone.]
sharply painful or saddening to the feelings; emotionally affective; piercing; sharp; cutting in effect
deciduous [The evergreens don't shed, but the deciduous trees in my yard keep me busy in the fall.]
shedding or falling off seasonally
sheen [The sheen of the satin costumes added beauty to the pageant.]
shine; luster; brightness
refulgent [The frost on the ground was refulgent in the moonlight.]
shining; radiant; glowing
abridged [His huge novel has been abridged in a short article. It tells us to beware of abridged rights of citizenship.]
shortened by using fewer words but keeping essential meaning; made concise; lessened; curtailed.
flamboyant [I like plain and simple styles, but she prefers flamboyant clothes that attract attention.]
showy; fancy; resplendent; colorful; ornate; florid; flamelike
ostentatious [His speech was nothing but an ostentatious display of knowledge.]
showy; pretentious
cowers [No matter how brave he claims to be, he cowers every time he hears the sound of guns.]
shrinks aways from in fear; cringes
artifice [Instead of just asking for the assignment to be postponed, they used artifice to avoid it.]
skill; cleverness; ingenuity; craftiness; an artful trick or stratagem
deft [With one deft movement, the surgeon made the incision.]
skillful; dexterous; adroit
indolent [He is too indolent even to try for a passing grade.]
slothful; laze; idle
paucity [The paucity of his vocabulary shows in his repetitious expressions.]
smallness in quantity; insufficiency; fewness; scarcity
inextricably [He became inextricably involved in the plot, never to be cleared of blame for it.]
so involved or entangled as not to be removed or extricated
Emissary [He was the emissary chosen to represent his firm abroad.]
someone who is sent as a representative
figment [The story he submitted was a figment of his imagination.]
something invented in the mind; a whimsical or fanciful idea
desideratum [To visit every corner of the world was his driving desideratum.]
something needed and wanted; something much desired
innovation [At one time the automobile was an innovation.]
something new; a recent invention; the act or process of creating or introducing new things or ideas
anachronism [Shakespeare's reference to clocks in Julius Caesar is an anachronism: of course, there were no clocks in Caesar's time.]
something out of place in time; such a representation
commodious [He bought a commodious home for his large family.]
spacious; roomy
laconic [Her laconic speeches tell you important things in a very few words.]
sparing of words; terse or concise
abstemious [A good athlete is abstemious in his habits.]
sparing or moderate in eating and drinking; temperate
polyglot [I hope I can find someone who speaks English in this polyglot neighborhood.]
speaking or writing in several languages; multilingual; a mixture or languages
vociferous [She annoyed us by becoming vociferous when quiet talk would have served as well.]
speaking out noisily; clamorous
vapid [His speech was so vapid that much of the audience fell asleep.]
spiritless; insipid; dull
platonic [Although they had been very close for many years, their love was purely platonic.]
spiritual and not sexual or sensual. Platonic: idealistic; academic; theoretical
immaculate [Even though he has been criticized by his opponents, his public record is immaculate.]
spotlessly clean; without stain or blemish
rampant [After the victory the crowd rushed rampant through the streets shouting, "We're number one!"
spreading unchecked; widespread and uncontrolled; wild or violent
philatelist [His interest in stamps began early and he became an avid philatelist.]
stamp collector
destitution [The Social Security system attempts to prevent destitution among the aged.]
state of being without means of subsistence; great poverty
desuetude [The good old customs soon fell into desuetude with the new generation.]
state of disuse; uselessness
sedulous [he obtains good grades not because he is brilliant, but because he is a sedulous worker.]
steadily busy or attentive; diligent; assiduous
furtive [She caught him making furtive glances at her, but he would never look in the eye.]
stealthy; secretive; sly; evasive
sidled [The bashful child at last sidled up to her new aunt.]
stepped or moved sideways in a shy or stealthy manner
stilted [His speaking style is too stilted to appeal to a general audience.]
stiffly formal; pompous
piquant [He is a master of the piquant mystery story. She is dull and lethargic but she has a piquant young friend.]
stimulating to the mind; interesting; provocative; charmingly lively; spicy; tart
sarcophagus [On his first visit to the cathedral the boy was frightened by the row of huge, grim sarcophagi.]
stone coffin or tomb; especially one exposed to view
exotic [Several exotic oriental dishes were served at the international banquet.]
strangely enticing or fascinating; not native; foreign
mettle [He was a man of fine mettle during the entire war.]
strength of spirit; stamina; dependability; ardor
obdurate [He remained obdurate in spite of our encouraging him to join us.]
stubborn; unyielding; obstinate; unmanageable
pertinacious [He was pertinacious in maintaining his position.]
stubbornly persistent; tenacious of goals or purpose; not easily gotten rid of
subsidiary [The main office has opened several subsidiary offices all over town.]
subsidized by or dependent upon; supplemental; subordinate; auxiliary; one or that in such a status
cataclysmic [The destruction caused by the storm reached cataclysmic proportions.]
sudden and violent on a large scale; disastrous or violently changing in effect
schizophrenic [Because she appears to live in a world of her own, she may be schizophrenic.]
suffering from a mental disorder characterized by withdrawal from reality, often incorrectly defined as having a split personality; one with such a condition
expedient [We must win by the most expedient means and worry about the consequences later.]
suitable or advisable at the moment; opportune or useful but not necessarily right; such an action or means
perponderance [Some women and a few children attended but there was a preponderance of men in the audience.]
superiority in quantity or influence; the greater part of
turgid [As a turgid stream overflows its banks, his turgid speech flooded us with almost meaningless words.]
swollen; distended; inflated or bombastic in expression
deleted [Your name was inadvertently deleted from the list, but I have just added it.]
taken out; cut out; removed
omnivorous [He is an omnivorous reader, enjoying any book and every subject available to him. Most dogs are omnivorous.
taking in or consuming everything; eating almost anything, esp. both vegetables and meat
garrulous [She works very rapidly, but her garrulous tongue distracts us from our studies.]
talkative; chattering; loquacious
loquacious [They are quite different: one is loquacious, while the other rarely says a word.]
talkative; given to continual talking
sullies [The student who cheats sullies his honor.]
tarnishes; defiles or stains; tarnishments; defilements.
fraught [Although the mission was fraught with danger he was willing to carry it out.]
teeming with; laden; full of
spasmodic [He cannot be relied upon because he is too spasmodic in doing his work.]
temporarily impulsive or violent; intermittent and intense; convulsive
abeyance [The committee held his question in abeyance until more important matters had been settled.]
temporary inaction; suspension; deferral; (adjective form: abeyant)
mutability [The mutability of all living things is symbolized by the changing seasons.]
tendency to change; alterability; inconsistency
erosive [The erosive power of the river changed the shape of his property.]
tending or causing to wear away or disintegrate slowly
evanescent [The carefee spirit of youth is evanescent and seldom persists into adulthood.]
tending to fade like vapor; vaporous; ephemeral
salutary [The salutary result of their argument ultimately may be cooperation.]
tending to promote good; beneficial; healthful
sinister [He dedicated his life to combating the sinister forces in society.]
tending toward disaster; threatening; foreboding; evil; wicked; (literally: left or left-hand).
frustration [He felt great frustration when he did not receive the answer he had hoped for.]
that which baffles or thwarts accomplishment; the state of being so affected
protuberance [The archeologists were puzzled by a protuberance just below the surface of the earth.]
that which bulges, sticks out or protrudes; a protrusion
demarcation [Slavery caused a demarcation of attitudes in northern and southern states before the Civil War.]
that which clearly distinguishes or marks a difference; a differencing or distinguishing; a boundary or separation; the fixing of such
anomaly [Everything in the whole test was related, except for one anomaly.]
that which differs from what is commonly expected; a deviation from the rule; an irregularity or abnormality
complement [Your study of calculus will complement the requirements for a degree in mathematics.]
that which fills up or adds to for completion; that which must be so added; to add to in such a manner
sequel [The sequel to the story will appear in the next issue of the magazine.]
that which follows; a continuation
aggrandizement [His only interest in being elected was personal aggrandizement.]
that which makes richer or greater; the state or result of such
paradox [To be both rational and passionate would seem to be a paradox.]
that which may be true but which seems to be contradictory, false or absurd; a self contradictory statement
finesse [What she lacked in understanding of business details, she made up for by her finesse in dealing with customers.]
the ability to perform with delicate skill and style; tactfulness and subtlety; artfulness
degradation [How can any thoughtful person submit to the degradation that drugs induce?]
the act of degrading; reduction in quality, status, morals, etc.
acquisition [Let's hire her because her ability will be a valuable acquisition for our company.]
the act of gaining or acquiring; anything gained or acquired
focalization [Today, our focalization will be on chapter three.]
the act or action of focusing or concentration; the location of concentrated attention
perturbation [The overthrowing of the king caused great perturbation of the country's social structure.]
the act or cause of disturbance in a usual condition; such as disturbance; agitation
mayhem [It is a wonder he was not killed by the mayhem that did make him an invalid for life.]
the act or offense of causing severe bodily injury; maiming; mutilation; crippling; violent confusion and destruction
extortion [The student tried extortion to gain a better grade, but the teacher would not be intimidated]
the act or result of forcing payment by intimidation or violence; blackmail; the act or result of imposing a grossly unfair high price
amelioration [The dress code had been too restrictive and its amelioration was welcomed by the students.]
the act or state of changing for the better; improvement
hedonism [Since hedonism was his philosophy, he cared only about the immediate gratification of this desires.]
the belief that pleasure is the principle goal in life; self indulgence in pleasure seeking
resilience [In spite of many misfortunes, her resilience has kept her a happy person.]
the capability of recovering shape after being bent or stretched; elasticity; the personal capability of recovering undamaged from stress or pressure
spectrum [He was very familiar with Faulkner, having read the entire spectrum of the novelist's work.]
the entire range of something; the colored bands of refracted light
visage [His visage was normally placid but his mouth twisted and his eyes bulged when he was angry.]
the face, particularly with regard to expression
cognomen [His legal cognomen is Smith, and his familiar cognomen is "Smitty']
the family name; surname; a name by which one is known: a nickname
orthopedics [A specialist in orthopedics was called in to treat her broken leg.]
the field of medicine dealing with skeletal system injuries or abnormalities
paragon [Hamlet said that his father was the paragon of kings, whose place could never be taken.]
the finest example; a model of excellence
prototype [The prototype of this car was first suggested five years ago.]
the first of its kind; the original model to which others must conform
necromancy [The magician claimed that he used necromancy when he told our fortunes.]
the foretelling of the future by supposed communication with the dead or with spirits; black magic; sorcery
protagonist [As the protagonist in uncovering city corruption, he stood out like the protagonist in a mystery novel.]
the leading or central character in a play or story; a person most concerned and active in resolving a situation
bourgeois [In America there are rich people, poor people - and many of us are of the bourgeois.]
the middle class; a member of the middle class; pertaining to the middle class; commonplace or ordinary
essence [Faith, hope and love constitute the essence of Christianity.]
the most essential and characterizing aspect; the deep and true character; a concentrated and stable substance; a perfume
filibuster [The senator's filibuster lasted for an amazing fourteen hours.]
the obstruction of passage of a legislative bill by the making of long speeches; to speak for such purpose
permeate [The odor of the flowers will permeate the entire house]
the pass into and penetrate throughout; to spread or diffuse into; to pervade
agglomeration [The entire east end of the city was formed by the gradual agglomeration of tenement houses.]
the process of massing or clustering together; a jumbled mass or cluster
euphony [Choose another word for the sake of euphony.]
the quality of pleasantness in sound; pleasant sound
beneficence [His beneficence as a citizen stood out in contrast to the meanness of others.]
the quality or display of goodness and kindness; a good deed or kindness; such actions collectively
verisimilitude [Some science fiction has the verisimilitude to make it almost believable.]
the resemblance or appearance of truth or reality
hallucination [Macbeth's hallucination of the ghost of Banquo is the result of his guilty conscience.]
the seeing, feeling, experiencing of something mentally that seems real but is not; an imaginary perception
propriety [Although he was very crude at home, he always acted with propriety when in public.]
the sense or quality of being appropriate or proper; conduct that matches generally accepted standards
ideology [The ideology of communism cannot be accepted in a democracy.]
the set of beliefs or doctrines that distinguish a person or group
protrusion [The protrusion of your personal affairs is a distraction from our work. She cut her foot on a sharp protrusion in the carpet.]
the state of act of thrusting forward or sticking out; that which sticks out or juts out
sobriety [Absolute sobriety is necessary when one is driving. He seldom laughs but maintains sobriety.]
the state of being sober, serious or temperate; abstinence from intoxicating substance
celibacy [Celibacy is obligatory for Roman Catholic priests.]
the state of refraining from marriage and sexual relations.
anthropology [Anthropology helps us to understand differences and similarities among human races.]
the study of mankind, including origins, development, characteristics, customs, etc.
topography [The aerial camera revealed the topography of the river valley with amazing detail.]
the surface features of land; the art and science of representing such on a map.
plagiarism [Instead of being an original composition, his writing was nothing but plagiarism.]
the taking of expressions and ideas of another perosn and using them as if they were one's own; copying without credit to the author
denouement [We didn't recognize the real villain in the drama until the denouement occurred.]
the unraveling or revealing of meaning of a play, novel, etc.; the point where this occurs; a final outcome
appurtenances [He made sure that all of the appurtenances came with the boat.]
things added to a more important thing; supplementary equipment; accessories
votaries [The High Priest's votaries would follow him anywhere and do all his bidding.]
those bound by a vow; those devoted to a particular cause or belief; dedicated followers or students
pensive [Cheer up - stop thinking - get active - you have been pensive long enough!]
thoughtful, reflective - usually with a feeling of soberness or sadness
malignant [The operation showed that the cancer was malignant.]
threatening to produce death; harmful
taut [His nerves were so taut he thought they would snap.]
tightly drawn; tense
interim [We had two business meetings but in the interim we went sightseeing.]
time between; meantime
assimilate [If you tell me carefully, I can assimilate all the data. Many different cultures have been assimilated into American culture.]
to absorb and make a part of; to take in and relate; to digest; to be or become like or absorbed
escort [As he escorted her into the ballroom, his mother thought of her own cotillion days.]
to accompany in order to protect or show honor or courtesy to; one who so acts.
augment [Students often augment their allowance with the income from a job.]
to add to; to increase; to supplement
badger [If you don't stop badgering me about your grade I shall lower it.]
to annoy persistently; to bother or tease; a small burrowing animal
foment [The police are afraid that the demonstration will foment violence.]
to arouse; to cause; to incite
impute [We should not impute false motives to those who are kind.]
to ascribe; to attribute; to credit or blame
allocate [We must work out a budget and allocate funds for each project.]
to assign as a portion or share; to set apart for; to distribute by allotment
subside [After the flood, the water finally subsided.]
to become less active; to decrease from violence or agitation to calmness;; to sink or settle
blanch [She blanched when she heard the bad news.]
to become or turn pale; to make white; to bleach; to scald edibles
prosecute [He has threatened to prosecute anyone who hunts on his property. We are dedicated to the task and will prosecute it to completion.]
to begin and conduct legal action against; to sue; to go on with or pursue; to carry on a business or trade
encumber [The equipment did not encumber our efforts as much as we had feared.]
to burden; to load down; to hinder
mollify [Not even her apology could mollify the angry teacher.]
to calm or appease; to soothe; to make less severe
terminate [When the company terminates its manufacture of this product, my services with them will terminate as well.]
to cause or bring to an end; to conclude; to end
modulate [no other actor could express so many moods by merely modulating his voice.]
to change, adjust or regulate; to vary the pitch or tone of sound or the frequency of radio waves
glean [I had to glean the information I needed by long searching through many books.]
to collect facts, patiently and gradually, etc.; literally: to gather grain left by reapers
coalesce [Under a good leader, their various ideas may coalesce into one common purpose.]
to combine or come together in one body, purpose, etc.; to unite; to fuse; to blend
conscript [A conscript army is usually not as dependable as a volunteer one.]
to compel or force into service; drafted or compelled to serve; one so compelled.
temporize [The professor refused to temporize in his literary tastes just for the sake of current fashion.]
to comply with the time and occasion; to yield to current opinion; to stall for time; to compromise
dissemble [He claimed that he was not afraid, but we knew that he was dissembling.]
to conceal or disguise; to show falsely; to dissimulate
infer [You have implied your interest in this kind of work, and so I infer that you want the job.]
to conclude or derive from something assumed, known or implied; (imply: to suggest vaguely)
comport [They comport themselves with admirable grace.]
to conduct or behave oneself; to be compatible or in agreement with
confound [He tried to confound us by telling different versions of his plan.]
to confuse, bewilder or amaze
clamber [He was so drunk that he had to clamber up the steps.]
to crawl or climb in a clumsy manner
excoriate [The general delivered a speech excoriating the deserters.]
to criticize harshly; to censure; (literally: to tear off a strip of skin)
flout [He was punished for flouting the authority of his teachers.]
to defy contemptiously; to scorn or scoff; such an act
decry [We should decry the bad behavior of those who upset the classroom.]
to denounce or condemn openly; to censure
gainsay [No matter how much I dislike him, I cannot gainsay his success.]
to deny; to contradict
enervate [The thinness of the air seemed to enervate the mountain climber.]
to deprive of strength; to devitalize; to weaken
decimate [The community had been decimated by a fearful epidemic and the mill had to close down.]
to destroy or kill a large number; literally: to kill one out of every ten
flaunt [The winner continued to flaunt the money in their faces.]
to display proudly or defiantly; to wave or flourish arrogantly
implement [She has the experience to implement our plans, putting ideas to work. These regulations will be implements for quality control.]
to do or provide what is needed for completion or activation; to effect; to accomplish; something used for a specific purpose; a tool or instrument
retract [He was willing to retract the statement he made yesterday.]
to draw back; to withdraw; to take back
elicit [His long and heavy discourse elicited yawns and stifled groans from the audience.]
to draw forth or call forth; to evoke; to educe
protract [The workers were inclined to protract the job because they were being paid by the hour.]
to draw out; to prolong; to extend
alleviate [As an excellent nurse, she was able to alleviate anxiety as well as pain.]
to ease, relieve or lighten; to mitigate
mince [She did not mince words in her forthright accusation.] [Minced ham makes good sandwiches.]
to express with primness or with little force; to cut into little pieces
purport [He purports to be a doctor, but his methods suggest that he is a charlatan.]
to give an impression of; to claim as true, to profess; meaning; intention
endorse [Once before he had made the mistake of endorsing a candidate he did not know well enough.]
to give support or approval to; to sanction; to transfer or guarantee by signing
manipulate [To fly an airplane, you must manipulate the controls. He doesn't hesitate to manipulate people to achieve his own goals.]
to handle skillfully; to manage, change or alter shrewdly
incarcerate [He committed a felony and was incarcerated for punishment.]
to imprison; to confine
denote [The huge black clouds denote a storm.]
to indicate; to mark; to designate or signify
amalgamate [Two business firms may amalgamate for the best interest of both.]
to join or mix together; to unite; to combine
rationalize [He attempted to rationalize his behavior by claiming that the ends would justify his means.]
to justify one's actions or motives plausibly but not necessarily truthfully; to make reasonable or rational
abscond [We have told the police that he left quickly yesterday to abscond with our funds.]
to leave secretly and in haste, usually to escape the law
allay [The teacher tried to allay the student's fears about the test by assuring him that he would pass.]
to lessen in intensity; to remove or reduce fear or doubt; to calm; to pacify
assuage [Not even her kind words could assuage her friend's grief.]
to lessen in severity or harshness; to mitigate; to alleviate; to calm or satisfy; to appease
console [No one could console her after the tragedy in her family. The organist adjusted the stops on the console and then began the concert.]
to lessen sadness or disappointment; to comfort or cheer in distreee; to solace; the keyboard of an organ, computer, etc.; a cabinet
stint [Now that the food shortage is over, there is no need to stint on means. This stint of hard work will be over in one day.]
to limit; to be frugal or sparing; a limited or assigned task or period
languish [Since freedom was denied him, he was left to languish in prison.]
to lose strength, force, or animation; to experience physical and mental discomfort
essay [you must not give up, but must essay to complete an interesting essay.]
to make an effort; to try; to attempt; a trial; an attempt; a short written composition
enhance [The improvements enhance the value of the property.]
to make better; to heighten or increase in value, quality, etc.
fructify [The farmer must work hard to fructify his fields.]
to make fruitful; to make productive
divulge [You must promise not to divulge that secret.]
to make known; to reveal; to tell
embellish [These oriental rugs certainly embellish the appearance of the room.]
to make more beautiful or valuable; to add to; to enhance
mitigate [His good intentions do not mitigate his bad actions.]
to make or become milder, less painful, less severe, less blameworthy
writhe [As I pressed the stick against the snake's neck, it writhed awhile and then lay still.]
to make twisting or turning movements; to squirm; to contort the body as in agony
swirl [The strong wind caused the dead leaves to swirl.]
to move in a circular, whirling or writhing manner; a twist, curl, whirl or eddy
dilate [Medicines are used to dilate the pupil of the eye.]
to open wide; to enlarge
remunerate [They did not fail to remunerate him generously for his work.]
to pay or to pay for; to compensate
dissuade [It was hard to dissuade him from doing what he planned.]
to persuade not to do something
proselytize [Christian denominations welcome voluntary members but few of them will actually proselytize.]
to persuade to change from one belief, party, religion, etc. to another; to seek to convert
prognosticate [To prognosticate weather conditions is not a simple matter.]
to predict; to foretell
portend [Dark clouds portend a storm.]
to present an omen; to warn of; to foretell; to presage
emboss [The head of Caesar was embossed on Roman coins.]
to push up or raise upon a surface; to produce a design in relief; to adorn
subsume [Many forms and transitions of life are subsumed in the science of paleontology.]
to put into or include within a larger class or category
couch [He knew exactly what he wanted to say, but he could not couch his letter in the right words.]
to put into words; to express appropriately; to phrase; a piece of furniture - a sofa
inculcate [He tried to inculcate a sense of loyalty among his classmates.]
to reach or impress by frequent repetition; to instill
renaissance [In a renaissance of concern, the voters approved a new school levy ten years after the last one.]
to rebirth; a revival; Renaissance: the time of greatly renewed learning in Europe after the Dark Ages, 14th-16th centuries
retrench [As his bank account began to dwindle he knew he had to retrench on expenditures.]
to reduce; to curtail; to economize
palliate [The doctor gave him some medicine to palliate his suffering.]
to relieve or ease without curing; to alleviate; to lessen seriousness; to extenuate; to excuse
recant [To be reinstated he was obliged to recant his statement.]
to renounce formally; to disavow; to "take back" or withdraw
epitomize [Sir Galahad epitomizes knighthood, and his legend is too long for me to epitomize.]
to represent or typify a whole;to summarize concisely
importune [I can't change your grade so it's useless to importune me.]
to request urgently; to implore; to beg; to urge
resuscitate [The lifeguard could not resuscitate the drowned woman.]
to restore from apparent death; to bring back to consciousness; to revive
blazon [An artist was chosen to blazon the hero's shield.]
to richly adorn; to depict symbolically; such a depiction or its description
gouge [They'll have to gouge those big rocks out of the ground with a bulldozer.]
to scoop, dig or force out; to overcharge; a woodworking tool for cutting holes or grooves; such a hole or groove
excerpt [He read an excerpt from Lewis's book.]
to select or take out from; to extract; a passage taken out of a book, article, etc.
sequester [We will sequester the students taking the test so the others won't distract them.]
to set apart; to isolate; to segregate; to seclude
propound [He may propound many ideas, but he can't apply them unless the committee adopted them.]
to set forth for consideration; to suggest subject to approval
brandish [The child would brandish his stick when a dog approached.]
to shake, wave or flourish threateningly, defiantly or triumphantly
scintillate [They are the ideal guests at a party - well-dressed, refined, and scintillating.]
to sparkle; to glitter; to be vibrantly personable; to be brilliant and witty in conversation
malign [He maligned his opponents, hoping voters would believe the worst about them.]
to speak badly of; to defame; to slander
loll [Despite the arrival of visitors, the man continued to loll in his chair.]
to sprawl or repose listlessly to lazily; to lounge or droop
propagate [Be careful about saying anything that might propagate rumors.]
to spread information, etc. from one person to another; to disseminate; to reproduce or multiply; to cause such
legibility [He praised the young man for the legibility of his hand writing.]
to state or quality of being easy to read
filch [When the grocer was not looking, the hungry boy was tempted to filch an apple.]
to steal slyly, usually something of little value
emulate [If you emulate your parent's success and satisfaction, your own can certainly be no less.]
to strive to equal or surpass; to successfully rival
connote [The word "country" connotes different things to different people.]
to suggest; to imply
capitulate [Because defeat was sure, the general was willing to capitulate.]
to surrender on certain terms; to give in; to acquiesce
commiserate [You commiserate with a friend who has suffered some loss.]
to sympathize or condole with; to feel or show pity or sorrow for
coagulate [A new substance has been found which helps the blood to coagulate.]
to thicken; to clot; to gather together in a mass
ruminate [It is well to ruminate over a subject before beginning to write about it.]
to think about carefully; to ponder over; to meditate
jettison [To lighten the plane, the crew was forced to jettison the cargo.]
to throw overboard; to discard
encroach [She owns the copyright on that book and if you copy it, she can sue you for encroaching.]
to trespass; to intrude upon another's property or rights
esophagus [Food passes down the esophagus into the stomach.]
to tube passing from the pharynx to the stomach; the gullet
construe [If you can't construe my directions, you may end up following the wrong route.]
to understand or explain the meaning of; to interpret or deduce
exploit [He unfairly exploited the work of another man to gain his own ends. She will wisely exploit the help of others in an exploit that will make them all famous.]
to use selfishly or to take advantage of; to put to full and practical use; a great and bold or daring deed
deplete [Senseless waste will in time deplete our national resources.]
to use up; to empty; to reduce; to exhaust
substantiate [The rumors were substantiated by the report.]
to verify; to attest as true; to give substance to
dally [If you dally here much longer, you'll miss your appointment. Don't dally with Dolly - she's too serious for flirtation.]
to waste time; to loiter; to play or trifle with; to playfully show affection
inured [By constant exposure he soon became inured to the hardships of cold weather.]
tolerant of because of prior exposure; accustomed to; hardened to unaffected by
ineffable [His ineffable delight was caused by the unexpected arrival of his friend.]
too overpowering to be expressed in words; unutterable; indescribable
contiguous [The property of my next door neighbor is contiguous with my property.]
touching; adjoining
perfidious [a perfidious man will not keep your secrets and may turn against you.]
treacherous; violating of faith or trust
condoned [His intentions were good but their bad results could not be condoned.]
treated, overlooked or forgiven as though not committed or of no consequence.
opulent [The opulent sheik spent money recklessly and served his guests an opulent dinner.]
tremendously wealthy; very rich or affluent; most abundant; luxuriously plentiful
panegyric [He requested the honor of speaking the panegyric at his friend's funeral.
tribute; a speech of praise
chicanery [He is so adept at political chicanery that no one can pin the dirty tricks on him.]
trickery; deception
veracity [His lying in the past causes me to doubt his veracity now.]
truthfulness; honesty
tortuous [His story-telling and the crooked road to his mountain home were equally tortuous.]
twisting; winding; turning; not direct or straightforward
indomitable [It was his indomitable spirit to win that carried him on to success.]
unable to be overcome, subdued or dominated; stubbornly resistant; persevering
illiterate [Since he has had no formal education, he is virtually illiterate.]
unable to read or write
immutable [The physical laws of the universe are immutable, but its features are constantly changing.]
unchangeable; fixed
inexorable [A fatalist believes that man's destiny is inexorable.]
unchanging; relentless; unalterable
empathy [Sympathy is empty unless empathy allows me to really share your concern.]
understanding and identification with the mental state and emotions of another person
tacit [He did not actually say "yes" but he gave tacit permission for us to go.]
understood without being openly stated; implied
compunction [She had absolutely no compunction about lying to her mother. My compunction moves me to apologize for inconveniencing you.]
uneasiness because of guilt; a slight sense of pity or regret
recreant [The recreant soldier was captured and court-martialed for desertion.]
unfaithful; disloyal; cowardly; one who exhibits these qualities
disparity [Disparity in rank did not prevent the soldiers and the officers from enjoying the party.]
unlikeness; inequality; difference
redundant [The phrase "small in size" is redundant.]
unnecessary to meaning; already stated; repetitive; excessive
spontaneous [Wordsworth defined poetry as the "spontaneous overflow of powerful feeling.']
unplanned; acting from a natural impulse; self-generated
cacophony [The cacophony of a band not in tune hurts my ears.]
unpleasant, harsh, or discordant sound
chauvinistic [He knows good people everywhere but he's rather chauvinistic about fellow Virginians.]
unreasonably devoted or loyal to one's own group, race, sex or status; implying unreasoned superiority to such
crass [His crass behavior was partially due to lack of education.]
unrefined; common; vulgar
atypical [His clumsiness on the fairway was atypical of a professoinal golfer.]
unrepresentative; not typical
refractory [A refractory boy is hard to handle.]
unresponsive to discipline; resistant; stubborn; unmanageable
fallow [The fields were left fallow for several years.]
unused; uncultivated
rectitude [Her rectitude is such that no one can criticize her relatinships with others.]
unwavering honesty and right behavior; moral soundness; integrity
utilitarian [Our plan was simple and utilitarian, without any expensive frills.]
useful and without ornamentation or non-necessities; functional and nothing more; one who prizes utility
verbose [A speaker should be concise, not verbose.]
using too many words.
ennui [Many poets and philosophers have stated that physical suffering is preferable to ennui.]
vague discontent; listless dissatisfaction; weariness of life; oppressive boredom
ribald [His ribald stories are not appropriate in polite company.]
verbally vulgar, coarse or offensive
avid [He is such an avid fan that he has not missed a home game in twenty years.]
very desirous of; eager; enthusiastic
staid [We were ecstatic about the news but, as usual, she remained staid.
very reserved; sedate; sober; grave
infinitesimal [An infinitesimal germ can cause serious illness.]
very small; incalculably minute
tenuous [Her argument was too tenuous for us to take seriously.]
very thin or fine; flimsy; insubstantial
invective [We thought that they were friends until we heard their invectives about each other.]
violent denunciation or accusation; vituperation; abuse; abusive; condemning
scurrilous [He deserved to be criticized but not in such scurrilous language.]
vulgarly abusive; coarse; indecent
nomadic [It took a long time before the nomadic tribes settled down.]
wandering from place to place; having no fixed location
balmy [There are many balmy days in spring.]
warm; refreshing; mild
emaciated [The emaciated bodies of the prisoners of war were pitiful.]
wasted away from lack of nourishment; extremely thin
haggard [The smooth features of his youth had turned into the haggard face of a worn-out old man.]
wasted or gaunt in appearance
prodigal [He was so prodigal in his youth that he has nothing left for his old age.]
wasteful; recklessly extravagant
decrepitude [Even at the age of ninety he showed no signs of decrepitude.]
weakness because of advanced age or infirmity; feebleness; a state of being worn out or nearly useless
debility [No specific disease could be diagnosed, yet he suffered from general debility.]
weakness; loss of strength; infirmity
erudite [Although he has never attended college, he is a very erudite person.]
well-read; learned; scholarly
flagellation [he was sentenced to flagellation in the public square.]
whipping; flogging
nefarious [He was given a long prison term for his nefarious crime]
wicked; vicious
pandemonium [The earthquake wrecked many homes and sent hordes of people into pandemonium.]
wild tumult; disorder on grand scale
abnegation [She assigned her rights in the legacy to charity, and is poor but happy in her abnegation.]
willing self-sacrifice; self denial; renunciation
credulous [The teacher was so credulous that he actually believed the student's vague excuses.]
willing to believe too readily; trusting of scant evidence; gullible
expurgated [Perhaps an expurgated edition of the novel would be more appropriate for the less sophisticated students.]
with the objectionable parts taken out; removed as objectionable; censored; howdlerized
seceded [Southern states seceded from the Union during the Civil War.]
withdrew or broke away from; withdrawn; broken away
futile [No matter how hard he tried, his efforts were futile.]
without effect; ineffectual; useless
perfunctory [He turned in all his assignments, but his work is so perfunctory that he failed the course.]
without genuine concern or interest; without true meaning; superficial; routine
indigent [An indigent farmer was given help by his neighbors.]
without means for subsistence; destitute; needy; poor; such a person
licentious [He has gone from bad to worse, from rude to licentious behavior.]
without moral restraint; defiant of normal rules; lewd; dissolute
impious [He always scoffs at religion and seems to be totally impious.]
without piety; irreverent; blasphemous
verbatim [Repeat the instructions verbatim to assure me you know what to do.]
word for word; in the exact words
prolix [His speech was so prolix that his audience grew restless waiting for it to end.]
wordy; long-winded; verbose
sophisticated [She is so sophisticated that she disdains football games and country picnics.]
worldly-wise; not simple; refined; cultivated
mundane [Now that my vacation is over, routine work seems mundane.]
worldly; ordinary; uninspired or uninspiring
jaded [We were so jaded by school work that vacation was a welcome relief.]
worn out; exhausted; "burned out", satiated
venerable [His many years of loving understanding made the priest venerable to all of his parishoners.]
worthy of respect or reverance because of advanced age, wisdom, dedication, etc; revered