92 words of halve/morgan/edwards AP lang vocab. 1st semester
a temporary suspension of activity | ||
voluntarily refraining from eating certain foods or drink or from doing from doing something pleasant but not good for you | ||
hard to understand or grasp | ||
to suggest partly, to give a hint of things to come, to foreshadow vaguely | ||
cheerful readiness, liveliness or eagerness | ||
able to walk or move about | ||
false, spurious, of a doubtful origin | ||
a judge, one who decides | ||
hermitlike, self,denial, austere | ||
hardworking, busy, diligent | ||
whimsical, fanciful, impulsive | ||
to punish, chastise, criticize severely | ||
careful, cautious, wary | ||
deception or trickery | ||
wildly fanciful, absurd | ||
wordy language, an indirect, roundabout expression | ||
argumentative over a point, quarrelsome | ||
to run counter to, to show something as false | ||
to tolerate, to put up with something | ||
a disaster or violent breakdown | ||
harmful | ||
to discer, to see something, to catch sight of | ||
to dry out | ||
to confuse, deceive | ||
to take off (usually clothing) as a sign of greeting | ||
comic, sometimes crude, informal verse | ||
a file of documents, letters and records | ||
having a nice, agreeable melodious sound | ||
a eulogy or expression of high praise | ||
native, belonging to a specific region | ||
to glimpse, to descry, to catch sight of | ||
vanishing, happening for the briefest moment | ||
an excellent model, a typical example | ||
urgent, demands prompt action | ||
to rip up by the roots, to abolish, to annihilate | ||
humorous, joking in a somewhat inappropriate or clumsy manner | ||
fertile, productive, fruitful | ||
a rapid outburst, spray of gunfire | ||
to deny, to speak or act against | ||
talkative | ||
bad breath | ||
hot tempered, cranky | ||
a dominant or recurring theme | ||
an embankment designed to prevent a river from flooding | ||
to run at a steady, easy pace | ||
to soften by soaking, to cause to waste away | ||
the humorous misuse of a word that sounds very much like the word intended | ||
to enroll, most particularly in college | ||
overly sentimental | ||
sweetly flowing | ||
bitingly sarcastic, incisive, caustic in manner | ||
being in a dying or decaying condition | ||
generous | ||
a beginner, a novice | ||
unnecessarily helpful, meddlesome, interfering | ||
eating or absorbing everything, feeding on both animal and vegetable substances | ||
to swing back and forth | ||
to become rigid, to become set in one's ways | ||
to hide the seriousness of something with excuses or apologies, to ease without curing | ||
lacking color, wan | ||
lofty praise, eulogistic writing | ||
stingy | ||
extreme poverty | ||
faithless, untrustworthy | ||
careless, unenthusiastic, done merely as duty | ||
to make a long, formal speech, to sum up a speech | ||
shrewd, astute, showing strong powers of discernment | ||
cranky, ill tempered, irritable, peevish | ||
pungent, charmingly provocative | ||
having foresight | ||
to deviate from the truth | ||
corrupt, degenerate, wildly extravagant | ||
nearness in place or time, kinship | ||
readily assuming different shapes or characters | ||
to rot | ||
stubbornly defiant and resistant of authority | ||
hard to understand, abstruse, over one's head | ||
a morally unprincipled person, a scoundrel | ||
restrained, reluctant, uncommunicative | ||
vulgar or indecent language | ||
wise, shrewd | ||
favorable to health | ||
to put an end to | ||
winding, having many curves | ||
marked with thin lines or grooves | ||
arrogant, overbearing, condescending | ||
sneaky, secret | ||
a flatterer, a self-serving, "yes" man | ||
boldness, rashness, audacity | ||
hostile, aggressive, savage | ||
empty, lacking intelligence | ||
a thick or sticky consistency of a liquid |