Lesson 4 Flashcards

1
Q

ambiguous

A

adv. ambiguously
n. ambiguity
adj. of unclear meaning; something that can be
understood in more than one way
syn. vague

The men received an ambiguous message from their boss.
Her letter was full of ambiguities.

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2
Q

arbitrary

A

adv. arbitrarily
n. arbitrariness
adj. an action or decision made with little
thought, order, or reason
syn. haphazard

Her choice of clothing seemed arbitrary.
The teacher arbitrarily decided to give the class a test.
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3
Q

assert

A

adv. assertively
n. assertiveness
n. assertion
adj. assertive
v. to express or defend oneself strongly; to
state positively
syn. declare

The government asserted its control over the banking system.
The company president is an assertive individual.

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4
Q

astounding

A

v. astound
adv. astoundingly
aq.j. very surprising
syn. astonishing
The scientists made an astounding discovery.
The fans were astounded by their team’s success.

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5
Q

astute

A

adj. astutely
n. astuteness
adj. very intelligent, smart, clever
syn. perceptive

He was an astute worker, finishing in half the time it took the others
to finish.
They astutely determined that there would be no chance to finish
on time.

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6
Q

concur

A

n. concurrence
v. to have the same opinion or draw the
same conclusion
syn. agree

The director concurred with the conclusions of the committee’s report.
Do you concur with the details of the business plan?

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7
Q

deceptively

A

adj. deceptive
v. deceive
n. deception
adv. making something appear true or good
when it is false or bad
syn. misleadingly

The magician deceptively made the rabbit disappear.
Richard deceived Joe about the cost of the coat.

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8
Q

designate

A

n. designation
n. designator
v. to specify, name, or select to do a task;
to indicate
syn. assign

The president designated the vice president to represent him at
the meeting.
The designated driver drove every one home after the party.

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9
Q

determined

A

n. determination
v. determine
adj. strong in one’s opinion, firm in conviction,
to find out
syn. resolute

They were determined to go to graduate school.
The judge determined that the man was lying.

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10
Q

elicit

A

n. elicitation
v. to get the facts or draw out the truth
syn. extract

A lawyer will elicit all the facts necessary to prove her case.
Elicitation of the truth can be difficult at times.

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11
Q

embody

A

n. embodiment
v. to be a good example of a concept or idea
syn. exemplify

The constitution is an embodiment of American ideals.
Charlotte embodi[es all of the qualities of a good leader.

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12
Q

instigate

A

n. instigator
adj. instigative
adv. instigatively
v. to cause a conflict or argument
syn. initiate

No one knew who had instigated the demonstration.
Dissatisfaction with government policies instigated the revolution.

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13
Q

mundane

A

adv. mundanely
n. mundaneness
n. mundanity
adj. common or routine
syn. ordinary

The student’s mundane summer job frustrated her.
His mother asked him to do all the mundane household chores.

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14
Q

petition

A

n. petition
v. to make a request
syn. appeal

Canada petitioned the United Nations to consider its case.
The student’s petition was denied.

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15
Q

relinquish

A

n. relinquishment
v. to give up control
syn. abdicate

The troubled executive relinquished her control of the company.
The relinquishment of his claim to the building will allow the building
to be sold.

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16
Q

resilient

A

adv. resiliently
n. resilience
adj. strong enough to recover from difficulty
or disease
syn. tenacious

She has a resilient personality and will soon feel better.
The doctor was surprised by his patient’s resilience.

17
Q

tempt

A

adv. temptingly
n. temptation
adj. tempting
v. to make it attractive to do something,
usually something not good
syn. entice

The idea of getting rich quickly tempted him to invest his life savings.
Desserts are more tempting when one is on a diet.