• Shuffle
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
  • Alphabetize
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
  • Front First
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
  • Both Sides
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
  • Read
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
Reading...
Front

Card Range To Study

through

image

Play button

image

Play button

image

Progress

1/77

Click to flip

Use LEFT and RIGHT arrow keys to navigate between flashcards;

Use UP and DOWN arrow keys to flip the card;

H to show hint;

A reads text to speech;

77 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back

Abscond (verb)

To depart clandestinely; to steal off and hide

Aberrant (adj.)

Deviating from the norm (noun form: abberation)

Alacrity (noun)

Eager and enthusiastic willingness

Anomaly ( noun )

Deviation from the normal order,form,or rule; abnormality ( adj. form : anomalous )

Approbation (noun )

An expression of approval or praise

Arduous (adj.)

Strenuous, taxing; requiring significant effort

Assuage (verb)

To ease or lessen; to appease our pacify

Audacious (adj.)

Daring and fearless; recklessly bold ( noun form: audacity )

Austere (adj.)

Without adornment; bare; severely simple; ascetic (noun form: austerity )

Axiomatic (adj.)

Taken as a given; possessing self-evident truth ( noun form: axiom)

Canonical (adj.)

Following or in agreement with accepted, traditional standards (noun form: canon)

Capricious (adj.)

Inclined to change ones mind impulsively; erratic, unpredictable

Censure (verb )

To criticize severely; to officially rebuke

Chicanery (noun)

Trickery or subterfuge

Connoisseur (noun)

An informed and astute judge in matters of taste; expert

Convoluted (adj.)

Complex or complicated

Disabuse (verb)

To undeceive : to set right

Discordant (adj)

Conflicting; dissonant or harsh in sound

Disparate (adj.)

Fundamentally distinct or dissimilar

Effrontery (noun)

Extreme boldness; presumptuousness

Eloquent (adj.)

Well spoken, expressive, articulate (noun form: eloquence)

Enervate (verb)

To weaken; to reduce in vitality

Ennui (noun)

Dissatisfaction and restlessness resulting from boredom or apathy

Equivocate (verb)

to use ambiguous language with a deceptive intent (adj. form: equivocal)

Erudite (adj.)

very learned; scholarly (noun form: erudition)

Exculpate (verb)

exonerate; to clear of blame

Exigent (adj.)

urgent, pressing; requiring immediate action or attention

Extemporaneous (adj.)

improvised; done without preparation

Filibuster (noun)

intentional obstruction, esp. using prolonged speechmaking to delay legislative action

Fulminate (verb)

to loudly attack or denounce

Ingenuous (adj.)

artless; frank and candid; lacking in sophistication

Inured (adj.)

accustomed to accepting something undesirable

Irascible (adj.)

easily angered; prone to temperamental outbursts

Laud ( verb)

to praise highly (adj. form: laudatory)

Lucid (adj.)

clear; easily understood

Magnanimity (noun)

the quality of being generously noble in mind and heart, esp. in forgiving (adj. form: magnanimous)

Martial (adj.)

associated with war and the armed forces

Mundane (adj.)

of the world; typical of or concerned with the ordinary

Nascent (adj.)

coming into being; in early developmental stages

Nebulous (adj.)

vague; cloudy;lacking clearly defined form

Neologism (noun)

a new word, expression, or usage; the creation or use of new words or senses

Noxious (adj.)

harmful, injurious

Obtuse (adj.)

lacking sharpness of intellect; not clear or precise in thought or expression

Obviate (verb)

to anticipate and make unnecessary

Onerous (adj.)

troubling; burdensome

Paean (noun)

a song or hymn of praise and thanksgiving

Parody (noun)

a humorous imitation intended for ridicule or comic effect, asp. in literature and art

Perennial (adj.)

recurrent through the year or many years; happening repeatedly

Perfidy (noun)

intentional breach of faith; treachery ( adj. form : perfidious)

Perfunctory (adj.)

cursory; done without care or interest

Perspicacious (adj.)

acutely perceptive; having keen discernment (noun form: perspicacity)

Prattle (verb)

to babble meaninglessly; to talk in an empty and idle manner

Precipitate (adj.)

acting with excessive haste or impulse

Precipitate (verb)

to cause or to happen before anticipated or required

Predilection (noun)

a disposition in favor of something; preference

Prescience (noun)

foreknowledge of events of events; knowing of events prior to their occurring (adj. form: prescient)

Prevaricate (verb)

to deliberately avoid the truth; to mislead

Qualms (noun)

misgivings; reservations; cause for hesitancy

Recant (verb)

to retract, esp. a previously held belief

Refute (verb)

to disprove; to successfully argue against

Relegate (verb)

to forcibly assign, esp. to a lower place or position

Reticent (adj.)

quiet; reserved; reluctant to express thoughts and feelings

Solicitous (adj.)

concerned and attentive; eager

Sordid (adj.)

characterized by filth; grime, or squalor; foul

Sporadic (adj.)

occurring only occasionally, or in scattered instances

Squander (verb)

to waste by spending or using irresponsibly

Static (adj.)

not moving, active, or in motion; at rest

Stupefy ( verb)

to stun, baffle, or amaze

Stymie (verb)

to block; to thwart

Synthesis (noun)

the combination of parts to make a whole (verb form: synthesize)

Torque (noun)

a force that causes rotation

Tortuous (adj.)

winding, twisting; excessively complicated

Truculent (adj.)

fierce and cruel; eager to fight

Veracity (noun)

truthfulness, honesty

Virulent (adj.)

extremely harmful or poisonous; bitterly hostile or antagonistic

Voracious (adj.)

having an insatiable appetite for an activity or pursuit; ravenous

Waver (verb)

to move to and fro; to sway; to be unsettled in opinion