IQ_Words
obloquy
\OB-luh-kwee\, noun:| 1. Strongly condemnatory or abusive language or utterance.| 2. The condition of disgrace suffered as a result of public| blame, abuse, or condemnation; ill repute.
obviate
\OB-vee-ayt\, transitive verb:| To prevent by interception; to anticipate and dispose of or make unnecessary.| After lunch he packed and stepped into the shower: Ronald Rosenthal spent a good portion of his life in planes and he knew that hot water immediately before and after a flight obviated most of its bad effects.
onus
\OH-nuhs\, noun:| 1. A burden; an obligation; a disagreeable necessity.| 2. a: A stigma. b: Blame.| 3. The burden of proof.| And who knew what financial pressures he was under or how desperate was his need to shed the onus of his past?
Annex
(n)|a building which is an addition to an existing building| (v)|take possession of; seize; capture
lissom
, also lissome \LISS-uhm\, adjective:| 1. Limber; supple; flexible.| 2. Light and quick in action; nimble; agile; active.| Raphaelle Boitel moves with the lissom, contortionist plastique of a snake-woman.
pukka
, also pucka \PUHK-uh\, adjective:| 1. Authentic; genuine.| 2. Good of its kind; first-class.| He talks like the quintessential pukka Englishman and quotes Chesterton and Kipling by the yard and yet he has chosen to live most of his adult life abroad.
orotund
\OR-uh-tuhnd\, adjective:| 1. Characterized by fullness, clarity, strength, and smoothness of sound.| 2. Pompous; bombastic.| I have been cursed to stalk the night through all eternity, he went on, his voice orotund, carrying all| across the playground.
polymath
\PAH-lee-math\, noun:| A person of great or varied learning; one acquainted with various subjects of study.| A century after Aristotle, in 240 B.C., a brilliant polymath, Eratosthenes, is appointed chief librarian of the Museum at Alexandria--the most cosmopolitan city and center of learning in the Mediterranean world.
paroxysm
\PAIR-uhk-siz-uhm\, noun:| 1. (Medicine) A sudden attack, intensification, or recurrence of a disease.| 2. Any sudden and violent emotion or action; an outburst; a fit.| But when he's on target -- and more often than not he is -- he can send you into paroxysms of laughter.
Belie
contradict
Belied
contradicted
Dearth
shortage
Paucity
shortage
Monotonous
dull; repetitive
Staid
dull; sober; serious
Banal
dull; unoriginal
Monotonous
dull; unvarying
Obscured
hidden; covered; buried
Cryptic
hidden; obscure
Covert
hidden; undercover
Quarantine
isolation to prevent the spread of disease
Colloquial
local and informal (used of language)
Execrable
very, very bad
Imponderable
cannot be understood
Indelible
cannot be wiped out
Circumspect
cautious; considering all sides
Prudent
cautious; wise
Alacrity
eagerness; enthusiasm; quickness;speed and eagerness
Immoderate
excessive; extreme
Preeminent
famous; outstanding
Dalliance
non-serious involvement; toying or playing with something
Perquisites
'perks'
cenacle
'senik? noun 1. a group of people, such as a discussion group or literary clique. 2. the room in which the Last Supper was held.
Articulate
(adj.) able to express something well in words;clear; lucid; eloquent
sang
-froid, also sangfroid \sang-FRWAH\, noun:| Freedom from agitation or excitement of mind; coolness in| trying circumstances; calmness.
hugger
-mugger \HUH-guhr-muh-guhr\, noun:| 1. A disorderly jumble; muddle; confusion.| 2. Secrecy; concealment.| adjective: 1. Confused; muddled; disorderly. 2. Secret.| adverb: 1. In a muddle or confusion. 2. Secretly.| transitive verb: To keep secret.| intransitive verb: To act in a secretive manner.| While Ventura is speaking out -- his wisdom seems to be a hugger-mugger of twisted cliches from his reading of airport trash picked up as he traveled from bout to bout -- others who do possess minds too often are failing to speak theirs, and usually they do so only as a consequence of perceived electoral pragmatism.
Fathom
1. (v) work out; understand, 2. (n) measure of depth
Shroud
1. a cover for dead body, 2. to cover
Discriminating
1. able to make fine distinctions between; having good taste, 2. favoring one side/group and acting against another
Blunderbuss
1. ancient weapon (type of gun); 2. a clumsy person
Personification
1. attributing human qualities to something non-human, 2. acting as an example of
Pedestrian
1. boring (adj), 2. person who walks (n)
Pastoral
1. concerned with the countryside, 2. concerned with the care a pastor gives to someone
Ordain
1. destine; 2. confer holy orders on a priest
Divert
1. entertain; 2. distract; 3. cause a detour
Paradigm
1. example; 2. model; 3. way of looking at things
Conception
1. idea; view. 2. beginning of pregnancy
Legend
1. key to map; 2. myth or story
Prostration
1. lying face down; 2. be overcome with extreme weakness
Drone
1. monotonous noise (n); 2. to speak with no emotion (v); 3.male bee
Indifferent
1. neutral; 2. not outstanding
Hieroglyphics
1. picture writing; 2. writing which is difficult to read or enigmatic
Parasite
1. scrounger; 2. animal which takes digested food from another
Elliptical
1. shaped like an ellipse, 2. indirect
Quarry
1. something that is hunted; 2. mine for stone
Galvanized
1. stirred into action; stimulated, 2. coated with zinc
Petrify
1. terrify; 2. turn to stone
Grate (v)
1. to annoy; aggravate; vex; 2. shred
Flag
1. to lose energy, 2. to signal
Lobby
1. to try to persuade, 2. entrance hall
Ossify
1. turn to bone; 2. become fixed and rigid
Lukewarm
1. unenthusiastic; 2. neither hot nor cold
Currency
1. widespread acceptance, 2. money
Mallet
1. wooden hammer; 2. stick used for polo
Drivel
nonsense
lothario
noun a successful womanizer; a man who behaves selfishly in his sexual relationships with women
mist
noun a thin fog with condensation near the ground; verb become covered with mist; spray finely or cover with mist
imbroglio
noun a very embarrassing misunderstanding; an intricate and confusing interpersonal or political situation
legerdemain
noun an illusory feat; considered magical by naive observers
pittance
noun an inadequate payment
epigone
noun an inferior imitator of some distinguished writer or artist of musician
bugbear
noun an object of dread or apprehension; an imaginary monster used to frighten children
easel
noun an upright tripod for displaying something (usually an artist's canvas)
Captivating
fascinating
Anomalous
odd; not fitting the pattern
Anomalies
oddities; things that don't fit the pattern
Quirk
oddity
Condoning
overlooking; disregarding; ignoring
Effusive
overly expressive of emotions; 'gushing'
Fastidious
overly particular; finicky
Servile
overly submissive; groveling
Cliché
overused expression; something unoriginal
Preclude
prevent or make impossible
rancid
adj. (used of decomposing oils or fats) having a rank smell or taste usually due to a chemical change or decomposition; smelling of fermentation or staleness
redolent
adj. (used with `of' or `with') noticeably odorous; having a strong pleasant odor; serving to bring to mind
here
adj. being here now; adv. in or at this place; where the speaker or writer is; to this place (especially toward the speaker)
prurient
adj. characterized by lust
caitiff
adj. despicably mean and cowardly; noun a cowardly and despicable person
mawkish
adj. effusively or insincerely emotional
embonpoint
adj. euphemisms for slightly fat; noun the bodily property of being well rounded
parsimonious
adj. excessively unwilling to spend
regnant
adj. exercising power or authority
Dirge
mournful song
Clamor
shout; scream
Metaphorically
symbolically; figuratively
Raiment
clothes; garments
Receptacle
container; vessel; holder
busker
\BUS-kur\, noun:| A person who entertains (as by playing music) in public places.| Jakub is a student of mathematics, a likable but callow young man who seduces a blind busker, Alzbeta, who plays for the tourists in modern Prague.
adamant
\AD-uh-muhnt\, adjective:| Not capable of being swayed by pleas, appeals, or reason; not susceptible to persuasion; unyielding.
affable
\AF-uh-buhl\, adjective:| 1. Easy to speak to; receiving others kindly and conversing with them in a free and friendly manner.| 2. Gracious; benign.
opportune
\AHP-er-TOON\, \AHP-er-TYOON\, adjective:| Suitable for a given purpose or occasion; timely.| There is a war on. It's not the most opportune of times to distract the president with a phony political scandal.
ersatz
\AIR-sahts; UR-sats\, adjective: Being a substitute or imitation, usually an inferior one.| Meanwhile, a poor copy was erected in the courtyard; many an unsuspecting traveler paid homage to| that ersatz masterpiece.
arrogate
\AIR-uh-gayt\, transitive verb:| 1. To claim or seize without right or justification; to appropriate.| 2. To claim on behalf of another; to ascribe.
erudite
\AIR-yuh-dyt; -uh-dyt\, adjective:| Characterized by extensive reading or knowledge; learned.
agitprop
\AJ-it-prop\, noun:| Propaganda, especially pro-communist political propaganda disseminated through literature, drama, music, or art.
acrid
\AK-rid\, adjective:| 1. Sharp and harsh, or bitter to the taste or smell; pungent.| 2. Caustic in language or tone; bitter.
algorithm
\AL-guh-RITH-uhm\, noun:| A step-by-step procedure for solving a problem in a finite number of steps that often involves repetition of an operation.
anodyne
\AN-uh-dyn\, adjective:| 1. Serving to relieve pain; soothing.| 2. Not likely to offend; bland; innocuous.| noun:| 1. A medicine that relieves pain.| 2. Anything that calms, comforts, or soothes disturbed feelings.
ingenue
\AN-zhuh-noo\, noun:| 1. A naive girl or young woman.| 2. An actress playing such a person; also: the stage role of an ingenue.| This is not the face of an ingenue; this is an old soul in a new body -- wary, wise to her own long past, on to the wiles of the world, and having miles to go before she sleeps.
apogee
\AP-uh-jee\, noun:| 1. The point in the orbit of the moon or of an artificial satellite that is at the greatest distance from the center of the earth.| 2. The farthest or highest point; culmination.
apposite
\AP-uh-zit\, adjective:| Being of striking appropriateness and relevance; very applicable; apt.
autocrat
\AW-tuh-krat\, noun:| An absolute monarch who rules with unlimited authority; by extension, any person with undisputed authority in a relationship or situation.
bellwether
\BEL-wether\, noun:| 1. A wether, or sheep, which leads the flock, with a bell on his neck.| 2. Hence: A leader of a movement or activity.
billingsgate
\BIL-ingz-gayt; -git\, noun: Coarsely abusive, foul, or profane language.| Chaney would yell at him in his own particular patois -- an unapologetic stream of billingsgate far more creative than Marine drill instructors or master rappers.
bilious
\BIL-yuhs\, adjective:| 1. Of or pertaining to bile.| 2. Marked by an excess secretion of bile.| 3. Pertaining to, characterized by, or affected by gastric| distress caused by a disorder of the liver.| 4. Appearing as if affected by such a disorder.| 5. Resembling bile, especially in color.| 6. Of a peevish disposition; ill-tempered.| Most arresting of all, his normally gray elephant hide has changed to a bilious shade of green.
bivouac
\BIV-wak, BIV-uh-wak\, noun:| An encampment for the night, usually under little or no shelter.| intransitive verb:| To encamp for the night, usually under little or no shelter.| Rob had made his emergency bivouac just below the South Summit.
blandishment
\BLAN-dish-muhnt\, noun:| Speech or action that flatters and tends to coax, entice, or persuade; allurement -- often used in the plural.
bowdlerize
\BODE-luh-rise; BOWD-\, transitive verb:| 1. To remove or modify the parts (of a book, for example) considered offensive.| 2. To modify, as by shortening, simplifying, or distorting in style or content.| The president did not call for bowdlerizing all entertainment, but stressed keeping unsuitable material away from the eyes of children.
bombinate
\BOM-buh-nayt\, intransitive verb:| To buzz; to hum; to drone.| He is often drunk. His head hurts. Snatches of| conversation, remembered precepts, prefigured cries of| terror bombinate about his skull.
bootless
\BOOT-lis\, adjective: Unavailing; useless; without advantage or benefit.| I have seen a swan With bootless labour swim against the tide.
brio
\BREE-oh\, noun: Enthusiastic vigor; vivacity; liveliness; spirit.| Though my judgment was no doubt affected by all the wine we'd consumed, I remember being elated by our performance that night: our inspired spur-of-the-moment dialogue, the actors fleshing out their roles with such brio.
chary
\CHAIR-ee\, adjective:| 1. Wary; cautious.| 2. Not giving or expending freely; sparing.| What do you suppose the Founding Fathers, so chary of overweening government power, would make of a prosecutor with virtually unlimited reach and a staff the size of a small town?
daedal
\DEE-duhl\, adjective:| 1. Complex or ingenious in form or function; intricate.| 2. Skillful; artistic; ingenious.| 3. Rich; adorned with many things.| Most Web-site designers realize that large image maps and daedal layouts are to be avoided, and the leading World Wide Web designers have reacted to users' objections to highly graphical, slow sites by using uncluttered, easy-to-use layouts.
demagogue
\DEM-uh-gog\, noun:| 1. A leader who obtains power by means of impassioned appeals| to the emotions and prejudices of the populace.| 2. A leader of the common people in ancient times.
deprecate
\DEP-rih-kayt\, transitive verb:| 1. [Archaic] To pray against, as an evil; to seek to avert by prayer.| 2. To disapprove of strongly.| 3. To belittle; to depreciate.| We experience such augmentations as pleasure, which may be why aesthetic values have always been deprecated by social moralists, from Plato through our current campus Puritans.
descant
\DES-kant\, noun:| 1. (Music) (a) A melody or counterpoint sung above the plain song of the tenor. (b) The upper voice in part music.| 2. A discourse or discussion on a theme.|#|DES-kant; des-KANT; dis-\, intransitive verb:| 1. (a) To sing or play a descant. (b) To sing.| 2. To comment freely; to discourse at length.| [T]hese to their nests,| Were slunk, all but the wakeful nightingale;| She all night long her amorous descant sung.
desultory
\DES-uhl-tor-ee\, adjective:| 1. Jumping or passing from one thing or subject to another| without order or rational connection; disconnected; aimless.| 2. By the way; as a digression; not connected with the| subject.| 3. Coming disconnectedly or occuring haphazardly; random.| 4. Disappointing in performance or progress.| The shadows on the perfect lawn were straight and angular;they were the shadows of an old man sitting in a deep wicker-chair near the low table on which the tea had been served, and of two younger men strolling to and fro, in desultory talk, in front of him.
desuetude
\DES-wih-tood, -tyood\, noun:| The cessation of use; discontinuance of practice or custom; disuse.
diffident
\DIF-uh-dunt; -dent\, adjective:| 1. Lacking self-confidence; distrustful of one's own powers; timid; bashful.| 2. Characterized by modest reserve; unassertive.| He lived naturally in a condition that many greater poets never had, or if they had it, were embarrassed or diffident about it: a total commitment to his own powers of invention, a complete loss of himself in his materials.
dilatory
\DIL-uh-tor-ee\, adjective:| 1. Tending to put off what ought to be done at once; given to procrastination.| 2. Marked by procrastination or delay; intended to cause delay; -- said of actions or measures.| I am inclined to be dilatory, and if I had not enjoyed extraordinary luck in life and love I might have been living with my mother at that very moment, doing nothing.
disparate
\DIS-puh-rit; dis-PAIR-it\, adjective:| 1. Fundamentally different or distinct in quality or kind.| 2. Composed of or including markedly dissimilar elements.| Science at its best isolates a common element underlying many seemingly disparate phenomena.
dissolute
\DIS-uh-loot\, adjective:| Loose in morals and conduct; marked by indulgence in sensual pleasures or vices.
doff
\DOF\, transitive verb:| 1. To take off, as an article of clothing.| 2. To tip or remove (one's hat).| 3. To put aside; to rid oneself of.| After I finished sweeping, I grabbed my check, went to the locker room, and doffed the monkey suit, slipped into my jeans, sneakers and T-shirt and broke camp.
doula
\DOO-luh\, noun:| A woman who assists during childbirth labor and provides support to the mother, her child and the family after childbirth.
dudgeon
\DUH-juhn\, noun:| A state or fit of intense indignation; resentment; ill humor -- often used in the phrase in high dudgeon.| Higgins was so frustrated by such a basic error that he stormed out of the arena for the mid-session interval in high dudgeon.
diadem
\DY-uh-dem\, noun:| 1. A crown.| 2. An ornamental headband worn (as by Eastern monarchs) as a badge of royalty.| 3. Regal power; sovereignty; empire; -- considered as symbolized by the crown.| transitive verb: To adorn with a diadem; to crown.| On the far side of the cloister in the long, chapel-like room called the Treasure, she sits on her throne -- a small stiff gold figure robed in gold and covered with jewels and crowned with a golden diadem.
exculpate
\EK-skuhl-payt; ek-SKUHL-payt\, transitive verb:| To clear from alleged fault or guilt; to prove to be guiltless; to relieve of blame; to acquit.| Each member is determined to exculpate himself, to lay the blame elsewhere.
explicate
\EK-spluh-kayt\, transitive verb:| To explain; to clear of difficulties or obscurity.| I can cite a case -- my own -- of a young person's being altered politically by a novel, but I cannot explicate the process, let alone explain it in terms of the author's intention or literary strategies.
extricate
\EK-struh-kayt\, transitive verb:| To free or release from a difficulty or entanglement; to get free; to disengage.| Sean introduced himself and then extricated his hand from| Ronan's persistent grasp in order to show him the photo.
extant
\EK-stunt; ek-STANT\, adjective:| Still existing; not destroyed, lost, or extinct.
extirpate
\EK-stur-payt\, transitive verb:| 1. To pull up by the stem or root.| 2. To destroy completely.| 3. To remove by surgery.| A plant growing where it shouldn't is a weed. An object for which you have no need or sentimental attachment is garbage. Extirpate the one, toss the other.
exegete
\EK-suh-JEET\, noun:| A person who explains or interprets difficult parts of written works.| All the things said in this passage are clear and should be
exigent
\EK-suh-juhnt\, adjective:| 1. Requiring immediate aid or action; pressing; critical.| 2. Requiring much effort or expense; demanding; exacting.
equable
\EK-wuh-buhl; EE-kwuh-\, adjective:| 1. Equal and uniform; not varying.| 2. Not easily disturbed; not variable or changing -- said of| the feelings, temper, etc.| An equable climate, evidently due to the large area of sea compared with the land, seems to extend over the greater part of the southern hemisphere; and, as a consequence, the vegetation partakes of a semi-tropical character.
enervate
\EN-ur-vayt\, transitive verb:| 1. To deprive of vigor, force, or strength; to render feeble; to weaken.| 2. To reduce the moral or mental vigor of.| Beatriz de Ahumada soldiered on to produce nine more children, a tour of duty that left her enervated and worn.
epigone
\EP-uh-gohn\, noun:| An inferior imitator, especially of some distinguished writer, artist, musician, or philosopher.| He probably was influenced by John le Carré.... But Mr. Crisp... is no mere epigone.
aesthete
\ES-theet\, noun:| One having or affecting great sensitivity to beauty, as in art or nature.
fealty
\FEE-uhl-tee\, noun:| 1. Fidelity to one's lord; the feudal obligation by which the| tenant or vassal was bound to be faithful to his lord.| 2. The oath by which this obligation was assumed.| 3. Fidelity; allegiance; faithfulness.| He was re-elected Governor in 1855, and his administration of the State affairs, both in that and the preceding term of office,was marked by a regard for the public interest rather than party fealty.
fiat
\FEE-uht; -at; -aht; FY-uht; -at\, noun:| 1. An arbitrary or authoritative command or order.| 2. Formal or official authorization or sanction.
fetid
\FET-id; FEE-tid\, adjective:| Having an offensive smell; stinking.| The air was fetid, heavy as the breath of a large animal.
fettle
\FET-l\,| noun:A state or condition of fitness or order; state of mind; spirits -- often used in the phrase in fine fettle.| Aside from the problems with her voice... Miss Garland was in fine fettle last night.
philter
\FIL-tur\, noun:| 1. A potion or charm supposed to cause the person taking it to| fall in love.| 2. A potion or charm believed to have magic power.
philomath
\FIL-uh-math\, noun:| A lover of learning; a scholar.| It is precisely for the philomaths that universities ought to cater.
flippant
\FLIP-uhnt\, adjective:| Lacking proper seriousness or respect; showing inappropriate levity; pert.| In the mid-1950s we both wrote for the same weekly, where her contributions were a good deal more serious| and less flippant than mine.
florid
\FLOR-id\, adjective:| 1. Flushed with red; of a lively reddish color.| 2. Excessively ornate; flowery; as, a florid style; florid| eloquence.| The Reverend Mr Kidney is a short round bowlegged man with black muttonchop whiskers and a florid face, like a pomegranate, into which he has poured a great quantity of brandy and lesser amounts of whisky and claret.
fop
\FOP\, noun:| A man who is overly concerned with or vain about his dress and appearance; a dandy.| I wear ties because I don't have to, because in an increasingly dressed-down, homogenized world, they can set you apart. I wear ties because they nurture the inner fop.Also the outer one.
foundling
\FOWND-ling\, noun:| A deserted or abandoned infant; a child found without a parent| or caretaker.| Some of her desires were more altruistic: she wanted to| send Phyllis to school for a year, take Auntie May for a| winter in the Isle of Pines, and raise foundlings.
friable
\FRY-uh-buhl\, adjective:| Easily crumbled, pulverized, or reduced to powder.
fulminate
\FUL-muh-nayt\,| intransitive verb:| 1. To issue or utter verbal attacks or censures authoritatively or menacingly. 2. To explode; to detonate.| transitive verb:| 1. To utter or send out with denunciations or censures.| 2. To cause to explode.
firmament
\FUR-muh-muhnt\, noun:| 1. The region of the air; the sky; the heavens.| 2. The field or sphere of an interest or activity| But to judge by the twinkling summer stars that filled the| firmament, the dawn was still far off.
gewgaw
\G(Y)OO-gaw\, noun:| A showy trifle; a trinket; a bauble.| Bidders paid hundreds of thousands of dollars for worthless gewgaws--fake pearls, ashtrays, golf clubs--merely, one supposes, because they were touched by the hand of this celebrity of celebrities.
garrulous
\GAIR-uh-lus; GAIR-yuh-\, adjective:| 1. Talking much, especially about commonplace or trivial things; talkative.| 2. Wordy
gambol
\GAM-buhl\, intransitive verb:| To dance and skip about in play; to frolic.
gastronome
\GAS-truh-nohm\, noun: A connoisseur of good food and drink.| If poultry is for the cook what canvas is for a painter, to quote the 19th-century French gastronome Brillat-Savarin, why paint the same painting over and over again?
glower
\GLAU-urh\, intransitive verb:| To look or stare angrily or with a scowl.| noun: An angry or scowling look or stare.| At one point, the head of the institute started chatting with colleagues sitting at a table behind Yeltsin,prompting the Russian President to interrupt his reading and glower at them.
gloaming
\GLOH-ming\, noun:| Twilight; dusk.| The children squealed and waved and smiled, their teeth flashing white in the gloaming.
gubernatorial
\GOO-ber-nuh-TOR-ee-uhl\, adjective: Of or pertaining to a governor.| In 1780 [1]John Hancock was elected the first governor of Massachusetts under its new constitution and| thereafter was easily reelected whenever he chose to run. His gubernatorial career was marked by his| inability to prevent a fiscal and currency crisis in the mid-1780s.
gravitas
\GRAV-uh-tahs\, noun:| High seriousness (as in a person's bearing or in the treatment of a subject).
hobnob
\HAHB-nahb\, intransitive verb:To associate familiarly.| Occasionally I heard him stop in the corridor outside my door to hobnob with someone of status.
adventitious
\ad-ven-TISH-uhs\, adjective:| 1. Added extrinsically; not essentially inherent.| 2. (Biology) Out of the proper or usual place; as, adventitious buds or roots.
harridan
\HAIR-uh-din\, noun:| A scolding, vicious woman; a shrew; a hag.| With the insight of hindsight, I'd have liked to have been able to protect my mother from the domineering old harridan, with her rough tongue and primitive sense of justice, but I did not see it like that, then.
halcyon
\HAL-see-uhn\, noun:| 1. A kingfisher. 2. A mythical bird, identified with the kingfisher, that was fabled to nest at sea about the time of the winter solstice and to calm the waves during incubation. adjective:| 1. Calm; quiet; peaceful; undisturbed; happy; as, deep, halcyon repose.| 2. Marked by peace and prosperity; as, halcyon years.| It seems to be that my boyhood days in the Edwardian era were halcyon days.
hale
\HAYL\, adjective:| Free from disease and weakening conditions; healthy.| Uncle Charles was a hale old man with a well tanned skin, rugged features and white side whiskers.
heterodox
\HET-uh-ruh-doks\, adjective:| 1. Contrary to or differing from some acknowledged standard,| especially in church doctrine or dogma; unorthodox.| 2. Holding unorthodox opinions or doctrines.
hirsute
\HUR-soot; HIR-soot; hur-SOOT; hir-SOOT\, adjective:| Covered with hair; set with bristles; shaggy; hairy.| The Bear... makes the rounds of the clubs disguised in trench coat and broad-brimmed hat, hoping (successfully, it seems) to be mistaken for a rather hirsute human.
indigent
\IN-di-juhnt\, adjective:| Extremely poor; not having the necessities of life, such as food, clothing and shelter.| That which goes under the general Name of Charity... consists in relieving the Indigent.
indolent
\IN-duh-luhnt\, adjective:| 1. Avoiding labor and exertion; habitually idle; lazy; inactive.| 2. Conducive to or encouraging laziness or inactivity.| 3. Causing little or no pain.| 4. Slow to heal, develop, or grow.| We worked very hard--at least Iris did; I was more naturally indolent.
genial
\JEEN-yuhl; JEE-nee-uhl\, adjective:| 1. [Obsolete] Pertaining to generation or marriage.| 2. Friendly, warm; kindly; sympathetically cheerful and cheering.| 3. Mild, pleasant; comfortable; favorable to life or growth.| The day before the operation, despite his paralysis, he had been his usual genial self, laughing and joking.
gelid
\JEL-id\, adjective:| Extremely cold; icy.| The weather is gelid on a recent Thursday night--so uninviting that it's hard to imagine anyone venturing out.
gimcrack
\JIM-krak\, noun:A showy but useless or worthless object; a gewgaw.| adjective:Tastelessly showy; cheap; gaudy.| Yet the set is more than a collection of pretty gimcracks.
jocund
\JOCK-uhnd; JOH-kuhnd\, adjective:| Full of or expressing high-spirited merriment; light-hearted; mirthful.| His careless manners and jocund repartees might well seem incompatible with anything serious.
cadre
\KAD-ree; -ray; KAH-dray; -druh\, noun: 1. A core or nucleus of trained or otherwise qualified personnel around which an organization is formed. 2. A tightly knit and trained group of dedicated members active in promoting the interests of a revolutionary party. 3. A member of such a group. 4. A framework upon which a larger entity can be built; a scheme.| Trained cadres flowed across the porous border and down the blossoming supply trail through eastern| Laos (the Ho Chi Minh Trail).
carapace
\KAIR-uh-pace\, noun:| 1. The thick shell that covers the back of the turtle, the crab, and other animals.| 2. Something likened to a shell that serves to protect or isolate from external influence.| . . . a gauge for measuring the length of a lobster's carapace from the thorax to the eye socket.
callow
\KAL-oh\, adjective:| Immature; lacking adult perception, experience, or judgment.| Those who in later years did me harm I describe as I knew them then, and I beg any reader to remember that,| although I was hardly callow, I was not yet wise in the ways of the world.
captious
\KAP-shuhs\, adjective: 1. Marked by a disposition to find fault or raise objections. 2. Calculated to entrap or confuse, as in an argument.| The most common among those are captious individuals who can find nothing wrong with their own| actions but everything wrong with the actions of everybody else.
castigate
\KAS-tuh-gayt\, transitive verb:| To punish severely; also, to chastise verbally; to rebuke; to criticize severely.| It was not good enough to castigate him for his sins.
cavil
\KAV-uhl\, intransitive verb:| To raise trivial or frivolous objections; to find fault without good reason.| transitive verb:| To raise trivial objections to.| noun:| A trivial or frivolous objection.| Insiders with their own strong views, after all, tend to cavil about competing ideas and stories they consider less than comprehensive.
kismet
\KIZ-met; -mit\, noun: Destiny; fate.| It's pure kismet when these two find each other.
claque
\KLACK\, noun:| 1. A group hired to applaud at a performance.| 2. A group of fawning admirers.
clarion
\KLAIR-ee-uhn\, noun: 1. A kind of trumpet having a clear and shrill note. 2. The sound of this instrument or a sound similar to it. adjective: Sounding like the clarion; loud and clear.| His voice and laugh, which perpetually re-echoed through the Custom-House, had nothing of the tremulous| quaver and cackle of an old man's utterance; they came strutting out of his lungs, like the crow of a cock, or| the blast of a clarion.
clemency
\KLEM-uhn-see\, noun:| 1. Disposition to forgive and spare, as offenders; mercy.| 2. An act or instance of mercy or leniency.| 3. Mildness, especially of weather.| He put in a strong plea for clemency, begging the king to| spare the alchemist's life.
cogent
\KOH-juhnt\, adjective:| Having the power to compel conviction; appealing to the mind or to reason; convincing.| One woman, Adrian Pomerantz, was so intelligent that the professors always lit up when Adrian spoke; her| eloquent, cogent analyses forced them not to be lazy, not to repeat themselves.
cogitate
\KOJ-uh-tayt\, intransitive verb: To think deeply or intently; to ponder; to meditate.| transitive verb: To think about; to ponder on; to meditate upon; to plan or plot.| Still cogitating and looking for an explanation in the fire.
comity
\KOM-uh-tee\, noun:| A state of mutual harmony, friendship, and respect, especially between or among nations or people; civility.| comity of nations, noun:| 1. The courteous recognition by one nation of the laws and institutions of another.| 2. The group of nations observing international comity.| In Athens last week, E.U. leaders offered a picture of comity as they formally signed accession treaties with 10 new members.
confrere
\KON-frair\, noun:| A fellow member of a fraternity or profession; a colleague; a comrade; an intimate associate.| At Father Kilmartin's death the book was left unfinished (a sign of the times: not in manuscript, but on his laptop); and the arduous but also extremely delicate task of putting it into publishable condition was carried out by his Jesuit confrere, Robert J. Daly.
coruscate
\KOR-uh-skayt\, intransitive verb:| 1. To give off or reflect bright beams or flashes of light; to sparkle.| 2. To exhibit brilliant, sparkling technique or style.| They pulled up at the farthest end of a loop path that looked out over the great basin of the Rio Grande under brilliant, coruscating stars.
cosset
\KOSS-it\, transitive verb:| To treat as a pet; to treat with excessive indulgence; to| pamper.
cursory
\KUR-suh-ree\, adjective:Hastily or superficially performed.| In a time when most college coeds had strict curfews, Bennington students had none, and only a cursory morning check to make sure that we were alive and in our beds.
quondam
\KWAHN-duhm; KWAHN-dam\, adjective:| Having been formerly; former; sometime.| A quondam flower child, she spent seven years at the Royal| College of Art, before becoming a lecturer at Edinburgh School of Art.
querulous
\KWER-uh-luhs; -yuh\, adjective:| 1. Apt to find fault; habitually complaining.| 2. Expressing complaint; fretful; whining.| Querulous Oscar rattles on, never more or less than himself, but never much more than the content of his grumpy rattling.
quiddity
\KWID-ih-tee\, noun:| 1. The essence, nature, or distinctive peculiarity of a thing.| 2. A hairsplitting distinction; a trifling point; a quibble.| 3. An eccentricity; an odd feature.| He wanted to capture not just live animals, but the aliveness of animals in their natural state: their wildness, their quiddity, the fox-ness of the fox and the crow-ness of the crow
quidnunc
\KWID-nuhngk\, noun:| One who is curious to know everything that passes; one who knows or pretends to know all that is going on; a gossip; a busybody.| What a treasure-trove to these venerable quidnuncs, could they have guessed the secret which Hepzibah and Clifford were carrying along with them!
quaff
\KWOFF; KWAFF\,| transitive verb:To drink with relish; to drink copiously of; to swallow in large draughts.| intransitive verb: To drink largely or luxuriously.| noun: A drink quaffed.| He gets drunk with his guides, makes eyes at the girls and gamely quaffs snake wine.
quorum
\KWOR-uhm\, noun:| 1. Such a number of the officers or members of any body as is| legally competent to transact business.| 2. A select group.| The extraordinary powers of the Senate were vested in twenty-six men, fourteen of whom would constitute a quorum,of which eight would make up a majority.
lachrymose
\LAK-ruh-mohs\, adjective:| 1. Given to shedding tears; suffused with tears; tearful.| 2. Causing or tending to cause tears.| At the farewell party on the boat, Joyce was surrounded by a lachrymose family.
lambent
\LAM-buhnt\, adjective:| 1. Playing lightly on or over a surface; flickering; as, a lambent flame; lambent shadows.| 2. Softly bright or radiant; luminous; as, a lambent light.| 3. Light and brilliant; as, a lambent style; lambent wit.| I have an image in my mind of the soaring vault rising and disappearing into the gray-white silence, the niches in the salt walls where the saints dwelled, the few points of lambent gold glimmering feebly on the altar.
lassitude
\LASS-uh-tood; LASS-uh-tyood\, noun:| Lack of vitality or energy; weariness; listlessness.| The feverish excitement ... had given place to a dull, regretful lassitude.
laudable
\LAW-duh-bul\, adjective:| Worthy of praise; commendable.| Her first answer was laudable -- she wrote that yes, she would remain engaged to a man who fell seriously ill subsequent to the engagement.
lexicon
\LEK-suh-kon\, noun; plural lexicons or lexica \-kuh\:| 1. A book containing an alphabetical arrangement of the words| in a language with the definition of each; a dictionary.| 2. The vocabulary of a person, group, subject, or language.| 3. [Linguistics] The total morphemes of a language.| He thought it right in a lexicon of our language to collect many words which had fallen into disuse.
lenity
\LEN-uh-tee\, noun:| The state or quality of being lenient; mildness; gentleness of treatment; leniency.| The criminal suspect is pressured by remorse or hope of lenity or sheer despair to fess up.
levity
\LEV-uh-tee\, noun:| 1. Lightness of manner or speech, especially when inappropriate or excessive; frivolity.| 2. Lack of steadiness or constancy; changeableness.
littoral
\LIH-tuh-rul\, adjective: Of, relating to, or on a coastal or shore region, especially a seashore.| Professor Henslow tells me, he believes that nearly all the plants which I brought from these islands, are common littoral species in the East Indian archipelago.
limn
\LIM\, transitive verb:| 1. To depict by drawing or painting.| 2. To portray in words; to describe.| Oh, yes, I write, as I limn the familiar perfections of his profile, you look very well.
lineament
\LIN-ee-uh-muhnt\, noun:| 1. One of the outlines, exterior features, or distinctive marks of a body or figure, particularly of the face.| 2. A distinguishing or characteristic feature; -- usually in the plural.| If she saw herself, even in her memory, she did not see the brightness that had been hers as a wife; she saw the lined and ageing woman she had become, as if these lineaments had been waiting to emerge since her features had first been formed.
lucre
\LOO-kuhr\, noun:| Monetary gain; profit; riches; money; -- often in a bad sense.| His stories began to be published in the American Mercury before he moved to L.A., lured by the dream of Hollywood lucre.
malleable
\MAL-ee-uh-buhl\, adjective:| 1. Capable of being extended or shaped by beating with a| hammer, or by the pressure of rollers; -- applied to metals.| 2. Capable of being altered or controlled by outside forces;| easily influenced.| 3. Capable of adjusting to changing circumstances; adaptable.| His image for his own imagination is the acid, the catalyst, that is mixed in to make the gold malleable, and is then wiped away.
manse
\MAN(T)S\, noun:| 1. A large and imposing residence.| 2. The residence of a clergyman (especially a Presbyterian clergyman).| A two-story white Greek Revival manse, with a front porch and a terrace in the back.
maudlin
\MAWD-lin\, adjective:| Tearfully or excessively sentimental.
melee
\MAY-lay; may-LAY\, noun:| 1. A fight or hand-to-hand struggle in which the combatants are mingled in one confused mass.| 2. A confused conflict or mingling.| In another incident, two staff members required stitches from a melee that ensued from their attempts to| confiscate a razor blade found in the sock of a boy who had just arrived from another facility.
maelstrom
\MAYL-struhm\, noun:| 1. A large, powerful, or destructive whirlpool.| 2. Something resembling a maelstrom; a violent, disordered, or turbulent state of affairs.| The murk became thicker as Zachareesi fishtailed his canoe through a swirling maelstrom of currents pouring| past, and over, unseen rocks.
mien
\MEEN\, noun:| 1. Manner or bearing, especially as expressive of mood, attitude, or personality; demeanor.| 2. Aspect; appearance.
minatory
\MIN-uh-tor-ee\, adjective:| Threatening; menacing.| He was often observed peeping through the bars of a gate and making minatory gestures with his small forefinger while he scolded the sheep with an inarticulate burr, intended to strike terror into their astonished minds.
missive
\MIS-iv\, noun:| A written message; a letter.| She also agreed to write to the Prince, while the Count included a suitably outraged missive of his own.
mollify
\MOL-uh-fy\, transitive verb:| 1. To pacify; to soothe or calm in temper or disposition.| 2. To reduce in intensity; to temper.| 3. To soften; to reduce the rigidity of.| One hundred seventeen and a half pesos! Did you think you could mollify me with that amount, Philip V?
mores
\MOR-ayz; -eez\, plural noun:| 1. The fixed customs of a particular group that are morally binding upon all members of the group.| 2. Moral attitudes.| 3. Customs; habits; ways.| But even before that, the increasing secularization and urbanization of society, the employment of women in| large numbers and diverse occupations, the suffragette movement (culminating in the acquisition of the vote after| the war), the widespread practice and, no less important, the candid discussion of contraception, the advent| of automobiles providing an unprecedented degree of mobility and freedom
mordant
\MOR-d'nt\, adjective:Biting; caustic; sarcastic.| Mr. Justice Moorcroft's forte, a part which he had played for so many years that it had become instinctive, was a courteous reasonableness occasionally enlivened with shafts of mordant wit.
moribund
\MOR-uh-bund\, adjective:| 1. In a dying state; dying; at the point of death.| 2. Becoming obsolete or inactive.| He put on a beaver overcoat, a present from a wealthy Petrograd banker and speculator, Ignati Porfiryevich Manus, whose niece had been moribund with fever until Rasputin's healing intercession had revived her.
moiety
\MOY-uh-tee\, noun:| 1. One of two equal parts; a half.| 2. An indefinite part; a small portion or share.| 3. One of two basic tribal subdivisions.| Tom divided the cake and Becky ate with good appetite,while Tom nibbled at his moiety.
myrmidon
\MUR-muh-don; -dun\, noun:| 1. [Capitalized] A member of a warlike Thessalian people who| followed Achilles on the expedition against Troy.| 2. A loyal follower, especially one who executes orders| without question, protest, or pity.
nadir
\NAY-dir; nay-DIR\, noun:| 1. [Astronomy]. The point of the celestial sphere directly opposite the zenith and directly below the observer.| 2. The lowest point; the time of greatest depression or adversity.| Exploitation reached a nadir in the 1920s, when high government officials were implicated in a flourishing international slave trade and domestic forced labor.
nescience
\NESH-uhn(t)s; NESH-ee-uhn(t)s\, noun:| Lack of knowledge or awareness; ignorance.
nonage
\NON-ij; NOH-nij\, noun:| 1. The time of life before a person becomes legally of age.| 2. A period of youth or immaturity.| He was an adept in politics, even in his nonage, and an accomplished statesman before the laws regarded him as a man.
nugatory
\NOO-guh-tor-ee; NYOO-\, adjective:| 1. Trifling; insignificant; inconsequential.| 2. Having no force; inoperative; ineffectual.| Tygiel's forte as a historian is his eye for what may appear nugatory or marginal but, when focused| upon, illuminates the temper of a given moment.
numinous
\NOO-min-nus\, \NYOO-min-nus\, adjective:Indicating or suggesting the presence of a god-- spiritual,divine; inspiring awe and reverence-- holy.| Smoking is a ritual, and it has all the numinous force of a ritual.
nostrum
\NOS-truhm\, noun:| 1. A medicine of secret composition and unproven or dubious effectiveness; a quack medicine.| 2. A usually questionable remedy or scheme; a cure-all.| James is put to work at country fairs, promoting a quack nostrum for pain relief.
noisome
\NOY-sum\, adjective:| 1. Noxious; harmful; unwholesome.| 2. Offensive to the smell or other senses; disgusting. The body politic produces noisome and unseemly substances,| among which are politicians.
obdurate
\OB-duh-rit; -dyuh-\, adjective:| 1. a. Hardened in wrongdoing; stubbornly wicked. b. Hardened in feelings; hard-hearted.| 2. Resistant to persuasion; unyielding.| 3. Hard; harsh; rugged; rough.| The obdurate conscience of the old sinner.
objurgate
\OB-juhr-gayt\, transitive verb:| To express strong disapproval of; to criticize severely.| I objurgate the centipede,A bug we do not really need.--Ogden Nash, The Centipede| The act about to be objurgated here calls on the Food and Drug Administration to oversee a broad revision of food labeling.
palimpsest
\PAL-imp-sest\, noun:| 1. A manuscript, usually of papyrus or parchment, on which more than one text has been written with the earlier writing incompletely erased and still visible.| 2. An object or place whose older layers or aspects are apparent beneath its surface.| The manuscript is a palimpsest consisting of vellum leaves from which the fluent and assured script of the original Archimedes text and 55 diagrams had been washed or scraped off so that the surface could be used for new writings.
palindrome
\PAL-in-drohm\, noun:| A word, phrase, sentence, or verse that reads the same backward or forward.| A few examples:| * Madam, I'm Adam. (Adam's first words to Eve?)| * A man, a plan, a canal -- Panama! (The history of the Panama Canal in brief.)| * Able was I ere I saw Elba. (Napoleon's lament.)| * Mom, Dad.| Palindrome comes from Greek palindromos, literally running back (again), from palin, back, again + dromos, running.
palpable
\PAL-puh-buhl\, adjective:| 1. Capable of being touched and felt; perceptible by the| touch; as, a palpable form.| 2. Easily perceptible; plain; distinct; obvious; readily| perceived and detected; gross; as, palpable imposture;| palpable absurdity; palpable errors.| A sense of devastation from the attacks remains palpable, but so too is a sense of rejuvenation.
paladin
\PAL-uh-din\, noun:| 1. A knight-errant; a distinguished champion of a medieval king or prince; as, the paladins of Charlemagne.| 2. A champion of a cause.| Once in power, though, Clinton stumbled repeatedly over obstacles created by the schizoid campaign he had| conducted, in which he had cast himself simultaneously as the champion of a more conservative Democratic credo and as| a paladin of the party's traditional activism.
panoply
\PAN-uh-plee\, noun:| 1. A splendid or impressive array.| 2. Ceremonial attire.| 3. A full suit of armor; a complete defense or covering.| Every step taken to that end which appeases the obsolete hatreds and vanished oppressions, which makes easier the traffic and reciprocal services of Europe, which encourages nations to lay aside their precautionary panoply, is good in itself.
parley
\PAR-lee\, noun:| A conference or discussion, especially with an enemy, as with regard to a truce or other matters. intransitive verb: To speak with another; to confer on some point of mutual concern; specifically, to have a| discussion with an enemy.| The government recognized his knack for parleying with tribes, and it sent him all over the West.
parlous
\PAR-luhs\, adjective:| Attended with peril; fraught with danger; hazardous.| It was a parlous time on the Continent, when Communists and fascists vied brutally for supremacy.
pelf
\PELF\, noun:Money; riches; gain; -- generally conveying the idea of something ill-gotten.| . .. a master manipulator who will twist and dodge around the clock to keep the privileges of power and pelf.
penchant
\PEN-chunt\, noun: Inclination; decided taste; a strong liking.| Ben was a dreamy little boy, recalls Hiddy, who always thought her brother's penchant for reveries might lead him to become an artist or a great philosopher.
plenary
\PLEE-nuh-ree; PLEN-uh-ree\, adjective:| 1. Full in all respects; complete; absolute; as, plenary authority.| 2. Fully attended by all qualified members. Judges like to quote a 1936 Supreme Court opinion that| spoke of the very delicate, plenary and exclusive power of| the President as the sole organ of the Federal Government| in the field of international relations.
pleonasm
\PLEE-uh-naz-uhm\, noun:| 1. The use of more words than are necessary to express an| idea; as, I saw it with my own eyes.| 2. An instance or example of pleonasm.| 3. A superfluous word or expression.
potable
\POE-tuh-buhl\, adjective:| Fit to drink; suitable for drinking; drinkable.
polyglot
\POL-ee-glot\, adjective:| 1. Containing or made up of several languages.| 2. Writing, speaking, or versed in many languages.| noun:| One who speaks several languages.
posit
\POZ-it\, transitive verb:| 1. To assume as real or conceded.| 2. To propose as an explanation; to suggest.| 3. To dispose or set firmly or fixedly.| It is not necessary to posit mysterious forces to explain coincidences.
practicable
\PRAK-tik-uh-buhl\, adjective:| 1. Capable of being done, accomplished, or put into practice; feasible; as, a practicable method; a practicable aim.| 2. Capable of being used; usable.| The authors give easy-to-follow instructions on coping with a whole ham leg, and so many ways to cook with it| that the project even seems practicable.
prescient
\PRE-shee-uhnt\, adjective:| Knowing or anticipating the outcome of events before they happen.| Despite [1]Carroll's unfamiliarity with military matters he had an astonishingly prescient view of how the war for independence would be fought and won.
precipice
\PRES-uh-pis\, noun:| 1. A very steep, perpendicular, or overhanging place; a cliff.| 2. The brink of a hazardous situation.| Barbara got as close to the edge as she dared and looked down over the precipice.
prink
\PRINGK\, transitive verb:| To dress up; to deck for show.
probity
\PRO-buh-tee\, noun:| Complete and confirmed integrity; uprightness.
protean
\PRO-tee-un; pro-TEE-un\, adjective:| 1. Displaying considerable variety or diversity.| 2. Readily assuming different shapes or forms.| The [Broadway] musical was ceaselessly protean in these years, usually conventional but always developing convention, twisting it, replacing it.
provenance
\PROV-uh-nuhn(t)s\, noun:| Origin; source.| In a world awash in information of dubious provenance, whom can you trust to tell you the truth?
putsch
\PUCH ('u' as in 'push')\, noun:| (Sometimes capitalized) A secretly planned and suddenly| executed attempt to overthrow a government.| Hitler operated from Munich where he enjoyed a fair degree| of support, and it was here that his Putsch took place in| an effort to seize power in Bavaria.
felicitous
\fuh-LIS-uh-tuhs\, adjective:| 1. Well suited or expressed; appropriate; apt.| 2. Pleasant; delightful; marked by happiness or good fortune.| We do this sort of thing most weekends anyway, said a lean rebel with gunpowder smudges on his face and the felicitous name of Troy Cool.
purblind
\PUR-blynd\, adjective:| 1. Having greatly reduced vision.| 2. Lacking in insight or discernment.| Add to this that the work seems unsure of its audience, providing no footnotes or exact references, but concluding with a bizarre parade of bibliographical essays running to 59 pages; that it gives the date only about once every 100 pages (and then not always the right date...) and leaves us feeling as if we were wandering purblind in some deep cave.
persiflage
\PUR-suh-flahzh\, noun:| Frivolous or bantering talk; a frivolous manner of treating any subject, whether serious or otherwise; light raillery.| He was somber and wordless and utterly unresponsive to my mother's charming persiflage.
puissant
\PWISS-uhnt; PYOO-uh-suhnt; pyoo-ISS-uhnt\,| adjective: Powerful; strong; mighty; as, a puissant prince or empire.| As an upcoming young corporate lawyer in San Francisco in the 1930's, Crum tended the interests of some of California's most puissant businesses, starting with William Randolph Hearst's newspaper empire.
piebald
\PY-bald\, adjective:| 1. Having spots and patches of black and white, or other colors; mottled.| 2. Mixed; composed of incongruous parts.| She remembered the piebald hair of a convicted woman, with brown roots growing through the crude bleach.
pugilist
\PYOO-juh-list\, noun:| One who fights with the fists; especially, a professional prize fighter; a boxer.| I had escaped my years as a pugilist with few of the badges that gave fellow-veterans of the ring the appearance of ruffians--missing eyes, mashed noses, or suchlike disfigurements--and had no more to show for my beatings than some small scars about my face and a nose that bore only the mild bumps and jagged edges that come with several breakings.
putative
\PYOO-tuh-tiv\, adjective:| Commonly thought or deemed; supposed; reputed.| Certainly, to have even a putative ancestor commemorated by Shakespeare is something about which to boast.
puerile
\PYOO-uhr-uhl; PYOOR-uhl\, adjective:| Displaying or suggesting a lack of maturity; juvenile; childish.
pule
\PYOOL\, intransitive verb:| To whimper; to whine.| The first lady initially flourished as a wronged wife precisely because she endured her humiliation so stoically; she did not whine or pule or treat her pain as license to behave badly.
rapine
\RAP-in\, noun: The act of plundering; the seizing and carrying away of another's property by force.| He who has once begun to live by rapine always finds reasons for taking what is not his.
recondite
\REK-un-dyt\, adjective: 1. Difficult to understand; [1]abstruse.2. Concerned with obscure subject matter.| And his fondness for stopping his readers short in their tracks with evidence of his recondite vocabulary is wonderfully irritating.
relegate
\REL-uh-gayt\, transitive verb:| 1. To assign to an inferior position, place, or condition.| 2. To assign to an appropriate category or class.| 3. To assign or refer (a matter or task, for example) to another for| appropriate action.| 4. To send into exile; to banish.| Employment discrimination locked them out of better paying jobs and relegated them to menial occupations.
restive
\RES-tiv\, adjective:| 1. Impatient under restriction, delay, coercion, or opposition; resisting control.| 2. Unwilling to go on; obstinate in refusing to move forward; stubborn.| He turned restive at the least attempt at coercion.
reticent
\RET-ih-suhnt\, adjective:| 1. Inclined to keep silent; reserved; uncommunicative.| 2. Restrained or reserved in style.| 3. Reluctant; unwilling.
revenant
\REV-uh-nunt\, noun:| One who returns after death (as a ghost) or after a long absence.| Lazarus, as a revenant, is often used by the religious romance-writers of the middle ages as a vehicle for their conceptions of the lower world.
ribald
\RIB-uld; RY-bawld\, adjective:| Characterized by, or given to, vulgar humor; coarse.| noun: A ribald person; a lewd fellow.| Barrymore delights you with his own delight in his silly, ribald jokes (most of which are unprintable here).
rictus
\RIK-tuhs\, noun:| 1. The gape of the mouth, as of birds.| 2. A gaping grin or grimace.| A rictus of cruel malignity lit up greyly their old bony faces.
risible
\RIZ-uh-buhl\, adjective:| 1. Capable of laughing; disposed to laugh.| 2. Exciting or provoking laughter; worthy of laughter; laughable; amusing.| 3. Relating to, connected with, or used in laughter; as, risible muscles.| Before long, I began to read aloud with my father, chanting the strange and wondrous rivers -- Shenandoah, Rappahannock, Chickahominy -- and wrapping my tongue around the risible names of rebel generals: Braxton Bragg, Jubal Early, John Sappington Marmaduke, William Extra Billy Smith, Pierre Gustave Toutant Beauregard.
roseate
\ROH-zee-it; -ayt\, adjective:| 1. Overly optimistic; bright or cheerful.| 2. Resembling a rose especially in color.| That roseate view was shattered when the North last week detained a South Korean housewife, on a Kumkang tour with her six-year-old son, on a bizarre pretext.
rubicund
\ROO-bih-kund\, adjective: Inclining to redness; ruddy; red.| The men are second cousins, around forty, resembling each other not very much, one taller and leaner, less rubicund than the other, who has just returned from California.
roister
\ROY-stur\, intransitive verb:| 1. To engage in boisterous merrymaking; to revel; to carouse.| 2. To bluster; to swagger.
sacrosanct
\SAK-roh-sankt\, adjective:| Sacred; inviolable.| The family was viewed as sacrosanct: divorce was highly unusual and children were expected to be grateful for the sacrifices that parents, who postponed their own gratifications in forming a family, made on their behalf.| salad days, noun:| A time of youthful inexperience, innocence, or indiscretion.| Those were his salad days, and he thought they might last forever.
salutary
\SAL-yuh-ter-ee\, adjective:| 1. Producing or contributing to a beneficial effect; beneficial; advantageous.| 2. Wholesome; healthful; promoting health.| Alexis de Tocqueville famously observed during his sojourn in this country that America was teeming with such associations -- charities, choral groups, church study groups, book clubs -- and that they had a remarkably salutary effect on society, turning selfish individuals into public-spirited citizens.
sough
\SAU; SUHF\, intransitive verb:| To make a soft, low sighing or rustling sound, as the wind.| noun:| A soft, low rustling or sighing sound.| At a recent visit to Marsha's grave in Rathdrum, as the wind soughed through the towering pines nearby, Marsha's brother Pat left a silk bluebird by her headstone to honor her love of the outdoors.
sapient
\SAY-pee-uhnt\, adjective:| Wise; sage; discerning.| By actual measurement they are the brainiest of birds, and on subjective evidence they seem more sapient than most other living creatures.
segue
\SEG-way; SAYG-way\, verb:| To proceed without interruption; to make a smooth transition.| Daylight segued into dusk. --Susan Dworski| Our honeymoon seemed to segue into a month of dinner parties.
sedulous
\SEJ-uh-luhs\, adjective:| 1. Diligent in application or pursuit; steadily industrious.| 2. Characterized by or accomplished with care and perseverance.| He did not attain this distinction by accident but by sedulous study from the cradle forward.
sentient
\SEN-shee-uhnt; -tee-; -shuhnt\, adjective:| 1. Capable of perceiving by the senses; conscious.| 2. Experiencing sensation or feeling.| I can remember very vividly the first time I became aware| of my existence; how for the first time I realised that I was| a sentient human being in a perceptible world.
schadenfreude
\SHOD-n-froy-duh\,| noun: A malicious satisfaction obtained from the misfortunes of others.| That the report of Sebastian Imhof's grave illness might also have been tinged with Schadenfreude appears not to have crossed Lucas's mind.
scrabble
\SKRAB-uhl\, intransitive verb:| 1. To scrape or scratch with the hands or feet.| 2. To struggle by or as if by scraping or scratching.| 3. To proceed by clawing with the hands and feet; to scramble.| 4. To make irregular, crooked, or unmeaning marks; to scribble; to scrawl.| transitive verb:| 1. To mark with irregular lines or letters; to scribble on or over.| 2. To make or obtain by scraping together hastily.| noun:| 1. The act or an instance of scrabbling.| 2. A scribble.| Mice kept me awake by scrabbling in the uncovered garbage can.
scuttlebutt
\SKUHT-l-buht\, noun:| 1. (Nautical)| a. A drinking fountain on a ship.| b. A cask on a ship that contains the day's supply of drinking water.| 2. Gossip; rumor.| What were they talking about? Sports? Neighborhood scuttlebutt? Off-color jokes? I didn't know; I knew only how exciting it was to see Dad in action.
slugabed
\SLUHG-uh-bed\, noun:| One who stays in bed until a late hour; a sluggard.| Nemecek's business is not for slugabeds. He opens for business every weekday at 4 a.m.
sobriquet
\SO-brih-kay; -ket; so-brih-KAY; -KET\, noun:| A nickname; an assumed name; an epithet.| In addition to his notorious amours, he became distinguished for a turbulent naval career, particularly for the storms he weathered, thus bringing him the sobriquet Foulweather Jack.| At a small reception on the occasion of my twenty-fifth anniversary in this position, my good friend Izzy Landes raised a glass and dubbed me the Curator of the Curators, a sobriquet I have worn with pride ever since.
sojourn
\SO-jurn; so-JURN\, intransitive verb:| To stay as a temporary resident; to dwell for a time.| noun: A temporary stay.| Though he has sojourned in Southwold, wandered in Walberswick, dabbled in Dunwich, ambled through Aldeburgh and blundered through Blythburgh, Smallweed has never set foot in Oxford.
somnolent
\SOM-nuh-luhnt\, adjective:| 1. Sleepy; drowsy; inclined to sleep.| 2. Tending to cause sleepiness or drowsiness.
spoony
\SPOO-nee\, adjective:| 1. Foolish; silly; excessively sentimental.| 2. Foolishly or sentimentally in love.| Nevertheless, because we're spoony old things at heart, we like to believe that some showbiz marriages are different.
spoonerism
\SPOO-nuh-riz-uhm\, noun:| The transposition of usually initial sounds in a pair of words.
spurious
\SPYUR-ee-uhs\, adjective:| 1. Not proceeding from the true or claimed source; not genuine; false.| 2. Of illegitimate birth.| Some of these graves are clearly spurious and were manufactured by nineteenth-century royalists who| wanted evidence of an unbroken 2,000-year-old imperial line.
stasis
\STAY-sis; STAS-is\, noun;
stertorous
\STUR-tuh-ruhs\, adjective:| Characterized by a heavy snoring or gasping sound; hoarsely breathing.| In the cinder-block motel room he set the alarm, but his own stertorous breathing woke him before it rang.
circumspect
\SUR-kuhm-spekt\, adjective:| Marked by attention to all circumstances and probable consequences; cautious; prudent.| When the evidence is plentiful and the theories well confirmed, we can be more confident of the historical scenarios we propose; when theories are weak or evidence scarce, we ought to be more circumspect.
sinecure
\SY-nih-kyur; SIN-ih-\, noun:| An office or position that requires or involves little or no responsibility, work, or active service.| I was fortunate to receive the. . . offer, which in practical terms was a sinecure.
cynosure
\SY-nuh-shoor; SIN-uh-shoor\, noun:| 1. Anything to which attention is strongly turned; a center of attraction.| 2. That which serves to guide or direct.| 3. [Capitalized]. The northern constellation Ursa Minor, which contains the North Star; also, the North Star itself.| The monarch, at the apex of court power and centre of its ritual, and the greatest patron of the arts, was the cynosure of this culture, standing (or, more usually, sitting) at the centre of a system of artistic practice intended to represent his or her sacred omnipotence and monopoly of power.
abjure
\ab-JUR\, transitive verb:| 1. To renounce under oath.| 2. To renounce or reject solemnly; to recant; to reject; repudiate.| 3. To abstain from; to shun.
abscond
\ab-SKOND\, intransitive verb:| To depart secretly; to steal away and hide oneself -- used especially of persons who withdraw to avoid arrest or prosecution.
abstemious
\ab-STEE-mee-uhs\, adjective:| 1. Sparing in eating and drinking; temperate; abstinent.| 2. Sparingly used or consumed; used with temperance or moderation.| 3. Marked by or spent in abstinence.
ostensible
\ah-STEN-suh-bul\, adjective:| Represented or appearing to be true, but not necessarily so.| The credibility of the energy-trading sector has been severely damaged by disclosures of sham transactions in energy trading, designed to build up ostensible sales and profits and therefore share prices of the trading companies.
accede
\ak-SEED\, intransitive verb:| 1. To agree or assent, as to a proposition, or to terms proposed by another.| 2. To become a party, as to an agreement, treaty, convention,| 3. To attain, as to an office or rank; to enter upon the duties of an office.
apparition
\ap-uh-RISH-uhn\, noun:| 1. A ghost; a specter; a phantom.| 2. The thing appearing; the sudden or unexpected appearance of something or somebody.| 3. The act of becoming visible; appearance.| 4. (Astronomy) The first appearance of a star or other luminary after having been invisible or obscured; -- opposed to [1]occultation.
atelier
\at-l-YAY\, noun:| A workshop; a studio.
auspicious
\aw-SPISH-uhs\, adjective:| 1. Giving promise of success, prosperity, or happiness;| predicting good; as, an auspicious beginning.| 2. Prosperous; fortunate; as, auspicious years.
autochthonous
\aw-TOCK-thuh-nuhs\, adjective:| 1. Aboriginal; indigenous; native.| 2. Formed or originating in the place where found.
autodidact
\aw-toh-DY-dakt\, noun:| One who is self-taught.
badinage
\bad-n-AHZH\, noun:| Light, playful talk; banter.
bagatelle
\bag-uh-TEL\, noun:| 1. A trifle; a thing of little or no importance.| 2. A short, light musical or literary piece.| 3. A game played with a cue and balls on an oblong table having cups or arches at one end.
bonhomie
\bah-nuh-MEE\, noun:| Good nature; pleasant and easy manner.| That bonhomie which won the hearts of all who knew him.
bedizen
\bih-DY-zuhn\, transitive verb:| To dress or adorn in gaudy manner.
beholden
\bih-HOHL-duhn\, adjective:| Obliged; bound in gratitude; indebted.
benignant
\bih-NIG-nuhnt\, adjective:| 1. Kind; gracious.| 2. Beneficial; favorable.| After the captain and ladies had sat down, the autocratic steward rang a second bell, and with a majestic wave of the hand, and a calm, benignant smile, signified his pleasure that we should sit down.
berate
\bih-RAYT\, transitive verb:| To scold severely or angrily| She tells of Mr. Hauptmann's great joy when they had a baby son, and of the times she ran up the stairs to berate him for playing the mandolin after the baby was asleep and found him playing the Brahms Lullaby as the baby looked on approvingly.
boulevardier
\boo-luh-var-DYAY; bul-uh-\, noun:| 1. A frequenter of city boulevards, especially in Paris.| 2. A sophisticated, worldly, and socially active man; a man who frequents| fashionable places; a man-about-town.| Oswald, whose idea of excitement is breakfasting with a penguin, is a boulevardier: Hat cocked precariously on his head, he saunters out into the sunny city.
booboisie
\boob-wah-ZEE\, noun:| A class of people regarded as stupid or foolish.| Until then, he'd dismissed Hollywood as a purveyor of machine-made fodder for the booboisie, but he found,| much| to his surprise, that the movies weren't nearly as bad as he'd claimed.
bouleversement
\bool-vair-suh-MAWN\, noun:Complete overthrow; a reversal; a turning upside down.| For the second time in his life Amory had had a complete bouleversement and was hurrying into line with his generation.
Brobdingnagian
\brob-ding-NAG-ee-uhn\, adjective:| Of extraordinary size; gigantic; enormous.| The venture capital business has a size problem. A monstrous, staggering, stupefying one. Brobdingnagian even.
bravado
\bruh-VAH-doh\, noun plural bravados or bravadoes \bruh-VAH-dohz\A real or pretended show of courage or boldness.| While the popular mood in Belgrade remains defiant, unease beneath the bravado is growing.
beneficence
\buh-NEFF-i-suhns\, noun:| The practice of doing good; active goodness, kindness, or charity; bounty springing from purity and goodness.
deliquesce
\del-ih-KWES\, intransitive verb:| 1. To melt away or to disappear as if by melting.| 2. (Chemistry) To dissolve gradually and become liquid by| attracting and absorbing moisture from the air, as certain| salts, acids, and alkalies.| 3. To become fluid or soft with age, as certain fungi.| 4. To form many small divisions or branches -- used especially| of the veins of a leaf.| Now it's high summer, the very high point of the high season, and I've just struggled back from Santa Eulalia with the weekly shop, most of which has already deliquesced into an evil-smelling puddle in the back of the car.
depredation
\dep-ruh-DAY-shun\, noun:| 1. An act of plundering or despoiling; a raid.| 2. [Plural] Destructive operations; ravages.| . . . the depredations of pirates and privateers on the high seas.
deride
\dih-RYD\, transitive verb:| To laugh at with contempt; to subject to ridicule or make sport of; to mock; to scoff at.| She was inclined to deride Mr. Hemingway's mania for firearms and thereby often hurt his feelings.
descry
\dih-SKRY\, transitive verb:| 1. To catch sight of, especially something distant or obscure;| to discern.| 2. To discover by observation; to detect.| On a clear day, if there was no sun, you could descry (but barely) the ships roving out at anchor in Herne Bay and count their masts.
detritus
\dih-TRY-tuhs\, noun; plural detritus:| 1. Loose material that is worn away from rocks.| 2. Hence, any fragments separated from the body to which they| belonged; any product of disintegration; debris.
desideratum
\dih-sid-uh-RAY-tum; -RAH-\, noun; plural desiderata:| Something desired or considered necessary.
farrago
\fuh-RAH-go; fuh-RAY-go\, noun; plural farragoes:| A confused mixture; an assortment; a medley.
diktat
\dik-TAHT\, noun:| 1. A harsh settlement unilaterally imposed on a defeated party.| 2. An authoritative decree or order.| Whether with the rapid reaction force or with the Bosnian government, the United States should vigorously support efforts to lift the siege of Sarajevo and help to piece back together a contiguous territory so that the Bosnian government can come to the bargaining table free of a Serbian diktat.
discursive
\dis-KUR-siv\, adjective:| 1. Passing from one topic to another; ranging over a wide| field; digressive; rambling.| 2. Utilizing, marked by, or based on analytical reasoning -- contrasted with intuitive.
disconcert
\dis-kuhn-SURT\, transitive verb:| 1. To disturb the composure of.| 2. To throw into disorder or confusion; as, the emperor disconcerted the plans of his enemy.| In steering a small boat before a heavy gale, don't look back -- it may disconcert you.
dubiety
\doo-BY-uh-tee; dyoo-\, noun:| 1. The condition or quality of being doubtful or skeptical.| 2. A matter of doubt| Kennedy and O'Connor may think that Title 3 has been violated, but O'Connor and the chief justice are not convinced that the Supreme Court was meant to litigate challenges under that federal statute, and their dubiety here is shared by Justices Scalia and Souter.
diaphanous
\dy-AF-uh-nuhs\, adjective:| 1. Of such fine texture as to allow light to pass through; translucent or transparent.| 2. Vague; insubstantial.| The curtains are thin, a diaphanous membrane that can't quite contain the light outside.
idee fixe
\ee-day-FEEKS\, noun; plural idees fixes \ee-day-FEEKS\:| An idea that dominates the mind; a fixed idea; an obsession.| The reality of obsession -- its incessant return to the same few themes, scenarios and questions; its meticulous examination and re-examination of banal minutiae for hidden meanings that simply aren't there; the cancerous way an idee fixe usurps other, more interesting thoughts -- is that it is confining, not rebellious, and not fascinating but maddeningly dull.
expatiate
\ek-SPAY-shee-ayt\, intransitive verb:| 1. To speak or write at length or in considerable detail.| 2. To move about freely; to wander.
expeditious
\ek-spuh-DISH-uhs\, adjective:| Characterized by or acting with speed and efficiency.| His problem was to get from Lookout Valley to Chattanooga Valley in the most expeditious way possible.
eleemosynary
\el-uh-MOS-uh-ner-ee\, adjective:| 1. Of or for charity; charitable; as, an eleemosynary institution.| 2. Given in charity; having the nature of alms; as, eleemosynary assistance.| 3. Supported by or dependent on charity; as, the eleemosynary poor.| We also need to revive the great eleemosynary institutions through which compassionate people serve those in need with both greater flexibility and discipline than government agencies are capable.
encumbrance
\en-KUHM-bruhn(t)s\, noun:| 1. Something that burdens or impedes; a burdensome and troublesome load;| an impediment.| 2. A claim or lien upon property.| But just as certainly, the Don understood that Astorre wanted an excuse to be free of any encumbrance on his march to the glories of life.
eschew
\es-CHOO\, transitive verb: To shun; to avoid (as something wrong or distasteful).| In high school and college the Vassar women had enjoyed| that lifestyle, but afterward they had eschewed it as shallow.
evanescent
\ev-uh-NES-unt\, adjective:| Liable to vanish or pass away like vapor; fleeting.
itinerant
\eye-TIN-uhr-uhnt\, adjective:| Passing or traveling from place to place; wandering.| noun:One who travels from place to place.| Like many itinerant vendors in rural places, he was a smooth-talking purveyor of dreams along with tawdry trinkets, and Eliza responded to this romantic wanderer.
factotum
\fak-TOH-tuhm\, noun:A person employed to do all kinds of work or business.| Mr. Hersey thus became Mr. Lewis's summertime factotum,copying pages of a play that Lewis was writing about Communism.
fanfaronade
\fan-fair-uh-NAYD; -NOD\, noun:| 1. Swaggering; empty boasting; blustering manner or behavior; ostentatious| display.| 2. Fanfare.| George Manahan made his debut this week as music director of New York City Opera, and it is difficult to imagine someone laying claim to a major podium with less of a fanfaronade.
faineant
\fay-nay-AWN\, adjective:| Doing nothing or given to doing nothing; idle; lazy.
fiduciary
\fih-DOO-shee-AIR-ee\, adjective: Relating to the holding of something in trust for another.| American capitalism relies heavily on the fiduciary duty concept to protect those who entrust their money to large and often distant corporations.
flagitious
\fluh-JISH-uhs\, adjective:| 1. Disgracefully or shamefully criminal; grossly wicked; scandalous; -- said of acts, crimes, etc.| 2. Guilty of enormous crimes; corrupt; profligate; -- said of persons.| 3. Characterized by enormous crimes or scandalous vices; as, flagitious times.| However flagitious may be the crime of conspiring to subvert by force the government of our country, such conspiracy is not treason.
foment
\foh-MENT\, transitive verb:To nurse to life or activity; to encourage; to incite; to instigate; -- often in a bad sense.| Cynical politicians may even foment conflicts among groups to advance their own power.
forfend
\for-FEND\, transitive verb:| 1. a. [Archaic] To prohibit; to forbid. b. To ward off; to prevent; to avert.| 2. To defend; to protect; to preserve.| The Tory leader sort of wanted to say that the government should deploy the army more rapidly, but -- heaven forfend -- he didn't want to imply that it was anybody's fault that the soldiers hadn't been deployed!
fortuitous
\for-TOO-uh-tuhs; -TYOO-\, adjective:| 1. Happening by chance; coming or occurring by accident, or without any known| cause.| 2. Happening by a fortunate or lucky chance.| 3. Fortunate or lucky.| The profession, the political faith, the entire life of many men, depend on chance circumstances, on what is fortuitous, on the caprice and the unexpected turns of fate.
frisson
\free-SOHN\, noun: A moment of intense excitement; a shudder; an emotional thrill.| When we think a story hasn't been invented, there's an extra frisson in reading it.
facetious
\fuh-SEE-shuhs\, adjective:| 1. Given to jesting; playfully jocular.| 2. Amusing; intended to be humorous; not serious.| J. K. Morley was being both serious and facetious when he claimed that the world's greatest water power is woman's tears.
forlorn
\fur-LORN; for-\, adjective:| 1. Sad and lonely because deserted, abandoned, or lost.| 2. Bereft; forsaken.| 3. Wretched or pitiful in appearance or condition.| 4. Almost hopeless; desperate.| Henry had felt guilty at abandoning his sister; he had married not once but twice, leaving Rose forlorn.
fugacious
\fyoo-GAY-shuhs\, adjective: Lasting but a short time; fleeting.| The fugacious nature of life and time.
funereal
\fyoo-NIR-ee-uhl\, adjective:| 1. Of or pertaining to a funeral.| 2. Suiting a funeral; solemn; dark; gloomy; mournful.
gaucherie
\goh-shuh-REE\, noun:| 1. A socially awkward or tactless act.| 2. Lack of tact; boorishness; awkwardness.| If you find yourself sitting next to an obviously prosperous guest at a dinner party and your host introduces| him (it will be a him) as a successful barrister, you will be guilty of a gaucherie of the crassest kind if you| exclaim: How fascinating! If I promise not to call you Rumpole, will you tell me about your goriest| murder trials?
gourmand
\goor-MAHND; GOOR-mahnd; GOOR-mund\, noun: 1. One who eats to excess. 2. A lover of good food.| A gourmand who zealously avoids all exercise as seriously damaging to one's health, he had caviar for| breakfast and was now having oysters for lunch, whetted with wine, as he fueled| himself for a [1]postprandial reading at the Montauk Club in Brooklyn.
grandee
\gran-DEE\, noun:| 1. A man of elevated rank or station.| 2. In Spain or Portugal, a nobleman of the first rank.| Jack Byron still harbored delusions of being a local grandee, attempting to influence district politics; as the final humiliation, in the parliamentary election of 1786 his vote was disallowed.
gregarious
\grih-GAIR-ee-us\, adjective:| 1. Tending to form a group with others of the same kind.| 2. Seeking and enjoying the company of others.
galumph
\guh-LUHM(P)F\, intransitive verb:| To move in a clumsy manner or with a heavy tread.| Then he climbed up the little iron ladder that led to the wharf's cap, placed me once more upon his shoulders and galumphed off again.
hauteur
\haw-TUR; (h)oh-\, noun:| Haughty manner, spirit, or bearing; haughtiness; arrogance
edacious
\i-DAY-shus\, adjective: Given to eating; voracious; devouring.| Swallowed in the depths of edacious Time.
effulgence
\i-FUL-juhn(t)s\, noun: The state of being bright and radiant; splendor; brilliance.| The purity of his private character gave effulgence to his public virtues.
exacerbate
\ig-ZAS-ur-bayt\, transitive verb:| To render more severe, violent, or bitter; to irritate; to aggravate; to make worse.| To reduce the stress that exacerbates my stuttering, I have meditated, done deep-breathing exercises, and floated under a condition of sensory deprivation in a dark, enclosed isolation tank.
exiguous
\ig-ZIG-yoo-us\, adjective: Extremely scanty; meager.| They are entering the market, setting up stalls on snowy| streets, moonlighting to supplement exiguous incomes.
exalt
\ig-ZOLT\, verb:| 1. To praise, glorify, or honor| 2. To heighten or intensify| 3. To raise in rank, character, or status; as, exalted the humble shoemaker to the rank of King's adviser| [A] show that was merely competent needed something special if it was to run--a couple of hit tunes, something astonishing in design or [1]choreography... or a theatre-filling personality who can exalt ordinary material.
ebullient
\ih-BUL-yuhnt\, adjective:| 1. Overflowing with enthusiasm or excitement; high-spirited.| 2. Boiling up or over.
ephemeron
\ih-FEM-uh-ron\, noun; plural ephemera \ih-FEM-uh-ruh\:| 1. Something short-lived or of no lasting significance.| 2. ephemera: Items, especially printed matter (as posters,| broadsides, pamphlets, etc.), intended to be of use or| importance for only a short time but preserved by collectors.| And collections of correspondence will always reveal a remarkable mind, grappling with everything from the ephemera of day-to-day life to the mysteries of the universe.
equivocate
\ih-KWIV-uh-kayt\, intransitive verb:| To be deliberately ambiguous or unclear in order to mislead or to avoid committing oneself to anything definite.| The witness shuffled, equivocated, pretended to misunderstand the questions.
immure
\ih-MYUR\, transitive verb:| 1. To enclose within walls, or as if within walls; hence, to shut up; to imprison; to incarcerate.| 2. To build into a wall.| 3. To entomb in a wall.| Not surprisingly, Sally shuddered at the thought of being immured in the black cave, to die slowly and hopelessly, far below the sunny hillside.
irascible
\ih-RASS-uh-buhl\, adjective:| Prone to anger; easily provoked to anger; hot-tempered.| The lawyer described his client as an irascible eighty-two-year-old eccentric who alternated between spinning fascinating tales about her past and cussing him out.
esurient
\ih-SUR-ee-uhnt; -ZUR-\, adjective: Hungry; voracious; greedy| The enemy then was an esurient Soviet Union which, having swallowed up Eastern Europe, had imposed a totalitarian system on countries just liberated from Nazism.
evince
\ih-VIN(T)S\, transitive verb:To show in a clear manner; to manifest; to make evident; to bring to light.| The study showed that girls were better prepared for class, had better attendance records, and evinced more positive academic behavior overall.
excrescence
\ik-SKRESS-uhn(t)s\, noun:| 1. Something (especially something abnormal) growing out from something else.| 2. A disfiguring or unwanted mark, part, or addition.
extempore
\ik-STEM-puh-ree\, adverb:| Without premeditation or preparation; on the spur of the moment.
mellifluous
\muh-LIF-loo-us\, adjective:| Flowing as with honey; flowing sweetly or smoothly; as, a mellifluous voice.| The balladeer whose mellifluous voice serenaded two generations of lovers.
imbroglio
\im-BROHL-yoh\, noun:| 1. A complicated and embarrassing state of things.| 2. A confused or complicated disagreement or misunderstanding.| 3. An intricate, complicated plot, as of a drama or work of fiction.| 4. A confused mass; a tangle.| The political imbroglio also appears to endanger the latest International Monetary Fund loan package for Russia,| which is considered critical to avoid a default this year on the country's $17 billion in foreign debt.
impassive
\im-PASS-iv\, adjective:| 1. Devoid of or unsusceptible to emotion.| 2. Showing no sign of emotion or feeling; expressionless.| As before, he seemed neither happy nor unhappy. Just utterly impassive.
importunate
\im-POR-chuh-nit\, adjective:| Troublesomely urgent; overly persistent in request or demand; unreasonably solicitous.| An emperor penguin in captivity starved to death by feeding all his rations -- about six pounds of fish daily -- to an importunate chick.
indelible
\in-DEL-uh-buhl\, adjective:| 1. That cannot be removed, erased, or washed away.| 2. Making marks that cannot easily be removed or erased.| 3. Incapable of being forgotten; memorable.| It was part of his image, indelible as the ink stains under the breast pocket.
indomitable
\in-DOM-ih-tuh-buhl\, adjective:| Incapable of being subdued or overcome; unconquerable.
ineffable
\in-EF-uh-buhl\, adjective:| 1. Incapable of being expressed in words; unspeakable; unutterable; indescribable. 2. Not to be uttered; taboo. . . . the tension inherent in human language when it attempts to relate the ineffable, see the invisible, understand the incomprehensible.
inclement
\in-KLEM-uhnt\, adjective:| 1. Rough, harsh; extreme, severe -- generally restricted to the elements or weather. 2. Severe, unrelenting; cruel.| To make his misery complete he was forced to travel back in the winter, in the most inclement weather.
inchoate
\in-KOH-it\, adjective:| 1. In an initial or early stage; just begun.| 2. Imperfectly formed or formulated.| Mildred Spock believed that, at about the age of three, her children's inchoate wills were to be shaped like vines sprouting up a beanpole.
insensate
\in-SEN-sayt; -sit\, adjective:| 1. Lacking sensation or awareness; inanimate.| 2. Lacking human feeling or sensitivity; brutal; cruel.| 3. Lacking sense; stupid; foolish.| The religion of primeval humans, he suggested, held that souls inhabited not only human beings but also animals,trees, plants--even rocks, rivers, and other natural features we regard as insensate.
incipient
\in-SIP-ee-uhnt\, adjective:| Beginning to exist or appear.
inscrutable
\in-SKROO-tuh-bul\, adjective:| Difficult to fathom or understand; difficult to be explained or accounted for satisfactorily; obscure;| incomprehensible; impenetrable; as, an inscrutable design or event.| US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright recalled the inscrutable comment of a French diplomat| about the interaction of the various European organisations: It will work in practice, yes. But will it work in theory?
intractable
\in-TRAK-tuh-buhl\, adjective:| 1. Not easily governed, managed, or directed; stubborn; obstinate; as, an intractable child.| 2. Not easily wrought or manipulated; as, intractable materials.| 3. Not easily remedied, relieved, or dealt with; as, intractable problems.| Would their methods work with a child who was as violent and intractable as Helen?
intransigent
\in-TRAN-suh-juhnt; -zuh-\, adjective:| Refusing to compromise; uncompromising.| He was intransigent at times, and almost playfully yielding at others.
interpolate
\in-TUR-puh-layt\, transitive verb:| 1. To alter or corrupt (as a book or text) by the insertion of new or foreign| matter.| 2. To insert (material) into a text or conversation.| 3. To insert between other elements or parts.| 4. [Mathematics] to estimate a value of (a function) between two known values.| intransitive verb:To make insertions.| Twenty years earlier, Rodgers was not so pleased when, at the request of the star Belle Baker, Berlin had written a song for her to interpolate into an otherwise all-Rodgers-and-Hart score for the Broadway musical Betsy.
interstice
\in-TUR-stuhs\, noun; plural interstices \in-TUR-stuh-seez; -suhz\:| 1. A space between things or parts, especially a space between| things closely set; a narrow chink; a crack; a crevice; an| interval.| 2. An interval of time.| Out in the harbor, boats are gridlocked: who knows how they got there, or how they will get away? The filthy water is barely visible in the interstices of smokestack, hull, and sail.
inveigle
\in-VAY-guhl; -VEE-\, transitive verb:| 1. To persuade by ingenuity or flattery; to entice.| 2. To obtain by ingenuity or flattery.| Deep Blue had tried to inveigle Kasparov into grabbing several pawn offers, but the champion was not fooled.
inveterate
\in-VET-uhr-it\, adjective:| 1. Firmly established by long persistence; deep-rooted; of long standing.| 2. Fixed in habit by long persistence; confirmed; habitual.| In Montpelier, where this prison stands, the inveterate prejudice against prisoners has been swept away.
invidious
\in-VID-ee-uhs\, adjective:| 1. Tending to provoke envy, resentment, or ill will.| 2. Containing or implying a slight.| 3. Envious.| But to the human hordes of Amorites -- Semitic nomads wandering the mountains and deserts just beyond the pale of Sumer -- the tiered and clustered cities, strung out along the green banks of the meandering Euphrates like a giant's necklace of polished stone, seemed shining things, each surmounted by a wondrous temple and ziggurat dedicated to the city's god-protector, each city noted for some specialty -- all invidious reminders of what the nomads did not possess.
inure
\in-YOOR\, transitive verb:| To make accustomed or used to something painful, difficult, or inconvenient; to harden; to habituate; as, inured to drudgery and distress.| intransitive verb:| To pass into use; to take or have effect; to be applied; to serve to the use or benefit of; as, a gift of lands inures to the heirs.| They were a hard-driven, hardworking crowd inured to the hardest living, and they found their recreation in hard drinking and hard fighting.
ineluctable
\in-ih-LUCK-tuh-buhl\, adjective:| Impossible to avoid or evade; inevitable.
incontrovertible
\in-kon-truh-VUR-tuh-buhl\, adjective:| Too clear or certain to admit of dispute; indisputable; unquestionable.
inanition
\in-uh-NISH-uhn\, noun:| 1. The condition or quality of being empty.| 2. Exhaustion, as from lack of nourishment.| 3. Lack of vitality or spirit.| The problem that faces British universities is not that they have become fat and lazy, but that they have been starved beyond lean efficiency into inanition.
irrefragable
\ir-REF-ruh-guh-buhl\, adjective:| Impossible to refute; incontestable; undeniable; as, an irrefragable argument; irrefragable evidence.| I had the most irrefragable evidence of the absolute truth and soundness of the principle upon which my| invention was based.
jollification
\jol-ih-fuh-KAY-shuhn\, noun:| Merrymaking; festivity; revelry.| Some inform; some prompt the conscience; some entertain, while having more than jollification in mind.
camarilla
\kam-uh-RIL-uh; -REE-yuh\, noun:| A group of secret and often scheming advisers, as of a king; a cabal or clique.| Mr Kiselev likened Yeltsin's entourage to a camarilla..
cavalcade
\kav-uhl-KAYD; KAV-uhl-kayd\, noun:| 1. A procession of riders or horse-drawn carriages.| 2. Any procession.| 3. A sequence; a series.
coeval
\koh-EE-vuhl\, adjective:| Of the same age; originating or existing during the same period of time -- usually followed by 'with'.| noun: One of the same age; a contemporary.| According to John Paul, this longing for transcendent truth is coeval with human existence: All men and women shape a comprehensive vision and an answer to the question of life's meaning.
concatenation
\kon-kat-uh-NAY-shuhn; kuhn-\, noun: A series of links united; a series or order of things depending on each other, as if linked together; a chain, a succession.| But at this stage the accident appears to have been just that, a dreadful concatenation of random events.
consanguineous
\kon-san(g)-GWIN-ee-us\, adjective:| Of the same blood; related by birth; descended from the same parent or ancestor.| These Neolithic people practiced agriculture in a settled communal life and are widely supposed to have had consanguineous clans as their basic social grouping.
contravene
\kon-truh-VEEN\, transitive verb:| 1. To act or be counter to; to violate.| 2. To oppose in argument; to contradict.
contradistinction
\kon-truh-dis-TINK-shuhn\,| noun: Distinction by contrast; as, sculpture in contradistinction to painting.| In the quarter-century since [1]Gravity's Rainbow, American novelists| have increasingly fixed their boldest inventions in the past, usually their own| early years or a time long before they were born -- in contradistinction to postwar writers who| vigorously peeled away World War II and the social fabric of the 1950's.
conurbation
\kon-uhr-BAY-shuhn\, noun:| An aggregation or continuous network of urban communities.| To live there in that great smoking conurbation rumbling with the constant thunder of locomotives, filled with the moaning of train whistles coming down the Potomac Valley,was beyond my most fevered hopes.
countervail
\kown-tur-VAYL\, transitive verb:| 1. To act against with equal force, power, or effect; to| counteract.| 2. To compensate for; to offset; to furnish or serve as an| equivalent to.
crepuscular
\kri-PUS-kyuh-lur\, adjective:| 1. Pertaining to twilight; glimmering; hence, imperfectly clear or luminous.| 2. (Zoology) Flying in the twilight or evening, or before sunrise; -- said certain birds and insects.| A faint crepuscular light extending beyond the cusps of the planet.
collude
\kuh-LOOD\, intransitive verb:| To act in concert; to conspire; to plot.
comestible
\kuh-MES-tuh-buhl\, adjective: Suitable to be eaten; edible.| noun:Something suitable to be eaten; food.| I came to Adria's lab expecting subtle combinations and rare ingredients, the real outer limit of the comestible.
canorous
\kuh-NOR-us; KAN-or-uhs\, adjective:| Richly melodious; pleasant sounding; musical.| I felt a deep contentment listening to the meadowlark's complex melody as he sat on his bragging post calling for a mate, and the soft canorous whistle of the bobwhite as he whistled his name with intermittent lulls.
capacious
\kuh-PAY-shuhs\, adjective:| Able to contain much; roomy; spacious.| Litter was picked up non stop during the week (mostly by that nice governor with the capacious pockets).
corroborate
\kuh-RAHB-uh-RAYT\, transitive verb:| To strengthen or make more certain with other evidence.| Whenever I can, I interview family and friends extensively both to corroborate the history given me by the defendant and to gain insight into his behavior and personality.
complaisant
\kuhm-PLAY-suhnt; -zuhnt\, adjective:| Exhibiting a desire to please; obliging; compliant.| They evict the irascible artist and install a complaisant tenant.
compunction
\kuhm-PUHNK-shuhn\, noun:| 1. Anxiety or deep unease proceeding from a sense of guilt or consciousness of causing pain.| 2. A sting of conscience or a twinge of uneasiness; a qualm; a scruple.| Not only were tears one means of prayer, according to Benedict, they were the only pure form: We must know that God regards our purity of heart and tears of compunction, not our many words.
condign
\kuhn-DINE; KON-dine\, adjective:| Suitable to the fault or crime; deserved; adequate.| In a story as old as the Greeks, overweening pride brought condign disaster.
conflate
\kuhn-FLAYT\, transitive verb:| 1. To bring together; to fuse together; to join or meld.| 2. To combine (as two readings of a text) into one whole.| Scott Reynolds's creepy debut feature [film] conflates the| present and the past with ingenious use of flashbacks.
confute
\kuhn-FYOOT\, transitive verb:| To overwhelm by argument; to refute conclusively; to prove or show to be false.| Having settled in Rome in 1486, he proposed 900 theses and challenged any scholar to confute them, agreeing to pay his expenses.
monomania
\mon-uh-MAY-nee-uh; -nyuh\, noun:| 1. Pathological obsession with a single subject or idea.| 2. Excessive concentration of interest upon one particular subject or idea.| One of the themes in the book was the necessity for a leader to be passionate about the work. And sometimes in a corporate setting, passion becomes monomania.
concomitant
\kuhn-KOM-uh-tuhnt\, adjective:| Accompanying; attendant; occurring or existing concurrently.| noun: Something that accompanies or is collaterally connected with something else; an accompaniment.| For a filmmaker so obsessed with these issues, it is a sad irony that his fear of things going wrong--and his concomitant mania for clockwork control--should have been a major reason for the failure of... his final film.
conspectus
\kuhn-SPEK-tuhs\, noun:| 1. A general sketch or survey of a subject.| 2. A synopsis; an outline.| Eagerly the Austen family went at their productions,choosing plays that represented, as Gay says, a conspectus of late 18th-century fashionable comic theatre.
convivial
\kuhn-VIV-ee-uhl\, adjective:Of or relating to feasting, drinking, and good company; fond of festivity and good company; sociable.| Young Sam, steeped in the family's endless storytelling,confessions, musings about their aspirations, and bickering about politics, seemed destined to become happy and convivial.
contemporaneous
\kuhn-tem-puh-RAY-nee-uhs\, adjective:Originating, existing, or occurring at the same time.| The best sources for a historian are those that provide a contemporaneous account of the events under scrutiny.
comport
\kum-PORT\, transitive verb:| To conduct or behave (oneself) in a particular manner.| intransitive verb: To be fitting; to accord; to agree -- usually followed by 'with'.
quotidian
\kwoh-TID-ee-uhn\, adjective:| 1. Occurring or returning daily; as, a quotidian fever.| 2. Of an everyday character; ordinary; commonplace.
quiescent
\kwy-ES-uhnt; kwee-\, adjective:| Being in a state of repose; at rest; still; inactive.| The solution, Dr. Wilmut discovered, was to, in effect, put the DNA from the adult cell to sleep, making it quiescent by depriving the adult cell of nutrients.
chimerical
\ky-MER-ih-kuhl; -MIR-; kih-\, adjective:| 1. Merely imaginary; produced by or as if by a wildly fanciful imagination; fantastic; improbable or unrealistic.| 2. Given to or indulging in unrealistic fantasies or fantastic schemes.| But those risks are real, not chimerical.| chthonic (THONE-ik), adjective: dwelling in or under the earth; also, pertaining to the underworld| Driven by dæmonic, chthonic Powers. --T.S. Eliot
cupidity
\kyoo-PID-uh-tee\, noun: Eager or excessive desire, especially for wealth; greed; avarice.| Curiosity was a form of lust, a wandering cupidity of the eye and the mind.
lackadaisical
\lack-uh-DAY-zih-kuhl\, adjective:| Lacking spirit or liveliness; showing lack of interest;languid; listless. Drowsy from the heat and from fatigue, he dozed to the steady lackadaisical clips of the mule's shoes.
logorrhea
\law-guh-REE-uh\, noun: Excessive talkativeness or wordiness.
legerdemain
\lej-ur-duh-MAIN\, noun:| 1. Sleight of hand.| 2. A display of skill, trickery, or artful deception.| We are inclined to regard the treatment of [paradoxes].. . as a mere legerdemain of words.
loquacious
\loh-KWAY-shuhs\, adjective:| 1. Very talkative.| 2. Full of excessive talk; wordy.
lugubrious
\lu-GOO-bree-us; -GYOO-\, adjective:| 1. Mournful; indicating sorrow, often in a way that seems| feigned, exaggerated, or ridiculous.| 2. Gloomy; dismal.| Oh yes, he says, and his lugubrious expression suggests that the loss afflicts him still.
laconic
\luh-KON-ik\, adjective:| Using or marked by the use of a minimum of words; brief and pithy; brusque.| Readers' reports range from the laconic to the verbose.
lacuna
\luh-KYOO-nuh\, noun; plural lacunae \luh-KYOO-nee\ or lacunas:| 1. A blank space; a missing part; a gap.| 2. (Biology) A small opening, depression, or cavity in an anatomical structure.| Like most other writers of his generation, he was a profoundly apolitical being, not from any lacuna in his education but as a matter of principle.
lascivious
\luh-SIV-ee-uhs\, adjective:| 1. Lewd; lustful.| 2. Tending to arouse sexual desires.| Irwin, wearing Groucho Marx glasses to which a false nose is attached, appears uncharacteristically as a lascivious fellow, the maitre d'hôtel who tries to move in on the girlfriend.
malfeasance
\mal-FEE-zuhn(t)s\, noun:| Wrongdoing, misconduct, or misbehavior, especially by a public official.| But more often than not the same board members who were removed by the chancellor for malfeasance subsequently manage to get reelected in a political process that defies any form of accountability.
malapropos
\mal-ap-ruh-POH\, adjective:| Unseasonable; unsuitable; inappropriate.
malediction
\mal-uh-DIK-shun\, noun:| A curse or execration.
maladroit
\mal-uh-DROYT\, adjective:| Lacking adroitness; clumsy; awkward; unskillful; inept.| Do you know someone who... loves quiet conversations about feelings or ideas, and can give a dynamite presentation to a big audience, but seems awkward in groups and maladroit at small talk?
melange
\may-LAHNZH\, noun:| A mixture; a medley.| Interspersed with diverse lectures and classroom activities were periods of financial difficulty, military service, and employment as a private tutor, all of which added to the curious melange of experiences that would ultimately blossom into his unexpected and remarkable life's work.
milieu
\meel-YUH; meel-YOO\, noun; plural milieus or milieux \-(z)\:| Environment; setting.| These were agricultural areas, populated with prosperous farming families and rural artisans -- a completely different milieu from the Monferrands', which was more closed, more cultured, but less affluent.
mendacious
\men-DAY-shuhs\, adjective:| 1. Given to deception or falsehood; lying; untruthful; as, a mendacious person.| 2. False; untrue; as, a mendacious statement.
misnomer
\mis-NO-muhr\, noun:| 1. The misnaming of a person in a legal instrument, as in a complaint or indictment.| 2. Any misnaming of a person or thing; also, a wrong or inapplicable name or designation.| Morning sickness is a misnomer -- it can strike any time.
salubrious
\suh-LOO-bree-us\, adjective:| Favorable to health; promoting health; healthful.
meticulous
\muh-TIK-yuh-luhs\, adjective:| Extremely or excessively careful about details.| How much work gets done in the fall perennial garden depends somewhat on whether your gardening tendencies lean toward the meticulous or toward the casual.
matutinal
\muh-TOOT-nn-uhl\, adjective:| Relating to or occurring in the morning; early.| Get up early and wash your face in the matutinal May Day dew; it will make your skin beautiful and your heart pure.
multifarious
\muhl-tuh-FAIR-ee-uhs\, adjective:| Having great diversity or variety; of various kinds;diversified.| She is good at constructing a long, multifarious narrative,weaving many minor stories into one, so that you are left with a sense of the fluidity and ambiguity of historical interpretation.
mercurial
\mur-KYUR-ee-uhl\, adjective:| 1. [Often capitalized] Of or pertaining to the god Mercury. 2. [Often capitalized] Of or pertaining to the planet Mercury. 3. Having the qualities of shrewdness, eloquence, or thievishness attributed to the god Mercury. 4. Changeable in temperament or mood; temperamental; volatile. 5. Of, pertaining to, or containing mercury. 6. Caused by the use of mercury. Most of his New England cronies, accustomed to Brownson's frequent changes of opinion, treated him as| a mercurial spirit who had finally stepped off the edge of the world rather than as a role model.
munificent
\myoo-NIF-i-suhnt\, adjective:Very liberal in giving or bestowing; very generous; lavish.| Another munificent friend has given me the most splendid reclining chair conceivable.
nimiety
\nih-MY-uh-tee\, noun: The state of being too much; excess.| What a nimiety of ... riches have we here! I am quite undone.
nonagenarian
\non-uh-juh-NAIR-ee-uhn; no-nuh-\, noun:| A ninety year old person; someone whose age is in the nineties.
nefarious
\nuh-FAIR-ee-us\, adjective:| Wicked in the extreme; iniquitous.
obsequious
\ob-SEE-kwee-uhs; uhb-\, adjective:| Marked by or exhibiting servile attentiveness; compliant to excess; fawning.| His wealth nevertheless turns the townspeople into groveling, obsequious sycophants.
oneiric
\oh-NY-rik\, adjective:| Of, pertaining to, or suggestive of dreams; dreamy.| On this score, the novel might easily drift off into an oneiric never-never land, but Mr. Welch doesn't let this happen.
omnipresent
\om-nuh-PREZ-uhnt\, adjective: Present in all places at the same time; ubiquitous.| It was rather that myth was omnipresent; the whole people thought in this way and were long confirmed| in their belief.
ennui
\on-WEE\, noun:| A feeling of weariness and dissatisfaction arising from lack of interest; boredom.| He glanced at his heavily laden bookshelves. Nothing there appealed to him. The ennui seemed to have settled into his very bones.
outre
\oo-TRAY\, adjective:| Unconventional; eccentric; bizarre.| This seven-year-old house of outre culture is the kind of place you can shop for a sculpture made out of working flamethrowers, videocassettes of underground movies, computer-generated art or a cute robot
osculation
\os-kyuh-LAY-shuhn\, noun:| The act of kissing; also: a kiss.| He had engaged in nervous osculation with all three of Lord Flamborough's daughters.
ostentation
\os-ten-TAY-shuhn\, noun: Excessive or pretentious display; boastful showiness.| In a city where the wealthy are known for ostentation, many are now buying low-profile economy cars to| fool kidnappers and thieves.
panacea
\pan-uh-SEE-uh\, noun:| A remedy for all diseases, problems, or evils; a universal medicine; a cure-all.| [T]echnology had become a panacea for the great economic,social, and political challenges facing the nation as it embarked on the path of modernization.
parsimonious
\par-suh-MOH-nee-uhs\, adjective:Sparing in expenditure; frugal to excess.| His mother became increasingly parsimonious over the years,and even if there were a good doctor around she did not like to pay one.
peccadillo
\peck-uh-DIL-oh\, noun:| A slight offense; a petty fault.| No peccadillo is too trivial: we learn that the mogul once blew his top because his laundry came back starched ( 'Fluff and fold!' he screamed).
peregrination
\pehr-uh-gruh-NAY-shun\, noun: A traveling from place to place; a wandering.| He left Parma in the family camper-van, abandoning it in a Milan car-park to avoid its being identified at border controls before setting off on a peregrination through Switzerland, France, London, Canada, New York and eventually back to London.
pecuniary
\pih-KYOO-nee-air-ee\, adjective:| 1. Relating to money; monetary.| 2. Consisting of money.| 3. Requiring payment of money.
plebeian
\plih-BEE-uhn\, adjective:| 1. Of or pertaining to the Roman plebs, or common people.| 2. Of or pertaining to the common people.| 3. Vulgar; common; crude or coarse in nature or manner.| noun:| 1. One of the plebs, or common people of ancient Rome; opposed to patrician.| 2. One of the common people or lower classes.| 3. A coarse, crude, or vulgar person.| He was unashamed of his plebeian roots but keen to provide himself with aristocratic forebears.
portend
\por-TEND\, verb: To indicate (events, misfortunes, etc.) as in future; to foreshadow; to bode.| Although no humans were there to witness the giant comet of 65 million years ago, in this case it really did portend disaster.
postprandial
\post-PRAN-dee-uhl\, adjective:| Happening or done after a meal.
prepotency
\pree-POTE-n-see\, noun:| 1. The quality or condition of having superior power,| influence, or force; predominance.| 2. (Biology) The capacity, on the part of one of the parents,| as compared with the other, to transmit more than his or her| own share of characteristics to their offspring.| The awesome prepotency of this smokescape is no illusion, for this is an epicenter of power, oil capital of the Western world and the most industrialized corner of the United States.
prelapsarian
\pree-lap-SAIR-ee-uhn\, adjective:| Pertaining to or characteristic of the time or state before the Fall.| Because artifice connotes civilization to the Chinese elite, it doesn't have quite the negative meaning it has| for Europeans brought up on stories of prelapsarian Eden and on Romantic conceptions of nature.
prestidigitation
\pres-tuh-dij-uh-TAY-shuhn\, noun:| Skill in or performance of tricks; sleight of hand.| He was the man who had sat alone in a room for hundreds and hundreds of hours, his fingers manipulating cards and coins until he had learned and could perfectly reproduce every form of prestidigitation found in books of magic lore.
preponderate
\prih-PON-duh-rayt\, intransitive verb:| 1. To exceed in weight.| 2. To incline or descend, as the scale of a balance; to be weighed down.| 3. To exceed in influence, power, importance, number, amount, etc.| It's about the random acts of kindness which still, magically, preponderate over acts of incivility or nastiness.
prevaricate
\prih-VAIR-uh-kayt\, intransitive verb:| To depart from or evade the truth; to speak with equivocation.| Journalism has a similar obligation, particularly with men and women suddenly transferred to places of great power,who are often led to exaggerate and prevaricate, all in the name of a supposedly greater good.
proclivity
\pro-KLIV-uh-tee\, noun:| A natural inclination; predisposition.
prolix
\pro-LIKS; PRO-liks\, adjective:| 1. Extending to a great length; unnecessarily long; wordy.| 2. Tending to speak or write at excessive length.
pronunciamento
\pro-nun-see-uh-MEN-toe\, noun:| 1. A proclamation or manifesto; a formal announcement or declaration.| 2. A pronouncement.
procrastination
\proh-CRAS-tuh-NAY-shun\,| noun:The act or habit of delaying doing something.| If you have newspapers dating to the last millennium,magazines from the Seventies stacked on your nightstand, and countless envelopes filled with family photos stuffed in a drawer, you may be carrying procrastination to an extreme.
propinquity
\pruh-PING-kwih-tee\, noun:| 1. Nearness in place; proximity.| 2. Nearness in time.| 3. Nearness of relation; kinship.| Following the race he took umbrage at Stewart's rough driving so early in the day, and the propinquity of the two drivers' haulers allowed the Kid to express his displeasure up close and personal.
propitious
\pruh-PISH-uhs\, adjective:| 1. Presenting favorable circumstances or conditions.| 2. Favorably inclined; gracious; benevolent.
proponent
\pruh-POH-nuhnt\, noun:One who argues in support of something; an advocate; a supporter.| A fervent proponent of the work ethic, Reuther at first resisted the demand for early retirement, as he had rejected shorter hours in the 1950s.
pellucid
\puh-LOO-sid\, adjective:| 1. Transparent; clear; not opaque.| 2. Easily understandable.
pugnacious
\puhg-NAY-shuhs\, adjective: Inclined to fight; combative; quarrelsome.| Roberto's pugnacious grandmother lived across the meadow and would yell threats and curses helplessly from her balcony.
perdurable
\pur-DUR-uh-bul; pur-DYUR-\, adjective:Very durable; lasting; continuing long.| The idea of a classic is historically bound up with the view . .. that there are certain perdurable human truths and values, immune from geographical or historical [1]vitiation.
perforce
\pur-FORS\, adverb:| By necessity; by force of circumstance.
perfunctory
\pur-FUNGK-tuh-ree\, adjective:| 1. Done merely to carry out a duty; performed mechanically or| routinely.| 2. Lacking interest, care, or enthusiasm; indifferent. The city's moderate hotels, however, tend to offer minimal| comforts, perfunctory service and dreary decor.
perspicacity
\pur-spuh-KAS-uh-tee\, noun:| Clearness of understanding or insight; penetration, discernment.| His predictions over the years have mixed unusual aristocratic insight with devastating perspicacity.
pusillanimous
\pyoo-suh-LAN-uh-muhs\, adjective:| Lacking in courage and resolution; contemptibly fearful; cowardly.
raconteur
\rack-on-TUR\, noun:| One who excels in telling stories and anecdotes.| An excellent raconteur, he had a varied stock of stories| and enjoyed the joke just as much when it was on himself as| he did when it was on some one else.
ratiocination
\rash-ee-ah-suh-NAY-shun; rash-ee-oh-\, noun:| The process of reasoning.| For all their vaunted powers of ratiocination, grand masters of chess tend to be a skittery lot.
redivivus
\red-uh-VY-vuhs; -VEE-\, adjective:Living again; brought back to life; revived; restored.| Augustine redivivus, R. contends, would find in the history of the present century confirmation of his pessimistic views of human nature.
rebarbative
\ree-BAR-buh-tiv\, adjective:| Serving or tending to irritate or repel.| Over the past couple of hours a lot of rebarbative, ulcerated and embittered people had been working hard at bedding their resentments down in sensory-deprivation tanks full of alcohol.
redoubt
\rih-DOWT\, noun:| 1. A small and usually temporary defensive fortification.| 2. A defended position or protective barrier.| 3. A secure place of refuge or defense; a stronghold.
refractory
\rih-FRAK-tuh-ree\, adjective:| 1. Stubbornly disobedient; unmanageable.| 2. Resisting ordinary treatment or cure.| 3. Difficult to melt or work; capable of enduring high| temperature.
refulgent
\rih-FUL-juhnt\, adjective:| Shining brightly; radiant; brilliant; resplendent.| If Moore was not quite a burned-out case, his once refulgent light flickered only dimly in his sad last years.
recalcitrant
\rih-KAL-sih-truhnt\, adjective:| Stubbornly resistant to and defiant of authority or restraint.
renascent
\rih-NAS-uhnt\, adjective:| Springing or rising again into being; showing renewed vigor.| Their goal: to give voters in the June presidential elections a realistic choice between the rough-and-tumble reforms of President Boris Yeltsin and the Soviet-era nostalgia of Gennadi Zyuganov,leader of the renascent Russian Communist Party.
riparian
\rih-PAIR-ee-uhn; ry-PAIR-ee-uhn\, adjective:| of or pertaining to the bank of a river or stream| Riparian areas are the green, vegetated areas on each side of streams and rivers. They serve many important| functions, including purifying water by removing sediments and other contaminants; reducing the risk of flooding| and associated damage; reducing stream channel and streambank erosion; increasing available water and| stream flow duration by holding water in stream banks and [1]aquifers; supporting a diversity of plant and| wildlife species; maintaining a habitat for healthy fish populations; providing water, [2]forage, and shade| for wildlife and livestock; and creating opportunities for recreationists to fish, camp, picnic, and enjoy other| activities.
repast
\rih-PAST\, noun:| Something taken as food; a meal.| This repast could scarcely have been digested before a tea of fresh bread, butter, cheese, cold meat, and cake was served at half past six.
recrimination
\rih-krim-uh-NAY-shuhn\,| noun:1. The act of returning one charge or accusation with another.| 2. An accusation brought by the accused against the accuser; a counter| accusation.| Others have written about the epidemic of partisanship and lack of character in our government's elected branches and the cycle of recrimination and disaffection it has created.
robustious
\roh-BUHS-chuhs\, adjective:| 1. Boisterous; vigorous.| 2. Coarse; rough; crude.| . . . the robustious romantic figure comparable to John Willoughby in Sense and Sensibility--he comes in with dash, then proves a temptation to the heroine but is an eventual disappointment.
salmagundi
\sal-muh-GUHN-dee\, noun:| 1. A salad plate usually consisting of chopped meat,anchovies, eggs, and onions, served with oil and vinegar.| 2. Any mixture or assortment; a medley; a potpourri; a miscellany.| A glance at the schedule is enough to make one feel that one would rather go out and shoot songbirds than stay in and watch the dismal salmagundi of game shows, repeats and soap operas.
sardonic
\sar-DON-ik\, adjective:Scornful, mocking; disdainfully humorous.| Clive gave a sardonic account of a publicly subsidized concert in a nearly deserted church hall, in which the legs of a piano were repeatedly struck with the broken neck of a violin for over an hour.
sartorial
\sar-TOR-ee-uhl\, adjective:| 1. Of or relating to a tailor or to tailoring.| 2. Of or relating to clothing, or style or manner of dress.| 3. [Anatomy] Of or relating to the sartorius muscle.| His sartorial style runs toward jeans, Hawaiian shirts and cowboy boots, and he favors the grizzled, haven't-shaven-in-days look.
sempiternal
\sem-pih-TUR-nuhl\, adjective:| Of never ending duration; having beginning but no end; everlasting; endless.| In all the works on view, Mariani conjures a sempiternal realm that exists parallel to mundane reality and which is accessible through art, reverie and the imagination
censorious
\sen-SOR-ee-uhs\, adjective:| 1. Tending to blame, condemn, or criticize; harshly critical.| 2. Implying or expressing harsh criticism or disapproval; as, censorious remarks.| Another factor is the morally censorious climate in which we live -- a climate that is intolerant of eccentricity,waywardness and general lack of perfection.
sesquipedalian
\ses-kwuh-puh-DAYL-yuhn\, adjective:| 1. Given to or characterized by the use of long words.| 2. Long and ponderous; having many syllables.| noun: A long word.| As a sesquipedalian stylist, he can throw a word like 'eponymous into a sentence without missing a beat.
chicanery
\shih-KAY-nuh-ree\, noun:| 1. The use of trickery or sophistry to deceive (as in matters of law).| 2. A trick; a subterfuge.| Wordsworth's paternal grandfather, Richard, had first come to Westmorland from South Yorkshire in 1700, to recoup his fortunes with the then baron Lonsdale, having been done out of his fortune by his own guardian's chicanery.
chagrin
\shuh-GRIN\, noun: Acute vexation, annoyance, or embarrassment, arising from disappointment or failure.| transitive verb: To unsettle or vex by disappointment or humiliation; to mortify.| He ran away to the recruiting office at Ottumwa, a river port where Union soldiers were transported east--how he got to the town, a good half-day journey by wagon, isn't clear--and to his chagrin, he found his father waiting there.
caesura
\sih-ZHUR-uh; -ZUR-\, noun;
simulacrum
\sim-yuh-LAY-kruhm; -LAK-ruhm\, noun;
scintilla
\sin-TIL-uh\, noun: A tiny or scarcely detectable amount; the slightest particle; a trace; a spark. In victory, they must hold on to at least a scintilla of humility, lest they get too cocky -- and ripe for a| takedown.
seriatim
\sir-ee-AY-tim; -AT-im\, adverb:| In a series; one after another.
circumlocution
\sir-kum-lo-KYOO-shun\, noun:| The use of many words to express an idea that might be expressed by few; indirect or roundabout language; a [1]periphrase.| Dickens gave us the classic picture of official heartlessness: the government Circumlocution Office, burial ground of hope in Little Dorrit.
somniferous
\som-NIF-uhr-uhs\, adjective:Causing or inducing sleep.| He has gone outside the usual channels of stodgy academic journals and somniferous lectures.
soporific
\sop-uh-RIF-ik; soh-puh-\, adjective:| 1. Causing sleep; tending to cause sleep.| 2. Of, relating to, or characterized by sleepiness or lethargy.| noun: A medicine, drug, plant, or other agent that has the quality of inducing sleep; a narcotic.| Hamilton's voice droned on, hypnotic, soporific, the gloom beyond the windows like the backdrop of a waking dream.
stentorian
\sten-TOR-ee-uhn\, adjective:| Extremely loud.| Around his family, Sergeant Charles Mingus Sr. was easily angered and often violent and closemouthed the rest of the time, except when he gave orders in a stentorian voice that carried the assumption of command.
celerity
\suh-LAIR-uh-tee\, noun:| Rapidity of motion or action; quickness; swiftness.
circumambient
\sur-kuhm-AM-bee-uhnt\, adjective:| Surrounding; being on all sides; encompassing.| The self owes its form and perhaps its very existence to the circumambient social order. Facing reality, then, implies accepting one's essential powerlessness, yielding or adjusting to| circumambient forces, taking solace in some local pattern or order that one has created and to which one has| become habituated.
ablution
\uh-BLOO-shun\, noun:| 1. The act of washing or cleansing; specifically, the washing of the body, or some part of it (as in a religious rite).| 2. The water used in cleansing.
abominate
\uh-BOM-uh-nayt\, transitive verb:| To hate in the highest degree; to detest intensely; to loathe; to abhor.
officious
\uh-FISH-uhs\, adjective:| Marked by excessive eagerness in offering services or advice where they are neither requested nor needed; meddlesome.| Ian Holm plays a well-meaning but officious lawyer who tries to make the grieving families sue for damages.
afflatus
\uh-FLAY-tuhs\, noun:| A divine imparting of knowledge; inspiration.
affray
\uh-FRAY\, noun:| A tumultuous assault or quarrel; a brawl.
aggress
\uh-GRES\, intransitive verb:| To commit the first act of hostility or offense; to make an attack.
acumen
\uh-KYOO-muhn; AK-yuh-muhn\, noun:| Quickness of perception or discernment; shrewdness shown by keen insight.
ameliorate
\uh-MEEL-yuh-rayt\, transitive verb: To make better; to improve.| intransitive verb: To grow better.
aplomb
\uh-PLOMM\,| noun:| Assurance of manner or of action; self-possession; confidence;coolness.
apostasy
\uh-POS-tuh-see\, noun:| Total desertion or departure from one's faith, principles, or party.
appurtenance
\uh-PUR-tn-un(t)s\, noun:| 1. An adjunct; an accessory; something added to another, more important thing.| 2. [Plural]. Accessory objects; gear; apparatus.| 3. [Law]. An incidental right attached to a principal property right for purposes such as passage of title, conveyance, or inheritance.
asseverate
\uh-SEV-uh-rayt\, transitive verb:| To affirm or declare positively or earnestly.| But of course it is! asseverates Herman Woodlife.
assiduous
\uh-SIJ-oo-uhs\, adjective:| 1. Constant in application or attention; devoted; attentive.| 2. Performed with constant diligence or attention; unremitting; persistent; as, assiduous labor.
aspersion
\uh-SPUR-zhuhn; -shuhn\, noun:| 1. A damaging or derogatory remark; slander.| 2. The act of defaming or slandering.| 3. A sprinkling with water, especially in religious ceremonies.
aver
\uh-VUR\,transitive verb| [Inflected forms: averred; averring]:| 1. To affirm with confidence; to declare in a positive manner, as in confidence of asserting the truth.| 2. (Law) To assert, claim, or declare as a fact.
euphonious
\yoo-FOH-nee-uhs\,| adjective:Pleasing or sweet in sound; smooth-sounding.| She combines alliteration and deft word choices with the grace of an oral storyteller, creating euphonious and precise sentences that are perfect for reading aloud.
Smorgasbord
a Swedish buffet of cold dishes
Novice
a beginner; tyro
Anthology
a book which is a collection of poems or stories
Respite
a break; intermission
Anecdote
a brief amusing story
Contusion
a bruise
Genre
a category; type
Malediction
a curse
Laceration
a cut
Aversion
a dislike of
Dichotomy
a division into two parts
Obsession
a dominating concern
Presentiment
a feeling that something might happen
Epistle
a letter (form of communication)
Maverick
a loner
Labyrinth
a maze
Parody
a mockery; imitation for ridicule; spoof
Effigy
a model of a person
Paragon
a perfect example
Hypochondriac
a person obsessed with health; having imaginary illnesses
Nonentity
a person of no importance; not famous
opsimath
a person who begins to learn or study only late in life.
pastiche
noun a work of art that imitates the style of some previous work; a musical composition consisting of a series of songs or other musical pieces from various sources
Idiosyncrasy
a personal peculiarity; something unique to an individual
Hedonist
a pleasure seeker
Euphemism
a polite phrase to cover something unpleasant
Precedent
a previous occurrence used as a guide
Conundrum
a puzzle
Insurgent
a rebel
Palliative
a remedy that improves but doesn't cure
Reprieve
a respite; postponement of a sentence
Restorative
a tonic
Coalition
a union of two parts
Portent
a warning sign; omen
Sage
a wise person
Malefactor
a wrong-doer
hypnopompic
adj of or relating to the state immediately preceding waking up contrast to hypnogogic
Clairvoyant
able to see into the future/another dimension
Resilient
able to spring back; strong
Ambulatory
able to walk around (used of hospital patients)
fuliginous
adj sooty or dusky
repartee
noun adroitness and cleverness in reply
Resignation
acceptance of fate
Circumstantial
accidental; indirect (as in circumstantial evidence)
Amass
accumulate
Amassed
accumulated
Exonerates
acquits; absolves; removes blame
Denunciation
act of speaking out against
Despotic
acting like a tyrant
Avuncular
acting like an uncle; kindly
Crepuscular
active at dawn and dusk
Diurnal
active in daytime
Epitomizes
acts as a typical example of
Stoke
add fuel to; strengthen
puny
adj. (used especially of persons) of inferior size; inferior in strength or significance
go
adj. functioning correctly and ready for action; noun a board game for two players who place counters on a grid; the object is to surround and so capture the opponent's counters; a time for working (after which you will be relieved by someone else)
bibulous
adj. given to or marked by the consumption of alcohol
next
adj. immediately following in time or order; nearest in space or position; immediately adjoining without intervening space; (of elected officers) elected but not yet serving
deaf
adj. lacking or deprive of the sense of hearing wholly or in part; (usually followed by `to') unwilling or refusing to pay heed; noun people who have severe hearing impairments
after
adj. located farther aft; adv. behind or in the rear; happening at a time subsequent to a reference time
sedulous
adj. marked by care and persistent effort
duplicitous
adj. marked by deliberate deceptiveness especially by pretending one set of feelings and acting under the influence of another
seamy
adj. morally degraded; showing a seam
puckish
adj. naughtily or annoyingly playful
maladroit
adj. not adroit
near
adj. not far distant in time or space or degree or circumstances; closely resembling the genuine article; being on the left side
awry
adj. not functioning properly; turned or twisted toward one side; adv. away from the correct or expected course
impolitic
adj. not politic
shrill
adj. of colors that are bright and gaudy; being sharply insistent on being heard; having or emitting a high-pitched and sharp tone or tones
noisome
adj. offensively malodorous; causing or able to cause nausea
dowdy
adj. primly out of date; lacking in smartness or taste; noun deep-dish apple dessert covered with a rich crust
like
adj. resembling or similar; having the same or some of the same characteristics; often used in combination; equal in amount or value; having the same or similar characteristics
disjunctive
adj. serving or tending to divide or separate
ajar
adj. slightly open
cozy
adj. suggesting connivance; enjoying or affording comforting warmth and shelter especially in a small space; having or fostering a warm or friendly and informal atmosphere
captious
adj. tending to find and call attention to faults
midget
adj. very small; noun a person who is markedly small
fledgling
adj. young and inexperienced; (of a young bird) having acquired its flight feathers; noun young bird that has just fledged or become capable of flying
Posthumous
after death
Heresy
against orthodox opinion
Belligerence
aggression
Bellicose
aggressive
Pugnacious
aggressive
Belligerent
aggressive; ready to fight
Concur
agree
Concord
agreement
Concordance
agreement
funambulist
noun an acrobat who performs on a tightrope or slack rope
Nonchalance
an appearance of indifference; calm and composed
Decathlon
an athletic competition with ten events
Omnipotent
all powerful
Omniscient
all-knowing
Omnipotent
all-powerful
Querulous
always complaining
Equivocal
ambiguous; something that can be interpreted in more than one way
Haughtiness
arrogance; pride
Haughty
arrogant
Dowager
an elderly woman of elevate social status
Phenomenon
an event or happening (plural: phenomena)
Plethora
an excess
Alibi
an excuse that shows someone was not at a crime scene
Disparity
an inequality
Seminary
an institution in which priests are trained
Pariah
an outcast from society
Galleon
ancient type of sailing ship
Archaic
ancient; outdated; old fashioned
Ire
anger [irate (a) = very angry]
Nettle
annoy
Miffed
annoyed
Irksome
annoying; infuriating
Bombast
arrogant, pompous language
Purportedly
apparently claiming
Paradox
apparently contradictory statement
Sensuous
appealing to the senses
Ratify
approve; consent
Felicitous
apt
Invidious
arousing envy
Collate
arrange in order
Abashed
ashamed or sorry
Lynch
assassinate; kill; illegal hanging
Nonchalant
assuming an appearance of not caring; indifferent
Presumption
assuming too much
Presumptuous
assuming too much; arrogant
Bypasses
avoids; finds a way around
Comely
attractive
Personable
attractive
Mediocre
average
rara
avis \RARE-uh-AY-vis\, noun plural rara avises \RARE-uh-AY-vuh-suhz\ or rarae aves \RARE-ee-AY-veez\:| A rare or unique person or thing.| He was, after all, that rara avis, a Jewish Catholic priest with a wife and children.
Circumvent
avoid
Obviate
avoid; make unnecessary
Reclusive
avoiding other people; solitary
Cantankerous
bad tempered
Cantankerous
bad-tempered; quarrelsome
Insolvent
bankrupt
Hypothetical
based on guesswork; not proven
Ossified
become fixed and rigid
Mendicancy
begging
Bestial
behaving like a beast; brutal
Brevity
being brief
Credence
belief
Credulity
belief
Egalitarianism
belief in equality
Nihilism
belief in nothing; anarchy
Credible
believable
Plausible
believable
Cynical
believing that people act only out of selfish motives
Beleaguer
besiege; attack
Partisan
biased; one-sided; committed to one group
Conflagration
big fire
Rancor
bitterness and bad feeling
Censure
blame
Recrimination
blame
Censure
blame; criticize
Censured
blamed
Censures
blames
Sanguinary
bloodthirsty; bloody
Brusque
blunt; abrupt
Rambunctious
boisterous
Barrage
bombardment; stream (of abuse etc.)
Ramifications
branches; subdivisions of a complex system; outcomes
Intrepid
brave
Stoic
brave; able to tolerate whatever life throws at you
Fortitude
bravery
Respite
break (from work etc.)
Respite
break from work etc.
Brevity
briefness
Reconcile
bring disputing side together again
Reconcile
bring disputing sides together; overcome bad feeling
Prospectus
brochure
Disdain
contempt; strong dislike
Cumulative
building up
Edifice
building; structure; construction
Onus
burden
Onerous
burdensome
Onerous
burdensome; hard to undertake
Caustic
burning
Discordancy
cacophony; harshness; jarring
plural
caesuras or caesurae \sih-ZHUR-ee; -ZUR-ee\:| 1. A break or pause in a line of verse, usually occurring in the middle of a line, and indicated in scanning by a double vertical line; for example, The proper study|| of mankind is man [Alexander Pope, An Essay on Man].| 2. Any break, pause, or interruption.| After an inconclusive day spent discussing the caesura of Sonnet's opening line, Luke and his colleagues went for cocktails at Strabismus.
Phlegmatic
calm
Placid
calm and peaceful
Poised
calm; collected; self-possessed
Phlegmatic
calm; imperturbable
Placid
calm; peaceful
Serene
calm; peaceful
Sedate
calm; placid
Mollified
calmed; pacified
Plausible
can be believed; reasonable
Arable
can be cultivated
Palpable
can be felt
Salvageable
can be saved
Ineffable
can't be expressed in words
Negate
cancel; deny
Abrogate
cancel; deny; repeal
Implacable
cannot be appeased; relentless
Inevitable
cannot be avoided
Irrevocable
cannot be cancelled; unchangeable
Incorrigible
cannot be corrected (of behavior)
Irreproachable
cannot be criticized. (Reproach = criticize)
Irreproachable
cannot be criticized; perfect
Indecipherable
cannot be decoded; cannot be worked out
Ineffable
cannot be expressed in words
Inviolable
cannot be invaded
Irrefutable
cannot be proved wrong
Cherished
cared for; firmly-held
Husbandry
careful management of resources
Perusal
careful reading
Deliberation
careful thought
Scrupulous
careful; diligent; painstaking
Lax
careless; not strict
Slipshod
careless; untidy
Negligence
carelessness
Engender
cause
Defoliate
cause leaves to fall off
Perpetuated
caused to continue
Polemical
causing debate or argument
Seditious
causing division or rebellion
Certitude
certainty
Impugned
challenged; attacked in words
Protean
changeable
Capricious
changeable; fickle
Chimerical
changeable; unstable
Incantation
chant; invocation; prayer
Anarchy
chaos; lack of government
Indictment
charge; legal accusation
Philanthropy
charity; love of mankind
Flout
defy; reject
Disarming
charming; unthreatening
Bilk
cheat; defraud
Impudent
cheeky
Facetious
cheeky; not to be taken seriously
Puerile
childish
Peevishness
childish sullenness; irritability
Opting
choosing
Disseminating
circulating; broadcasting; spreading (information)
Archetype
classic example of
Scouring
cleaning thoroughly; thorough searching
Lucid
clear
Exposition
clear explanation
Enunciation
clear pronunciation; accent; articulation
Flagrant
clearly wrong
Proximity
closeness
Inept
clumsy
Lummox
clumsy person
Maladroit
clumsy; unskillful
Gritty
coarse; granular
Cajole
coax
Menagerie
collection of animals
Archives
collections of old records; place of storage of old documents
Emerge
come out; appear
Merge
come together
Coalesce
come together; merge
Solace
comfort
Solace
comfort for grief
Convergence
coming together
Rife
common
Hackneyed
common and over-used
Banal
common; dull
Pedestrian
common; mundane; banal
Hackneyed
commonplace; over-used
Analogous
comparable
Analogy
comparison
Benignity
compassion; gentleness; fondness
Bemoan
complain about
Exhaustive
complete and thorough
Consummate
complete; total; supremely good
Knotty
complex; difficult to solve
Intricate
complicated
Convoluted
complicated or long-winded
Labyrinthine
complicated; highly convoluted
Cosmopolitan
composed of varied nationalities
Pyromania
compulsion to start fires
Morbidity
concern with death and disease
Mercenary
concerned only with money
Forensic
concerned with argument or debate (esp. for legal evidence)
Raze
destroy; demolish; tear down
Funerary
concerned with funerals
Epistolary
concerned with letters; through correspondence
Bucolic
concerned with the countryside and farming
Filial
concerned with the relationship between child and parent
Olfactory
concerned with the sense of smell
Gustatory
concerned with the sense of taste
Orthographical
concerned with writing and spelling
Aesthetic
concerning art or beauty
Denounce
condemn; speak out against
Patronize
condescend to; behave in an arrogant manner towards
Befuddle
confuse
Confound
confuse
Corollary
consequence; inference
Carping
constant criticism
Extirpation
destruction
Expedient
convenient; practical
Orthodox
conventional
Judicious
correct in judgment; wise
Enumerate
count out; list
Paradoxically
counter to what one would think; contradictory
Mettle
courage; bravery; valor
Enshroud
cover
Pusillanimous
cowardly
Artisan
craftsman
Disingenuous
crafty
Innovate
create; introduce something new
Pernicious
destructive; harmful
Disparaging
critical
Remonstrance
criticism
Disparage
criticize; belittle
Deprecate
criticize; denounce
Disparaged
criticized
Disparaging
criticizing
Fraudulent
crooked; intending to cheat
Callous
cruel and unfeeling
Callousness
cruelty; unfeeling behavior
Nuzzle
cuddle; snuggle
Devious
cunning
Guile
cunning; craftiness
Clientele
customers
Excised
cut out
Curtail
cut short
Razing
cutting down
Jaundiced
cynical; pessimistic
Dike
dam; embankment
Blighted
damaged; destroyed; ruined
Marred
damaged; spoiled
Perdition
damnation
Refute
disprove
Languish
decay; fade away; get weaker
Artifice
deception; trickery
Illusory
deceptive; false; misleading
Manipulative
deceptive; skilful at handling people
Decipher
decode; work out meaning
Embellished
decorated
Consecrate
dedicate
Consecrated
dedicated; made holy
Consecration
dedication
Infer
deduce; conclude
Poignant
deeply moving; strongly affecting the emotions
Embezzle
defraud; steal
Procrastinate
delay; put off
Malinger
deliberately avoid work; shirk
Misrepresentation
deliberately deceiving
Obfuscate
deliberately make something difficult to understand
Delineation
demarcation; explanation; definition; outlining
Rebuttal
denial
Extradite
deport from one country back to the home country
Degradation
deprivation; poverty; debasement
Profundity
depth
Profundity
depth (of ideas)
Pejorative
derogatory
Abstain
desist; go without; withdraw
Impoverished
destitute; poor
Obliterate
destroy; demolish; eradicate
Resolution
determination
Precocious
developing early
Aberration
deviation; abnormality
Sophistry
devious logic
Elusive
difficult to pin down
Abstruse
difficult to understand; obscure
Obscure
difficult to understand; partially hidden
Decorum
dignified, correct behavior [decorous (a)]
Predicament
dilemma; difficult situation
Quandary
dilemma; puzzle
Grimy
dirty
Discord
disagreement
Dissent
disagreement
Disapprobation
disapproval
Censorious
disapproving; critical
Debacle
disaster
Recant
disclaim; retract statement
Cacophony
discordant loud noises
Relegate
dismiss to a lower position
Aloof
distant; detached; cold
Garble
distort; confuse; muddle
Skewed
distorted; bent
Precinct
district of a city
Polarized
divided into two extremes
Prosaic
dull; boring; ordinary
Lackluster
dull; monotonous; bland
Mundane
dull; ordinary
Bifurcation
division into two
Dichotomies
divisions into two parts
But
do I have to sound so funereal, so pontifically solemn? furbelow \FUR-buh-low\, noun:| 1. A pleated or gathered flounce on a woman's garment; a ruffle.| 2. Something showy or superfluous; a bit of showy| ornamentation.
Stevedore
dockworker
Opaque
does not let light through
Officious
domineering; intrusive; meddlesome
Precipitous
done in a hurry
Dubious
doubtful
Skeptical
doubtful
Skeptical
doubting; not gullible
Elicit
draw out (used mainly for information or feelings)
Parched
dried up
Quaff
drink down quickly
Inebriation
drunkenness; intoxication
Droll
dryly amusing
Insipid
dull; bland; boring
Choleric
easily angered
Irascible
easily angered
Palpable
easily felt; easily perceived
Gullible
easily fooled
Obtrusive
easily seen
Obtrusive
easily seen; 'sticking out'
Conspicuous
easily seen; prominent
Compliant
easy to control; submissive
Idiosyncratic
eccentric
Resonance
echo
Resonant
echoing
Frugal
economical
Parsimonious
economical; frugal; thrifty
Frugal
economical; not wasting anything
Jubilant
ecstatic; delighted; rejoicing
Rudimentary
elementary; basic
Gaunt
emaciated; bony and angular
Devoid of
empty of
Foster
encourage
Fostered
encouraged
Regale
entertain
Milieu
environment
Milieu
environment; surroundings
Egalitarian
equal; believer in equality
Parity
equality
Arcane
esoteric
Epitome
essence; typical example or symbol of
Ensconce
establish firmly in a position
Perpetuity
eternity
Pathos
evoking sadness or pity
Grandiose
exaggerated; too great; on a grand scale
Scrutinize
examine carefully
Exemplars
excellent examples of
Exorbitant
excessive
Hubris
excessive pride
Byzantine
excessive; decadent
Exhilarating
exciting
Empathetic
exhibiting deep emotional understanding
Egress
exit
Belabor
explain in unnecessary detail
Debunking
exposing false claims or myths
Lament
express regret
Lament
express regret over something
Solicitousness
expressing care/concern
Lamentation
expression of regret or sorrow
Extrapolate
extend; predict on the basis of known data
Decimation
extensive destruction
gleam
noun an appearance of reflected light; a flash of light (especially reflected light); verb appear briefly
Indigence
extreme poverty
Jingoistic
extremely patriotic; nationalistic
Gregarious
extroverted; sociable; outgoing
Equitable
fair and equal
Judicious
fair and equal
Judicious
fair; wise
Fidelity
faithfulness; loyalty
Counterfeit
fake; false
Fraudulent
fake; false
Counterfeiter
faker; someone who makes fake money, for example
Plummet
fall suddenly and steeply
Fallacious
false
Specious
false
Spurious
false
Saccharin
falsely sweet
Renown
fame
Preeminence
fame; top position
Infamous
famous for something bad
Persnickety
fastidious; fussy
Corpulent
fat
Auspicious
favorable; promising to turn out well
Elitist
favoring top group; snob
Acrophobia
fear of heights
Phobic
fearful
Plumage
feathers of a bird
Palisade
fence made of posts
Fecund
fertile
Metaphor
figurative speech; using implied comparisons
Ascertain
find out; make sure
Robust
firm and strong
Resolute
firm of purpose
Stereotype
fixed image
Insipid
flavorless; bland
Lithe
flexible
Pliant
flexible
Malleable
flexible; can be shaped
Pliable
flexible; not stubborn
Lithe
flexible; supple
Levity
flippancy; joking about serious matters
Flotsam
floating rubbish
Eloquent
fluent and persuasive in speech
Dotard
foolish old man
Proscribe
forbid
Coercion
force
Coerced
forced
clerisy
noun an educated and intellectual elite
Adamant
forceful; inflexible
Precursor
fore-runner; earlier version
Precursor
forerunner
Precursors
forerunners
Portend
foretell
Absolution
forgiveness; pardon; release
Red tape
formalities; paperwork; official procedure
Cohesive
forming a whole; 'sticking' together
Bulwark
fortification; barricade; wall
Bastion
fortress; stronghold
Serendipity
fortunate coincidence; unsought discovery
Auspicious
fortunate; indicative of a successful outcome
Soothsayer
fortuneteller
Empiric
found by experiment/practice
Candid
frank; honest
Guileless
frank; straightforward; honest
Candor
frankness; openness
Gratis
free of charge; without payment
Exculpate
free someone from blame; pardon; acquit
Blithe
free-spirited; carefree
Gratuitous
free; unwarranted
Disillusioned
freed from wrong ideas
Affability
friendliness; cordiality
Amiable
friendly; lovable
Congenial
friendly; sociable; suitable
Affable
friendly; social; easygoing
Amity
friendship
Gambol
frolic; leap; bound
Exasperated
frustrated; annoyed
Exasperation
frustration and annoyance
Replete
full
Riddled
full of (usually full of holes)
Embittered
full of bitter feelings
Falter
hesitate; waver
Posterity
future generations
Jollity
gaiety; happiness
Garner
gather; collect
Garish
gaudy
Sermonized
gave moral lecture
Consensus
general agreement
Largess
generosity
Magnanimity
generosity (of spirit)
Magnanimous
generous; big-hearted
Munificent
generous; charitable
Docile
gentle and easily lead
Recuperate
get better after illness
Exorcism
getting free/rid of; eliminating (especially demons)
Apparition
ghost; something that 'appears'
Sanction
give approval to
Ratify
give official approval to
Endorse
give support or approval to
Bolster
give support to
Enfranchise
give voting rights
Mendacious
given to lying
Morose
gloomy; bad tempered
Digression
going off the point
Decorous
good and correct (used of behavior)
Palatable
good to eat; agreeable
Opportunism
grabbing opportunities; seeking unprincipled advantage
Erudition
great knowledge or learning
Hilarity
great laughter
Devoured
greedily eaten/consumed
Gluttonous
greedy
Furrow
groove
Hyperbole
grossly exaggerated speech
Entourage
group of followers; retinue
Obsequious
groveling
Fawning
groveling; 'sucking up' to people
Burgeon
grow; flourish; put forth new shoots
Sentinel
guard; sentry
Precept
guiding principle
Credulous
gullible; ready to believe anything
Effusive
gushing; demonstrative
Intuitions
gut feelings
Inveterate
habitual
Fortuitous
happening by chance
Arduous
hard and difficult
Elusive
hard to pin down
Diligent
hard-working
Adversity
hardship
Destitution
hardship; poverty; misery
Deleterious
harmful
Detrimental
harmful
Noxious
harmful; poisonous; lethal
Innocuous
harmless
Placebo
harmless medicine with no effect; dummy medicine
Innocuous
harmless; inoffensive
Grating
harsh; rasping
Cryptic
hidden
Furtive
hidden and secret
Abhor
hate
Odious
hateful
Misanthrope
hater of the rest of mankind
Misogynist
hater of women
Animosity
hatred; antagonism
Profound
having deep meaning
Prescient
having fore-knowledge
Multifaceted
having many aspects
Multifarious
having many aspects
Languid
having no energy or interest
Despondent
having no hope; miserable
Impecunious
having no money
Nondescript
having no special features; dull and ordinary
Nondescript
having no special qualities; ordinary
Dogmatic
having stubbornly held opinions
Salubrious
health-giving
Harbored
held [as in 'harbored and idea']
Demur
hesitate; refuse
Ornate
highly decorated
Corrugated
highly folded
Balk
hinder and prevent; hesitate over
Hamper
hinder; obstruct
Sanctity
holiness
Integrity
honesty
Integrity
honor; honesty
Inimical
hostile
Glacial
hostile; unfriendly; cold; icy
Animosity
hostility; hatred
Antagonism
hostility; strong opposition
Caldron
huge cooking pot
Abasement
humiliation; degradation
Hasten
hurry; accelerate; rush
Sanctimonious
hypocritically holy
Sanctimonious
hypocritically holy; making a pretense of religious feeling
Postulate
hypothesize; propose
Glacial
icy; unfriendly
Quixotic
idealistic; impractical
Boorish
ill-mannered
Churlish
ill-mannered
Malady
illness
Envisioning
imagining, predicting
Callow
immature
Stolid
impassive; dull; indifferent
Enhance
improve; make better or clearer
Amelioration
improvement
Impetuous
impulsive
Impetuosity
impulsiveness
Peremptory
in a commanding manner
Jocular
in a joking manner
Pensive
in a thoughtful mood; thinking deeply
Copious
in large amounts
Legion
in large numbers
Myriad
in large numbers
Meager
in short supply
Inertia
inactivity; lethargy
Inherent
inbuilt; genetic
Encompassed
included; surrounded
Inept
incompetent; unskilled; useless
Discrepancy
inconsistency
Augment
increase; make bigger
Augmenting
increasing in size or number
Infusion
influx
Harbingers
indicators; bringers of warnings
Apathetic
indifferent; uninterested; lethargic
Circuitous
indirect
Allusion
indirect reference
Oblique
indirect; slanting
Soporific
inducing sleep
Nefarious
infamous
Notoriety
infamy
Notoriety
infamy; known for wrong doing
Manipulatable
influencable; controllable
Innate
inherited; inborn
Naiveté
innocence; lack of worldliness
Perspicacity
insight
Perspicacious
insightful; sharp; wise
Hypocritical
insincere
Stipulated
insisted
Formidable
inspiring awe
Cerebral
intellectual
Didactic
intended to teach; instructive
Didactic
intending to preach or teach
Didactic
intending to teach or give instructions
Intrigued
interested and curious
Officious
interfering
Sporadic
intermittent; on and off
Fitful
intermittent; on and off; not continuous
Hiatus
interruption; pause
Preamble
introductory material
Embroil
involve in hostility or argument
Extraneous
irrelevant
Extrinsic
irrelevant; on the outside
Cantankerous
irritable and difficult to please
Fractious
irritable; difficult to control
Sequester
isolate
Serrated
jagged; saw-like
Jubilant
joyful
Discernment
judgment;
Luscious
juicy; moist; succulent
Incipient
just beginning
Nascent
just begun; in an early stage of development
Germinal
just growing; not developed; immature
Sophomoric
juvenile; immature
Benevolent
kindly
Benign
kindly
Benign
kindly; harmless
Raze
knock down
Stoic
known for fortitude; indifferent to pleasure or pain
squelch
noun an electric circuit that cuts off a receiver when the signal becomes weaker than the noise; a crushing remark; verb suppress or crush completely
Ineptitude
lack of ability
Incoherence
lack of clarity
Ambivalence
lack of clarity; wavering; being undecided;uncertainty; having 'mixed' feelings
Lassitude
lack of energy
Apathy
lack of energy or interest
Apathy
lack of interest or emotion
Intemperance
lack of moderation
Irreverence
lack of respect
Insolence
lack of respect; rudeness
Levity
lack of seriousness; humor
Diffident
lacking confidence
Apathetic
lacking energy or interest
Languid
lacking energy; weak
Irresolute
lacking firmness of purpose; hesitant
Irresolute
lacking firmness; inability to decide or commit
Amorphous
lacking in shape
Irreverent
lacking respect
Enduring
lasting
Opulence
lavish display of wealth
Indolence
laziness
Lackadaisical
lazy
Lackadaisical
lazy; careless; lax
Erudition
learning; scholarly knowledge
Bequeath
leave something in one's will to be given after one's death
Salacious
lecherous; erotic
Mitigate
lessen; make less severe
Reprieve
let off (at least temporarily)
Predilection
liking for; penchant
Circumscribe
limit
Concatenate
link together
Concatenation
linking into chains
Heed
listen to
Cornucopia
literally a horn filled with fruits etc; symbol of plenty
Dynamic
lively; vibrant; energetic
Embodiment
living example of
Arboreal
living in trees
Contemporary
living or happening at the same time
Desolate
lonely; devoid of life; feeling very sad and hopeless
Secluded
lonely; isolated
Longevity
long life
Discursiveness
long windedness; indirectness
Nostalgia
longing for the past
Nostalgic
longing for the past
Staunch
loyal; faithful; dependable
Steadfastness
loyalty; firmness of purpose
Cogent
lucid; well argued
Decoy
lure; trap; trick
Mitigated
made less severe
Exacerbated
made worse
Protagonist
main character in film, book, play etc.
Err
make a mistake
Ameliorate
make better
Elucidate
make clear
Expedite
make faster
Alleviate
make less severe
pother
noun an excited state of agitation; verb make upset or troubled; make a fuss; be agitated
Exacerbate
make worse
Exacerbates
makes worse
Ameliorating
making better
Flippant
making jokes about serious matters
Alleviation
making less severe
Gibbering
making meaningless noises
Quagmire
marsh; bog
Arbitration
mediating between disputing sides
Analgesic
medicine to combat pain
Alchemy
medieval chemistry; attempt to change base metal into gold
Proletarian
member of the working class
Cognitions
mental knowledge
Obtuse
mentally dull
Clemency
mercy
Punctilious
meticulous
Bourgeois
middle class
Skirmish
minor battle
Peccadillo
minor weakness; trivial offence
Penurious
miserly
Niggardly
miserly; stingy
Beguile
mislead; lure
Amalgam
mixture
Amalgamation
mixture or joining of different components
Demagogues
mob leaders; agitators
Derided
mocked
Sarcasm
mockery
Sardonic
mocking
Diorama
model of a scene
Mitigator
moderator
Depravity
moral corruption
Lugubrious
mournful; very sad
Regressive
moving backwards (literal or metaphoric)
Brawny
muscular
Inscrutable
mysterious; impenetrable
Bigot
narrow-minded, prejudiced person
Parochial
narrow-minded; concerned only with local matters
Indigenous
native to a locality
Indigenous
native to a particular area
Indigenous
native to a particular place
Ingenuous
naïve
Ingénue
naïve, unsophisticated person
Aspersion
negative feeling; damaging remark
Remiss
neglectful
Dispassionate
neutral; objective
Interminable
never-ending
Novel
new; unusual
Neologism
newly coined word
Defunct
no longer in existence
Obsolete
no longer valid
bete
noire \bet-NWAHR\, noun: Something or someone particularly detested or avoided; a bugbear.| Even more regrettable, as far as Dame Edna is concerned, is the presence of her old bete noire, the extravagantly disgusting Sir Les Patterson.
Cacophony
noise; din
Obstreperous
noisy and boisterous
Harangue
noisy, attacking speech
Peripatetic
nomadic; moving from place to place
Itinerant
nomadic; wandering from place to place
Inexpedient
not advisable
Incoherent
not clear
Sporadic
not continuous; intermittent
Fitful
not continuous; stopping and starting
Inconspicuous
not easily seen
Inconspicuous
not easily seen; subtle; not noticeable
Indiscernible
not easy to see
Incongruous
not fitting in; out of place
Inadvertent
not intentional
Metaphorical
not literal; figurative
Hypothetical
not proven; based on guesswork
Frivolous
not serious
Indecorous
not well-behaved; lacking in dignity
mammon
noun (New Testament) a personification of wealth and avarice as an evil spirit; wealth regarded as an evil influence
midriff
noun (anatomy) a muscular partition separating the abdominal and thoracic cavities; functions in respiration; the middle area of the human torso (usually in front)
estivation
noun (botany) the arrangement of sepals and petals in a flower bud before it opens; (zoology) cessation or slowing of activity during the summer; especially slowing of metabolism in some animals during a hot or dry period
cash
noun United States country music singer and songwriter (1932-2003); prompt payment for goods or services in currency or by check; money in the form of bills or coins
cradle
noun a baby bed with sides and rockers; birth of a person; a trough that can be rocked back and forth; used by gold miners to shake auriferous earth in water in order to separate the gold
pick
noun a basketball maneuver; obstructing an opponent with one's body; a heavy iron tool with a wooden handle and a curved head that is pointed on both ends; a thin sharp implement used for removing unwanted material
shard
noun a broken piece of a brittle artifact
bludgeon
noun a club used as a weapon; verb overcome or coerce as if by using a heavy club; strike with a club or a bludgeon
lampoon
noun a composition that imitates somebody's style in a humorous way; verb ridicule with satire
fuddle
noun a confused multitude of things; verb be confusing or perplexing to; cause to be unable to think clearly; consume alcohol
ragamuffin
noun a dirty shabbily clothed urchin
sobriquet
noun a familiar name for a person (often a shortened version of a person's given name)
crowd
noun a large number of things or people considered together; an informal body of friends; verb to gather together in large numbers
portmanteau
noun a large travelling bag made of stiff leather; a new word formed by joining two others and combining their meanings
potboiler
noun a literary composition of poor quality that was written quickly to make money (to boil the pot)
leitmotiv
noun a melodic phrase that accompanies the reappearance of a person or situation (as in Wagner's operas)
melange
noun a motley assortment of things
polymath
noun a person of great and varied learning
prig
noun a person regarded as arrogant and annoying
signet
noun a seal (especially one used to mark documents officially)
dagger
noun a short knife with a pointed blade used for piercing or stabbing; a character used in printing to indicate a cross reference or footnote
dirge
noun a song or hymn of mourning composed or performed as a memorial to a dead person
ballast
noun any heavy material used to stabilize a ship or airship; an electrical device for starting and regulating fluorescent and discharge lamps; an attribute that tends to give stability in character and morals; something that steadies the mind or feelings
moon
noun any natural satellite of a planet; the natural satellite of the Earth; any object resembling a moon
fish
noun any of various mostly cold-blooded aquatic vertebrates usually having scales and breathing through gills; the flesh of fish used as food; the twelfth sign of the zodiac; the sun is in this sign from about February 19 to March 20
mien
noun dignified manner or conduct
oneiromancy
noun divination through the interpretation of dreams
raiment
noun especially fine or decorative clothing; verb provide with clothes or put clothes on
ostrich
noun fast-running African flightless bird with two-toed feet; largest living bird; a person who refuses to face reality or recognize the truth (a reference to the popular notion that the ostrich hides from danger by burying its head in the sand)
pabulum
noun insipid intellectual nourishment; any substance that can be used as food
ring
noun jewelry consisting of a circlet of precious metal (often set with jewels) worn on the finger; a square platform marked off by ropes in which contestants box or wrestle; a characteristic sound
lore
noun knowledge gained through tradition or anecdote
barnacle
noun marine crustaceans with feathery food-catching appendages; free-swimming as larvae; as adults form a hard shell and live attached to submerged surfaces; European goose smaller than the brant; breeds in the far north
hope
noun one of the three Christian virtues; a specific instance of feeling hopeful; the general feeling that some desire will be fulfilled
nostrum
noun patent medicine whose efficacy is questionable; hypothetical remedy for all ills or diseases; once sought by the alchemists
hand
noun physical assistance; terminal part of the forelimb in certain vertebrates (e.g. apes or kangaroos); a rotating pointer on the face of a timepiece
grouse
noun popular game bird having a plump body and feathered legs and feet; flesh of any of various grouse of the family Tetraonidae; usually roasted; flesh too dry to broil; verb hunt grouse
rescue
noun recovery or preservation from loss or danger; verb take forcibly from legal custody; free from harm or evil
manacle
noun shackle that consists of a metal loop that can be locked around the wrist; usually used in pairs; verb confine or restrain with or as if with manacles or handcuffs
drum
noun small to medium-sized bottom-dwelling food and game fishes of shallow coastal and fresh waters that make a drumming noise; a musical percussion instrument; usually consists of a hollow cylinder with a membrane stretched across each end; a cylindrical metal container used for shipping or storage of liquids
soothsayer
noun someone who makes predictions of the future (usually on the basis of special knowledge)
squall
noun sudden violent winds; often accompanied by precipitation; verb make high-pitched, whiney noises; blow in a squall
stirrup
noun support consisting of metal loops into which rider's feet go; the stirrup-shaped ossicle that transmits sound from the incus to the cochlea
bloat
noun swelling of the rumen or intestinal tract of domestic animals caused by excessive gas; verb become bloated or swollen or puff up; make bloated or swollen
rise
noun the act of changing location in an upward direction; an increase in cost; a growth in strength or number or importance
look
noun the act of directing the eyes toward something and perceiving it visually; physical appearance; the feelings expressed on a person's face
rumpus
noun the act of making a noisy disturbance; verb cause a disturbance
sparge
noun the act of sprinkling or splashing water; verb agitate by introducing air or compressed gas; scatter with liquid; wet lightly
cantle
noun the back of a saddle seat
rind
noun the natural outer covering of food (usually removed before eating); the tissue forming the hard outer layer (of e.g. a fruit)
malapropism
noun the unintentional misuse of a word by confusion with one that sounds similar
mayhem
noun the willful and unlawful crippling or mutilation of another person; violent and needless disturbance
nib
noun the writing point of a pen; horny projecting mouth of a bird
braggadocio
noun vain and empty boasting
offal
noun viscera and trimmings of a butchered animal often considered inedible by humans
sapling
noun young tree
Inductee
novice; beginner
Esoteric
obscure
Esoteric
obscure and difficult to understand
Arcane
obscure; known only to a few people
Perceptive
observant
Fanatical
obsessive; fixated
Hinder
obstruct
Blatant
obvious
Overt
obvious; not hidden
Blatantly
obviously
Pivotal
of central importance
Apocryphal
of doubtful origin
Paramount
of supreme importance
Bureaucracy
officialdom
Dictum
often-used saying
Hoary
old
Archaic
old-fashioned
Lavish
on a grand scale; wasteful
Intermittent
on and off; not continuous
Peripheral
on the edge; not important
Moribund
on the point of death
Predecessor
one who came before
Patron
one who give support (usually financial)
Purveyor
one who sells something or causes something to spread
Libelous
open to prosecution for libel (Libel = written slander)
Antagonistic
opposed; hostile; aggressive
Sanguine
optimistic; cheerful
Banality
ordinariness; dullness
Prosaic
ordinary
Mundane
ordinary; worldly
Anachronistic
out of normal time range
Antiquated
outdated; old fashioned
Antediluvian
outdated; prehistoric; very old-fashioned
Delineates
outlines
Prognosis
outlook
Exemplary
outstandingly good; setting a fine example
Egregious
outstandingly, obviously bad
Belabor
over-emphasizing
Hyperbole
over-exaggeration
Coddled
over-protected; kept warm
Cliche
over-used expression
Placate
pacify; soothe; calm
Appease
pacify; soothe; calm down; make peace with
Pallid
pale
Coddle
pamper; fuss over; indulge
Indulgent
pampering; satisfying desires
Contagious
passed on through touch; infectious
Fervor
passion; enthusiasm
Fanaticism
passion; excessive devotion
Fervent
passionate
pari
passu \PAIR-ee-PASS-oo; PAIR-ih-PASS-oo\, adverb:| At an equal pace or rate.| Expand the state and [its] destructive capacity necessarily expands too, pari passu.
Reciprocate
pay back
Punctilious
paying attention to small details
Remuneration
payment for work done
Equanimity
peace of mind; balance; calm
Placid
peaceful
Serene
peaceful
Belittlers
people who criticize/disparage
Debunkers
people who expose/throw out old ideas
Pacifists
people who oppose war
Revisionists
people who revise; anti-revolutionaries
Insightful
perceptive
Percipient
perceptive; insightful
Astute
perceptive; sharp-witted
Infallible
perfect; flawless; cannot make mistakes
Mandate
permission
Scapegoat
person on whom blame is placed for faults of others
Foil for
person that shows another to advantage
Protégé
person under protection of, or guided by another
Martinet
person who believes in strict discipline
Dilettante
person who dabbles in a subject without serious study
Dilettante
person who dabbles in the arts
Malingerer
person who deliberately tries to avoid work
Atheist
person who does not believe in God
Iconoclast
person who goes against accepted authority
Pedant
person who insists on strict adherence to rules or narrow learning
Masochist
person who intentionally inflicts pain on himself
Cartographer
person who makes maps
Iconoclast
person who opposes orthodoxy
Chronicler
person who records historical information
Lobbyist
person who tries to persuade someone to support a particular cause
Savant
person with knowledge
Connoisseur
person with refined taste and good judgment
Rhetoric
persuasive language
Plaintiff
petitioner (in court of law)
stormy
petrel \STOR-mee-PET-ruhl\, noun:| 1. Any of various small sea birds of the family Hydrobatidae, having dark plumage with paler underparts; also called storm petrel.| 2. One who brings discord or strife, or appears at the onset of trouble.| But far from a 'pet' of the Communist regime, Gorky, the stormy petrel of the revolution, also condemned the revolution early on as a cruel experiment with the Russian people doomed to failure.
Collage
picture made from fragments of other pictures
Quaint
picturesque
Juxtapose
place next to
Asylum
place of refuge or safety
Antipodes
places on opposite sides of the globe
Docile
placid; easily lead
Juxtaposition
placing two thing nest to each other
Euphony
pleasant sounds
Mellifluous
pleasant-sounding
Stratagem
plot; plan; trick
Machinations
plots and plans
Collusion
plotting and planning
Pillage
plunder
Bard
poet
Burnish
polish
Pretentious
pompous; self-important
Feasible
possible and practicable
Marsupial
pouched mammal (like a kangaroo)
Penury
poverty
Magnate
powerful businessman
Potent
powerful; compelling; strong
Pragmatic
practical
Pragmatist
practical person; one who is concerned with usefulness
Pragmatism
practicality
Eulogy
praise
Extol
praise
Laud
praise
Plaudits
praise
Extolled
praised
Creditable
praiseworthy
Invocation
prayer
Extrapolated
predicted on the basis of existing data; extended
Congenital
present from birth
Retention
preservation; withholding
Presumptive
presumed
Preclude
prevent
Protocol
procedure; code of behavior
Cavalcade
procession of vehicles
Goad
prod; urge
Prolific
producing a lot
Espouse
promote; take up; support
Proponents
promoters; supporters
Exonerated
proved not guilty
Smelt
refine an ore
Provocative
provoking
Clairvoyant
psychic; mystic
Referendum
public vote
Chastises
punishes
Catharsis
purging of pent-up emotions
Oust
push out of a position
Ousted
pushed out of a position
Jeopardize
put at risk
Jeopardize
put at risk; endanger
Deter
put off; prevent
Redress
put right something that was wrong
Incarceration
putting in prison
Anthropocentrism
putting man at the center of one's philosophy
Deferment
putting off
Pretentious
putting on an act
Altruism
putting others first; being self-sacrificing
Enigma
puzzle
Enigma
puzzle; mystery
Enigmas
puzzles
Dilemma
puzzling situation
Cryptic
puzzling; enigmatic
Expatriate
refugee; emigrant; someone living away from his own country
Condone
tacitly support; overlook
Idiosyncratic
quirky; eccentric; unique to an individual
Idiosyncratic
quirky; unique to an individual
Podium
raised platform
Arbitrary
random; for no definite reason
Repertoire
range; set of skills
Mercurial
rapidly changing
Peruse
read carefully
Insurrectionists
rebels
Cower
recoil in fear or servility; shrink away from
Cringe
recoil; flinch; shy away
Retrenchment
reducing staff or forces; conserving resources
Deplore
regret
Remorse
regret; sorrow; contrition
Lamentable
regrettable
Inexorable
relentless
Germane
relevant
Pertinent
relevant
Panacea
remedy for all ills
Retraction
removal; 'taking back'
Overhaul
renovate
Anecdote
short account/story
Begrudge
resent
Rancor
resentment; animosity; bad feeling
Deference
respect
Reticent
restrained; holding something back; uncommunicative
Rescind
retract; repeal
Rehash
revamp hurriedly/carelessly
Resurgence
revival
Jaunt
short pleasure trip
Assiduous
thorough; diligent
Deride
ridicule; make fun of; mock
Lampoon
ridicule; spoof
Ludicrous
ridiculous; silly
Prerogative
right or privilege
Hidebound
rigid in opinions
Raucous
rough and unpleasant (of sounds)
Abrasive
rough; coarse; harsh
Rotund
round
Detritus
rubbish
Insolence
rudeness
Boorishness
rudeness; ill-mannered behavior
Derelict
rundown; abandoned
Pathos
sadness; stirring the emotions
Foundered
sank
Ironic
satiric; unexpected
Exegesis
scholarly explanation or interpretation
Pedagogy
science of teaching
Jurisprudence
science or study of law
Castigate
scold strongly
Berate
scold; criticize
Chided
scolded
Reprimanded
scolded
Foraging
searching for food
Clandestine
secret; covert; stealthy
Furtiveness
secretiveness
Stanza
section of a poem
Faction
section; group with common interests
Conciliatory
seeking compromise
Mercenary
seeking money above all else
Abstemious
self denying; refraining from indulging
Hedonism
self indulgence; pleasure-seeking
Autonomous
self-governing
Autonomy
self-government
Altruism
self-sacrifice
Complacent
self-satisfied; smug
Egotistical
selfish
Egotists
selfish people
Foreboding
sense of doom
Estrangement
separation
Gravity
seriousness
Obsequious
servile; submissive
Ephemeral
short-lived
Myopic
short-sighted (literal or metaphoric)
Emancipate
set free
Austere
severely plain
Ignominy
shame
Ignominy
shame [ignominious (a) = shameful]
Ignominious
shameful
Reprehensible
shameful; very bad
Acrid
sharp; pungent (used of smells and tastes)
Hone
sharpen; increase; whet
Acuity
sharpness (mental or visual)
Acumen
sharpness of mind
Resplendent
shining; glowing
Flabbergasted
shocked; speechless
Anecdote
short account of something interesting; story
Flaunt
show off; display in a showy manner
Disdained
showed contempt for
Deferential
showing respect
Reverential
showing respect
Ostentatious
showy
Flamboyant
showy; ornate
Repudiate
shun; eschew
Spurned
shunned; rejected
Occlusion
shutting out
Diffident
shy; hesitant
Reticent
shy; unwilling to reveal information
Factions
sides in a dispute; groups with common interests
Gestures
signals
Inane
silly
Fatuous
silly; foolish
Sedulous
thorough; eager
plural
simulacra \sim-yuh-LAY-kruh; -LAK-ruh\:| 1. An image; a representation.| 2. An insubstantial, superficial, or vague likeness or semblance.| Incorporating simulacra of historic buildings and exotic landscapes the Emperor saw on his extensive travels through his dominions, the villa is high-style multiculturalism.
Scuttle
sink
Intuition
sixth sense; 'gut feeling'
Deft
skilful
Adroit
skilful / skillful (Maladroit = clumsy)
Dexterous
skilful with hands
Adroitness
skill
Finesse
skill
Soporific
sleep-inducing
Somnambulist
sleepwalker
Sluggard
slow-moving; lethargic person
Dilatory
slow; falling behind with one's work
Dilatory
slow; sluggish
Modicum
small amount
Meager
small; scanty
Redolent
smelling of; giving off odors
Complacent
smug; over-confident
Sarcasm
sneering, bitter remarks; ironic or taunting
Lofty
snooty; arrogant; haughty
Convivial
sociable and friendly
Matriarchy
society governed by women
Mellow
soft; melodious; ripe
Epicure
someone who appreciates good food and drink
Braggart
someone who boasts
Recluse
someone who cuts himself off from life
Libertarian
someone who opposes tyranny
Poseur
someone who puts on an act
Profiteer
someone who seeks to make unjustified profits
Propagandist
someone who spreads ideas
Qualification
something added to modify an opinion
Fabrication
something made up; untrue
Nuance
something subtle; a fine shade of meaning
Axiom
something that is taken to be true; basic idea that can't be questioned
Deterrent
something that puts one off; a preventive
Irony
something unexpected; use of words to convey opposite meaning
Anomaly
something which does not fit in a pattern; irregularity
Discrepancy
something which does not match up; inconsistency
Salutary
something which teaches you a lesson; beneficial
Meticulous
thorough; taking care of details
Rigor
thoroughness
Liniment
soothing lotion
Contrition
sorrow and repentance
Contrite
sorry
Capacious
spacious
Sparse
spare; bare; meager
Equivocate
speak ambiguously/vaguely
Equivocate
speak ambiguously; avoid telling the truth
Prevaricate
speak misleadingly and evasively
Pontificate
speak pompously or dogmatically
Drawl
speak slowly with words running together
Lance
spear; spike; javelin
Jargon
specialized language used by experts
Blasphemy
speech which offends religious sentiments
Celerity
speed
Dispatch
speed and eagerness
Expeditious
speedy
Despoiled
spoiled
Marred
spoiled; ruined
Desecration
spoiling something holy
Intermittent
sporadic; irregular
Speckled
spotted; freckled; dotted
Pervasive
spreading everywhere
Hackneyed
stale and over-used
Ogle
stare at; observe in an obvious manner
Broach
start to discuss; approach
plural
stases \STAY-seez; STAS-eez\:| 1. A state of balance, equilibrium, or stagnation.| 2. Stoppage of the normal flow of a bodily fluid or semi fluid.| The reality of governance was not stasis but change; institutions did not operate according to mechanical laws,they evolved organically.
Concise
stated in few words
Plaudit
statement giving strong praise
Manifesto
statement of values
Endurance
staying power; patience; stamina
Pilfer
steal
Purloin
steal
Precipice
steep slope
Extant
still in existence
Stagnant
still; not moving
Parsimony
stinginess; frugality; cost-cutting
Rousing
stirring
Desist
stop; discontinue; cease
Hangar
storage area (like garage) for a plane
Repertory
story; stock; repertoire
Hodgepodge
strange mixture
Exotic
strange; foreign
Resilience
strength; ability to withstand
Emancipators
those who set others free
Buttress
strengthen; support
Denuded
stripped
Adulation
strong admiration; worship
Robust
strong; healthy; tough
Contumacious
stubborn
Obdurate
stubborn
Intransigent
stubborn; unyielding
Headstrong
stubborn; willful
Intransigence
stubbornness
Prosody
study of versification
Dolt
stupid person
Guffaw
sudden loud laughter
Potable
suitable for drinking
Navigable
suitable for sailing
Conducive to
suitable for; leading to
Petulant
sulky
Petulant
sulky; peevish
Recapitulate
summarize
Scuttled
sunk
Cursory
superficial
Perfunctory
superficial; cursory
Advocate
support
Endorse
support
Endorsement
support; approval
Foster
support; encourage
Bolster
support; prop up
Endorsed
supported
Corroborated
supported; given supporting evidence
Proponents
supporters
Stifle
suppress
Squelch
suppress; crush
Quelled
suppressed
Stifling
suppressing
Consummate
supremely good
Capitulate
surrender; give in to
Mire
swamp; muddy ground
Profanity
swearing; cursing
Distension
swelling
Billowing
swelling; fluttering; waving
Commandeer
take possession of
Plagiarism
taking credit for someone else's writing or ideas
Eclectic
taking things from different sources
Condescend
talk down to
Garrulous
talkative
Loquacious
talkative
Loquacious
talkative; using too many words
Docile
tame; subservient
Lachrymose
tearful; sad
Perjury
telling lies under oath
Moratorium
temporary prohibition or halt to activity
Proclivity
tendency towards
Inclination
tendency; a leaning toward
Penchant
tendency; leaning toward
Propensity
tendency; leaning' predilection
Disposition
tendency; personality
Byline
the line that tells you who wrote an article
minutiae
the small, precise, or trivial details of something
Etymology
the study of word origins
Elite
the upper levels in a society; the privileged ones
Histrionic
theatrical; exaggerated
Larceny
theft; robbery; stealing
Sparse
thin; not thick
Cogitate
think over something; ponder
Ruminate
think over something; ponder
Ominous
threatening
Aural
through the sense of hearing
Derailed
thrown off course
Modicum
tiny amount
Jaded
tired; bored
Jaded
tired; bored; worn out
Languid
tired; slow
Lethargic
tired; without energy
Acquiesce
to agree to; give in to
Pious
very religious
Solicit
to ask for; seek
Conciliate
to bring together; end a dispute
Assuage
to calm
Envenom
to cause bitterness and bad feeling
Scale
to climb
Nullify
to counter; make unimportant
Desecrate
to damage or pollute a holy place
Belittle
to demean
Discern
to distinguish one thing from another
Dupe
to fool someone
Marshal
to gather together
Emulate
to imitate something admired
Allay
to lessen
Illuminate
to light up or make clear
Discriminate
to make a clear distinction; see the difference
Legitimate
to make legal; give approval to
Assuage
to make less
Exemplify
to serve as a good example
Bristle
to show irritation
Congeal
to solidify
Kindle
to start a fire
Instigate
to start; provoke
Deliberate
to think over deeply
Diaphanous
very thin and transparent
Condoning
tolerating
Bombastic
too elaborate; exaggerated
Pinnacle
topmost point
Oblivious
totally unaware
Pellucid
transparently clear
Perfidy
treachery
Perfidy
treachery; betrayal
Encroaching
trespassing
Accolade
tribute; honor; praise
Knack
trick; skill
Ruse
trick; stratagem
Chicanery
trickery
Chicanery
trickery; attempt to deceive
Charlatan
trickster who claims knowledge he doesn't have
Instigator
troublemaker; person who entices others to do something
Bane
troublesome influence
Emaciated
very thin; withered
Candid
truthful
Candid
truthful; honest
Evasiveness
trying to avoid something
Blanched
turned pale
Beret
type of cap
Caucus
type of private political meeting
Epitomized
typified; characterized; personified
Disinterested
unbiased
Dispassionate
unbiased
Dispassionate
unbiased; fair
Impartial
unbiased; neutral
Objective
unbiased; not subjective
Ambiguity
uncertainty; vagueness
Immutable
unchanging; permanent
Ambiguous
unclear in meaning; can be interpreted in different ways;vague
Derogatory
uncomplimentary
Philistine
uncultured person
Ambivalent
undecided; having 'mixed' feelings;unable to decide;unclear
Empathetic
understanding in an insightful way
Ironic
unexpected
Insentient
unfeeling
Ingrate
ungrateful person
Profane
unholy
Inconsequential
unimportant
Inconsequential
unimportant; insignificant; negligible
Redundant
unnecessary; superfluous
Derivative
unoriginal
Fickle
unpredictable; whimsical; easily swayed
Irrational
unreasonable; absurd
Impromptu
unrehearsed; spontaneous
Fly-by-night
unreliable; disreputable
Indomitable
unshakeable; fearless
Provincial
unsophisticated; narrow-minded
Naive
unsophisticated; simple and inexperienced
Pristine
unspoiled
Precarious
unstable; risky
Infelicity
unsuitability; inappropriateness
Agnostic
unsure of the existence of god
Eccentric
unusual; quirky; odd
Gullibility
unwariness; trustfulness; being easily fooled
Gratuitous
unwarranted
Rectitude
uprightness
Rant
use bombastic language
Deplete
use up; lessen
Futile
useless; hopeless
Futile
useless; waste of time and effort
Futility
uselessness
Laconic
using few words; brief; to the point
Circumlocution
using too many words; long-windedness
Jingoism
using words to stir up exaggerated patriotism
Conventional
usual; customary; common
Evacuate
vacate; empty; abandon
Nebulous
vague
Motley
varied; miscellaneous
chivvy
verb annoy continually or chronically
discomfit
verb cause to lose one's composure
bawl
verb cry loudly; shout loudly and without restraint; make a raucous noise
pule
verb cry weakly or softly
adumbrate
verb give to understand; describe roughly or briefly or give the main points or summary of
burgeon
verb grow and flourish
smite
verb inflict a heavy blow on, with the hand, a tool, or a weapon; affect suddenly with deep feeling; cause pain or suffering in
inveigle
verb influence or urge by gentle urging, caressing, or flattering
ask
verb make a request or demand for something to somebody; consider obligatory; request and expect; inquire about
purloin
verb make off with belongings of others
conflate
verb mix together different elements
extol
verb praise, glorify, or honor
deracinate
verb pull up by or as if by the roots; move (people) forcibly from their homeland into a new and foreign environment
arrive
verb reach a destination; arrive by movement or progress; succeed in a big way; get to the top
cower
verb show submission or fear; crouch or curl up
bruit
verb tell or spread rumors
Livid
very angry
Reprehensible
very bad
Exceptionable
very bad (something which we should object to)
Meticulous
very careful; painstaking
Explicitly
very clear; nothing hidden
Prohibitive
very expensive
Hilarious
very funny
Fastidious
very fussy; excessively concerned (esp. about cleanliness)
Sacrosanct
very holy; inviolable
Momentous
very important
Prodigious
very large
Ebullient
very lively; cheerful; jovial; happy
Cacophonous
very noisy; unpleasant sounding
Mutinous
very rebellious
Mercurial
volatile; changeable
Ramble
wander aimlessly
Meander
wander from side to side
Digress
wander off the subject
Nomadic
wandering from place to place
Erratic
wandering; irregular
Bellicose
war-like; aggressive
Parry
ward off; avoid
Chary
wary of; cautious about; reluctant to give
Squander
waste
Atrophy
waste away from lack of use
Profligacy
wasteful and immoral behavior
Prodigal
wasteful; extravagant
Attenuate
weaken
Debilitated
weakened
Debility
weakness; incapacity
Affluence
wealth and status
Opulent
wealthy; rich; magnificent
Ponderous
weighty; slow and heavy
Finagle
wheedle; wangle; trick
Capricious
whimsical; changeable
Maelstrom
whirlpool; storm in the ocean
Holistic
whole; entire (Holistic viewpoint = seeing things as a whole)
Nefarious
wicked; immoral; disreputable
Impious
wicked; profane
Eradicate
wipe out
Negate
wipe out
Efface
wipe out; remove all trace of
Annihilated
wiped out
Obliterated
wiped out
Effacement
wiping out; (self-effacement = excessive modesty)
Eradicating
wiping out; destroying
Prudence
wisdom; caution
Sagacious
wise
Prudent
wise; cautious
Astute
wise; mentally sharp
Retraction
withdrawal; cancellation of a statement
Peerless
without equal
Ascetic
without luxuries; severely simple
Incessant
without stopping
Indiscriminate
without thought; random; careless
Bereft of
without; deprived of
Overwrought
worked up; in an emotional state
Flustered
worked-up; not calm
Apprehensive
worried; fearful
Apprehension
worry; nervousness
Deteriorate
worsen; decline
Revere
worship
Hallowed
worshipped; consecrated
Erroneous
wrong
Remiss
wrong
Misnomer
wrong name
Misnomer
wrong name for something
Miscreants
wrong-doers
Delinquency
wrong-doing
Sallow
yellowish