1 / 9

NCEE/SAT Words

NCEE/SAT Words. Week 10. CURR vs. FUG CURR- / CURS- / CORR - [COUR-] = to run (from Latin currere = to run) FUG- / FUGIT - = to flee (from Latin fugere = to flee). Examples: curr ent = belonging to the present time; a body of water or air moving in a definite direction

Download Presentation

NCEE/SAT Words

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. NCEE/SAT Words Week 10

  2. CURR vs. FUG CURR- / CURS- / CORR- [COUR-] = to run (from Latin currere = to run) FUG- / FUGIT- = to flee (from Latin fugere = to flee)

  3. Examples: current = belonging to the present time; a body of water or air moving in a definite direction currency = a system of money curriculum = the subjects comprising a course of study in a school (literally, “a little running” from Latin currere and the diminutive suffix –ulum) cursory = hasty and lacking in detail cursive = writing style in which the characters are joined together fugitive = one who runs away refuge = a person or the condition of being safe from danger (literally, “one who runs back” from Latin re+fugere) fugue = a state of altered consciousness in which a person may wander around as though conscious, but his/her behavior is not directed by the normal personality centrifugal = literally, “fleeing from the center” from centrum+fugere

  4. ERR vs. VAG ERR- = to stray, wander (from Latin errare = to wander) VAG- = to wander (from Latin vagari = to wander)

  5. Examples: err = to make a mistake errant = to go astray error = a mistake extravagant = lacking restraint in spending money or resources (literally, “wander beyond” from Latin extra+vagari) vague = not specific vagrant = a person without a settled home who wanders from place-to-place

  6. STA STA- / STAT- / STIT- / SIST- = put in place, cause to stand, stand (from Latin stare = to stand)

  7. Examples: stable = unchanging or unlikely to move stanza = the divisions in a poem stanchion = a vertical pole or bar used to support something statue = a three dimension, usually freestanding, image stature = an individual’s level of achievement statute = a law established by a legislative body resist = to fight or refuse to give in to something (literally, “to stand back” from Latin re+stare)

  8. SED SED- / SID- / SESS- = sit, settle (from Latin sedere)

  9. Examples: sedulous = working with great zeal and diligence sedation = a state of calm, restfulness, or drowsiness sedentary = tending to sit a lot of the time sediment = material in a liquid that settles at the bottom subside = to diminish in intensity (literally, “sitting under” from Latin sub+sedere) session = a period in which an official body meets sessile = a plant or animal permanently attached to a base

More Related