5939702851 | Asceticism | (N.)- Austere self-denial, avoidance of all forms of indulgence to lead a better life. (Ex.- Siddhartha Gautama left luxury to live an ascetic life.) | 0 | |
5939702852 | Dint | (N.)- Force, power, emphasis. (Ex.- By dint of their expertise, the boy's condition diminished in severity.) | 1 | |
5939702853 | Envoy | (N.)- A messenger or representative, usually for diplomatic reasons. (Similar to emissary) (Ex.- Queen Elizabeth's envoy was sent to Spain.) | 2 | |
5939702854 | Espouse | (V.)- To adopt or support a cause, belief, or way of life. (Ex.- Though he had claimed to espouse gender equality, many of his statements were sexist.) | 3 | |
5939702855 | Beguile | (V.)- To mislead or deceive. (Ex.- The millionaire beguiled the community by dressing as though he were homeless.) | 4 | |
5939702856 | Allocation | (N.)- A share of something assigned to someone/something. (Ex.- She was able to sell her entire allocation of raffle tickets.) | 5 | |
5939702857 | Enjoin | (V.)- To command someone to act a certain way, to instruct or urge someone to do something, to forbid. (Ex.- Her father enjoined her from staying out past curfew.) | 6 | |
5939702858 | Oscillate | (V.)- To waver between conflicting opinions or courses of actions. (Ex.- The dog often oscillated between the house and the backyard.) | 7 | |
5939702859 | Interloper | (N.)- Someone who becomes involved in affairs they are not welcome or wanted in, usually for selfish reasons. (Ex.- Because he could not move on from his ex, he became an interloper in her relationships.) | 8 | |
5939702860 | Histrionics | (N.)- Behavior that is greatly exaggerated for the sole purpose of attracting attention. (Ex.- His ceaseless use of histrionics left him very few friends.) | 9 | |
5939702861 | Innocuous | (Adj.)-Harmless in effect;not intended to cause offense or provoke a reaction. (Ex.- Though he believed his comment to be innocuous, she ran from him sobbing.) | 10 | |
5939702862 | Impervious | (Adj.)-Remaining unmoved and unaffected; not allowing passage into or through. (Ex.- Jeremy was now impervious to the words of his bully.) | 11 | |
5939702863 | Fetter | (N./V.)-A chain or shackle; a means of confinement/to confine or restrain. (Ex.- It is your own fetter to the past that is keeping you from moving on.) | 12 | |
5939702864 | Desecrate | (V.)- To damage something sacred. (Ex.- Entrusting him with my lawn mower ensured the desecration of my garden.) | 13 | |
5939702865 | Rend | (V.)- To tear apart violently. (Ex.-He rended the letter ferociously as tears streamed down his face.) | 14 | |
5939702866 | Salubrious | (Adj.)- Beneficial to or promoting health or well-being. (Ex.- The cool autumn air was a salubrious change following the dry summer atmosphere.) | 15 | |
5939702867 | Vapid | (Adj.)- Lacking interest or liveliness; lacking strength, taste, or flavor. (Ex.- She possessed a personality so remarkably vapid that she nearly disappeared if she stood still too long.) | 16 | |
5939702868 | Taciturn | (Adj.)- Habitually uncommunicative or reserved in speech and manner. (Ex.- Before the dance, the men stood taciturn in a row.) | 17 | |
5939702869 | Alacrity | (N.)- Promptness or eager and speedy readiness. (Ex.- Sunset came upon them with an alacrity that reminded them of their prior urgency.) | 18 | |
5939702870 | Abstruse | (Adj.)- Obscure and not easily understood. (Ex.- Thinking of the abstruse task at hand gave Tina a headache.) | 19 | |
5939702871 | Incarcerate | (V.)- To put in prison; to place in a situation of confinement. (Ex.- He was incarcerated after the body was found in his car.) | 20 | |
5939702872 | Vacuous | (Adj.)- Having no content; lacking ideas or intelligence. (Ex.- The box in her closet was vacuous; her search continued) | 21 | |
5939702873 | Akimbo | (Adj. or Adv.)- With hands on hips and elbows turned outward; set in a bent position. (Ex.- He stood in front of his sister akimbo, no longer subduing to her taunts.) | 22 | |
5939702874 | Jubilant | (Adj.)- Feeling or expressing great delight. (Ex.- Hearing her song played on the radio made her jubilant.) | 23 | |
5939702875 | Presumptuous | (Adj.)- Inconsiderate, disrespectful, or overconfident, especially in doing something when not entitled or qualified. (Ex.- He presumptuously assumed he would be president of the club.) | 24 | |
5939702876 | Pecuniary | (Adj.)- Having to do with money or financial matters. (Ex.- Sarah was in charge of the pecuniary aspect of the organization.) | 25 | |
5939702877 | Licentious | (Adj.)- Lacking moral restraint, of a promiscuous or illegal nature. (Ex.- De Ata, Maria, you know I am much better than the common, vulgar, weak, licentious crowd.) | 26 | |
5939702878 | Muse | (V.)- To ponder, think over, daydream. (Ex.- She mused the idea of her running away.) | 27 | |
5939702879 | Subversive | (Adj.)- Intended or likely to undermine or overthrow a government or other institution or idea. (Ex.- Every one of their crimes, without exception, was subversive.) | 28 | |
5939702880 | Lassitude | (N.)- State of weariness accompanied by listlessness or apathy. (Ex.- He had a lassitude that revoked his ability to reply to his friend.) | 29 | |
5939702881 | Vacillate | (V.)- To be indecisive or irresolute; to sway from side to side. (Ex.- She vacillitated between going with her parents and staying home.) | 30 | |
5939702882 | Initiative | (N.)- The ability to act and make decisions without help or advice. (Ex.- he took the initiative and approached her first.) | 31 | |
5939702883 | Disparity | (N.)- Lack of equality; dissimilarity or incongruity. (Ex.- The stark disparity between the man and woman were startling.) | 32 | |
5939702884 | Avocation | (N.)- Hobby or pastime; something that distracts. (Ex.- Playing football was her favorite avocation, though she was discouraged from playing.) | 33 | |
5939702885 | Efficacy | (N.)- Ability to produce the necessary or desired results. (Ex.- She worked on the project with a great efficacy.) | 34 | |
5939702886 | Capricious | (Adj.)- Tending to make sudden and unpredictable changes; spontaneous. (Ex.- His capricious behavior made him a very interesting but turbulent friend.) | 35 | |
5939702887 | Reticent | (Adj.)- Unwilling to communicate or reveal facts. (Ex.- In choosing a partner in crime, select someone who would be reticent if arrested and questioned.) | 36 | |
5939702888 | Dichotomous | (Adj.)- Dividing into two parts. (Ex.- The tree's dichotomous branches provided ample shade.) | 37 | |
5939702889 | Moribund | (Adj.)- Nearly dead; having lost all sense of purpose; becoming obsolete. (Ex.- Her panic attack left her in a moribund state of despair.) | 38 | |
5939702890 | Risqué | (Adj.)- Alluding to sexual conduct in a way that is close to being indecent or in bad taste. (Ex.- His behavior towards his employer was risqué and sexist, and he became and remained unemployed.) | 39 | |
5939702891 | Unequivocally | (Adj.)- In a way that is clear; in a way that is not subject to conditions or exceptions. (Ex.- Though cold to him initially, she grew inexorably and unequivocally in love with him.) | 40 | |
5939702892 | Inexorable | (Adj.)- Impossible to stop; not moved by pleas or persuasion. (Ex.- Nobody tested him because of his ruthless and inexorable personality.) | 41 | |
5939702893 | Retinue | (N.)- A group of people who travel with and attend to an important person. (Ex.- The man and his expansive retinue created a great ruckus.) | 42 | |
5939702894 | Insipid | (Adj.)- Lacking in character or lively qualities; bland and without flavor. (Ex.- Being remarkably insipid and uninteresting, she had no reason to have an enlarged ego.) | 43 | |
5939702895 | Shamble | (V.)- To walk with an unsteady or unusual gait. (Ex.- His ghostly silhouette shambled across the decrepit bridge.) | 44 | |
5939702896 | Corroborate | (V.)- To give or represent evidence of the truth. (He corroborated his previous statement by providing his whereabouts for the day in question.) | 45 | |
5939702897 | Employment | (V.)- To make use of; to apply. (Ex.- She finally employed her needles and continued her knitting.) | 46 | |
5939702898 | Suppliant | (Adj. or N.)- Humble towards one in power; servant like; one who is humble. (Ex.- Despite being of royal blood, she was unwaveringly suppliant to the queen.) | 47 | |
5939702899 | Tedium | (N.)- Quality of being boring, monotonous, too long, or repetitive. (Ex.- He had a tedium about him that made him unbearable.) | 48 | |
5939702900 | Torrid | (Adi.)- Full of ROMANTIC passion. (Ex.- Her mind filled with torrid delights which she shared only with her journal.) | 49 | |
5939702901 | Impasse | (N.)- A point at which no further progress can be made or agreement reached. (Ex.- After hours of arguing, they eventually reached an impasse.) | 50 | |
5939702902 | Lugubrious | (Adj.)- Extremely mournful, sad, or gloomy. (Ex.- After her suicide, his lugubrious mood became permanent.) | 51 | |
5939702903 | Affront | (N. or V.)- An open insult or giving offense/to insult or openly offend. (Ex.- In person they were kind, but behind computer screens they ruthlessly affronted her.) | 52 | |
5939702904 | Indolent | (Adj.)- Lethargic and not showing any interest or making any effort. (Ex.- Growing up he was often indolent, but as a teenager he developed sincere passion.) | 53 | |
5939702905 | Connoisseur | (N.)- One who has a specialist knowledge of or training in a particular field. (Ex.- He described himself as a connoisseur of the fine arts.) | 54 | |
5939702906 | Cajole | (V.)- To persuade by use of flattery or gentle but persistent argument. (Ex.- His mother unceasingly cajoled him to join a sport.) | 55 | |
5939702907 | Blasé | (Adj.)- Not impressed or worried, usually because of experience. (Ex.- Seeing images of horribly mutilated bodies was blasé to her, since she was so interested in medicine.) | 56 | |
5939702908 | Analogous | (Adj.)- Comparable in certain respects, typically in a way that makes clearer the nature of the things compared. (Ex.- The plights of the main character are analogous to the theme of trying to find one's true purpose.) | 57 | |
5939702909 | Choleric | (Adj.)- Liable to become angry, or irritated or showing anger or irritation. (Ex.- She was always slightly choleric during practices.) | 58 | |
5939702910 | Encumber | (V.)- To hamper or impede; to burden or weigh down. (Ex.- The cast on her leg greatly encumbered her ability to walk.) | 59 | |
5939702911 | Droll | Adj.- Amusing in a wry or odd way. (Ex.- His droll voice entertained them for hours without him even trying.) | 60 | |
5939702912 | Adulation | N.- Excessive flattery or admiration. (Ex.- Their constant adulation became somewhat overwhelming.) | 61 | |
5939702913 | Carnage | N.- Widespread and indiscriminate slaughter or massacre. (Ex.- The teacher spread unforgiving carnage to all the students who didn't read.) | 62 | |
5939702914 | Decrepit | Adj.- In poor condition, especially old, overused, or not working efficiently. (Ex.- Her corpse was decrepit after having stayed there for weeks.) | 63 | |
5939702915 | Expectorate | V.- To cough up or spit. (Ex.- He was so excited he nearly expectorated his proposal to her too early.) | 64 | |
5939702916 | Attribute | V./N.- To regard something as being caused by someone or something/ an abstraction belonging to or characteristic of an entity. (Ex.- She attributes his dog's tragic death to the insipid father of her friend.) | 65 | |
5939702917 | Recurring | Adj.- Happening more than once or frequently; repetitive. (Ex.- The recurring events made her feel uneasy, like she was in a glitching video game.) | 66 | |
5939702918 | Lethargic | Adj.- Physically slow and mentally dull. (Ex.- After the 5 showings of the play, she was utterly lethargic and vapid.) | 67 | |
5939702919 | Endowed | V.- Provided, supplied, or equipped with. (Ex.- After the inheritance, he became very well endowed.) | 68 | |
5939702920 | Peremptory | Adj.- Communicating urgency, command, or instruction. (Ex.- I gave her peremptory instruction which she was not allowed to disobey.) | 69 | |
5939702921 | Prostrate | (V.)- To lie flat on the face or bow very low, as in worship or humility. (Ex.- He prostrated at his feet to exemplify his subordinate attitude towards him.) | 70 | |
5939702922 | Plethora | (N.)- A large amount or number of something, especially an excessive amount. (Ex.- When she returned home, she was greeted by a plethora of brand new kittens.) | 71 | |
5939702923 | Palpitate | (V.)- To beat in an irregular or abnormally rapid way. (Ex.- His heart palpitations as the shaky hand slowly opened the envelope.) | 72 | |
5939702924 | Propitious | (Adj.)- Favorable and likely to lead to success; kindly disposed or gracious. (Ex.- The omen was ominous, but because it was propitious, it did not frighten her.) | 73 | |
5939702925 | Extricate | (V.)- To release somebody or something with difficulty from a constraint or an unpleasant or complicated situation. (Ex.- He was finally extricated from the house, after having been held captive for months.) | 74 | |
5939702926 | Emanate | (V.)- To originate from; be produced by. (Ex.- The soft glow delicately emanated from the gap under the door.) | 75 | |
5939702927 | Antithesis | (N.)- The opposition or contrast of ideas; the direct opposite. (Ex.- His view on civil rights was an antithesis to her own view.) | 76 | |
5939702928 | Deem | (V.)- To judge or consider something in a particular light. (Ex.- Because he had the authority to, he deemed her behavior inappropriate.) | 77 | |
5939702929 | Fiasco | (N.)- A total failure, especially a humiliating or ludicrous one. (Ex.- Nobody talks about last years car wash fiasco.) | 78 | |
5939702930 | Pinnacle | (N.)- The highest or topmost point or level of something, a natural peak. (Ex.- To him, she was the absolute pinnacle of perfection.) | 79 | |
5939702931 | Voluble | (Adj.)- Talking or spoken easily and at length. (Ex.- The student's speech was moving, voluble, and inspiring.) | 80 | |
5939702932 | Perspicuity | (N.)- Clearness, acuteness in discernment or perception. (Ex.- He explained the situation with great perspicuity) | 81 | |
5939702933 | Perjury | (N.)- The telling of a lie after having taken an oath to tell the truth. (Ex.- Because she told my friend after promising to keep her mouth shut, she committed perjury.) | 82 | |
5939702934 | Flagrant | (Adj.)- Very obvious and contrary to standards of conduct or morality. (Ex.- His crimes were flagrant and guided only by blatant pride.) | 83 | |
5939702935 | Acquiesce | (V.)- To agree to or comply with something passively. (Ex.- I'm disinclined to acquiesce to your request. Means "no.") | 84 | |
5939702936 | Amity | (N.)- Friendliness and peaceful relations. (Ex.- The amity between the two was settling and comforting.) | 85 | |
5939702937 | Preposterous | (Adj.)- Going very much against what is thought to be sensible or reasonable. (Ex.- Her claim was so preposterous that all who were present laughed.) | 86 | |
5939702938 | Parody | (N.)- A piece that deliberately copies another work in a comedic or satirical way. (Ex.- I like the Robin Hold parody more than I like the actual story.) | 87 | |
5939702939 | Arduous | (Adj.)- Requiring hard work or continuous strenuous effort. (Ex.- The labor was severely arduous, and it wasn't long before her body began to ache.) | 88 | |
5939702940 | Trepidation | (N.)- Fear or uneasiness about the future or a future event. (Ex.- Her trepidation was great as she stared at him, waiting for his reply.) | 89 | |
5939702941 | Admonish | (V.)- To rebuke somebody mildly but earnestly. (Ex.- He admonished his sisters argument politely.) | 90 | |
5939702942 | Vernacular | (N.)- The everyday language of the people in a particular country or region. (Ex.- The vernacular of the more southern region is harder to understand.) | 91 | |
5939702943 | Collusion | (N.)- Secret cooperation between people in order to do something illegal. (Ex.- The two refugees had a collusion to confirm the actions of the following day.) | 92 | |
5939702944 | Cognizant | (Adj.)- Being fully aware or having knowledge of something. (Ex.- He was cognizant of the plot to overthrow him.) | 93 | |
5939702945 | Barrage | (N.)- A rapid attacking or outpouring of something. (Ex.- He threw a barrage of questions as she walked through the door.) | 94 | |
5939702946 | Ramification | (N.)- The usually unintended consequence of an action, decision, or judgement. (Ex.- Not the action, but the ramifications, lead to his downfall.) | 95 | |
5939702947 | Unctuous | (Adj.)- Unpleasantly smug, suave, or smooth. (Ex.- The woman was severely put off by his unctuous nature.) | 96 | |
5939702948 | Urbane | (Adj.)- Showing sophistication, refinement, or courtesy. (Ex.- Her clothing was intricately urbane and refined.) | 97 | |
5939702949 | Aplomb | (N.)- Confidence, skill, poise. (Ex.- He expressed a great aplomb in facing the difficult task.) | 98 | |
5939702950 | Nebulous | (Adj.)- Not clear, distinct, or definite. (Ex.- Her answer was nebulous, and everyone was unsure how to proceed.) | 99 | |
5939702951 | Brazen | (Adj.)- Showing or expressing boldness and complete lack of shame. (Ex.- His brazen behavior was infuriating.) | 100 | |
5939702952 | Inscrutable | (Adj.)- Mysterious, incapable of being searched into and understood by inquiry. (Ex.- The case was inscrutable, and even the most nosy could find nothing.) | 101 | |
5939702953 | Caricature | (N.)- A verbal description meant to exaggerate or distort for comic effect. (Ex.- His explanation was a caricature of the truth.) | 102 | |
5939702954 | Ennui | (N.)- Weariness and dissatisfaction with life that results from a loss of interest. (Ex.- Her ennui fettered her to the confines of her room.) | 103 | |
5939702955 | Debilitate | (V.)- To sap strength of somebody or something. (Ex.- The day's labors were incredibly debilitating.) | 104 | |
5939702956 | Fraternize | (V.)- To spend time with other people socially, especially an enemy or antagonist. (Ex.- She accused her friend of fraternizing with the enemy.) | 105 | |
5939702957 | Schism | (N.)- The division of a group into mutually antagonistic factions; the faction formed. (Ex.- The feud formed a bottomless schism which separated the two forever.) | 106 | |
5939702958 | Exonerate | (V.)- To declare officially to be free from blame or guilt, to relieve someone from guilt. (Ex.- She exonerated him of his past misdemeanors.) | 107 | |
5939702959 | Sedation | (N.)- A state of calm restfulness or drowsiness. (Ex.- She was in a state of sedation as she wandered through the halls.) | 108 | |
5939702960 | Prognosticate | (V.)- To predict or foretell future events. (Ex.- She prognosticated him falling down the stairs.) | 109 | |
5939702961 | Austere | (Adj.)- Plain and simple, without luxury or self-indulgence. (Ex.- She lived an austere life by choice.) | 110 | |
5939702962 | Vehement | (Adj.)- Expressed with, or showing conviction or intense feeling; done with force. (Ex.- He vehemently shattered the case with his fist as his heart palpitated.) | 111 | |
5939702963 | Strident | (Adj.)- Harsh, loud, grating, or shrill. (Ex.- The voice which once sounded like music now grew strident.) | 112 | |
5939702964 | Ostentatious | (Adj.)- Marked by a vulgar display of wealth and success designed to impress people. (Ex.- His ostentatious coat, laden with buttons, weighed him down as he strutted around the room.) | 113 | |
5939702965 | Derisive | (Adj.)- Showing contempt or ridicule. (Ex.- She jeered at him derisively.) | 114 | |
5939702966 | Sanguine | (Adj.)- Cheerfully optimistic; flushed with a healthy rosy color. (Ex.- Her sanguine body flounced toward them as they watched her smile glow.) | 115 | |
5939702967 | Corpulent | (Adj.)- Obese, overdone. (Ex.- The man was corpulent and revolting.) | 116 | |
5939702968 | Pompous | (Adj.)- Having an excessive sense of self importance. (Ex- He had a pompous arrogance that could not be scrubbed clean by the harshest sponge.) | 117 | |
5939702969 | Facetious | (Adj.)- Intended to be humorous but often silly or inappropriate. (Ex.- In his arrogance he could not see that each of his remarks were facetious.) | 118 | |
5939702970 | Manifest | (V.)- To make something evident by showing or demonstrating it very clearly. (Ex.- He manifested the steps to become successful.) | 119 | |
5939702971 | Malady | (N.)- A physical or psychological disorder or disease. (Ex.- Her maladies prevented her from returning home.) | 120 | |
5939702972 | Allude | (V.)- To mention something or somebody briefly. (Ex.- In her novel, J.K. Rowling alludes to the bible.) | 121 | |
5939702973 | Grievance | (N.)- A cause for complaint or resentment that may not be well-founded. (Ex.- Her grievances were completely ignored.) | 122 | |
5939702974 | Sequential | (Adj.)- Forming or following a logical order or sequence. (Ex.- The events followed a sequential pattern.) | 123 | |
5939702975 | Vitiate | (V.)- To destroy or drastically reduce the effectiveness of something, make it invalid. (Ex.- She vitiated his efforts to calm the situation.) | 124 | |
5939702976 | Remonstrance | (N.)- A forceful argument in favor or against something; a formal protest. (Ex.- He provided a remonstrance in his rebuttal.) | 125 | |
5939702977 | Profligate | (V.)- Extremely extravagant or wasteful; showing or having low moral standards. (Ex.- He led a comfortable and profligate lifestyle.) | 126 | |
5939702978 | Nuance | (N.)- Slight difference in meaning, feeling, tone, or color. (Ex.- Her eyes did not miss a single nuance.) | 127 | |
5939702979 | Fortuitous | (Adj.)- Happening by chance; lucky. (Ex.- Recent events have been quite fortuitous.) | 128 | |
5939702980 | Fecund | (Adj.)- Prolific, fruitful, fertile. (Ex.- The valley is extremely fecund.) | 129 | |
5939702981 | Status Quo | (N.)- The accepted or given situation, the usual. (Ex.- Stick to the status quo, Troy.) | 130 | |
5939702982 | Repartee | (N.)- Conversation consisting of witty remarks; a witty remark. (Ex.- The majority of Elizabeth's comments are repartees.) | 131 | |
5939702983 | Incendiary | (Adj.)- Able to catch fire spontaneously or cause a fire easily. (Ex.- Her jests were incendiary and pushed him ever closer to the point of break.) | 132 | |
5939702984 | Periphery | (N.)- The area around the edge of a place. (Ex.- She began to have a periphery understanding of the situation.) | 133 | |
5939702985 | Emissary | (N.)- An agent or representative sent on a particular mission. (Ex.- The queen sent an emissary to notify the neighboring kingdom of her truce.) | 134 | |
5939702986 | Venerable | (Adj.)- Worthy of respect as a result of great age, wisdom, remarkable achievements. (Ex.- His actions during the war made him an outstandingly venerable man.) | 135 | |
5939702987 | Brigand | (N.)- A bandit operating in wild or isolated terrain, band of thieves. (Ex.- The brigand happened across a regal carriage in the middle of the forest.) | 136 | |
5939702988 | Felicity | (N.)- Happiness or contentment. (Ex.- Following his engagement, she was in a perpetual state of felicity.) | 137 | |
5939702989 | Magnanimous | (Adj.)- Very generous, kind, or forgiving. (Ex.- After donating to charity, he considered himself a magnanimous man.) | 138 | |
5939702990 | Ubiquitous | (Adj.)- Present everywhere at once, or seeming to be. (Ex.- The air of death and mortality was ubiquitous across the camp.) | 139 | |
5939702991 | Garrulous | (Adj.)- Given to excessive, rambling talk. (Ex.- During his visit he was exceedingly garrulous.) | 140 | |
5939702992 | Gratuitous | (Adj.)- Given freely; unearned; unwarranted. (Ex.- His excessive praise was gratuitous.) | 141 | |
5939702993 | Sonorous | (Adj.)- Having or producing sound. (Ex.- The odd box had an aura that was almost sonorous.) | 142 | |
5939702994 | Stupor | (N.)- A state of reduced or suspended sensibility. (Ex.- After hearing of the massacre, he was in a perpetual stupor.) | 143 | |
5939702995 | Frenetic | (Adj.)- Wildly excited or active. (Ex.- The coffee put her in a frenetic state.) | 144 | |
5939702996 | Ruse | (N.)- A crafty trick, a con, scam. (Ex.- Though previously ignorant, she soon became aware of his ruse.) | 145 | |
5939702997 | Egregious | (Adj.)- Conspicuously bad or offensive, flagrant. (Ex.- Your egregious behavior will no longer be tolerated.) | 146 | |
5939702998 | Pander | (V.)- To cater to the lower tastes and desires of others to exploit their weaknesses; flatter. (Ex.- He spent the day pandering to ignorant girls.) | 147 | |
5939702999 | Propriety | (N.)- Appropriateness of behavior. (Ex.- She demonstrated a great level of propriety.) | 148 | |
5939703000 | Innate | (Adj.)- Possessed at birth; inborn. (Ex.- Nothing could remove her innate desire to be loved.) | 149 | |
5939703001 | Resolute | Characterized by firmnes or determination. (Ex.- He stood resolute in his decision.) | 150 | |
5939703002 | Vanquish | To defeat or conquer in battle. (Ex.- He vanquished his 9 year addiction.) | 151 | |
5939703003 | Meet | (Not rendezvous) Appropriate, apt. (Ex.- It was meet that they would keep up formalities.) | 152 | |
5939703004 | Rendezvous | Prearranged meeting place. (Ex.- They decided to rendezvous at the lookout.) | 153 | |
5939703005 | Amorous | Strongly attracted to love. (Ex.- She had been lonely but amorous all her life.) | 154 | |
5939703006 | Languid | Lacking energy or vitality. (Ex.- After her marathon she was languid for days.) | 155 | |
5939703007 | Extol | To praise lavishly. (Ex.- The townspeople would extol their god and king daily.) | 156 | |
5939703008 | Dissolute | Lacking in moral restraint. (Ex.- There was an unusually high number of dissolute youth in the city.) | 157 | |
5939703009 | Turgid | Over distended, bloated. (Ex.- She was perpetually turgid following Thanksgiving.) | 158 | |
5939703010 | Ebullient | Overflowing with enthusiasm or exuberance. (Ex.- After she heard the news she was ebullient | 159 | |
5939703011 | Pernicious | Deadly, causing great harm. (Ex.- His behavior was blatantly pernicious.) | 160 | |
5939703012 | Fatuous | Unconsciously stupid, asinine, inane. (Ex.- The dog was unbearably fatuous.) | 161 | |
5939703013 | Writhe | To twist or squirm as in pain. (Ex.- The humble worm writhed its lacerated body back into the earth.) | 162 | |
5939703014 | Incredulous | Disbelieving, skeptical. (Ex.- He waited incredulously for her to do her backflip.) | 163 | |
5939703015 | Furtive | Characterized by stealth, shifty, sneaky. (Ex.- She snuck a furtive glance over her shoulder.) | 164 | |
5939703016 | Interminable | Never ending. (Ex.- He waited for a seemingly interminable amount of time.) | 165 | |
5939703017 | Obliquely | In an indirect or evasive manner. (Ex.- He obliquely walked away from her.) | 166 | |
5939703018 | Acute | Keenly perceptive, shrewd. (Ex.- He had an acute sense of direction.) | 167 | |
5939703019 | Obtuse | Slow to comprehend, not astute. (Ex.- She was notoriously obtuse to her classmates.) | 168 | |
5939703020 | Febrile | Feverish. (Ex.- He was prone to appearing sickly and febrile.) | 169 | |
5939703021 | Labyrinth | Maze, puzzle. (Ex.- The directions she gave were labyrinthine and confusing.) | 170 | |
5939703022 | Obfuscate | To render indistinct or dim, to darken, to confuse. (Ex.- Her true intentions had been obfuscated.) | 171 | |
5939703023 | Primeval | Original, belonging to the first ages. (Ex.- Her neighbors practices were primeval.) | 172 | |
5939703024 | Effusive | Spread out, exuding, flowing. (Ex.- Her exuberance was effusive.) | 173 | |
5939703025 | Beseech | Beg earnestly. (Ex.- She beseeched for a second chance.) | 174 | |
5939703026 | Pathos | Quality that arouses feelings of sympathy. (Ex.- The pathos of the funeral was overwhelming.) | 175 | |
5939703027 | Capitulate | To surrender under certain terms, to give up. (Ex.- After extensive deliberation, he capitulated his collateral.) | 176 | |
5939703028 | Astute | Keen in judgement, crafty. (Ex.- She had always been astute in nature.) | 177 | |
5939703029 | Solicitous | Anxious and concerned, attentive. (Ex.- Because of her PTSD, she was continuously solicitous.) | 178 | |
5939703030 | Deprecating | To lessen the price or value of. (Ex.- She severely deprecated herself constantly.) | 179 |
AP Literature Vocabulary Flashcards
Primary tabs
Need Help?
We hope your visit has been a productive one. If you're having any problems, or would like to give some feedback, we'd love to hear from you.
For general help, questions, and suggestions, try our dedicated support forums.
If you need to contact the Course-Notes.Org web experience team, please use our contact form.
Need Notes?
While we strive to provide the most comprehensive notes for as many high school textbooks as possible, there are certainly going to be some that we miss. Drop us a note and let us know which textbooks you need. Be sure to include which edition of the textbook you are using! If we see enough demand, we'll do whatever we can to get those notes up on the site for you!