(agj.) Moderate, Sparing, as in eating and drinking); characterized by abstinence and self- discipline.

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Presentation transcript:

(agj.) Moderate, Sparing, as in eating and drinking); characterized by abstinence and self- discipline.

 When food supplies are short, we need to be abstemious to ensure our survival.

 Frugal  Sparing  Austere  Restrained  Moderate

 Gluttonous  Greedy  Hungry  Wasteful

(v.) To emphasize, place stress on.

 People with different accents than ours, often accentuate different letters in their speech.

 Accent  Feature  Highlight  Stress  Emphasize

 Mask  Divert attention from  Dull  Hide  Minimize

(agj.) Deserving of blame or correction.

 The criminals actions labeled him as a censurable man.

 Blamable  Culpable  Guilty  Reprehensible  Wrong

 Innocent  Guiltless  Clean handed

(adj.) Likely but not certain to happen, possible; dependent on uncertain events or conditions; happening by chance. (n.) A representative group forming part of a larger body.

 The squadron of marines was only a contingent of the large group they represent.

 Likely  Possible  Chance  Casual  Subject to

 Impossible  Certain  Definite  Real  Unconditional

(v.) To confirm, make more certain.

 The suspects wife corroborated his alibi.

 Verify  Justify  Attest  Authenticate  Validate

 Verify  Justify  Attest  Authenticate  Validate

(n.) An inhabitant, resident; one who frequents a place.

 The homeless man was a denizen of the subway trains.

 Citizen  Dweller  Inhabitant  Native  Resident

 Alien  Foreigner  Immigrant  Non-Resident

(adj.) Passing aimlessly from one place or subject to another, rambling, roving, nomadic.

 The mentally ill patients speech was very discursive, and hard to follow.

 Rambling  Roving  Verbose  Deviating  Erratic

 Direct  To the point

(v.) To scatter widely

 Rubber bullets and tear gas are often used to disseminate riots.

 Diffuse  Disperse  Distribute  Radiate  Scatter

 Concentrate  Bring together  Collect  Gather

(adj.) Poorly dressed, shabby, lacking smartness and good taste.

 The poor orphan girl wore very dowdy clothes during her time at the shelter.

 Archaic  Messy  Out-Of-Date  Old  Dingy

 Chic  Classy  Fashionable  Modern  Neat  Clean

(adj.) Highly colored, reddish; excessively ornate, over decorated, showy.

 The millionaires house was excessively florid, filled with many expensive artifacts and decorations from all over the world.

 Rosy  Glowing  Flush  Flamboyant  Blooming

 Inelaborate  Natural  Plain  Undecorated  Unornate

(v.) To impose by fraud; to pass off as worthy or genuine, to bring in by stealth, dishonesty, or coercion.

 Oftentimes shady salesmen make their sales by employing techniques of foist.

 Cheat  Deceive  Dupe  Infiltrate  Edge

 Treat Fairly  Truth  Unbias

(adj.) awkward, lacking in social graces, tactless, clumsy

 The woman’s gauche remarks caused people to often give her strange looks.

 Clumsy  Awkward  Tactless  Crude  Brash  Indelicate  Graceless

 Elegant  Graceful  Polished  Refined  Sophisticated  Tasteful  Tactful

(n.) an opinion different from accepted belief, the denial of an idea that is generally held sacred

 The group of students exiled a classmate for heresy when she did not agree with their plans.

 Blasphemy  Disbelief  Nonconformist  Infidelity  Divergence  Dissidence  Fallacy

 Orthodoxy  Compliance  Conformity  Consent

(v.) to impress on the mind by repetition, teach persistently and earnestly

 The mother had inculcated good manners in her children all their lives.

 Brainwash  Educate  Impress  Instill  Drill  Teach  Plant

 Erase  Take Apart  Dislodge  Uproot

(adj.) capable of being touched or felt; easily seen, heard, or recognized

 Seeing a ghost is not a palpable idea to many people.

 Apparent  Believable  Credible  Straightforward  Certain  Visible  Tangible  Observable

 Hidden  Vague  Obscure  Unclear  Disguised  Invisible  Masked  Out of View

(adj.) having sympathetic insight or understanding, capable of keen appreciation

 The little girl was very perceptive and could easily tell her father was upset.

 Aware  Conscious  Keen  Insightful  Observant  Intuitive  Sharp  Savvy

 Dense  Unaware  Insensitive  Oblivious  Daydreaming  Unknowing  Blind

(adj.) extremely harmful; deadly, fatal

 Drinking harmful chemicals is a pernicious thing to do.

 Baleful  Damaging  Dangerous  Hazardous  Harmful  Destructive  Poisonous  Malignant

 Helpful  Good  Kind  Innocuous  Safe  Innocent  Sheltered

(v.) to shrink back in fear, lose heart in a difficult of dangerous situation

 The soldiers had been in battle for months and began to quail when their leader was captured.

 Cringe  Falter  Flinch  Recoil  Wince  Have Cold Feet  Quake  Shudder

 Face  Meet  Endure  Take On  Withstand  Challenge  Confront  Stand

(adj.) leaping, jumping, or springing forth; prominent, standing out, conspicuous (n.) a projection or bulge, a land form that projects upward or outward

 The boy stood on the salient cliff and looked out at the acres on land below.  The salient at the end of the road was so high that no one had ever been to the top.

 Extend  Hang Out  Prolong  Jut  Stick Out  Protrude

 Cave In  Collapse  Crumble  Deflate  Flat

(v.) to satisfy completely, to fill to excess (adj.) full, satisfied

 After eating at the buffet, Toby was satiated so much that he felt sick.

 Fill  Gorge  Indulge  Stuff  Saturate  Cloy  Glut

 Deprive  Dissatisfy  Leave Wanting  Hold Back  Bereave

(v.) to make or become dry and withered, to char or scorch the surface of; to harden or make unfeeling

 The marshmallow was seared after being held over the campfire.

 Scorch  Cook  Wilt  Shrivel  Wither  Brown  Dehydrate

 Freeze  Chill  Cool  Hydrate

(adj.) deceptive, apparently good or valid but lacking real merit

 The specious man only did his good deeds for the money he would get in return and not out of the kindness of his heart

 Vain  Untrue  Deceptive  Empty  Delusive  False  Seeming

 Honest  True  Valid  Real  Kind-Hearted  Credible  Bona Fide

Choosing the right word

 Her (perceptive, florid) writing style, abounding in adjectives and fancy metaphors, is far from suitable for factual newspaper stories.

 In a series of (searing, contingent) attacks now known as the Philippics Cicero launched his entire battery of political invective against the hapless Mark Antony.

 We are most likely to fall victim to (discursive, specious) reasoning when we have an emotional desire to believe what we are being told.

 Some English queens were strikingly elegant and imposing figures; others were somewhat (florid, dowdy) and unprepossessing.

 Let’s not allow them to (foist, accentuate) on us ideas and programs that have been proved failures in other countries!

 The idea that we can solve our problems by borrowing money to meet the payments on our debts is (palpably, perceptively) absurd.

 Perhaps he did not originate that vicious rumor, but he certainly shares the responsibility for having (seared, disseminated) it.

 Children are often remarkably (discursive, perceptive) in understanding how adults feel about them.

 Out of all the endless flow of dull verbiage in that long lecture, we could recognize only two or three (gauche, salient) points.

 The leaden sky of that bleak November day only served to (accentuate, inculcate) the gloom I felt at the sudden death of my best friend.

 I (quailed, seared) so much at the prospect of undergoing major surgery that my hands literally trembled as I entered the hospital.

 The most tragic aspect of a forest fire is its destructive effects on the innumerable plant and animal (denizens, heresies) of that environment.

 Although the essays are highly (discursive, dowdy), covering a wide range of topics, they are written In such clarity and grace that they are easy to follow.

 No doubt his efforts to advance his own interests were (censurable, florid), but let’s try to keep a sense of proportion and not condemn him too much.

 She was so (palpable, abstemious) that she extended her self-control even to her beloved music, and listened to records no more than an hour each day.

 All the available evidence (corroborates, foists) my theory that the theft was planned by someone familiar with the layout of the house.

 As the Scottish poet Robert Burns aptly suggests, even the best laid plans are often easily (palpable, contingent) on events over which we have no earthly control.

 The study of history teaches us that many ideas regarded as (heresies, disseminations) by one generation are accepted as sound and orthodox by the next.

 Before we start out to (inculcate, foist) certain principles in our young people, let’s be very sure that these principles are truly desirable for them and their society.

 He thought he was being witty and charming, but I regarded his conduct at the part as altogether (abstemious, gauche).

 The more we studied the drug problem, the more we became aware of its (florid, pernicious) influence on American people today.

 I rather like the better TV game shows, but I find that after a certain point, I’m (satiated, foisted) and ready for more substantial fare.

 Modern nutritionists emphasize that there is a(n) (palpable, abstemious) difference between “eating to live” and “living to eat”.

 Although the Declaration of Independence was framed only to justify a revolution in the British colonies in North America, its ideas and ideals have been (disseminated, accentuated) throughout the world.

 Her (florid, pernicious) personality was in sharp contrast to the quiet, restrained demeanor of her younger sister.

 The silence in their home when we made the condolence call was so (perceptive, palpable) that we could almost reach out and touch it.