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Vocabulary Workshop. Unit 2. NUNC/NOUNC “to announce”. Enunciate : verb To pronounce or articulate The speaker at graduation enunciated each student’s name correctly. Renounce : verb To reject by declaration The defendant renounced the judge’s guilty verdict. Pronouncement : noun
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Vocabulary Workshop Unit 2
NUNC/NOUNC “to announce” • Enunciate: verb • To pronounce or articulate • The speaker at graduation enunciated each student’s name correctly. • Renounce: verb • To reject by declaration • The defendant renounced the judge’s guilty verdict.
Pronouncement: noun • An official announcement • Woodbridge Township made a pronouncement that bullying will not be tolerated.
VOC/VOK “to call” • Invoke: verb • To call on for support • Eli Manning invoked Coach Coughlin for help on offensive plays. • Provocative: adjective • Causing disturbance or excitement • The provocative commercial for the new Ford Mustang was pulled from television.
Revoke: verb • To make invalid; deactivate • If you get too many points while driving, your license will be revoked.
FA “to speak” • Ineffable: adjective • Indescribable • The landscape on top of the mountain was ineffable, too beautiful for words. • Infantile: adjective • Childish; immature • The rude behavior between the two boys was infantile and immature.
Affable: adjective • Easy to converse with; friendly • Sandy Cheeks is an affable character.
DIC/DICT “to say, to tell” • Edict: Noun • An official order • The mayor ordered an edict to help Hurricane Irene victims whose homes flooded. • Indict: Verb • To charge with a crime; accuse • The criminal was indicted on three counts of burglary.
Dictum: noun • A formal or authoritative statement • Congress declared a dictum on the status of the war in Afghanistan.
Conjunctions • A word that joins two parts of a sentence • and • but • or • nor • for • yet • so • although • because • since • unless
Correlative Conjunctions Correlative conjunctions are tag-team conjunctions. They come in pairs, and you have to use both of them in different places in a sentence to make them work. • both/andEx: I’ll have both the cheesecake and the frozen hot chocolate. • whether/orEx:I didn’t know whether you’d want the cheesecake or the frozen hot chocolate, so I got you both. • either/orEx: I want either the cheesecake or the frozen hot chocolate. • neither/norEx: Oh, you want neither the cheesecake nor the frozen hot chocolate? No problem. • not/but not only/but alsoEx: I see you’re in the mood not for dessert but appetizers. Ex: I’ll eat them both - not only the cheesecake but also the frozen hot chocolate.