Hit Parade Group 1 Flashcards
Abscond
(verb) to depart clandestinely; to steal off and hide
Aberrant (noun form: aberration)
(adj) deviating from the norm
Alacrity
(noun) eager and enthusiastic willingness
Anomaly (adj. form: anomalous)
(noun) deviation from the normal order, form, or rule; abnormality
Approbation
(noun) an expression of approval or praise
Arduous
(adj.) strenuous, taxing; requiring significant effort
Assuage
(verb) to ease or lessen; to appease or pacify
Audacious (noun form: audacity)
(adj.) daring and fearless; recklessly bold
Austere (noun form: austerity)
(adj.) without adornment; bare; severely simple; ascetic
Axiomatic (noun form: axiom)
(adj.) taken as a given; possessing self-evident truth
Canonical (noun form: canon)
(adj.) following or in agreement with accepted, traditional standards
Capricious
(adj.) inclined to change one’s 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 (noun form: eloquence)
(adj.) well-spoken, expressive, articulate
Enervate
(verb) to weaken; to reduce in vitality
Ennui
(noun) dissatisfaction and restlessness resulting from boredom or apathy
Equivocate (adj. form: equivocal)
(verb) to use ambiguous language with a deceptive intent
Erudite (noun form: erudition)
(adj.) very learned; scholarly
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 (adj. form: laudatory)
(verb) to praise highly
Lucid
(adj.) clear; easily understood
Magnanimity (adj. form: magnanimous)
(noun) the quality of being generously noble in mind and heart, esp. in forgiving
Martial
(adj.) associated with war and the armed forces
Mundane
(adj.) of the world; typical 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, esp. in literature and art
Perennial
(adj.) recurrent throughout the year or many years; happening repeatedly
Perfidy (adj. form: perfidious)
(noun) intentional breach of faith; treachery
Perfunctory
(adj.) cursory; done without care or interest
Perspicacious (noun form: perspicacity)
(adj.) acutely perceptive; having keen discernment
Prattle
(verb) to babble meaninglessly; to talk in an empty and idle manner
Precipitate
(adj.) acting with excessive haste or impulse; (verb) to cause or happen before anticipated or required
Predilection
(noun) a disposition in favor of something; preference
Prescience (adj form: prescient)
(noun) foreknowledge of events; knowing of events prior to their occurring
Prevaricate
(verb) to deliberately avoid the truth; to mislead
Qualms
(noun) misgivings; reservations; causes 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; thwart
Synthesis (verb form: synthesize)
(noun) the combination of parts to make a whole
Torque
(noun) a force that causes rotation
Tortuous
(adj.) winding, twistingly 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