1000 Most Common IELTS Words
1000 Most Common IELTS Words
A
abase
(v.)
to humiliate, degrade
(After being
overthrown and abased, the deposed
leader offered to bow
down to his conqueror.)
abate
(v.)
to reduce, lessen
(The rain poured down
for a while, then abated.)
abdicate
(v.)
to give up a position, usually one of
leadership
(When he realized that
the
revolutionaries would
surely win, the king abdicated his throne.)
abduct
(v.)
to kidnap, take by force
(The evildoers
abducted the fairy princess from her
happy home.)
aberration
(n.)
something that differs from the norm
(In 1918, the Boston
Red Sox won
the World Series, but
the success turned out to be an aberration, and the Red Sox
have not won a World
Series since.)
abet
(v.)
to aid, help, encourage
(The spy succeeded
only because he had a friend on the
inside to abet him.)
SAT Vocabulary
A
abhor
(v.)
to hate, detest
(Because he always
wound up kicking himself in the head
when he tried to play
soccer, Oswald began to abhor the sport.)
abide
1.
(v.)
to put up with
(Though he did not agree with the decision,
Chuck decided
to abide by it.)
2.
(v.)
to remain
-(Despite the beating
they’ve taken from the weather
throughout the
millennia, the mountains abide.)
abject
(adj.)
wretched, pitiful
(After losing all her
money, falling into a puddle, and
breaking her ankle,
Eloise was abject.)
abjure
(v.)
to reject, renounce
(To prove his honesty,
the President abjured the evil
policies of his wicked
predecessor.)
abnegation
(n.)
denial of comfort to oneself
(The holy man slept on
the floor, took only
cold showers, and
generally followed other practices of abnegation.)
abort
(v.)
to give up on a half-finished project or
effort
(After they ran out of
food, the
men, attempting to
jump rope around the world, had to abort and go home.)
abridge
1.
(v.)
to cut down, shorten
(The publisher thought
the dictionary was too long
and abridged it.)
2.
(adj.)
shortened
(Moby-Dick is such a
long book that even the
abridged version is
longer than most normal books.)
abrogate
(v.)
to abolish, usually by authority
(The Bill of Rights
assures that the
government cannot
abrogate our right to a free press.)
abscond
(v.)
to sneak away and hide
(In the confusion, the
super-spy absconded into the
night with the secret
plans.)
absolution
(n.)
freedom from blame, guilt, sin
(Once all the facts
were known, the jury
gave Angela absolution
by giving a verdict of not guilty.)
abstain
(v.)
to freely choose not to commit an action
(Everyone demanded
that Angus
put on the kilt, but
he did not want to do it and abstained.)
abstruse
(adj.)
hard to comprehend
(Everyone else in the
class understood geometry
easily, but John found
the subject abstruse.)
accede
(v.)
to agree
(When the class asked
the teacher whether they could play baseball
instead of learn grammar
they expected him to refuse, but instead he acceded to
their request.)
accentuate
(v.)
to stress, highlight
(Psychologists agree
that those people who are
happiest accentuate
the positive in life.)
A
SAT Vocabulary
accessible
(adj.)
obtainable, reachable
(After studying with
SparkNotes and getting a
great score on the
SAT, Marlena happily realized that her goal of getting into an
Ivy-League college was
accessible.)
acclaim
(n.)
high praise
(Greg’s excellent poem
won the acclaim of his friends.)
accolade
(n.)
high praise, special distinction
(Everyone offered
accolades to Sam after
he won the Noble
Prize.)
accommodating
(adj.)
helpful, obliging, polite
(Though the apartment
was not big
enough for three
people, Arnold, Mark, and Zebulon were all friends and were
accommodating to each
other.)
accord
(n.)
an agreement
(After much
negotiating, England and Iceland finally came to
a mutually beneficial
accord about fishing rights off the cost of Greenland.)
accost
(v.)
to confront verbally
(Though Antoinette was
normally quite calm, when the
waiter spilled soup on
her for the fourth time in 15 minutes she stood up and accosted
the man.)
accretion
(n.)
slow growth in size or amount
(Stalactites are
formed by the accretion of
minerals from the
roofs of caves.)
acerbic
(adj.)
biting, bitter in tone or taste
(Jill became extremely
acerbic and began to
cruelly make fun of
all her friends.)
acquiesce
(v.)
to agree without protesting
(Though Mr. Correlli
wanted to stay outside
and work in his
garage, when his wife told him that he had better come in to dinner,
he acquiesced to her
demands.)
acrimony
(n.)
bitterness, discord
(Though they vowed
that no girl would ever come
between them, Biff and
Trevor could not keep acrimony from overwhelming their
friendship after they
both fell in love with the lovely Teresa.)
acumen
(n.)
keen insight
(Because of his
mathematical acumen, Larry was able to figure
out in minutes
problems that took other students hours.)
acute
1.
(adj.)
sharp, severe
(Arnold could not walk
because the pain in his foot was so
acute.)
2.
(adj.)
having keen insight
(Because she was so
acute, Libby instantly
figured out how the
magician pulled off his “magic.”)
adamant
(adj.)
impervious, immovable, unyielding
(Though public
pressure was
intense, the President
remained adamant about his proposal.)
adept
(adj.)
extremely skilled
(Tarzan was adept at
jumping from tree to tree like a
monkey.)
SAT Vocabulary
A
adhere
1.
(n.)
to stick to something
(We adhered the poster
to the wall with tape.)
2.
(n.)
to follow devoutly
(He adhered to the
dictates of his religion without question.)
admonish
(v.)
to caution, criticize, reprove
(Joe’s mother
admonished him not to ruin
his appetite by eating
cookies before dinner.)
adorn
(v.)
to decorate
(We adorned the tree
with ornaments.)
adroit
(adj.)
skillful, dexterous
(The adroit thief
could pick someone’s pocket without
attracting notice.)
adulation
(n.)
extreme praise
(Though the book was
pretty good, Marcy did not believe
it deserved the
adulation it received.)
adumbrate
(v.)
to sketch out in a vague way
(The coach adumbrated
a game plan, but
none of the players
knew precisely what to do.)
adverse
(adj.)
antagonistic, unfavorable, dangerous
(Because of adverse
conditions, the
hikers decided to give
up trying to climb the mountain.)
advocate
1.
(v.)
to argue in favor of something
(Arnold advocated
turning left at the
stop sign, even though
everyone else thought we should turn right.) 2. (n.) a person
who argues in favor of something (In addition to wanting
to turn left at every stop
sign, Arnold was also
a great advocate of increasing national defense spending.)
aerial (adj.) somehow related to the
air (We watched as the fighter planes conducted
aerial maneuvers.)
aesthetic (adj.) artistic, related to
the appreciation of beauty (We hired Susan as our
interior decorator
because she has such a fine aesthetic sense.)
affable (adj.) friendly, amiable (People like to be
around George because he is so affable
and good-natured.)
affinity (n.)a spontaneous feeling
of closeness (Jerry didn’t know why, but he felt an
incredible affinity
for Kramer the first time they met.)
affluent (adj.) rich, wealthy (Mrs. Grebelski was
affluent, owning a huge house, three
cars, and an island
near Maine.)
affront (n.) an insult (Bernardo was very
touchy, and took any slight as an affront to his
honor.)
aggrandize (v.) to increase or make
greater (Joseph always dropped the names of the
famous people his
father knew as a way to aggrandize his personal stature.)
A
SAT Vocabulary
aggregate 1. (n.) a whole or total (The three branches of
the U.S. Government form an
aggregate much more
powerful than its individual parts.) 2. (v.) to gather into a
mass (The dictator tried to aggregate as many
people into his army as he possibly
could.)
aggrieved (adj.) distressed, wronged,
injured (The foreman mercilessly overworked his
aggrieved employees.)
agile (adj.) quick, nimble (The dogs were too
slow to catch the agile rabbit.)
agnostic (adj.) believing that the
existence of God cannot be proven or disproven
(Joey’s parents are
very religious, but he is agnostic.)
agriculture (n.) farming (It was a huge step in
the progress of civilization when tribes left
hunting and gathering
and began to develop more sustainable methods of obtaining
food, such as
agriculture.)
aisle (n.) a passageway between
rows of seats (Once we got inside the stadium we
walked down the aisle
to our seats.)
alacrity (n.) eagerness, speed (For some reason,
Chuck loved to help his mother
whenever he could, so
when his mother asked him to set the table he did so with
alacrity.)
alias (n.) a false name or
identity (He snuck past the guards by using an alias and fake
ID.)
allay (v.) to soothe, ease (The chairman of the
Federal Reserve gave a speech to try to
allay investors’ fears
about an economic downturn.)
allege (v.) to assert, usually
without proof (The policeman had alleged that Marshall
committed the crime,
but after the investigation turned up no evidence, Marshall
was set free.)
alleviate (v.) to relieve, make more
bearable (This drug will alleviate the symptoms of
the terrible disease,
but only for a while.)
allocate (v.) to distribute, set
aside (The Mayor allocated 30 percent of the funds for
improving the town’s
schools.)
aloof (adj.) reserved, distant (The scientist could
sometimes seem aloof, as if he didn’t
care about his friends
or family, but really he was just thinking about quantum
mechanics.)
altercation (n.) a dispute, fight (Jason and Lionel
blamed one another for the car
accident, leading to
an altercation.)
SAT Vocabulary
A
amalgamate (v.) to bring together,
unite (Because of his great charisma, the presidential
candidate was able to
amalgamate all democrats and republicans under his banner.)
ambiguous (adj.) uncertain, variably
interpretable (Some people think Caesar married
Cleopatra for her
power, others believe he was charmed by her beauty. His actual
reasons are
ambiguous.)
ambivalent (adj.) having opposing
feelings (My feelings about Calvin are ambivalent
because on one hand he
is a loyal friend, but on the other, he is a cruel and vicious
thief.)
ameliorate (v.) to improve (The tense situation
was ameliorated when Sam proposed a
solution everyone
could agree upon.)
amenable (adj.) willing, compliant (Our father was
amenable when we asked him to
drive us to the farm
so we could go apple picking.)
amenity (n.) an item that increases
comfort (Bill Gates’s house is stocked with so many
amenities, he never
has to do anything for himself.)
amiable (adj.) friendly (An amiable fellow,
Harry got along with just about everyone.)
amicable (adj.) friendly (Claudia and Jimmy got
divorced, but amicably and without
hard feelings.)
amorous (adj.) showing love,
particularly sexual (Whenever Albert saw Mariah wear
her slinky red dress,
he began to feel quite amorous.)
amorphous (adj.) without definite shape
or type (The effort was doomed from the start,
because the reasons
behind it were so amorphous and hard to pin down.)
anachronistic (adj.) being out of correct
chronological order (In this book you’re
writing, you say that
the Pyramids were built after the Titanic sank, which is
anachronistic.)
analgesic (n.) something that reduces
pain (Put this analgesic on the wound so that the
poor man at least
feels a little better.)
analogous (adj.) similar to, so that an
analogy can be drawn (Though they are unrelated
genetically, the bone
structure of whales and fish is quite analogous.)
anarchist (n.) one who wants to
eliminate all government (An anarchist, Carmine
wanted to dissolve
every government everywhere.)
anathema (n.) a cursed, detested
person (I never want to see that murderer. He is an
anathema to me.)
A
SAT Vocabulary
anecdote (n.) a short, humorous
account (After dinner, Marlon told an anecdote about
the time he got his
nose stuck in a toaster.)
anesthesia (n.) loss of sensation (When the nerves in
his spine were damaged, Mr.
Hollins suffered
anesthesia in his legs.)
anguish (n.) extreme sadness,
torment (Angelos suffered terrible anguish when he
learned that Buffy had
died while combating a strange mystical force of evil.)
animated (adj.) lively (When he begins to
talk about drama, which is his true passion, he
becomes very
animated.)
annex 1. (v.) to incorporate
territory or space (After defeating them in battle, the
Russians annexed
Poland.) 2. (n.) a room attached to a larger room or space (He
likes to do his
studying in a little annex attached to the main reading room in the
library.)
annul (v.) to make void or invalid
(After
seeing its unforeseen and catastrophic effects,
Congress sought to
annul the law.)
anomaly (n.) something that does not
fit into the normal order (“That rip in the spacetime
continuum is certainly
a spatial anomaly,” said Spock to Captain Kirk.)
anonymous (adj.) being unknown,
unrecognized (Mary received a love poem from an
anonymous admirer.)
antagonism (n.) hostility (Superman and Bizarro
Superman shared a mutual
antagonism, and often
fought.)
antecedent (n.) something that came
before (The great tradition of Western culture had
its antecedent in the
culture of Ancient Greece.)
antediluvian (adj.) ancient (The antediluvian man
still believed that Eisenhower was
president of the
United States and that hot dogs cost a nickel.)
anthology (n.) a selected collection
of writings, songs, etc. (The new anthology of Bob
Dylan songs contains
all his greatest hits and a few songs that you might never have
heard before.)
antipathy (n.) a strong dislike,
repugnance (I know you love me, but because you are a
liar and a thief, I
feel nothing but antipathy for you.)
antiquated (adj.) old, out of date (That antiquated car
has none of the features, like
power windows and
steering, that make modern cars so great.)
antiseptic (adj.) clean, sterile (The antiseptic
hospital was very bare, but its cleanliness
helped to keep
patients healthy.)
SAT Vocabulary
A
antithesis (n.) the absolute opposite (Your values, which
hold war and violence in the
highest esteem, are
the antithesis of my pacifist beliefs.)
anxiety (n.) intense uneasiness (When he heard about
the car crash, he felt anxiety
because he knew that
his girlfriend had been driving on the road where the accident
occurred.)
apathetic (adj.) lacking concern,
emotion (Uninterested in politics, Bruno was
apathetic about
whether he lived under a capitalist or communist regime.)
apocryphal (adj.) fictitious, false,
wrong (Because I am standing before you, it seems
obvious that the
stories circulating about my demise were apocryphal.)
appalling (adj.) inspiring shock,
horror, disgust (The judge found the murderer’s crimes
and lack of remorse appalling.)
appease (v.) to calm, satisfy (When the child cries,
the mother gives him candy to
appease him.)
appraise (v.) to assess the worth or
value of (A realtor will come over tonight to
appraise our house.)
apprehend 1. (v.) to seize, arrest (The criminal was
apprehended at the scene.) 2. (v.) to
perceive, understand, grasp (The student has
trouble apprehending concepts in
math and science.)
approbation (n.) praise (The crowd welcomed
the heroes with approbation.)
appropriate (v.) to take, make use of (The government
appropriated the farmer’s land
without
justification.)
aquatic (adj.) relating to water (The marine biologist
studies starfish and other aquatic
creatures.)
arable (adj.) suitable for growing
crops (The farmer purchased a plot of arable land on
which he will grow
corn and sprouts.)
arbiter (n.) one who can resolve a
dispute, make a decision (The divorce court judge
will serve as the
arbiter between the estranged husband and wife.)
arbitrary (adj.) based on factors that
appear random (The boy’s decision to choose one
college over another
seems arbitrary.)
arbitration (n.) the process or act of
resolving a dispute (The employee sought official
arbitration when he
could not resolve a disagreement with his supervisor.)
arboreal (adj.) of or relating to trees
(Leaves,
roots, and bark are a few arboreal traits.)
A
SAT Vocabulary
arcane (adj.) obscure, secret, known
only by a few (The professor is an expert in arcane
Lithuanian
literature.)
archaic (adj.) of or relating to an
earlier period in time, outdated (In a few select regions
of Western Mongolian,
an archaic Chinese dialect is still spoken.)
archetypal (adj.) the most representative
or typical example of something (Some
believe George
Washington, with his flowing white hair and commanding stature,
was the archetypal
politician.)
ardor (n.) extreme vigor, energy,
enthusiasm (The soldiers conveyed their ardor with
impassioned battle
cries.)
arid (adj.) excessively dry (Little other than
palm trees and cacti grow successfully in
arid environments.)
arrogate (v.) to take without
justification (The king arrogated the right to order
executions to himself
exclusively.)
artifact (n.) a remaining piece from
an extinct culture or place (The scientists spent all
day searching the cave
for artifacts from the ancient Mayan civilization.)
artisan (n.) a craftsman (The artisan uses wood
to make walking sticks.)
ascertain (v.) to perceive, learn (With a bit of
research, the student ascertained that
some plants can live
for weeks without water.)
ascetic (adj.) practicing restraint as
a means of self-discipline, usually religious (The
priest lives an
ascetic life devoid of television, savory foods, and other pleasures.)
ascribe (v.) to assign, credit,
attribute to (Some ascribe the invention of fireworks and
dynamite to the
Chinese.)
aspersion (n.) a curse, expression of
ill-will (The rival politicians repeatedly cast
aspersions on each
others’ integrity.)
aspire (v.) to long for, aim toward
(The
young poet aspires to publish a book of verse
someday.)
assail (v.) to attack (At dawn, the war
planes assailed the boats in the harbor.)
assess (v.) to evaluate (A crew arrived to
assess the damage after the crash.)
assiduous (adj.) hard-working, diligent (The construction workers
erected the
skyscraper during two
years of assiduous labor.)
assuage (v.) to ease, pacify (The mother held the
baby to assuage its fears.)
SAT Vocabulary
A
astute (adj.) very clever, crafty (Much of Roger’s
success in politics results from his
ability to provide
astute answers to reporters’ questions.)
asylum 1. (n.) a place of refuge,
protection, a sanctuary (For Thoreau, the forest served
as an asylum from the
pressures of urban life.) 2. (n.) an institution in which the
insane are kept (Once diagnosed by a
certified psychiatrist, the man was put in an
asylum.)
atone (v.) to repent, make amends (The man atoned for
forgetting his wife’s birthday
by buying her five
dozen roses.)
atrophy (v.) to wither away, decay (If muscles do not
receive enough blood, they will
soon atrophy and die.)
attain (v.) to achieve, arrive at (The athletes strived
to attain their best times in
competition.)
attribute 1. (v.) to credit, assign (He attributes all of
his success to his mother’s undying
encouragement.) 2. (n.) a facet or trait (Among the beetle’s
most peculiar attributes is
its thorny protruding
eyes.)
atypical (adj.) not typical, unusual (Screaming and crying
is atypical adult behavior.)
audacious (adj.) excessively bold (The security guard
was shocked by the fan’s
audacious attempt to
offer him a bribe.)
audible (adj.) able to be heard (The missing person’s
shouts were unfortunately not
audible.)
augment (v.) to add to, expand (The eager student
seeks to augment his knowledge of
French vocabulary by
reading French literature.)
auspicious (adj.) favorable, indicative
of good things (The tennis player considered the
sunny forecast an
auspicious sign that she would win her match.)
austere (adj.) very bare, bleak (The austere furniture
inside the abandoned house made
the place feel
haunted.)
avarice (n.) excessive greed (The banker’s avarice
led him to amass a tremendous
personal fortune.)
avenge (v.) to seek revenge (The victims will take
justice into their own hands and
strive to avenge
themselves against the men who robbed them.)
aversion (n.) a particular dislike
for something (Because he’s from Hawaii, Ben has an
aversion to autumn,
winter, and cold climates in general.)
B
SAT Vocabulary
B
balk (v.) to stop, block abruptly
(Edna’s
boss balked at her request for another raise.)
ballad (n.) a love song (Greta’s boyfriend
played her a ballad on the guitar during their
walk through the dark
woods.)
banal (adj.) dull, commonplace (The client rejected
our proposal because they found
our presentation banal
and unimpressive.)
bane (n.) a burden (Advanced physics is
the bane of many students’ academic lives.)
bard (n.) a poet, often a singer
as well (Shakespeare is often considered the greatest bard
in the history of the
English language.)
bashful (adj.) shy, excessively timid (Frankie’s mother told
him not to be bashful when
he refused to attend
the birthday party.)
battery 1.(n.) a device that supplies
power (Most cars run on a combination of power
from a battery and
gasoline.) 2. (n.)assault, beating (Her husband was accused of
assault and battery
after he attacked a man on the sidewalk.)
beguile (v.) to trick, deceive (The thief beguiled
his partners into surrendering all of
their money to him.)
behemoth (n.) something of tremendous
power or size (The new aircraft carrier is
among several
behemoths that the Air Force has added to its fleet.)
benevolent (adj.) marked by goodness or
doing good (Police officers should be
commended for their
benevolent service to the community.)
benign (adj.) favorable, not
threatening, mild (We were all relieved to hear that the
medical tests
determined her tumor to be benign.)
bequeath (v.) to pass on, give (Jon’s father
bequeathed his entire estate to his mother.)
berate (v.) to scold vehemently (The angry boss
berated his employees for failing to
meet their deadline.)
bereft (adj.) devoid of, without (His family was bereft
of food and shelter following the
tornado.)
beseech (v.) to beg, plead, implore (The servant beseeched
the king for food to feed his
starving family.)
bias (n.) a tendency,
inclination, prejudice (The judge’s hidden bias against smokers led
him to make an unfair
decision.)
SAT Vocabulary
C
bilk (v.) cheat, defraud (The lawyer discovered
that this firm had bilked several clients
out of thousands of
dollars.)
blandish (v.) to coax by using
flattery (Rachel’s assistant tried to blandish her into
accepting the deal.)
blemish (n.) an imperfection, flaw (The dealer agreed to
lower the price because of the
many blemishes on the
surface of the wooden furniture.)
blight 1. (n.) a plague, disease (The potato blight
destroyed the harvest and bankrupted
many families.) 2. (n.) something that destroys
hope (His bad morale is a blight
upon this entire
operation.)
boisterous (adj.) loud and full of energy
(The
candidate won the vote after giving
several boisterous
speeches on television.)
bombastic (adj.) excessively confident,
pompous (The singer’s bombastic performance
disgusted the crowd.)
boon (n.) a gift or blessing (The good weather has
been a boon for many businesses
located near the
beach.)
bourgeois (n.) a middle-class person,
capitalist (Many businessmen receive criticism for
their bourgeois
approach to life.)
brazen (adj.) excessively bold, brash
(Critics
condemned the novelist’s brazen attempt
to plagiarize
Hemingway’s story.)
brusque (adj.) short, abrupt,
dismissive (The captain’s brusque manner offended the
passengers.)
buffet 1. (v.) to strike with force (The strong winds
buffeted the ships, threatening to
capsize them.) 2. (n.) an arrangement of food
set out on a table (Rather than sitting
around a table, the
guests took food from our buffet and ate standing up.)
burnish (v.) to polish, shine (His mother asked him
to burnish the silverware before
setting the table.)
buttress 1. (v.) to support, hold up (The column buttresses
the roof above the statue.) 2.
(n.) something that offers
support (The buttress supports the roof above the statues.)
C
cacophony (n.) tremendous noise,
disharmonious sound (The elementary school
orchestra created a
cacophony at the recital.)
C
SAT Vocabulary
cadence (n.) a rhythm, progression
of sound (The pianist used the foot pedal to
emphasize the cadence
of the sonata.)
cajole (v.) to urge, coax (Fred’s buddies
cajoled him into attending the bachelor party.)
calamity (n.) an event with
disastrous consequences (The earthquake in San Francisco
was a calamity worse
than any other natural disaster in history.)
calibrate (v.) to set, standardize (The mechanic
calibrated the car’s transmission to
make the motor run
most efficiently.)
callous (adj.) harsh, cold, unfeeling (The murderer’s
callous lack of remorse shocked the
jury.)
calumny (n.) an attempt to spoil
someone else’s reputation by spreading lies (The local
official’s calumny
ended up ruining his opponent’s prospect of winning the election.)
camaraderie (n.) brotherhood, jovial
unity (Camaraderie among employees usually
leads to success in
business.)
candor (n.) honesty, frankness (We were surprised by
the candor of the mayor’s speech
because he is usually
rather evasive.)
canny (adj.) shrewd, careful (The canny runner hung
at the back of the pack through
much of the race to
watch the other runners, and then sprinted past them at the end.)
canvas 1. (n.) a piece of cloth on
which an artist paints (Picasso liked to work on canvas
rather than on bare
cement.) 2. (v.) to cover, inspect (We canvassed the
neighborhood looking
for clues.)
capacious (adj.) very spacious (The workers delighted
in their new capacious office
space.)
capitulate (v.) to surrender (The army finally
capitulated after fighting a long costly
battle.)
capricious (adj.) subject to whim, fickle
(The
young girl’s capricious tendencies made it
difficult for her to
focus on achieving her goals.)
captivate (v.) to get the attention
of, hold (The fireworks captivated the young boy, who
had never seen such
things before.)
carouse (v.) to party, celebrate (We caroused all night
after getting married.)
carp (v.) to annoy, pester (The husband divorced
his wife after listening to her carping
voice for decades.)
SAT Vocabulary
C
catalog 1. (v.) to list, enter into a
list (The judge cataloged the victim’s injuries before
calculating how much
money he would award.) 2. (n.) a list or collection (We
received a catalog
from J. Crew that displayed all of their new items.)
catalyze (v.) to charge, inspire (The president’s
speech catalyzed the nation and
resuscitated the
economy.)
caucus (n.) a meeting usually held
by people working toward the same goal (The
ironworkers held a
caucus to determine how much of a pay increase they would
request.)
caustic (adj.) bitter, biting, acidic (The politicians
exchanged caustic insults for over an
hour during the
debate.)
cavort (v.) to leap about, behave
boisterously (The adults ate their dinners on the patio,
while the children
cavorted around the pool.)
censure 1. (n.) harsh criticism (The frustrated
teenager could not put up with anymore
of her critical
mother’s censure.) 2. (v.) to rebuke formally (The principal censured
the head of the
English Department for forcing students to learn esoteric
vocabulary.)
cerebral (adj.) related to the
intellect (The books we read in this class are too cerebral—
they don’t engage my
emotions at all.)
chaos (n.) absolute disorder (Mr. Thornton’s sudden
departure for the lavatory
plunged his classroom into
chaos.)
chastise (v.) to criticize severely (After being chastised
by her peers for mimicking
Britney Spears,
Miranda dyed her hair black and affected a Gothic style.)
cherish (v.) to feel or show
affection toward something (She continued to cherish her
red plaid trousers,
even though they had gone out of style and no longer fit her.)
chide (v.) to voice disapproval (Lucy chided Russell
for his vulgar habits and sloppy
appearance.)
choreography (n.) the arrangement of
dances (The plot of the musical was banal, but the
choreography was
stunning.)
chronicle 1. (n.) a written history (The library featured
the newly updated chronicle of
World War II.) 2. (v.) to write a history (Albert’s diary
chronicled the day-to-day
growth of his
obsession with Cynthia.)
chronological (adj.) arranged in order of
time (Lionel carefully arranged the snapshots
of his former
girlfriends in chronological order, and then set fire to them.)
C
SAT Vocabulary
circuitous (adj.) roundabout (The bus’s circuitous
route took us through numerous
outlying suburbs.)
circumlocution (n.) indirect and wordy
language (The professor’s habit of speaking in
circumlocutions made
it difficult to follow his lectures.)
circumscribed (adj.) marked off, bounded (The children were
permitted to play tag
only within a
carefully circumscribed area of the lawn.)
circumspect (adj.) cautious (Though I promised
Rachel’s father I would bring her home
promptly by midnight,
it would have been more circumspect not to have specified a
time.)
circumvent (v.) to get around (The school’s dress
code forbidding navel-baring jeans
was circumvented by
the determined students, who were careful to cover up with
long coats when
administrators were nearby.)
clairvoyant (adj.) able to perceive things
that normal people cannot (Zelda’s uncanny
ability to detect my
lies was nothing short of clairvoyant.)
clamor 1. (n.) loud noise (Each morning the
birds outside my window make such a
clamor that they wake
me up.) 2. (v.)to loudly insist (Neville’s fans clamored for
him to appear on
stage, but he had passed out on the floor of his dressing room.)
clandestine (adj.) secret (Announcing to her
boyfriend that she was going to the gym,
Sophie actually went
to meet Joseph for a clandestine liaison.)
cleave 1. (v.) to divide into parts (Following the
scandalous disgrace of their leader, the
entire political party
cleaved into warring factions.) 2. (v.) to stick together firmly
(After resolving their
marital problems, Junior and Rosa cleaved to one another all
the more tightly.)
clemency (n.) mercy (After he forgot their
anniversary, Martin could only beg Maria
for clemency.)
clergy (n.) members of Christian
holy orders (Though the villagers viewed the church
rectory as quaint and
charming, the clergy who lived there regarded it as a mildewy
and dusty place that
aggravated their allergies.)
cloying (adj.) sickeningly sweet (Though Ronald was
physically attractive, Maud
found his constant
compliments and solicitous remarks cloying.)
coagulate (v.) to thicken, clot (The top layer of the
pudding had coagulated into a thick
skin.)
SAT Vocabulary
C
coalesce (v.) to fuse into a whole (Gordon’s ensemble of
thrift-shop garments coalesced
into a surprisingly
handsome outfit.)
cobbler (n.) a person who makes or
repairs shoes (I had my neighborhood cobbler
replace my worn-out
leather soles with new ones.)
coerce (v.) to make somebody do
something by force or threat (The court decided that
Vanilla Ice did not
have to honor the contract because he had been coerced into
signing it.)
cogent (adj.) intellectually
convincing (Irene’s arguments in favor of abstinence were so
cogent that I could
not resist them.)
cognizant (adj.) aware, mindful (Jake avoided speaking
to women in bars because he
was cognizant of the
fact that drinking impairs his judgment.)
coherent (adj.) logically consistent,
intelligible (Renee could not figure out what
Monroe had seen
because he was too distraught to deliver a coherent statement.)
collateral 1. (adj.) secondary (Divorcing my wife had
the collateral effect of making me
poor, as she was the
only one of us with a job or money.) 2. (n.) security for a debt
(Jacob left his watch
as collateral for the $500 loan.)
colloquial (adj.) characteristic of
informal conversation (Adam’s essay on sexual
response in primates
was marked down because it contained too many colloquial
expressions.)
collusion (n.) secret agreement,
conspiracy (The three law students worked in collusion
to steal the final
exam.)
colossus (n.) a gigantic statue or
thing (For 56 years, the ancient city of Rhodes featured
a colossus standing
astride its harbor.)
combustion (n.) the act or process of
burning (The unexpected combustion of the
prosecution’s evidence
forced the judge to dismiss the case against Ramirez.)
commendation (n.) a notice of approval or
recognition (Jared received a commendation
from Linda, his
supervisor, for his stellar performance.)
commensurate (adj.) corresponding in size
or amount (Ahab selected a very long roll
and proceeded to
prepare a tuna salad sandwich commensurate with his enormous
appetite.)
commodious (adj.) roomy (Holden invited the
three women to join him in the back seat
of the taxicab,
assuring them that the car was quite commodious.)
C
SAT Vocabulary
compelling (adj.) forceful, demanding
attention (Eliot’s speech was so compelling that
Lenore accepted his
proposal on the spot.)
compensate (v.) to make an appropriate
payment for something (Reginald bought
Sharona a new dress to
compensate her for the one he’d spilled his ice cream on.)
complacency (n.) self-satisfied
ignorance of danger (Colin tried to shock his friends out
of their complacency
by painting a frightening picture of what might happen to
them.)
complement (v.) to complete, make
perfect (Ann’s scarf complements her blouse
beautifully, making
her seem fully dressed even though she isn’t wearing a coat.)
compliant (adj.) ready to adapt oneself
to another’s wishes (Sue had very
strong opinions about
what to do on a first date, and Ted was
absolutely compliant.)
complicit (adj.) being an accomplice in
a wrongful act (By keeping her daughter’s affair
a secret, Maddie
became complicit in it.)
compliment (n.) an expression of esteem
or approval (I blushed crimson when Emma
gave me a compliment
on my new haircut.)
compound 1. (v.) to combine parts (The difficulty of
finding a fire escape amid the smoke
was compounded with
the dangers posed by the panicking crowds.) 2. (n.) a
combination of different parts (My attraction to
Donna was a compound of
curiosity about the
unknown, physical desire, and intellectual admiration.) 3. (n.) a
walled area containing a group of buildings (When the fighting
started, Joseph
rushed into the family
compound because it was safe and well defended.)
comprehensive (adj.) including everything (She sent me a
comprehensive list of the
ingredients needed to
cook rabbit soufflé.)
compress (v.) to apply pressure,
squeeze together (Lynn compressed her lips into a
frown.)
compunction (n.) distress caused by
feeling guilty (He felt compunction for the shabby
way he’d treated her.)
concede (v.) to accept as valid (Andrew had to concede
that what his mother said about
Diana made sense.)
conciliatory (adj.) friendly, agreeable (I took Amanda’s
invitation to dinner as a very
conciliatory gesture.)
SAT Vocabulary
C
concise (adj.) brief and direct in
expression (Gordon did not like to waste time, and his
instructions to Brenda
were nothing if not concise.)
concoct (v.) to fabricate, make up (She concocted the
most ridiculous story to explain her
absence.)
concomitant (adj.) accompanying in a
subordinate fashion (His dislike of hard work
carried with it a
concomitant lack of funds.)
concord (n.) harmonious agreement (Julie and Harold
began the evening with a
disagreement, but
ended it in a state of perfect concord.)
condolence (n.) an expression of
sympathy in sorrow (Brian lamely offered his
condolences on the
loss of his sister’s roommate’s cat.)
condone (v.) to pardon, deliberately
overlook (He refused to condone his brother’s
crime.)
conduit (n.) a pipe or channel
through which something passes (The water flowed
through the conduit
into the container.)
confection (n.) a sweet, fancy food (We went to the mall
food court and purchased a
delicious confection.)
confidant (n.) a person entrusted with
secrets (Shortly after we met, she became my
chief confidant.)
conflagration (n.) great fire (The conflagration
consumed the entire building.)
confluence (n.) a gathering together (A confluence of
different factors made tonight the
perfect night.)
conformist (n.) one who behaves the
same as others (Julian was such a conformist that
he had to wait and see
if his friends would do something before he would commit.)
confound (v.) to frustrate, confuse (MacGuyver confounded
the policemen pursuing
him by covering his
tracks.)
congeal (v.) to thicken into a solid
(The
sauce had congealed into a thick paste.)
congenial (adj.) pleasantly agreeable (His congenial manner
made him popular
wherever he went.)
congregation (n.) a gathering of people,
especially for religious services (The priest told
the congregation that
he would be retiring.)
congruity (n.) the quality of being in
agreement (Bill and Veronica achieved a perfect
congruity of opinion.)
C
SAT Vocabulary
connive (v.) to plot, scheme (She connived to get
me to give up my vacation plans.)
consecrate (v.) to dedicate something
to a holy purpose (Arvin consecrated his spare
bedroom as a shrine to
Christina.)
consensus (n.) an agreement of opinion
(The
jury was able to reach a consensus only
after days of
deliberation.)
consign (v.) to give something over
to another’s care (Unwillingly, he consigned his
mother to a nursing
home.)
consolation (n.) an act of comforting (Darren found
Alexandra’s presence to be a
consolation for his
suffering.)
consonant (adj.) in harmony (The singers’
consonant voices were beautiful.)
constituent (n.) an essential part (The most important
constituent of her perfume is
something called
ambergris.)
constrain (v.)to forcibly restrict (His belief in
nonviolence constrained him from taking
revenge on his
attackers.)
construe (v.) to interpret (He construed her
throwing his clothes out the window as a
signal that she wanted
him to leave.)
consummate (v.) to complete a deal; to
complete a marriage ceremony through sexual
intercourse (Erica and Donald
consummated their agreement in the executive
boardroom.)
consumption (n.) the act of consuming (Consumption of
intoxicating beverages is not
permitted on these
premises.)
contemporaneous (adj.) existing during the
same time (Though her novels do not
feature the themes of
Romanticism, Jane Austen’s work was contemporaneous with
that of Wordsworth and
Byron.)
contentious (adj.) having a tendency to
quarrel or dispute (George’s contentious
personality made him
unpopular with his classmates.)
contravene (v.) to contradict, oppose,
violate (Edwidge contravened his landlady’s rule
against overnight
guests.)
contrite (adj.) penitent, eager to be
forgiven (Blake’s contrite behavior made it
impossible to stay
angry at him.)
contusion (n.) bruise, injury (The contusions on his
face suggested he’d been in a fight.)
SAT Vocabulary
C
conundrum (n.) puzzle, problem (Interpreting Jane’s
behavior was a constant
conundrum.)
convene (v.) to call together (Jason convened his
entire extended family for a
discussion.)
convention 1. (n.) an assembly of people (The hotel was full
because of the cattleranchers’
convention.) 2. (n.) a rule, custom (The cattle-ranchers
have a convention
that you take off your
boots before entering their houses.)
convivial (adj.) characterized by
feasting, drinking, merriment (The restaurant’s
convivial atmosphere
put me immediately at ease.)
convoluted (adj.) intricate, complicated (Grace’s story was so
convoluted that I couldn’t
follow it.)
copious (adj.) profuse, abundant (Copious amounts of
Snapple were imbibed in the
cafeteria.)
cordial (adj.) warm, affectionate (His cordial greeting
melted my anger at once.)
coronation (n.) the act of crowning (The new king’s
coronation occurred the day after
his father’s death.)
corpulence (adj.)extreme fatness (Henry’s corpulence
did not make him any less
attractive to his
charming, svelte wife.)
corroborate (v.) to support with
evidence (Luke’s seemingly outrageous claim was
corroborated by witnesses.)
corrosive (adj.) having the tendency to
erode or eat away (The effect of the chemical
was highly corrosive.)
cosmopolitan (adj.) sophisticated, worldly (Lloyd’s education and
upbringing were
cosmopolitan, so he
felt right at home among the powerful and learned.)
counteract (v.) to neutralize, make
ineffective (The antidote counteracted the effect of
the poison.)
coup 1. (n.) a brilliant, unexpected
act (Alexander pulled off an amazing coup when he
got a date with
Cynthia by purposely getting hit by her car.) 2. (n.) the overthrow of
a government and assumption of authority (In their coup
attempt, the army officers
stormed the Parliament
and took all the legislators hostage.)
covet (v.) to desire enviously (I coveted Moses’s
house, wife, and car.)
D
SAT Vocabulary
covert (adj.) secretly engaged in (Nerwin waged a covert
campaign against his enemies,
while outwardly
appearing to remain friendly.)
credulity (n.) readiness to believe (His credulity made him
an easy target for con men.)
crescendo (n.) a steady increase in
intensity or volume (The crescendo of the brass
instruments gave the
piece a patriotic feel.)
criteria (n.) standards by which
something is judged (Among Mrs. Fields’s criteria for
good cookies are that
they be moist and chewy.)
culmination (n.) the climax toward which
something progresses (The culmination of
the couple’s argument
was the decision to divorce.)
culpable (adj.) deserving blame (He was culpable of
the crime, and was sentenced to
perform community
service for 75 years.)
cultivate (v.) to nurture, improve,
refine (At the library, she cultivated her interest in
spy novels.)
cumulative (adj.) increasing, building
upon itself (The cumulative effect of hours spent
in the sun was a deep
tan.)
cunning (adj.) sly, clever at being
deceitful (The general devised a cunning plan to
surprise the enemy.)
cupidity (n.) greed, strong desire (His cupidity made him
enter the abandoned gold
mine despite the
obvious dangers.)
cursory (adj.) brief to the point of
being superficial (Late for the meeting, she cast a
cursory glance at the
agenda.)
curt (adj.) abruptly and rudely
short (Her curt reply to my question made me realize
that she was upset at
me.)
curtail (v.) to lessen, reduce (Since losing his job,
he had to curtail his spending.)
D
daunting (adj.) intimidating, causing
one to lose courage (He kept delaying the
daunting act of asking
for a promotion.)
dearth (n.) a lack, scarcity (An eager reader, she
was dismayed by the dearth of classic
books at the library.)
debacle (n.) a disastrous failure,
disruption (The elaborately designed fireworks show
turned into a debacle
when the fireworks started firing in random directions.)
SAT Vocabulary
D
debase (v.) to lower the quality or
esteem of something (The large raise that he gave
himself debased his
motives for running the charity.)
debauch (v.) to corrupt by means of
sensual pleasures (An endless amount of good wine
and cheese debauched
the traveler.)
debunk (v.) to expose the falseness
of something (He debunked her claim to be the
world’s greatest chess
player by defeating her in 18 consecutive matches.)
decorous (adj.) socially proper,
appropriate (The appreciative guest displayed decorous
behavior toward his
host.)
decry (v.) to criticize openly (The kind video rental
clerk decried the policy of charging
customers late fees.)
deface (v.) to ruin or injure
something’s appearance (The brothers used eggs and
shaving cream to
deface their neighbor’s mailbox.)
defamatory (adj.) harmful toward
another’s reputation (The defamatory gossip
spreading about the
actor made the public less willing to see the actor’s new movie.)
defer (v.) to postpone something;
to yield to another’s wisdom (Ron deferred to Diane,
the expert on musical
instruments, when he was asked about buying a piano.)
deferential (adj.) showing respect for
another’s authority (His deferential attitude
toward her made her
more confident in her ability to run the company.)
defile (v.) to make unclean, impure
(She
defiled the calm of the religious building by
playing her banjo.)
deft (adj.) skillful, capable (Having worked in a
bakery for many years, Marcus was a
deft bread maker.)
defunct (adj.) no longer used or
existing (They planned to turn the defunct schoolhouse
into a community
center.)
delegate (v.) to hand over
responsibility for something (The dean delegated the task of
finding a new
professor to a special hiring committee.)
deleterious (adj.) harmful (She experienced the
deleterious effects of running a
marathon without
stretching her muscles enough beforehand.)
deliberate (adj.) intentional, reflecting
careful consideration (Though Mary was quite
upset, her actions to
resolve the dispute were deliberate.)
delineate (v.) to describe, outline,
shed light on (She neatly delineated her reasons for
canceling the
project’s funding.)
D
SAT Vocabulary
demagogue (n.) a leader who appeals to
a people’s prejudices (The demagogue
strengthened his hold
over his people by blaming immigrants for the lack of jobs.)
demarcation (n.) the marking of
boundaries or categories (Different cultures have
different demarcations
of good and evil.)
demean (v.) to lower the status or
stature of something (She refused to demean her
secretary by making
him order her lunch.)
demure (adj.) quiet, modest, reserved
(Though
everyone else at the party was dancing
and going crazy, she
remained demure.)
denigrate (v.) to belittle, diminish
the opinion of (The company decided that its
advertisements would
no longer denigrate the company’s competitors.)
denounce (v.) to criticize publicly (The senator denounced
her opponent as a greedy
politician.)
deplore (v.) to feel or express
sorrow, disapproval (We all deplored the miserable
working conditions in
the factory.)
depravity (n.) wickedness (Rumors of the ogre’s
depravity made the children afraid to
enter the forest.)
deprecate (v.) to belittle, depreciate
(Always
over-modest, he deprecated his
contribution to the
local charity.)
derelict (adj.) abandoned, run-down (Even though it was dangerous,
the children
enjoyed going to the
deserted lot and playing in the derelict house.)
deride (v.) to laugh at mockingly,
scorn (The bullies derided the foreign student’s
accent.)
derivative (adj.) taken directly from a
source, unoriginal (She was bored by his music
because she felt that
it was derivative and that she had heard it before.)
desecrate (v.) to violate the
sacredness of a thing or place (They feared that the
construction of a golf
course would desecrate the preserved wilderness.)
desiccated (adj.) dried up, dehydrated (The skin of the
desiccated mummy looked like
old paper.)
desolate (adj.) deserted, dreary,
lifeless (She found the desolate landscape quite a
contrast to the hustle
and bustle of the overcrowded city.)
SAT Vocabulary
D
despondent (adj.) feeling depressed,
discouraged, hopeless (Having failed the first
math test, the
despondent child saw no use in studying for the next and failed that
one too.)
despot (n.) one who has total power
and rules brutally (The despot issued a death
sentence for anyone
who disobeyed his laws.)
destitute (adj.) impoverished, utterly
lacking (The hurricane destroyed many homes
and left many families
destitute.)
deter (v.) to discourage, prevent
from doing (Bob’s description of scary snakes couldn’t
deter Marcia from
traveling in the rainforests.)
devious (adj.) not straightforward,
deceitful (Not wanting to be punished, the devious
girl blamed the broken
vase on the cat.)
dialect (n.) a variation of a
language (In the country’s remote, mountainous regions, the
inhabitants spoke a
dialect that the country’s other inhabitants had difficulty
understanding.)
diaphanous (adj.) light, airy,
transparent (Sunlight poured in through the diaphanous
curtains, brightening
the room.)
didactic 1. (adj.) intended to instruct (She wrote up a
didactic document showing new
employees how to
handle the company’s customers.) 2. (adj.) overly moralistic (His
didactic style of
teaching made it seem like he wanted to persuade his students not to
understand history
fully, but to understand it from only one point of view.)
diffident (adj.) shy, quiet, modest (While eating dinner
with the adults, the diffident
youth did not speak
for fear of seeming presumptuous.)
diffuse 1. (v.) to scatter, thin out,
break up (He diffused the tension in the room by
making in a joke.) 2. (adj.) not concentrated,
scattered, disorganized (In her
writings, she tried
unsuccessfully to make others understand her diffuse thoughts.)
dilatory (adj.) tending to delay,
causing delay (The general’s dilatory strategy enabled
the enemy to regroup.)
diligent (adj.) showing care in doing
one’s work (The diligent researcher made sure to
check her measurements
multiple times.)
diminutive (adj.) small or miniature (The bullies, tall and
strong, picked on the
diminutive child.)
dirge (n.) a mournful song,
especially for a funeral (The bagpipers played a dirge as the
casket was carried to
the cemetery.)
D
SAT Vocabulary
disaffected (adj.) rebellious, resentful
of authority (Dismayed by Bobby’s poor
behavior, the parents
sent their disaffected son to a military academy to be
disciplined.)
disavow (v.) to deny knowledge of or
responsibility for (Not wanting others to criticize
her, she disavowed any
involvement in the company’s hiring scandal.)
discern (v.) to perceive, detect (Though he hid his
emotions, she discerned from his body
language that he was
angry.)
disclose (v.) to reveal, make public (The CEO disclosed to
the press that the company
would have to fire
several employees.)
discomfit (v.) to thwart, baffle (The normally cheery
and playful children’s sudden
misery discomfited the
teacher.)
discordant (adj.) not agreeing, not in
harmony with (The girls’ sobs were a discordant
sound amid the general
laughter that filled the restaurant.)
discrepancy (n.) difference, failure of
things to correspond (He was troubled by the
discrepancy between
what he remembered paying for the appliance and what his
receipt showed he paid
for it.)
discretion (n.) the quality of being
reserved in speech or action; good judgment (Not
wanting her patient to
get overly anxious, the doctor used discretion in deciding how
much to tell the
patient about his condition.)
discursive (adj.) rambling, lacking order
(The
professor’s discursive lectures seemed to
be about every subject
except the one initially described.)
disdain 1. (v.) to scorn, hold in low
esteem (Insecure about their jobs, the older
employees disdained
the recently hired ones, who were young and capable.) 2. (n.)
scorn, low esteem (After learning of his
immoral actions, Justine held Lawrence in
disdain.)
disgruntled (adj.) upset, not content (The child believed
that his parents had unjustly
grounded him, and
remained disgruntled for a week.)
disheartened (adj.) feeling a loss of
spirit or morale (The team was disheartened after
losing in the finals
of the tournament.)
disparage (v.) to criticize or speak
ill of (The saleswoman disparaged the competitor’s
products to persuade
her customers to buy what she was selling.)
disparate (adj.) sharply differing,
containing sharply contrasting elements (Having
widely varying
interests, the students had disparate responses toward the novel.)
SAT Vocabulary
D
dispatch (v.) to send off to
accomplish a duty (The carpenter dispatched his assistant to
fetch wood.)
dispel (v.) to drive away, scatter (She entered the
office as usual on Monday, dispelling
the rumor that she had
been fired.)
disperse (v.) to scatter, cause to
scatter (When the rain began to pour, the crowd at the
baseball game quickly
dispersed.)
disrepute (n.) a state of being held
in low regard (The officer fell into disrepute after it
was learned that he
had disobeyed the orders he had given to his own soldiers.)
dissemble (v.) to conceal, fake (Not wanting to appear
heartlessly greedy, she
dissembled and hid her
intention to sell her ailing father’s stamp collection.)
disseminate (v.) to spread widely (The politician
disseminated his ideas across the town
before the election.)
dissent 1. (v.) to disagree (The principal argued
that the child should repeat the fourth
grade, but the unhappy
parents dissented.) 2. (n.) the act of disagreeing
(Unconvinced that the
defendant was guilty, the last juror voiced his dissent with
the rest of the jury.)
dissipate 1. (v.) to disappear, cause to
disappear (The sun finally came out and
dissipated the haze.) 2. (v.) to waste (She dissipated her
fortune on a series of bad
investments.)
dissonance (n.) lack of harmony or
consistency (Though the president of the company
often spoke of the
company as reliant solely upon its workers, her decision to increase
her own salary rather
than reward her employees revealed a striking dissonance
between her alleged
beliefs and her actions.)
dissuade (v.) to persuade someone not
to do something (Worried that he would catch a
cold, she tried to
dissuade him from going out on winter nights.)
distend (v.) to swell out (Years of drinking
beer caused his stomach to distend.)
dither (v.) to be indecisive (Not wanting to offend
either friend, he dithered about
which of the two
birthday parties he should attend.)
divine (adj.) godly, exceedingly
wonderful (Terribly fond of desserts, she found the rich
chocolate cake to be
divine.)
divisive (adj.) causing dissent,
discord (Her divisive tactics turned her two friends
against each other.)
E
SAT Vocabulary
divulge (v.) to reveal something
secret (Pressured by the press, the government finally
divulged the
previously unknown information.)
docile (adj.) easily taught or
trained (She successfully taught the docile puppy several
tricks.)
dogmatic (adj.) aggressively and
arrogantly certain about unproved principles (His
dogmatic claim that
men were better than women at fixing appliances angered
everyone.)
dormant (adj.) sleeping, temporarily
inactive (Though she pretended everything was
fine, her anger lay
dormant throughout the dinner party and exploded in screams of
rage after everyone
had left.)
dour (adj.)stern, joyless (The children feared
their dour neighbor because the old man
would take their toys
if he believed they were being too loud.)
dubious (adj.) doubtful, of uncertain
quality (Suspicious that he was only trying to get a
raise, she found his
praise dubious.)
duplicity (n.) crafty dishonesty (His duplicity
involved convincing his employees to let
him lower their
salaries and increase their stock options, and then to steal the money
he saved and run the
company into the ground.)
duress (n.) hardship, threat (It was only under
intense duress that he, who was
normally against
killing, fired his gun.)
dynamic (adj.) actively changing (The parents found it
hard to keep up with the
dynamic music scene
with which their children had become very familiar.)
E
ebullient (adj.) extremely lively,
enthusiastic (She became ebullient upon receiving an
acceptance letter from
her first-choice college.)
eclectic (adj.) consisting of a diverse
variety of elements (That bar attracts an eclectic
crowd: lawyers,
artists, circus clowns, and investment bankers.)
ecstatic (adj.) intensely and
overpoweringly happy (The couple was ecstatic when they
learned that they had
won the lottery.)
edict (n.) an order, decree (The ruler issued an
edict requiring all of his subjects to bow
down before him.)
SAT Vocabulary
E
efface (v.) to wipe out,
obliterate, rub away (The husband was so angry at his wife for
leaving him that he effaced
all evidence of her presence; he threw out pictures of her
and gave away all her
belongings.)
effervescent (adj.) bubbly, lively (My friend is so
effervescent that she makes everyone
smile.)
efficacious (adj.) effective (My doctor promised me
that the cold medicine was
efficacious, but I’m
still sniffling.)
effrontery (n.) impudence, nerve,
insolence (When I told my aunt that she was boring,
my mother scolded me
for my effrontery.)
effulgent (adj.) radiant, splendorous (The golden palace was
effulgent.)
egregious (adj.) extremely bad (The student who threw
sloppy joes across the cafeteria
was punished for his
egregious behavior.)
elaborate (adj.) complex, detailed,
intricate (Dan always beats me at chess because he
develops such an
elaborate game plan that I can never predict his next move.)
elated (adj.) overjoyed, thrilled (When she found out
she had won the lottery, the
writer was elated.)
elegy (n.) a speech given in honor
of a dead person (At the funeral, the widow gave a
moving elegy describing
her love for her husband.)
elicit (v.) to bring forth, draw
out, evoke (Although I asked several times where the exit
was, I elicited no
response from the stone-faced policeman.)
eloquent (adj.) expressive, articulate,
moving (The priest gave such an eloquent sermon
that most churchgoers
were crying.)
elucidate (v.) to clarify, explain (I didn’t understand
why my friend was so angry with
me, so I asked Janine
to elucidate her feelings.)
elude (v.) to evade, escape (Despite an intense
search, the robber continues to elude the
police.)
emaciated (adj.) very thin, enfeebled
looking (My sister eats a lot of pastries and
chocolate but still
looks emaciated.)
embellish 1. (v.) to decorate, adorn (My mom embellished
the living room by adding
lace curtains.) 2. (v.)to add details to,
enhance (When Harry told me that he had
“done stuff” on his
vacation, I asked him to embellish upon his account.)
E
SAT Vocabulary
embezzle (v.) to steal money by
falsifying records (The accountant was fired for
embezzling $10,000 of
the company’s funds.)
emend (v.) to correct or revise a
written text (If my sentence is incorrect, the editor will
emend what I have
written.)
eminent 1. (adj.) distinguished,
prominent, famous (Mr. Phillips is such an eminent
scholar that every
professor on campus has come to hear him lecture.) 2. (adj.)
conspicuous (There is an eminent
stain on that shirt.)
emollient (adj.) soothing (This emollient cream
makes my skin very smooth.)
emote (v.) to express emotion (The director told the
actor he had to emote, or else the
audience would have no
idea what his character was going through.)
empathy (n.) sensitivity to
another’s feelings as if they were one’s own (I feel such
empathy for my sister
when she’s in pain that I cry too.)
empirical 1. (adj.) based on observation or
experience (The scientist gathered empirical
data on the growth
rate of dandelions by studying the dandelions behind his house.)
2. (adj.) capable of being proved or disproved by
experiment (That all cats hate
getting wet is an
empirical statement: I can test it by bathing my cat, Trinket.)
emulate (v.) to imitate (I idolize Britney
Spears so much that I emulate everything she
does: I wear her
outfits, sing along to her songs, and date a boy named Justin.)
enamor (v.) to fill with love, fascinate,
usually used in passive form followed by “of” or
“with” (I grew enamored of that boy when he quoted
my favorite love poem.)
encore (n.) the audience’s demand
for a repeat performance; also the artist’s
performance in response to that demand (At the end of the
concert, all the fans
yelled, “Encore!
Encore!” but the band did not come out to play again.)
encumber (v.) to weigh down, burden (At the airport, my
friend was encumbered by
her luggage, so I
offered to carry two of her bags.)
enervate (v.) to weaken, exhaust (Writing these
sentences enervates me so much that I
will have to take a
nap after I finish.)
enfranchise (v.) to grant the vote to (The Nineteenth
Amendment enfranchised
women.)
engender (v.) to bring about, create,
generate (During the Olympics, the victories of
U.S. athletes engender
a patriotic spirit among Americans.)
enigmatic (adj.) mystifying, cryptic (That man wearing the
dark suit and dark glasses is
so enigmatic that no
one even knows his name.)
SAT Vocabulary
E
enmity (n.) ill will, hatred,
hostility (Mark and Andy have clearly not forgiven each
other, because the
enmity between them is obvious to anyone in their presence.)
ennui (n.) boredom, weariness (I feel such ennui
that I don’t look forward to anything,
not even my birthday
party.)
entail (v.) to include as a
necessary step (Building a new fence entails tearing down the
old one.)
enthrall (v.) to charm, hold
spellbound (The sailor’s stories of fighting off sharks and
finding ancient
treasures enthralled his young son.)
ephemeral (adj.) short-lived, fleeting (She promised she’d
love me forever, but her
“forever” was only
ephemeral: she left me after one week.)
epistolary (adj.) relating to or
contained in letters (Some people call me “Auntie’s boy,”
because my aunt and I
have such a close epistolary relationship that we write each
other every day.)
epitome (n.) a perfect example,
embodiment (My mother, the epitome of good taste,
always dresses more
elegantly than I do.)
equanimity (n.) composure (Even though he had just
been fired, Mr. Simms showed
great equanimity by
neatly packing up his desk and wishing everyone in the office
well.)
equivocal (adj.) ambiguous, uncertain,
undecided (His intentions were so equivocal
that I didn’t know
whether he was being chivalrous or sleazy.)
erudite (adj.) learned (My Latin teacher is
such an erudite scholar that he has translated
some of the most
difficult and abstruse ancient poetry.)
eschew (v.) to shun, avoid (George hates the
color green so much that he eschews all
green food.)
esoteric (adj.) understood by only a
select few (Even the most advanced students
cannot understand the
physicist’s esoteric theories.)
espouse (v.) to take up as a cause,
support (I love animals so much that I espouse animal
rights.)
ethereal (adj.) heavenly, exceptionally
delicate or refined (In her flowing silk gown and
lace veil, the bride
looked ethereal.)
etymology (n.) the history of words,
their origin and development (From the study of
etymology, I know that
the word “quixotic” derives from Don Quixote and the
word “gaudy” refers to
the Spanish architect GaudÃ.)
E
SAT Vocabulary
euphoric (adj.) elated, uplifted (I was euphoric when I
found out that my sister had
given birth to twins.)
evanescent (adj.) fleeting, momentary (My joy at getting
promoted was evanescent
because I discovered
that I would have to work much longer hours in a less friendly
office.)
evince (v.) to show, reveal (Christopher’s
hand-wringing and nail-biting evince how
nervous he is about
the upcoming English test.)
exacerbate (v.) to make more violent,
intense (The gruesome and scary movie I saw last
night exacerbated my
fears of the dark.)
exalt (v.) to glorify, praise (Michael Jordan is the
figure in basketball we exalt the most.)
exasperate (v.) to irritate, irk (George’s endless
complaints exasperated his roomate.)
excavate (v.) to dig out of the
ground and remove (The pharaoh’s treasures were
excavated by
archeologists in Egypt.)
exculpate (v.) to free from guilt or
blame, exonerate (My discovery of the ring behind
the dresser exculpated
me from the charge of having stolen it.)
excursion (n.) a trip or outing (After taking an
excursion to the Bronx Zoo, I dreamed
about pandas and
monkeys.)
execrable (adj.) loathsome, detestable (Her pudding is so
execrable that it makes me
sick.)
exhort (v.) to urge, prod, spur (Henry exhorted his
colleagues to join him in protesting
against the
university’s hiring policies.)
exigent (adj.) urgent, critical (The patient has an
exigent need for medication, or else he
will lose his sight.)
exonerate (v.) to free from guilt or
blame, exculpate (The true thief’s confession
exonerated the man who
had been held in custody for the crime.)
exorbitant (adj.) excessive (Her exorbitant praise
made me blush and squirm in my
seat.)
expedient (adj.) advisable,
advantageous, serving one’s self-interest (In his bid for
reelection, the
governor made an expedient move by tabling all controversial
legislation.)
expiate (v.) to make amends for,
atone (To expiate my selfishness, I gave all my profits to
charity.)
SAT Vocabulary
F
expunge (v.) to obliterate,
eradicate (Fearful of an IRS investigation, Paul tried to
expunge all
incriminating evidence from his tax files.)
expurgate (v.) to remove offensive or
incorrect parts, usually of a book (The history
editors expurgated
from the text all disparaging and inflammatory comments about
the Republican Party.)
extant (adj.) existing, not destroyed
or lost (My mother’s extant love letters to my
father are in the
attic trunk.)
extol (v.) to praise, revere (Violet extolled the
virtues of a vegetarian diet to her meatloving
brother.)
extraneous (adj.) irrelevant, extra, not
necessary (Personal political ambitions should
always remain
extraneous to legislative policy, but, unfortunately, they rarely are.)
extricate (v.) to disentangle (Instead of trying to
mediate between my brother and
sister, I extricated
myself from the family tension entirely and left the house for the
day.)
exult (v.) to rejoice (When she found out
she won the literature prize, Mary exulted by
dancing and singing
through the school’s halls.)
F
fabricate (v.) to make up, invent (When I arrived an
hour late to class, I fabricated some
excuse about my car
breaking down on the way to school.)
façade 1. (n.) the wall of a building (Meet me in front of
the museum’s main façade.) 2.
(n.) a deceptive appearance
or attitude (Despite my smiling façade, I am feeling
melancholy.)
facile 1. (adj.) easy, requiring little
effort (This game is so facile that even a four-yearold
can master it.) 2. (adj.) superficial, achieved
with minimal thought or care,
insincere (The business was in such shambles that any
solution seemed facile at best;
nothing could really
helpit in the long-run.)
fallacious (adj.) incorrect, misleading (Emily offered me
cigarettes on the fallacious
assumption that I
smoked.)
fastidious (adj.) meticulous, demanding,
having high and often unattainable standards
(Mark is so fastidious
that he is never able to finish a project because it always seems
imperfect to him.)
fathom (v.) to understand,
comprehend (I cannot fathom why you like that crabby and
mean-spirited neighbor
of ours.)
F
SAT Vocabulary
fatuous (adj.) silly, foolish (He considers himself
a serious poet, but in truth, he only
writes fatuous limericks.)
fecund (adj.) fruitful, fertile (The fecund tree bore
enough apples to last us through the
entire season.)
felicitous 1. (adj.) well suited, apt (While his comments
were idiotic and rambling, mine
were felicitous and
helpful.) 2. (adj.) delightful, pleasing (I spent a felicitous
afternoon visiting old
friends.)
feral (adj.) wild, savage (That beast looks so
feral that I would fear being alone with it.)
fervent (adj.) ardent, passionate (The fervent
protestors chained themselves to the
building and shouted
all night long.)
fetid (adj.) having a foul odor (I can tell from the
fetid smell in your refrigerator that
your milk has
spoiled.)
fetter (v.) to chain, restrain (The dog was fettered
to the parking meter.)
fickle (adj.) shifting in character,
inconstant (In Greek dramas, the fickle gods help
Achilles one day, and
then harm him the next.)
fidelity (n.) loyalty, devotion (Guard dogs are known
for the great fidelity they show
toward their masters.)
figurative (adj.) symbolic (Using figurative language,
Jane likened the storm to an
angry bull.)
flabbergasted (adj.) astounded (Whenever I read an
Agatha Christie mystery novel, I
am always
flabbergasted when I learn the identity of the murderer.)
flaccid (adj.) limp, not firm or
strong (If a plant is not watered enough, its leaves
become droopy and
flaccid.)
flagrant (adj.) offensive, egregious (The judge’s decision
to set the man free simply
because that man was
his brother was a flagrant abuse of power.)
florid (adj.) flowery, ornate (The writer’s florid
prose belongs on a sentimental
Hallmark card.)
flout (v.) to disregard or disobey
openly (I flouted the school’s dress code by wearing a
tie-dyed tank top and
a pair of cut-off jeans.)
foil (v.) to thwart, frustrate,
defeat (Inspector Wilkens foiled the thieves by locking them
in the bank along with
their stolen money.)
SAT Vocabulary
F
forage (v.) to graze, rummage for
food (When we got lost on our hiking trip, we foraged
for berries and nuts
in order to survive.)
forbearance (n.) patience, restraint,
toleration (The doctor showed great forbearance in
calming down the angry
patient who shouted insults at him.)
forestall (v.) to prevent, thwart,
delay (I forestalled the cold I was getting by taking
plenty of vitamin C
pills and wearing a scarf.)
forlorn (adj.) lonely, abandoned,
hopeless (Even though I had the flu, my family
decided to go skiing
for the weekend and leave me home alone, feeling feverish and
forlorn.)
forsake (v.) to give up, renounce (My New Year’s
resolution is to forsake smoking and
drinking.)
fortitude (n.) strength, guts (Achilles’ fortitude
in battle is legendary.)
fortuitous (adj.) happening by chance,
often lucky or fortunate (After looking for
Manuel and not finding
him at home, Harriet had a fortuitous encounter with him
at the post office.)
forum (n.) a medium for lecture or
discussion (Some radio talk-shows provide a good
forum for political
debate.)
foster (v.) to stimulate, promote,
encourage (To foster good health in the city, the mayor
started a “Get out and
exercise!” campaign.)
fractious (adj.) troublesome or
irritable (Although the child insisted he wasn’t tired, his
fractious
behavior—especially his decision to crush his cheese and crackers all over
the floor—convinced
everyone present that it was time to put him to bed.)
fraught (adj.) (usually used with
“with”) filled or accompanied with (Her glances in his
direction were fraught
with meaning, though precisely what meaning remained
unclear.)
frenetic (adj.) frenzied, hectic,
frantic (In the hours between night and morning, the
frenetic pace of city
life slows to a lull.)
frivolous (adj.) of little importance,
trifling (Someday, all that anxiety about whether
your zit will
disappear before the prom will seem totally frivolous.)
frugal (adj.) thrifty, economical (Richard is so frugal
that his diet consists almost
exclusively of catfish
and chicken liver—the two most inexpensive foods in the
store.)
G
SAT Vocabulary
furtive (adj.) secretive, sly (Jane’s placement of
her drugs in her sock drawer was not as
furtive as she
thought, as the sock drawer is the first place most parents look.)
G
garish (adj.) gaudy, in bad taste (Mrs. Watson has poor
taste and covers every object in
her house with a
garish gold lamé.)
garrulous (adj.) talkative, wordy (Some talk show hosts
are so garrulous that their
guests can’t get a
word in edgewise.)
genial (adj.) friendly, affable (Although he’s been
known to behave like a real jerk, I
would say that my
brother is an overall genial guy.)
gluttony (n.) overindulgence in food
or drink (Ada’s fried chicken tastes so divine, I
don’t know how anyone
can call gluttony a sin.)
goad (v.) to urge, spur, incite
to action (Jim may think he’s not going to fight Billy, but
Billy will goad Jim on
with insults until he throws a punch.)
gourmand (n.) someone fond of eating
and drinking (My parents, who used to eat little
more than crackers and
salad, have become real gourmands in their old age.)
grandiloquence (n.) lofty, pompous language
(The
student thought her grandiloquence
would make her sound
smart, but neither the class nor the teacher bought it.)
grandiose (adj.) on a magnificent or
exaggerated scale (Margaret planned a grandiose
party, replete with
elephants, trapeze artists, and clowns.)
gratuitous (adj.) uncalled for,
unwarranted (Every morning the guy at the donut shop
gives me a gratuitous
helping of ketchup packets.)
gregarious (adj.) drawn to the company of
others, sociable (Well, if you’re not
gregarious, I don’t
know why you would want to go to a singles party!)
grievous (adj.) injurious, hurtful;
serious or grave in nature (Electrocuting the inmate
without being sure of
his guilt would be a truly grievous mistake.)
guile (n.) deceitful, cunning, sly
behavior (Because of his great guile, the politician was
able to survive scandal
after scandal.)
H
hackneyed (adj.) unoriginal, trite (A girl can only hear
“I love you” so many times
before it begins to
sound hackneyed and meaningless.)
SAT Vocabulary
H
hallowed (adj.) revered, consecrated (In the hallowed
corridors of the cathedral, the
disturbed professor
felt himself to be at peace.)
hapless (adj.) unlucky (My poor, hapless
family never seems to pick a sunny week to go
on vacation.)
harangue 1. (n.) a ranting speech (Everyone had heard
the teacher’s harangue about
gum chewing in class
before.) 2. (v.) to give such a speech (But this time the teacher
harangued the class
about the importance of brushing your teeth after chewing
gum.)
hardy (adj.) robust, capable of
surviving through adverse conditions (I too would have
expected the plants to
be dead by mid-November, but apparently they’re very
hardy.)
harrowing (adj.) greatly distressing,
vexing (The car crash was a harrowing experience,
but I have a feeling
that the increase in my insurance premiums will be even more
upsetting.)
haughty (adj.) disdainfully proud (The superstar’s
haughty dismissal of her costars will
backfire on her
someday.)
hedonist (n.) one who believes
pleasure should be the primary pursuit of humans
(Because he’s such a
hedonist, I knew Murray would appreciate the 11 cases of wine
I bought him for his
birthday.)
hegemony (n.) domination over others (Britain’s hegemony
over its colonies was
threatened once
nationalist sentiment began to spread around the world.)
heinous (adj.) shockingly wicked, repugnant
(The
killings were made all the more
heinous by the fact
that the murderer first tortured his victims for three days.)
heterogeneous (adj.) varied, diverse in
character (I hate having only one flavor so I
always buy the
swirled, or should I say heterogeneous, type of ice cream.)
hiatus (n.) a break or gap in
duration or continuity (The hiatus in service should last
two or three
months—until the cable lines are repaired .)
hierarchy (n.) a system with ranked
groups, usually according to social, economic, or
professional class (Women found it very
difficult to break into the upper ranks of the
department’s
hierarchy.)
hypocrisy (n.) pretending to believe
what one does not (Once the politician began
passing legislation
that contradicted his campaign promises, his hypocrisy became
apparent.)
I
SAT Vocabulary
hypothetical (adj.) supposed or assumed
true, but unproven (Even though it has been
celebrated by seven
major newspapers, that the drug will be a success when tested in
humans is still hypothetical.)
I
iconoclast (n.) one who attacks common
beliefs or institutions (Jane goes to one protest
after another, but she
seems to be an iconoclast rather than an activist with a
progressive agenda.)
idiosyncratic (adj.) peculiar to one person;
highly individualized (I know you had
trouble with the last
test, but because your mistakes were highly idiosyncratic, I’m
going to deny your
request that the class be given a new test.)
idolatrous (adj.) excessively worshipping
one object or person (Xena’s idolatrous
fawning over the
band—following them on tour, starting their fan club, filming
their documentary—is
really beginning to get on my nerves.)
ignominious (adj.) humiliating, disgracing
(It
was really ignominious to be kicked out of
the dorm for having an
illegal gas stove in my room.)
illicit (adj.) forbidden, not
permitted (The fourth-grader learned many illicit words
from a pamphlet that
was being passed around school.)
immerse (v.) to absorb, deeply
involve, engross (After breaking up with her boyfriend,
Nancy decided to
immerse herself in her work in order to avoid crying.)
immutable (adj.) not changeable (The laws of physics
are immutable and constant.)
impassive (adj.) stoic, not susceptible
to suffering (Stop being so impassive; it’s healthy
to cry every now and
then.)
impeccable (adj.) exemplary, flawless (If your grades were
as impeccable as your sister’s,
then you too would
receive a car for a graduation present.)
impecunious (adj.) poor (“I fear he’s too
impecunious to take me out tonight,” the
bratty girl whined.)
imperative 1. (adj.) necessary, pressing (It is imperative that
you have these folders
organized by midday.) 2. (n.) a rule, command, or
order (Her imperative to have
the folders organized
by midday was perceived as ridiculous by the others.)
imperious (adj.) commanding, domineering
(The
imperious nature of your manner led
me to dislike you at
once.)
SAT Vocabulary
I
impertinent (adj.) rude, insolent (Most of your comments
are so impertinent that I don’t
wish to dignify them
with an answer.)
impervious (adj.) impenetrable, incapable
of being affected (Because of their thick layer
of fur, many seals are
almost impervious to the cold.)
impetuous (adj.) rash; hastily done (Hilda’s hasty slaying
of the king was an impetuous,
thoughtless action.)
impinge 1. (v.) to impact, affect, make
an impression (The hail impinged the roof,
leaving large dents.) 2. (v.) to encroach, infringe (I apologize for
impinging upon
you like this, but I
really need to use your bathroom. Now.)
implacable (adj.) incapable of being
appeased or mitigated (Watch out: once you shun
Grandma’s cooking, she
is totally implacable.)
implement 1. (n.) an instrument, utensil,
tool (Do you have a knife or some other sort of
implement that I could
use to pry the lid off of this jar?) 2. (v.) to put into effect, to
institute (After the first town curfew failed to stop
the graffiti problem, the mayor
implemented a new
policy to use security cameras to catch perpetrators in the act.)
implicate (v.) to involve in an
incriminating way, incriminate (Even though Tom wasn’t
present at the time of
the shooting, he was implicated by the evidence suggesting that
he had supplied the
shooters with guns.)
implicit (adj.) understood but not
outwardly obvious, implied (I know Professor Smith
didn’t actually say
not to write from personal experience, but I think such a message
was implicit in her
instruction to use scholarly sources.)
impregnable (adj.) resistant to capture or
penetration (Though the invaders used
battering rams,
catapults, and rain dances, the fortress proved impregnable and
resisted all attacks.)
impudent (adj.) casually rude,
insolent, impertinent (The impudent young man looked
the princess up and
down and told her she was hot even though she hadn’t asked
him.)
impute (v.) to ascribe, blame (The CEO imputed the
many typos in the letter to his lazy
secretary.)
inane (adj.) silly and meaningless (Some films are so
inane that the psychology of the
characters makes
absolutely no sense.)
inarticulate (adj.) incapable of expressing
oneself clearly through speech (Though he
spoke for over an
hour, the lecturer was completely inarticulate and the students had
no idea what he was
talking about.)
I
SAT Vocabulary
incarnate 1. (adj.) existing in the flesh,
embodied (In the church pageant, I play the role
of greed incarnate.) 2. (v.) to give human form to (The alien evaded
detection by
incarnating himself in
a human form.)
incendiary 1. (n.) a person who agitates (If we catch the
incendiary who screamed
“bomb” in the middle
of the soccer match, we’re going to put him in jail.) 2. (adj.)
inflammatory, causing combustion (Gas and lighter fluid
are incendiary materials
that should be kept
out of hot storage areas.)
incessant (adj.) unending (We wanted to go
outside and play, but the incessant rain kept
us indoors for two
days.)
inchoate (adj.) unformed or formless,
in a beginning stage (The country’s government
is still inchoate and,
because it has no great tradition, quite unstable.)
incisive (adj.) clear, sharp, direct (The discussion wasn’t
going anywhere until her
incisive comment
allowed everyone to see what the true issues were.)
inclination (n.) a tendency, propensity (Sarah has an
inclination to see every foreign film
she hears about, even
when she’s sure that she won’t like it.)
incontrovertible (adj.) indisputable (Only stubborn Tina
would attempt to disprove the
incontrovertible laws
of physics.)
incorrigible (adj.) incapable of
correction, delinquent (You can buy Grandma nicotine
gum all you want, but
I think that after sixty-five years of smoking she’s
incorrigible.)
increment (n.) an enlargement; the
process of increasing(The workmen made the wall
longer, increment by
increment.)
incumbent 1. (n.) one who holds an office
(The
incumbent senator is already serving his
fifth term.) 2. (adj.) obligatory (It is incumbent upon
this organization to offer aid to
all who seek it.)
indefatigable (adj.) incapable of defeat,
failure, decay (Even after traveling 62 miles, the
indefatigable runner
kept on moving.)
indigenous (adj.) originating in a region
(Some
fear that these plants, which are not
indigenous to the
region, may choke out the vegetation that is native to the area.)
indigent (adj.) very poor, impoverished
(I
would rather donate money to help the
indigent population
than to the park sculpture fund.)
indignation (n.) anger sparked by
something unjust or unfair (I resigned from the
sorority because of my
indignation at its hazing of new members.)
SAT Vocabulary
I
indolent (adj.) lazy (Why should my
indolent children, who can’t even pick themselves
up off the couch to
pour their own juice, be rewarded with a trip to the mall?)
indomitable (adj.) not capable of being
conquered (To be honest, Jim, my indomitable
nature means I could
never take orders from anyone, and especially not from a jerk
like you.)
induce (v.) to bring about,
stimulate (Who knew that our decision to boycott school
lunch would induce a
huge riot?)
ineffable (adj.) unspeakable, incapable
of being expressed through words (It is said
that the experience of
playing with a dolphin is ineffable and can only be understood
through direct
encounter.)
inept (adj.) not suitable or
capable, unqualified (She proved how inept she was when
she forgot three
orders and spilled a beer in a customer’s lap.)
inexorable (adj.) incapable of being
persuaded or placated (Although I begged for
hours, Mom was
inexorable and refused to let me stay out all night after the prom.)
inextricable (adj.) hopelessly tangled or
entangled (Unless I look at the solution
manual, I have no way
of solving this inextricable problem.)
infamy (n.) notoriety, extreme ill
repute (The infamy of his crime will not lessen as the
decades pass.)
infusion (n.) an injection of one
substance into another; the permeation of one
substance by another (The infusion of
Eastern religion into Western philosophy
created interesting
new schools of thought.)
ingenious (adj.) clever, resourceful (Her ingenious use of
walnuts instead of the peanuts
called for by the
recipe was lauded by the other garden club members who found her
cake delicious.)
ingenuous (adj.) not devious; innocent
and candid (He must have writers, but his
speeches seem so
ingenuous it’s hard to believe he’s not speaking from his own heart.)
inhibit (v.) to prevent, restrain,
stop (When I told you I needed the car last night, I
certainly never meant
to inhibit you from going out.)
inimical (adj.) hostile, enemylike (I don’t see how I
could ever work for a company that
was so cold and
inimical to me during my interviews.)
iniquity (n.) wickedness or sin (“Your iniquity,” said
the priest to the practical jokester,
“will be forgiven.”)
I
SAT Vocabulary
injunction (n.) an order of official
warning (After his house was toilet-papered for the
fifth time, the mayor
issued an injunction against anyone younger than 21 buying
toilet paper.)
innate (adj.) inborn, native,
inherent (His incredible athletic talent is innate, he never
trains, lifts weights,
or practices.)
innocuous (adj.) harmless, inoffensive (In spite of their innocuous
appearance, these
mushrooms are actually
quite poisonous.)
innovate (v.) to do something in an
unprecedented way (Because of the stiff
competition, the
company knew it needed to pour a lot of energy into innovating
new and better
products.)
innuendo (n.) an insinuation (During the debate,
the politician made several innuendos
about the sexual
activities of his opponent.)
inoculate (v.) to introduce a
microorganism, serum, or vaccine into an organism in
order to increase immunity to illness; to
vaccinate (I’ve feared needles ever since I
was inoculated against
37 diseases at age one; but I have also never been sick.)
inquisitor (n.) one who inquires,
especially in a hostile manner (The inquisitor was
instructed to knock on
every door in town in order to find the fugitive.)
insatiable (adj.) incapable of being
satisfied (My insatiable appetite for melons can be a
real problem in the
winter.)
insidious (adj.) appealing but
imperceptibly harmful, seductive (Lisa’s insidious
chocolate cake tastes
so good but makes you feel so sick later on!)
insinuate (v.) to suggest indirectly
or subtly (I wish Luke and Spencer would stop
insinuating that my
perfect report card is the result of anything other than my
superior intelligence
and good work habits.)
insipid (adj.) dull, boring (The play was so
insipid, I fell asleep halfway through.)
insolent (adj.) rude, arrogant,
overbearing (That celebrity is so insolent, making fun of
his fans right to
their faces.)
instigate (v.) to urge, goad (The demagogue instigated
the crowd into a fury by telling
them that they had
been cheated by the federal government.)
insular (adj.) separated and
narrow-minded; tight-knit, closed off (Because of the
sensitive nature of
their jobs, those who work for the CIA must remain insular and
generally only spend
time with each other.)
SAT Vocabulary
I
insurgent (n.) one who rebels (The insurgent snuck
into and defaced a different
classroom each night
until the administration agreed to meet his demands.)
integral (adj.) necessary for
completeness (Without the integral ingredient of flour, you
wouldn’t be able to
make bread.)
interject (v.) to insert between other
things (During our conversation, the cab driver
occasionally
interjected his opinion.)
interlocutor (n.) someone who
participates in a dialogue or conversation (When the
officials could not
come to an agreement over the correct cover of the flags, the prime
minister acted as an
interlocutor.)
interminable (adj.) without possibility of
end (The fact that biology lectures came just
before lunch made them
seem interminable.)
intimation (n.) an indirect suggestion (Mr. Brinford’s
intimation that he would soon pass
away occurred when he
began to discuss how to distribute his belongings among his
children.)
intractable (adj.) difficult to
manipulate, unmanageable (There was no end in sight to
the intractable
conflict between the warring countries.)
intransigent (adj.) refusing to compromise,
often on an extreme opinion (The
intransigent child
said he would have 12 scoops of ice cream, or he would bang his
head against the wall
until his mother fainted from fear.)
intrepid (adj.) brave in the face of
danger (After scaling a live volcano prior to its
eruption, the explorer
was praised for his intrepid attitude.)
inundate (v.) to flood with abundance
(Because
I am the star of a new sitcom, my fans
are sure to inundate
me with fan mail and praise.)
inure (v.) to cause someone or
something to become accustomed to a situation (Twenty
years in the salt
mines inured the man to the discomforts of dirt and grime.)
invective (n.) an angry verbal attack (My mother’s
irrational invective against the way I
dress only made me
decide to dye my hair green.)
inveterate (adj.) stubbornly established
by habit (I’m the first to admit that I’m an
inveterate coffee
drinker—I drink four cups a day.)
inviolable (adj.) secure from assault (Nobody was ever able
to break into Batman’s
inviolable Batcave.)
irascible (adj.) easily angered (At the smallest
provocation, my irascible cat will begin
scratching and
clawing.)
J
SAT Vocabulary
iridescent (adj.) showing rainbow colors (The bride’s large
diamond ring was
iridescent in the
afternoon sun.)
irreverence (n.) disrespect (The irreverence
displayed by the band that marched
through the chapel disturbed
many churchgoers.)
irrevocable (adj.) incapable of being
taken back (The Bill of Rights is an irrevocable
part of American law.)
J
jubilant (adj.) extremely joyful, happy
(The
crowd was jubilant when the firefighter
carried the woman from
the flaming building.)
judicious (adj.) having or exercising
sound judgment (When the judicious king decided
to compromise rather
than send his army to its certain death, he was applauded.)
juxtaposition (n.) the act of placing two
things next to each other for implicit
comparison (The interior designer admired my
juxtaposition of the yellow couch
and green table.)
K
knell (n.) the solemn sound of a
bell, often indicating a death (Echoing throughout our
village, the funeral
knell made the stormy day even more grim.)
kudos (n.) praise for an
achievement (After the performance, the reviewers gave the
opera singer kudos for
a job well done.)
L
laceration (n.) a cut, tear (Because he fell off
his bike into a rosebush, the paperboy’s skin
was covered with
lacerations.)
laconic (adj.) terse in speech or
writing (The author’s laconic style has won him many
followers who dislike
wordiness.)
languid (adj.) sluggish from fatigue
or weakness (In the summer months, the great heat
makes people languid
and lazy.)
larceny (n.) obtaining another’s
property by theft or trickery (When my car was not
where I had left it, I
realized that I was a victim of larceny.)
largess (n.) the generous giving of
lavish gifts (My boss demonstrated great largess by
giving me a new car.)
SAT Vocabulary
L
latent (adj.) hidden, but capable of
being exposed (Sigmund’s dream represented his
latent paranoid
obsession with other people’s shoes.)
laudatory (adj.) expressing admiration
or praise (Such laudatory comments are unusual
from someone who is usually
so reserved in his opinions.)
lavish 1. (adj.) given without limits (Because they had
worked very hard, the
performers appreciated
the critic’s lavish praise.) 2. (v.) to give without limits
(Because the
performers had worked hard, they deserved the praise that the critic
lavished on them.)
legerdemain (n.) deception,
slight-of-hand (Smuggling the French plants through
customs by claiming
that they were fake was a remarkable bit of legerdemain.)
lenient (adj.) demonstrating tolerance
or gentleness (Because Professor Oglethorpe
allowed his students
to choose their final grades, the other teachers believed that he
was excessively
lenient.)
lethargic (adj.) in a state of
sluggishness or apathy (When Jean Claude explained to his
boss that he was
lethargic and didn’t feel like working that day, the boss fired him.)
liability 1. (n.) something for which one
is legally responsible, usually involving a
disadvantage or risk (The bungee-jumping
tower was a great liability for the
owners of the
carnival.) 2. (n.) a handicap, burden (Because she often lost her
concentration and
didn’t play defense, Marcy was a liability to the team.)
libertarian (adj.) advocating principles
of liberty and free will (The dissatisfied subjects
overthrew the monarch
and replaced him with a libertarian ruler who respected
their democratic
principles.)
licentious (adj.) displaying a lack of
moral or legal restraints (Marilee has always been
fascinated by the
licentious private lives of politicians.)
limpid (adj.) clear, transparent (Mr. Johnson’s limpid
writing style greatly pleased
readers who disliked
complicated novels.)
linchpin (n.) something that holds
separate parts together (The linchpin in the
prosecution’s case was
the hair from the defendant’s head, which was found at the
scene of the crime.)
lithe (adj.) graceful, flexible,
supple (Although the dancers were all outstanding, Jae
Sun’s control of her
lithe body was particularly impressive.)
litigant (n.) someone engaged in a
lawsuit (When the litigants began screaming at each
other, Judge Koch
ordered them to be silent.)
M
SAT Vocabulary
lucid (adj.) clear, easily
understandable (Because Guenevere’s essay was so lucid, I only
had to read it once to
understand her reasoning.)
luminous (adj.) brightly shining (The light of the luminous
moon graced the shoulders
of the beautiful
maiden.)
lurid (adj.) ghastly, sensational (Gideon’s story, in
which he described a character
torturing his sister’s
dolls, was judged too lurid to be printed in the school’s literary
magazine.)
M
maelstrom (n.) a destructive whirlpool
which rapidly sucks in objects (Little did the
explorers know that as
they turned the next bend of the calm river a vicious
maelstrom would catch
their boat.)
magnanimous (adj.) noble, generous (Although I had
already broken most of her
dishes, Jacqueline was
magnanimous enough to continue letting me use them.)
malediction (n.) a curse (When I was arrested
for speeding, I screamed maledictions
against the policeman
and the entire police department.)
malevolent (adj.) wanting harm to befall
others (The malevolent old man sat in the park
all day, tripping
unsuspecting passersby with his cane.)
malleable (adj.) capable of being shaped
or transformed (Maximillian’s political
opinions were so
malleable that anyone he talked to was able to change his mind
instantly.)
mandate (n.) an authoritative
command (In the Old Testament, God mandates that no
one should steal.)
manifest 1. (adj.) easily understandable,
obvious (When I wrote the wrong sum on the
chalkboard, my mistake
was so manifest that the entire class burst into laughter.) 2.
(v.) to show plainly (His illness first
manifested itself with particularly violent
hiccups.)
manifold (adj.) diverse, varied (The popularity of
Dante’s Inferno is partly due to the
fact that the work allows
for manifold interpretations.)
maudlin (adj.) weakly sentimental (Although many people
enjoy romantic comedies, I
usually find them
maudlin and shallow.)
maverick (n.) an independent,
nonconformist person (Andreas is a real maverick and
always does things his
own way.)
SAT Vocabulary
M
mawkish (adj.) characterized by sick
sentimentality (Although some nineteenthcentury
critics viewed
Dickens’s writing as mawkish, contemporary readers have
found great emotional
depth in his works.)
maxim (n.) a common saying
expressing a principle of conduct (Miss Manners’s
etiquette maxims are
both entertaining and instructional.)
meager (adj.) deficient in size or
quality (My meager portion of food did nothing to
satisfy my appetite.)
medley (n.) a mixture of differing
things (Susannah’s wardrobe contained an
astonishing medley of
colors, from olive green to fluorescent pink.)
mendacious (adj.) having a lying, false
character (The mendacious content of the tabloid
magazines is at least
entertaining.)
mercurial (adj.) characterized by rapid
change or temperamentality (Though he was
widely respected for
his mathematical proofs, the mercurial genius was impossible to
live with.)
meritorious (adj.) worthy of esteem or
reward (Manfred was given the congressional
medal of honor for his
meritorious actions.)
metamorphosis (n.) the change of form,
shape, substance (Winnifred went to the gym
every day for a year
and underwent a metamorphosis from a waiflike girl to an
athletic woman.)
meticulous (adj.) extremely careful with
details (The ornate needlework in the bride’s
gown was a product of
meticulous handiwork.)
mitigate (v.) to make less violent,
alleviate (When I had an awful sore throat, only
warm tea would
mitigate the pain.)
moderate 1. (adj.) not extreme (Luckily, the
restaurant we chose had moderate prices;
none of us have any
money.) 2. (n.) one who expresses moderate opinions (Because
he found both the
liberal and conservative proposals too excessive, Mr. Park sided
with the moderates.)
modicum (n.) a small amount of
something (Refusing to display even a modicum of
sensitivity, Henrietta
announced her boss’s affair in front of the entire office.)
modulate (v.) to pass from one state
to another, especially in music (The composer
wrote a piece that
modulated between minor and major keys.)
mollify (v.) to soften in temper (The police officer
mollified the angry woman by giving
her a warning instead
of a ticket.)
N
SAT Vocabulary
morass (n.) a wet swampy bog;
figuratively, something that traps and confuses (When
Theresa lost her job,
she could not get out of her financial morass.)
mores (n.) the moral attitudes and
fixed customs of a group of people. (Mores change
over time; many things
that were tolerated in 1975 are no longer seen as being
socially acceptable.)
morose (adj.) gloomy or sullen (Jason’s morose nature
made him very unpleasant to
talk to.)
multifarious (adj.) having great diversity
or variety (This Swiss Army knife has
multifarious functions
and capabilities. Among other things, it can act as a knife, a
saw, a toothpick, and
a slingshot.)
mundane (adj.) concerned with the
world rather than with heaven, commonplace (He
is more concerned with
the mundane issues of day-to-day life than with spiritual
topics.)
munificence (n.) generosity in giving (The royal family’s
munificence made everyone
else in their country
rich.)
mutable (adj.) able to change (Because fashion is so
mutable, what is trendy today will
look outdated in five
years.)
myriad (adj.) consisting of a very
great number (It was difficult to decide what to do
Friday night because
the city presented us with myriad possibilities for fun.)
N
nadir (n.) the lowest point of
something (My day was boring, but the nadir came when
I accidentally spilled
a bowl of spaghetti on my head.)
nascent (adj.) in the process of being
born or coming into existence (Unfortunately,
my brilliant paper was
only in its nascent form on the morning that it was due.)
nebulous (adj.) vaguely defined, cloudy
(The
transition between governments meant
that who was actually
in charge was a nebulous matter.)
nefarious (adj.) heinously villainous (Although Dr.
Meanman’s nefarious plot to melt
the polar icecaps was
terrifying, it was so impractical that nobody really worried
about it.)
negligent (adj.) habitually careless,
neglectful (Jessie’s grandfather called me a
negligent fool after I
left the door to his apartment unlocked even though there had
been a recent string
of robberies.)
SAT Vocabulary
O
neophyte (n.) someone who is young or
inexperienced (As a neophyte in the literary
world, Malik had
trouble finding a publisher for his first novel.)
nocturnal (adj.) relating to or
occurring during the night (Jackie was a nocturnal
person; she would
study until dawn and sleep until the evening.)
noisome (adj.) unpleasant, offensive,
especially to the sense of smell (Nobody would
enter the stalls until
the horse’s noisome leavings were
taken away.)
nomadic (adj.) wandering from place to
place (In the first six months after college, Jose
led a nomadic life,
living in New York, California, and Idaho.)
nominal (adj.) trifling, insignificant
(Because
he was moving the following week and
needed to get rid of
his furniture more than he needed money, Jordan sold
everything for a
nominal fee.)
nonchalant (adj.) having a lack of
concern, indifference (Although deep down she was
very angry, Marsha
acted in a nonchalant manner when she found out that her best
friend had used her
clothing without asking.)
nondescript (adj.) lacking a distinctive
character (I was surprised when I saw the movie
star in person because
she looked nondescript.)
notorious (adj.) widely and unfavorably
known (Jacob was notorious for always
arriving late at
parties.)
novice (n.) a beginner, someone
without training or experience (Because we were all
novices at yoga, our
instructor decided to begin with the basics.)
noxious (adj.) harmful, unwholesome (Environmentalists
showed that the noxious
weeds were destroying
the insects’ natural habitats.)
nuance (n.) a slight variation in
meaning, tone, expression (The nuances of the poem
were not obvious to
the casual reader, but the professor was able to point them out.)
nurture (v.) to assist the
development of (Although Serena had never watered the plant,
which was about to
die, Javier was able to nurture it back to life.)
O
obdurate (adj.) unyielding to
persuasion or moral influences (The obdurate old man
refused to take pity
on the kittens.)
obfuscate (v.) to render
incomprehensible (The detective did want to answer the
newspaperman’s
questions, so he obfuscated the truth.)
O
SAT Vocabulary
oblique (adj.) diverging from a
straight line or course, not straightforward (Martin’s
oblique language
confused those who listened to him.)
oblivious (adj.) lacking consciousness
or awareness of something (Oblivious to the
burning smell
emanating from the kitchen, my father did not notice that the rolls in
the oven were burned
until much too late.)
obscure (adj.) unclear, partially
hidden (Because he was standing in the shadows, his
features were
obscure.)
obsequious (adj.) excessively compliant
or submissive (Mark acted like Janet’s servant,
obeying her every
request in an obsequious manner.)
obsolete (adj.) no longer used, out of
date (With the inventions of tape decks and CDs,
which both have better
sound and are easier to use, eight-track players are now
entirely obsolete.)
obstinate (adj.) not yielding easily,
stubborn (The obstinate child refused to leave the
store until his mother
bought him a candy bar.)
obstreperous (adj.) noisy, unruly (Billy’s obstreperous
behavior prompted the librarian
to ask him to leave
the reading room.)
obtuse (adj.) lacking quickness of
sensibility or intellect (Political opponents warned
that the prime minister’s
obtuse approach to foreign policy would embroil the nation
in mindless war.)
odious (adj.) instilling hatred or
intense displeasure (Mark was assigned the odious task
of cleaning the cat’s
litter box.)
officious (adj.) offering one’s services
when they are neither wanted nor needed
(Brenda resented
Allan’s officious behavior when he selected colors that might best
improve her artwork.)
ominous (adj.) foreboding or
foreshadowing evil (The fortuneteller’s ominous words
flashed through my
mind as the hooded figure approached me in the alley.)
onerous (adj.) burdensome (My parents lamented
that the pleasures of living in a
beautiful country
estate no longer outweighed the onerous mortgage payments.)
opulent (adj.) characterized by rich
abundance verging on ostentation (The opulent
furnishings of the
dictator’s private compound contrasted harshly with the meager
accommodations of her
subjects.)
SAT Vocabulary
P
oration (n.) a speech delivered in a
formal or ceremonious manner (The prime minister
was visibly shaken
when the unruly parliament interrupted his oration about failed
domestic policies.)
ornate (adj.) highly elaborate,
excessively decorated (The ornate styling of the new
model of luxury car
could not compensate for the poor quality of its motor.)
orthodox (adj.) conventional,
conforming to established protocol (The company’s
profits dwindled
because the management pursued orthodox business policies that
were incompatible with
new industrial trends.)
oscillate (v.) to sway from one side
to the other (My uncle oscillated between buying a
station wagon to
transport his family and buying a sports car to satisfy his boyhood
fantasies.)
ostensible (adj.) appearing as such,
seemingly (Jack’s ostensible reason for driving was
that airfare was too
expensive, but in reality, he was afraid of flying.)
ostentatious (adj.) excessively showy,
glitzy (On the palace tour, the guide focused on
the ostentatious
decorations and spoke little of the royal family’s history.)
ostracism (n.) exclusion from a group (Beth risked ostracism
if her roommates
discovered her
flatulence.)
P
pacific (adj.) soothing (The chemistry
professor’s pacific demeanor helped the class
remain calm after the
experiment exploded.)
palatable (adj.) agreeable to the taste
or sensibilities (Despite the unpleasant smell, the
exotic cheese was
quite palatable.)
palette (adj.) a range of colors or
qualities (The palette of colors utilized in the painting
was equaled only by
the range of intense emotions the piece evoked.)
palliate (v.) to reduce the severity
of (The doctor trusted that the new medication
would palliate her
patient’s discomfort.)
pallid (adj.) lacking color (Dr. Van Helsing
feared that Lucy’s pallid complexion was
due to an unexplained
loss of blood.)
panacea (n.) a remedy for all ills
or difficulties (Doctors wish there was a single panacea
for every disease, but
sadly there is not.)
paradigm (n.) an example that is a
perfect pattern or model (Because the new SUV was
so popular, it became
the paradigm upon which all others were modeled.)
P
SAT Vocabulary
paradox (n.) an apparently
contradictory statement that is perhaps true (The diplomat
refused to acknowledge
the paradox that negotiating a peace treaty would demand
more resources than
waging war.)
paragon (n.) a model of excellence
or perfection (The mythical Helen of Troy was
considered a paragon
of female beauty.)
paramount (adj.) greatest in importance,
rank, character (It was paramount that the
bomb squad disconnect
the blue wire before removing the fuse.)
pariah (n.) an outcast (Following the
discovery of his plagiarism, Professor Hurley was
made a pariah in all
academic circles.)
parody (n.) a satirical imitation (A hush fell over the
classroom when the teacher
returned to find
Deborah acting out a parody of his teaching style.)
parsimony (n.) frugality, stinginess (Many relatives
believed that my aunt’s wealth
resulted from her
parsimony.)
partisan (n.) a follower, adherent (The king did not
believe that his rival could round up
enough partisans to
overthrow the monarchy.)
patent (adj.) readily seen or
understood, clear (The reason for Jim’s abdominal pain
was made patent after
the doctor performed a sonogram.)
pathology (n.) a deviation from the
normal (Dr. Hastings had difficulty identifying the
precise nature of
Brian’s pathology.)
pathos (n.) an emotion of sympathy (Martha filled with
pathos upon discovering the
scrawny, shivering
kitten at her door.)
paucity (adj.) small in quantity (Gilbert lamented the
paucity of twentieth century
literature courses
available at the college.)
pejorative (adj.) derogatory,
uncomplimentary (The evening’s headline news covered
an international
scandal caused by a pejorative statement the famous senator had
made in reference to a
foreign leader.)
pellucid (adj.) easily intelligible,
clear (Wishing his book to be pellucid to the common
man, Albert Camus
avoided using complicated grammar when composing The
Stranger.)
penchant (n.) a tendency, partiality,
preference (Jill’s dinner parties quickly became
monotonous on account
of her penchant for Mexican dishes.)
penitent (adj.) remorseful, regretful (The jury’s verdict
may have been more lenient if
the criminal had
appeared penitent for his gruesome crimes.)
SAT Vocabulary
P
penultimate (adj.) next to last (Having smoked the
penultimate cigarette remaining in
the pack, Cybil
discarded the last cigarette and resolved to quit smoking.)
penurious (adj.) miserly, stingy (Stella complained
that her husband’s penurious ways
made it impossible to
live the lifestyle she felt she deserved.)
perfidious (adj.) disloyal, unfaithful (After the official
was caught selling government
secrets to enemy
agents, he was executed for his perfidious ways.)
perfunctory (adj.) showing little interest
or enthusiasm (The radio broadcaster
announced the news of
the massacre in a surprisingly perfunctory manner.)
permeate (v.) to spread throughout,
saturate (Mrs. Huxtable was annoyed that the wet
dog’s odor had
permeated the furniture’s upholstery.)
pernicious (adj.) extremely destructive
or harmful (The new government feared that
the Communist
sympathizers would have a pernicious influence on the nation’s
stability.)
perplex (v.) to confuse (Brad was perplexed by
his girlfriend’s suddenly distant
manner.)
perspicacity (adj.) shrewdness,
perceptiveness (The detective was too humble to
acknowledge that his
perspicacity was the reason for his professional success.)
pert (adj.) flippant, bold (My parents forgave
Sandra’s pert humor at the dinner table
because it had been so
long since they had last seen her.)
pertinacious (adj.) stubbornly persistent (Harry’s parents were
frustrated with his
pertinacious
insistence that a monster lived in his closet. Then they opened the closet
door and were eaten.)
perusal (n.) a careful examination,
review (The actor agreed to accept the role after a
two-month perusal of
the movie script.)
pervasive (adj.) having the tendency to
spread throughout (Stepping off the plane in
Havana, I recognized
the pervasive odor of sugar cane fields on fire.)
petulance (n.) rudeness, irritability (The Nanny resigned
after she could no longer
tolerate the child’s
petulance.)
philanthropic (adj.) charitable, giving (Many people felt that
the billionaire’s decision to
donate her fortune to
house the homeless was the ultimate philanthropic act.)
phlegmatic (adj.) uninterested,
unresponsive (Monique feared her dog was ill after the
animal’s phlegmatic
response to his favorite chew toy.)
P
SAT Vocabulary
pillage (v.) to seize or plunder,
especially in war (Invading enemy soldiers pillaged the
homes scattered along
the country’s border.)
pinnacle (n.) the highest point (Book reviewers
declared that the author’s
new novel was
extraordinary and probably the pinnacle of
Western literature.)
pithy (adj.) concisely meaningful (My father’s
long-winded explanation was a stark
contrast to his
usually pithy statements.)
pittance (n.) a very small amount,
especially relating to money (Josh complained that
he was paid a pittance
for the great amount of work he did at the firm.)
placate (v.) to ease the anger of,
soothe (The man purchased a lollipop to placate his
irritable son.)
placid (adj.) calm, peaceful (The placid lake
surface was as smooth as glass.)
platitude (n.) an uninspired remark,
cliché (After reading over her paper, Helene
concluded that what
she thought were profound insights were actually
just platitudes.)
plaudits (n.) enthusiastic approval,
applause (The controversial new film received
plaudits from even the
harshest critics.)
plausible (adj.) believable, reasonable (He studied all the
data and then came up with a
plausible theory that
took all factors into account.)
plenitude (n.) an abundance (My grandmother was
overwhelmed by the plenitude of
tomatoes her garden
yielded this season.)
plethora (n.) an abundance, excess (The wedding banquet
included a plethora of oysters
piled almost three
feet high.)
pliable (adj.) flexible (Aircraft wings are
designed to be somewhat pliable so they do not
break in heavy turbulence.)
poignant (adj.) deeply affecting,
moving (My teacher actually cried after reading to us
the poignant final
chapter of the novel.)
polemic (n.) an aggressive argument
against a specific opinion (My brother
launched into a
polemic against my arguments that capitalism was an unjust
economic system.)
portent (n.) an omen (When a black cat
crossed my sister’s path while she was walking to
school, she took it as
a portent that she would do badly on her spelling test.)
SAT Vocabulary
P
potable (adj.) suitable for drinking (During sea voyages it
is essential that ships carry a
supply of potable
water because salty ocean water makes anyone who drinks it sick.)
potentate (n.) one who has great
power, a ruler (All the villagers stood along the town’s
main road to observe
as the potentate’s procession headed towards
the capital.)
pragmatic (adj.) practical (The politician argued
that while increased security measures
might not fit with the
lofty ideals of the nation, they were a pragmatic necessity to
ensure everyone’s
safety.)
precipice (n.) the face of a cliff, a
steep or overhanging place (The mountain climber
hung from a precipice
before finding a handhold and pulling himself up.)
preclude (v.) to prevent (My grandfather’s
large and vicious guard dog precluded
anyone from entering
the yard.)
precocious (adj.) advanced, developing
ahead of time (Derek was so academically
precocious that by the
time he was 10 years old, he was already in the ninth grade.)
predilection (n.) a preference or
inclination for something (Francois has a predilection
for eating scrambled
eggs with ketchup, though I prefer to eat eggs without any
condiments.)
preponderance (adj.) superiority in
importance or quantity (Britain’s preponderance of
naval might secured
the nation’s role as a military power.)
prepossessing (adj.) occupying the mind to
the exclusion of other thoughts or feelings
(His prepossessing
appearance made it impossible for me to think of anything else.)
presage (n.) an omen (When my uncle’s old
war injury ached, he interpreted it as a
presage of bad weather
approaching.)
prescient (adj.) to have foreknowledge
of events (Questioning the fortune
cookie’s prediction,
Ray went in search of the old hermit who was rumored to be
prescient.)
prescribe (v.) to lay down a rule (The duke prescribed
that from this point further all of
the peasants living on
his lands would have to pay higher taxes.)
presumptuous (adj.) disrespectfully bold (The princess grew
angry after the
presumptuous noble
tried to kiss her, even though he was far below her in social
status.)
P
SAT Vocabulary
pretense (n.)an appearance or action
intended to deceive (Though he actually wanted
to use his parents’
car to go on a date, Nick borrowed his parents’ car under the
pretense of attending
a group study session.)
primeval (adj.) original, ancient (The first primates to
walk on two legs, called
Australopithecus, were
the primeval descendants of modern man.)
privation (n.) lacking basic
necessities (After decades of rule by an oppressive
government that saw
nothing wrong with stealing from its citizens, the recent
drought only increased
the people’s privation.)
probity (n.) virtue, integrity (Because he was never
viewed as a man of great probity, no
one was surprised by
Mr. Samson’s immoral behavior.)
proclivity (n.) a strong inclination
toward something (In a sick twist of fate, Harold’s
childhood proclivity
for torturing small animals grew into a desire to become a
surgeon.)
procure (v.) to obtain, acquire (The FBI was unable to
procure sufficient evidence to
charge the gangster
with racketeering.)
profane (adj.) lewd, indecent (Jacob’s profane act
of dumping frogs in the holy water in
the chapel at his
boarding school resulted in his dismissal.)
profligate (adj.) dissolute, extravagant (The profligate gambler
loved to drink, spend
money, steal, cheat,
and hang out with prostitutes.)
profuse (adj.) plentiful, abundant (The fans were profuse
in their cheers for the star
basketball player.)
promulgate (v.) to proclaim, make known
(The
film professor promulgated that both in
terms of sex appeal
and political intrigue, Sean Connery’s James Bond was superior
to Roger Moore’s.)
propagate (v.) to multiply, spread out
(Rumors
of Paul McCartney’s demise propagated
like wildfire
throughout the world.)
propensity (n.) an inclination,
preference (Dermit has a propensity for dangerous
activities such as
bungee jumping.)
propitious (adj.) favorable (The dark storm clouds
visible on the horizon suggested that
the weather would not
be propitious for sailing.)
propriety (n.) the quality or state of
being proper, decent (Erma’s old-fashioned parents
believed that her
mini-skirt lacked the propriety expected of a “nice” girl.)
SAT Vocabulary
Q
prosaic (adj.) plain, lacking
liveliness (Heather’s prosaic recital of the poem bored the
audience.)
proscribe (v.) to condemn, outlaw (The town council
voted to proscribe the sale of
alcohol on weekends.)
protean (adj.)able to change shape;
displaying great variety (Among Nigel’s protean
talents was his
ability to touch the tip of his nose with his tongue.)
prowess (n.) extraordinary ability (The musician had
never taken a guitar lesson in his
life, making his
prowess with the instrument even more incredible.)
prudence (n.) cautious, circumspect (After losing a
fortune in a stock market crash, my
father vowed to
practice greater prudence in future investments.)
prurient (adj.) eliciting or possessing
an extraordinary interest in sex (David’s mother
was shocked by the
discovery of prurient reading material hidden beneath her son’s
mattress.)
puerile (adj.) juvenile, immature (The judge demanded
order after the lawyer’s puerile
attempt to object by
stomping his feet on the courtroom floor.)
pugnacious (adj.) quarrelsome, combative (Aaron’s pugnacious
nature led him to start
several barroom brawls
each month.)
pulchritude (n.) physical beauty (Several of
Shakespeare’s sonnets explore the
pulchritude of a
lovely young man.)
punctilious (adj.) eager to follow rules
or conventions (Punctilious Bobby, hall monitor
extraordinaire,
insisted that his peers follow the rules.)
pungent (adj.) having a pointed, sharp
quality—often used to describe smells
(The pungent odor in
the classroom made Joseph lose his concentration during the
test.)
punitive (adj.) involving punishment (If caught smoking in
the boys’ room, the punitive
result is immediate
expulsion from school.)
putrid (adj.) rotten, foul (Those rotten eggs
smell putrid.)
Q
quagmire (n.) a difficult situation (We’d all like to
avoid the kind of military quagmire
characterized by the
Vietnam War.)
quaint (adj.) charmingly
old-fashioned (Hilda was delighted by the quaint bonnets she
saw in Amish country.)
R
SAT Vocabulary
quandary (n.) a perplexed,
unresolvable state (Carlos found himself in a quandary:
should he choose mint
chocolate chip or cookie dough?)
quell (v.) to control or diffuse a
potentially explosive situation (The skilled leader
deftly quelled the
rebellion.)
querulous (adj.) whiny, complaining (If deprived of his
pacifier, young Brendan
becomes querulous.)
quixotic (adj.) idealistic, impractical
(Edward
entertained a quixotic desire to fall in
love at first sight in
a laundromat.)
quotidian (adj.) daily (Ambika’s quotidian
routines include drinking two cups of coffee
in the morning.)
R
rail (v.) to scold, protest (The professor railed against
the injustice of the college’s tenure
policy.)
rancid (adj.) having a terrible taste
or smell (Rob was double-dog-dared to eat the
rancid egg salad
sandwich.)
rancor (n.) deep, bitter resentment
(When
Eileen challenged me to a fight, I could see
the rancor in her
eyes.)
rapport (n.) mutual understanding
and harmony (When Margaret met her paramour,
they felt an instant
rapport.)
rash (adj.) hasty, incautious (It’s best to think
things over calmly and thoroughly, rather
than make rash
decisions.)
raucous (adj.) loud, boisterous (Sarah’s neighbors
called the cops when her house party
got too raucous.)
raze (v.) to demolish, level (The old tenement
house was razed to make room for the
large chain store.)
rebuke (v.) to scold, criticize (When the cops showed
up at Sarah’s party, they rebuked
her for disturbing the
peace.)
recalcitrant (adj.) defiant, unapologetic (Even when scolded,
the recalcitrant young girl
simply stomped her
foot and refused to finish her lima beans.)
recapitulate (v.) to sum up, repeat (Before the final
exam, the teacher recapitulated the
semester’s material.)
SAT Vocabulary
R
reciprocate (v.) to give in return (When Steve gave
Samantha a sweater for Christmas,
she reciprocated by
giving him a kiss.)
reclusive (adj.) solitary, shunning
society (Reclusive authors such as J.D. Salinger do
not relish media
attention and sometimes even enjoy holing up in remote cabins in
the woods.)
reconcile 1. (v.) to return to harmony (The feuding neighbors
finally reconciled when
one brought the other
a delicious tuna noodle casserole.) 2. (v.) to make consistent
with existing ideas (Alou had to reconcile
his skepticism about the existence of aliens
with the fact that he
was looking at a flying saucer.)
rectitude (n.) uprightness, extreme
morality (The priest’s rectitude gave him the moral
authority to counsel
his parishioners.)
redoubtable 1. (adj.) formidable (The fortress looked
redoubtable set against a stormy
sky.) 2. (adj.) commanding respect (The audience greeted
the redoubtable speaker
with a standing
ovation.)
refract (v.) to distort, change (The light was
refracted as it passed through the prism.)
refurbish (v.) to restore, clean up (The dingy old chair,
after being refurbished,
commanded the handsome
price of $200.)
refute (v.) to prove wrong (Maria refuted the
president’s argument as she yelled and
gesticulated at the
TV.)
regurgitate 1. (v.) to vomit (Feeling sick, Chuck
regurgitated his dinner.) 2. (v.) to
throw back exactly (Margaret rushed
through the test, regurgitating all of the facts
she’d memorized an
hour earlier.)
relegate 1. (v.) to assign to the proper
place (At the astrology conference, Simon was
relegated to the
Scorpio room.) 2. (v.) to assign to an inferior place (After spilling a
drink on a customer’s
shirt, the waiter found himself relegated to the least lucrative
shift.)
relish (v.) to enjoy (Pete always relished
his bedtime snack.)
remedial (adj.) intended to repair gaps
in students’ basic knowledge (After his teacher
discovered he couldn’t
read, Alex was forced to enroll in remedial English.)
remiss (adj.) negligent, failing to
take care (The burglar gained entrance because the
security guard, remiss
in his duties, forgot to lock the door.)
R
SAT Vocabulary
renovate 1. (v.) restore, return to
original state (The renovated antique candelabra
looked as good as
new.) 2. (v.) to enlarge and make prettier, especially a house (After
getting renovated, the
house was twice as big and much more attractive.)
renown (n.) honor, acclaim (The young writer
earned international renown by winning
the Pulitzer Prize.)
renunciation (n.) to reject (Fiona’s renunciation
of red meat resulted in weight loss, but
confused those people
who thought she’d been a vegetarian for years.)
repentant (adj.) penitent, sorry (The repentant Dennis
apologized profusely for
breaking his mother’s
vase.)
replete (adj.) full, abundant (The unedited version
was replete with naughty words.)
repose (v.) to rest, lie down (The cat, after eating
an entire can of tuna fish, reposed in
the sun and took a
long nap.)
reprehensible (adj.) deserving rebuke (Jean’s cruel and
reprehensible attempt to dump
her boyfriend on his
birthday led to tears and recriminations.)
reprieve (n.) a temporary delay of
punishment (Because the governor woke up in a
particularly good
mood, he granted hundreds of reprieves to prisoners.)
reproach (v.) to scold, disapprove (Brian reproached the
customer for failing to rewind
the video he had
rented.)
reprobate (adj.) evil, unprincipled (The reprobate
criminal sat sneering in the cell.)
reprove (v.) to scold, rebuke (Lara reproved her son
for sticking each and every one of
his fingers into the
strawberry pie.)
repudiate (v.) to reject, refuse to
accept (Kwame made a strong case for an extension of
his curfew, but his
mother repudiated it with a few biting words.)
repulse 1. (v.) to disgust (Antisocial Annie
tried to repulse people by neglecting to brush
her teeth.) 2. (v.) to push back (With a deft movement
of her wrist and a punch to
the stomach, Lacy
repulsed Jack’s attempt to kiss her.)
reputable (adj.) of good reputation (After the most
reputable critic in the industry gave
the novel a glowing
review, sales took off.)
requisition (n.) a demand for goods,
usually made by an authority (During the war, the
government made a
requisition of supplies.)
rescind (v.) to take back, repeal (The company rescinded
its offer of employment after
discovering that
Jane’s resume was full of lies.)
SAT Vocabulary
R
reservoir 1. (n.) reserves, large supply (Igor the Indomitable
had quite a reservoir of
strengh and could lift
ten tons, even after running 700 miles, jumping over three
mountains, and
swimming across an ocean.) 2. (n.) a body of water used for storing
water (After graduation, the more rebellious
members of the senior class jumped
into the town
reservoir used for drinking water.)
resilient (adj.) able to recover from
misfortune; able to withstand adversity (The
resilient ballplayer
quickly recovered from his wrist injury.)
resolute (adj.) firm, determined (With a resolute glint
in her eye, Catherine announced
that she was set on
going to college in New York City even though she was a little
frightened of tall
buildings.)
resolve 1. (v.) to find a solution (Sarah and Emma
resolved their differences and shook
hands.) 2. (v.) to firmly decide (Lady Macbeth resolved
to whip her husband into
shape.)
respite (n.) a break, rest (Justin left the pub
to gain a brief respite from the smoke and
noise.)
resplendent (adj.) shiny, glowing (The partygoers were
resplendent in diamonds and
fancy dress.)
restitution (n.) restoration to the
rightful owner (Many people feel that descendants of
slaves should receive
restitution for the sufferings of their ancestors.)
restive (adj.) resistant, stubborn,
impatient (The restive audience pelted the band with
mud and yelled nasty
comments.)
retract (v.) withdraw (As the media worked
itself into a frenzy, the publicist hurriedly
retracted his client’s
sexist statement.)
revel (v.) to enjoy intensely (Theodore reveled in
his new status as Big Man
on Campus.)
revere (v.) to esteem, show
deference, venerate (The doctor saved countless lives with
his combination of
expertise and kindness and became universally revered.)
revoke (v.) to take back (After missing the
curfew set by the court for eight nights in a
row, Marcel’s freedom
of movement was revoked.)
rhapsodize (v.) to engage in excessive
enthusiasm (The critic rhapsodized about the
movie, calling it an
instant classic.)
ribald (adj.) coarsely, crudely
humorous (While some giggled at the ribald joke
involving a parson’s
daughter, most sighed and rolled their eyes.)
S
SAT Vocabulary
rife (adj.) abundant (Surprisingly, the
famous novelist’s writing was rife with
spelling errors.)
ruminate (v.) to contemplate, reflect
(Terry
liked to ruminate while sitting on the banks
of the river, staring
pensively into the water.)
ruse (n.) a trick (Oliver concocted an
elaborate ruse for sneaking out of the house to
meet his girlfriend
while simultaneously giving his mother the impression that he
was asleep in bed.)
S
saccharine (adj.) sickeningly sweet (Tom’s saccharine
manner, although intended to
make him popular,
actually repelled his classmates.)
sacrosanct (adj.) holy, something that
should not be criticized (In the United States,
the Constitution is
often thought of as a sacrosanct document.)
sagacity (n.) shrewdness, soundness
of perspective (With remarkable sagacity, the wise
old man predicted and
thwarted his children’s plan to ship him off to a nursing
home.)
salient (adj.) significant,
conspicuous (One of the salient differences between Alison
and Nancy is that
Alison is a foot taller.)
salutation (n.) a greeting (Andrew regularly
began letters with the bizarre salutation
“Ahoy ahoy.”)
salve (n.) a soothing balm (After Tony applied a
salve to his brilliant red sunburn, he
soon felt a little
better.)
sanctimonious (adj.) giving a hypocritical
appearance of piety (The sanctimonious
Bertrand delivered
stern lectures on the Ten Commandments to anyone who would
listen, but thought nothing
of stealing cars to make some cash on the side.)
sanguine (adj.) optimistic, cheery (Polly reacted to any
bad news with a sanguine smile
and the chirpy cry,
“When life hands you lemons, make lemonade!”)
satiate (v.) to satisfy excessively (Satiated after eating
far too much turkey and stuffing,
Liza lay on the couch
watching football and suffering from
stomach pains.)
scathing (adj.) sharp, critical,
hurtful (Two hours after breaking up with Russell,
Suzanne thought of the
perfect scathing retort to his accusations.)
SAT Vocabulary
S
scintillating (adj.) sparkling (The ice skater’s
scintillating rhinestone costume nearly
blinded the judges.)
scrupulous (adj.) painstaking, careful (With scrupulous care,
Sam cut a snowflake out of
white paper.)
scurrilous (adj.) vulgar, coarse (When Bruno heard the
scurrilous accusation being
made about him, he
could not believe it because he always tried to be nice to
everyone.)
sedentary (adj.) sitting, settled (The sedentary cat did
little but loll in the sun.)
semaphore (n.) a visual signal (Anne and Diana
communicated with a semaphore
involving candles and
window shades.)
seminal (adj.) original, important,
creating a field (Stephen Greenblatt’s essays on
Shakespeare proved to
be seminal, because they initiated the critical school of New
Historicism.)
sensual (adj.) involving sensory
gratification, usually related to sex (With a coy smile,
the guest on the
blind-date show announced that he considered himself a very
sensual person.)
sensuous (adj.) involving sensory
gratification (Paul found drinking Coke, with all the
little bubbles
bursting on his tongue, a very sensuous experience.)
serendipity (n.) luck, finding good
things without looking for them (In an amazing bit
of serendipity,
penniless Paula found a $20 bill in the subway station.)
serene (adj.) calm, untroubled (Louise stood in front
of the Mona Lisa, puzzling over
the famous woman’s
serene smile.)
servile (adj.) subservient (The servile porter
crept around the hotel lobby, bowing and
quaking before the
guests.)
sinuous (adj.) lithe, serpentine (With the sinuous
movements of her arms, the dancer
mimicked the motion of
a snake.)
sobriety (n.) sedate, calm (Jason believed that
maintaining his sobriety in times of crisis
was the key to success
in life.)
solicitous (adj.) concerned, attentive (Jim, laid up in bed
with a nasty virus,
enjoyed the solicitous
attentions of his mother, who brought him soup and extra
blankets.)
solipsistic (adj.) believing that oneself
is all that exists (Colette’s solipsistic attitude
completely ignored the
plight of the homeless people on the street.)
S
SAT Vocabulary
soluble (adj.) able to dissolve (The plot of the spy
film revolved around an untraceable
and water-soluble
poison.)
solvent 1. (n.) a substance that can
dissolve other substances (Water is sometimes called
the universal solvent
because almost all other substances can dissolve into it.) 2.
(adj.) able to pay debts (Upon receiving an
unexpected check from her aunt,
Annabelle found herself
suddenly solvent.)
somnolent (adj.) sleepy, drowsy (The somnolent student
kept falling asleep and waking
up with a jerk.)
sophomoric (adj.) immature, uninformed (The mature senior
rolled her eyes at the
sophomoric gross-out
humor of the underclassman.)
sovereign (adj.) having absolute
authority in a certain realm (The sovereign queen,
with steely resolve,
ordered that the traitorous nobleman be killed.)
speculative (adj.) not based in fact (Sadly, Tessa was
convicted on merely speculative
evidence.)
spurious (adj.) false but designed to
seem plausible (Using a spurious argument, John
convinced the others
that he had won the board game on a technicality.)
stagnate (v.) to become or remain
inactive, not develop, not flow (With no room for
advancement, the
waiter’s career stagnated.)
staid (adj.) sedate, serious,
self-restrained (The staid butler never changed his
expression no matter
what happened.)
stingy (adj.) not generous, not
inclined to spend or give (Scrooge’s stingy habits did not
fit with the generous,
giving spirit of Christmas.)
stoic (adj.) unaffected by passion
or feeling (Penelope’s faithfulness to Odysseus
required that she be
stoic and put off her many suitors.)
stolid (adj.) expressing little
sensibility, unemotional (Charles’s stolid reaction to his
wife’s funeral
differed from the passion he showed at the time of her death.)
strenuous (adj.) requiring tremendous
energy or stamina (Running a marathon is quite
a strenuous task. So
is watching an entire Star Trek marathon.)
strident (adj.) harsh, loud (A strident man,
Captain Von Trapp yelled at his daughter
and made her cry.)
stupefy (v.) to astonish, make
insensible (Veronica’s audacity and ungratefulness
stupefied her best
friend, Heather.)
SAT Vocabulary
T
subjugate (v.) to bring under control,
subdue (The invading force captured and
subjugated the natives
of that place.)
sublime (adj.) lofty, grand, exalted (The homeless man
sadly pondered his former
wealth and once
sublime existence.)
submissive (adj.) easily yielding to
authority (In some cultures, wives are supposed to
be submissive and
support their husbands in all matters.)
succinct (adj.) marked by compact
precision (The governor’s succinct speech energized
the crowd while the
mayor’s rambled on and on.)
superfluous (adj.) exceeding what is
necessary (Tracy had already won the campaign so
her constant flattery
of others was superfluous.)
surfeit (n.) an overabundant supply
or indulgence (After partaking of the surfeit of
tacos and tamales at
the All-You-Can-Eat Taco Tamale Lunch Special, Beth felt
rather sick.)
surmise (v.) to infer with little
evidence (After speaking to only one of the students, the
teacher was able to
surmise what had caused the fight.)
surreptitious (adj.) stealthy (The surreptitious CIA
agents were able to get in and out of
the house without
anyone noticing.)
surrogate (n.) one acting in place of
another (The surrogate carried the child to term for
its biological
parents.)
swarthy (adj.) of dark color or
complexion (When he got drunk, Robinson’s white skin
became rather
swarthy.)
sycophant (n.) one who flatters for
self-gain (Some see the people in the cabinet as the
president’s closest
advisors, but others see them as sycophants.)
T
tacit (adj.) expressed without words
(I interpreted
my parents’ refusal to talk as a tacit
acceptance of my
request.)
taciturn (adj.) not inclined to talk (Though Jane never
seems to stop talking, her brother
is quite taciturn.)
tangential (adj.) incidental, peripheral,
divergent (I tried to discuss my salary, but the
boss kept veering off
into tangential topics.)
tantamount (adj.) equivalent in value or
significance (When it comes to sports, fearing
your opponent is
tantamount to losing.)
T
SAT Vocabulary
tedious (adj.) dull, boring (As time passed and
the history professor continued to drone
on and on, the lecture
became increasingly tedious.)
temerity (n.) audacity, recklessness (Tom and Huck entered
the scary cave armed with
nothing but their own
temerity.)
temperance (n.) moderation in action or
thought (Maintaining temperance will ensure
that you are able to
think rationally and objectively.)
tenable (adj.) able to be defended or
maintained (The department heads tore
down the arguments in
other people’s theses, but Johari’s work proved to be quite
tenable.)
tenuous (adj.) having little substance
or strength (Your argument is very tenuous, since
it relies so much on
speculation and hearsay.)
terrestrial (adj.) relating to the land (Elephants are
terrestrial animals.)
timorous (adj.) timid, fearful (When dealing with the
unknown, timorous Tallulah
almost always broke
into tears.)
tirade (n.) a long speech marked by
harsh or biting language (Every time Jessica was
late, her boyfriend
went into a long tirade about punctuality.)
toady (n.) one who flatters in the
hope of gaining favors (The other kids referred to the
teacher’s pet as the
Tenth Grade Toady.)
tome (n.) a large book (In college, I used to
carry around an anatomy book that was the
heaviest tome in my
bag.)
torpid (adj.) lethargic, dormant,
lacking motion (The torpid whale floated, wallowing
in the water for
hours.)
torrid (adj.) giving off intense
heat, passionate (I didn’t want to witness the neighbor’s
torrid affair through
the window.)
tortuous (adj.) winding (The scary thing about
driving in mountains are the narrow,
tortuous roads.)
tractable (adj.) easily controlled (The horse was so
tractable, Myra didn’t even need a
bridle.)
tranquil (adj.) calm (There is a time of
night when nothing moves and everything
is tranquil.)
transgress (v.) to violate, go over a
limit (The criminal’s actions transgressed morality
and human decency.)
SAT Vocabulary
U
transient (adj.) passing through
briefly; passing into and out of existence (Because
virtually everyone in
Palm Beach is a tourist, the population of the town is quite
transient.)
transmute (v.) to change or alter in
form (Ancient alchemists believed that it was
possible to transmute
lead into gold.)
travesty (n.) a grossly inferior
imitation (According to the school newspaper’s merciless
theater critic,
Pacific Coast High’s rendition of the musical Oklahoma was a
travesty of the
original.)
tremulous (adj.) fearful (I always feel a
trifle tremulous when walking through
a graveyard.)
trenchant (adj.) effective, articulate,
clear-cut (The directions that accompanied my new
cell phone were
trenchant and easy to follow.)
trepidation (n.) fear, apprehension (Feeling great
trepidation, Anya refused to jump into
the pool because she
thought she saw a shark in it.)
trite (adj.) not original, overused (Keith thought of
himself as being very learned, but
everyone else thought
he was trite because his observations about the world were
always the same as
David Letterman’s.)
truculent (adj.) ready to fight, cruel (This club doesn’t
really attract the dangerous
types, so why was that
bouncer being so truculent?)
truncate (v.) to shorten by cutting
off (After winning the derby, the jockey truncated
the long speech he had
planned and thanked only his mom and his horse.)
turgid (adj.) swollen, excessively
embellished in style or language (The haughty writer
did not realize how we
all really felt about his turgid prose.)
turpitude (n.) depravity, moral
corruption (Sir Marcus’s chivalry often contrasted with
the turpitude he
exhibited with the ladies at the tavern.)
U
ubiquitous (adj.) existing everywhere,
widespread (It seems that everyone in the United
States has a
television. The technology is ubiquitous here.)
umbrage (n.) resentment, offense (He called me a
lily-livered coward, and I took
umbrage at the
insult.)
V
SAT Vocabulary
uncanny (adj.) of supernatural
character or origin (Luka had an uncanny ability to
know exactly what
other people were thinking. She also had an uncanny ability to
shoot fireballs from
her hands.)
unctuous (adj.) smooth or greasy in
texture, appearance, manner (The unctuous
receptionist seemed
untrustworthy, as if she was only being helpful because she
thought we might give
her a big tip.)
undulate (v.) to move in waves (As the storm began to
brew, the placid ocean began to
undulate to an
increasing degree.)
upbraid (v.) to criticize or scold
severely (The last thing Lindsay wanted was for Lisa to
upbraid her again
about missing the rent payment.)
usurp (v.) to seize by force, take
possession of without right (The rogue army general
tried to usurp control
of the government, but he failed because most of the army
backed the legally
elected president.)
utilitarian (adj.) relating to or aiming
at usefulness (The beautiful, fragile vase couldn’t
hold flowers or serve
any other utilitarian purpose.)
utopia (n.) an imaginary and remote
place of perfection (Everyone in the world wants
to live in a utopia,
but no one can agree how to go about building one.)
V
vacillate (v.) to fluctuate, hesitate (I prefer a definite
answer, but my boss kept
vacillating between
the distinct options available to us.)
vacuous (adj.) lack of content or
ideas, stupid (Beyonce realized that the lyrics she had
just penned were
completely vacuous and tried to add more substance.)
validate (v.) to confirm, support,
corroborate (Yoko’s chemistry lab partner was asleep
during the experiment
and could not validate the accuracy of her methods.)
vapid (adj.) lacking liveliness,
dull (The professor’s comments about the poem were
surprisingly vapid and
dull.)
variegated (adj.) diversified, distinctly
marked (Each wire in the engineering exam was
variegated by color so
that the students could figure out which one was which.)
vehemently (adv.) marked by intense force
or emotion (The candidate vehemently
opposed cutting back
on Social Security funding.)
SAT Vocabulary
V
veneer (n.) a superficial or
deceptively attractive appearance, façade (Thanks to her
Chanel makeup, Shannen
was able to maintain a veneer of perfection that hid the
flaws underneath.)
venerable (adj.) deserving of respect
because of age or achievement (The venerable
Supreme Court justice
had made several key rulings in landmark cases throughout
the years.)
venerate (v.) to regard with respect
or to honor (The tribute to John Lennon sought to
venerate his music,
his words, and his legend.)
veracity (n.) truthfulness, accuracy (With several agencies
regulating the reports, it was
difficult for Latifah
to argue against its veracity.)
verbose (adj.) wordy, impaired by
wordiness (It took the verbose teacher two hours to
explain the topic,
while it should have taken only fifteen minutes.)
verdant (adj.) green in tint or color (The verdant leaves on
the trees made the world
look emerald.)
vestige (n.) a mark or trace of
something lost or vanished (Do you know if the Mexican
tortilla is a vestige
of some form of Aztec corn-based flat bread?)
vex (v.) to confuse or annoy (My little brother
vexes me by poking me in the ribs for
hours on end.)
vicarious (adj.) experiencing through
another (All of my lame friends learned to be
social through
vicarious involvement in my amazing experiences.)
vicissitude (n.) event that occurs by
chance (The vicissitudes of daily life prevent me
from predicting what
might happen from one day to the next.)
vigilant (adj.) watchful, alert (The guards remained
vigilant throughout the night, but
the enemy never
launched the expected attack.)
vilify (v.) to lower in importance,
defame (After the Watergate scandal, almost any story
written about
President Nixon sought to vilify him and criticize his behavior.)
vindicate (v.) to avenge; to free from
allegation; to set free (The attorney had no chance
of vindicating the
defendant with all of the strong evidence presented by the state.)
vindictive (adj.) vengeful (The vindictive madman
seeks to exact vengeance for any
insult that he
perceives is directed at him, no matter how small.)
virtuoso (n.) one who excels in an
art; a highly skilled musical performer (Even though
Lydia has studied piano
for many years, she’s only average at it. She’s no virtuoso,
that’s for sure.)
W
SAT Vocabulary
viscous (adj.) not free flowing,
syrupy (The viscous syrup took three minutes to pour
out of the bottle.)
vitriolic (adj.) having a caustic
quality (When angry, the woman would spew vitriolic
insults.)
vituperate (v.) to berate (Jack ran away as soon
as his father found out, knowing he
would be vituperated
for his unseemly behavior.)
vivacious (adj.) lively, sprightly (The vivacious clown
makes all of the children laugh
and giggle with his
friendly antics.)
vocation (n.) the work in which
someone is employed, profession (After growing tired
of the superficial
world of high-fashion, Edwina decided to devote herself to a new
vocation: social
work.)
vociferous (adj.) loud, boisterous (I’m tired of his
vociferous whining so I’m breaking
up with him.)
W
wallow (v.) to roll oneself
indolently; to become or remain helpless (My roommate
can’t get over her
breakup with her boyfriend and now just wallows in self-pity.)
wane (v.) to decrease in size,
dwindle (Don’t be so afraid of his wrath because his
influence with the
president is already beginning to wane.)
wanton (adj.) undisciplined, lewd,
lustful (Vicky’s wanton demeanor often made the
frat guys next door
very excited.)
whimsical (adj.) fanciful, full of whims
(The
whimsical little girl liked to pretend that
she was an elvin
princess.)
wily (adj.) crafty, sly (Though they were not
the strongest of the Thundercats, wily Kit
and Kat were
definitely the most clever and full of tricks.)
winsome (adj.) charming, pleasing (After such a long,
frustrating day, I was grateful for
Chris’s winsome
attitude and childish naivete.)
wistful (adj.) full of yearning;
musingly sad (Since her pet rabbit died, Edda missed it
terribly and sat
around wistful all day long.)
wizened (adj.) dry, shrunken, wrinkled
(Agatha’s
grandmother, Stephanie, had the
most wizened
countenance, full of leathery wrinkles.)
wrath (n.) vengeful anger,
punishment (Did you really want to incur her wrath when
she is known for
inflicting the worst punishments legally possible?)
SAT Vocabulary
Y
Y
yoke (v.) to join, link (We yoked together the
logs by tying a string around them.)
Z
zealous (adj.) fervent, filled with
eagerness in pursuit of something (If he were any
more zealous about
getting his promotion, he’d practically live at the office.)
zenith (n.) the highest point,
culminating point (I was too nice to tell Nelly that she had
reached the absolute
zenith of her career with that one hit of hers.)
zephyr (n.) a gentle breeze (If not for the
zephyrs that were blowing and cooling us, our
room would’ve been unbearably hot.)
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