11.We tie knots & bind up words in double meaning, & then try to untie them. Flashcards
Evidence
That which makes clear the truth or falsehood of sth.
a. Each juror felt he needed more evidence before voting to convict the former football star.
b. Her many awards were evidence enough that Leona excelled in dancing.
c. Our teacher ignored the evidence that Simon had cheated on test.
Solitary
Alone; single; only.
a. Sid’s solitary manner kept him from making new friendships.
b. There was not a solitary piece of evidence that Manuel had eaten the cheesecake.
c. The convict went into a rage when he was placed in a solitary cell.
Vision
Power of seeing; sense of sight. [Keen eyes]
a. With the aid of the binoculars, my vision improved enough to see the entire vicinity.
b. Ted had perfect vision, & that helped to make him a good baseball player.
c. The glasses that Irma bought corrected her nearsighted vision
Frequent
Happening often; occurring repeatedly.
a. We made frequent visits to the hospital to see our grandmother.
b. On frequent occasions Sam fell asleep in class.
c. Dr. Bonner gave me some pills for my frequent headaches.
Glimpse
A short, quick look. ( @ a glance)
a. This morning we caught our first glimpse of the beautiful shoreline.
b. One glimpse of the very feminine vision was enough to tell Romeo that he loved Juliet.
c. The tall shrubs kept us from getting a glimpse of the new people who inhabited the beach house.
Recent
Done, made, or occurring not long ago.
a. @ a recent meeting, the Board of Education provided the evidence we had been asking for.
b. Bessie liked the old silent movies better than the more recent ones.
c. Recent studies have concluded that more people are unemployed than ever before.
Decade
Ten years.
a. After a decade of granting salary increases, my boss ended the practice.
b. Many people moved out of this city in the last decade.
c. I have a vision that this decade will be better than the last one.
Hesitate
Fail to act quickly; be undecided.
a. Nora hesitated to accept to live in that vacant house.
b. When he got to the robbers’ vicinity [proximity], he hesitated before going on.
c. The proverb tells us that he who hesitates is lost.
Absurd
Plainly not true or sensible; foolish.
a. It was absurd to believe the fisherman’s tall tale.
b. The flabby boy realised that the suggestion to diet was not absurd.
c. Underestimating the prominent of reading is absurd.
Conflict
Direct opposition; disagreement.
a. Our opinions about the company’s success in the last decade are in conflict with what the records show.
b. There was a noisy conflict over who was the better tennis player.
c. The class meditation team was invited to settle the conflict.
Minority
Smaller number or part; less than half.
a. Only a small minority of the neighborhood didn’t want a new park.
b. A minority of our athletes who competed in the Olympics were victorious.
c. Native Americans are a minority group in the US.
Fiction
That which is imagined or made up.
a The story that the president had died was fiction.
b. We hardly ever believed Vinny because what he said was usually fiction.
c. Marge enjoys reading works of fiction rather than true stories.