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Vocabulary Unit 3. Iskills Level 3. Adversary (n): an enemy or opponent. The adversary of my adversary is my friend. Adversarial ( adj ). Alienate (v): to turn away; to make indifferent or hostile; to transfer or convey (like the deed to a house).
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Vocabulary Unit 3 Iskills Level 3
Adversary (n): an enemy or opponent • The adversary of my adversary is my friend. • Adversarial (adj)
Alienate (v): to turn away; to make indifferent or hostile; to transfer or convey (like the deed to a house) • High school students are good at alienating anyone who is too different from them. • Alien (n): a stranger • Alienation (n): the condition of being alienated • Alienated (adj)
Artifice (n): a skillful or ingenious device; a clever trick or skill; trickery • The duplicitous secretary used artifice to make us believe she was a sweet old grandmother, all while stealing money every chance she had. • Artificial (adj): fake, not real, not natural but made by people
Coerce (v): to compel or force; to force someone to do something by threatening them. • He had to coerce his daughter to go to school on Monday morning. • Coercion (n) • Coercive (adj)
Craven (adj): cowardly, not brave (n): a coward • The craven general was dismissed from the Army. • Don’t be a craven, dude! It’s only a little test.
Culinary (adj): related to food, cooking, or the kitchen. • ESLI’s Fall Festival will be a feast of culinary diversity!
Demise (n): a death, especially of an important person • The demise of a president always causes a National Day of Mourning. • The victims met their demise in a great holocaust. • Her demise was painful and unhappy. • You CANNOT use demise as a verb!
Exhilarate (v): to enliven, give spirit or life to; to excite; to make feel happy or excited • The news of her acceptance to Harvard exhilarated Sarah so much she jumped for joy. • Stepping outside on a cold morning exhilarates me! • Exhilaration (n) • Exhilarating (adj)
Fallow (adj): plowed but not seeded; inactive; reddish-yellow (v): to plow something but not seed; to let the land rest. • A good farmer knows when to fallow his fields and when to plant them. • The fallow deer is a very sweet animal to look at.
Harass (v): to annoy or threaten someone again and again • The students harassed their teacher repeatedly because they wanted their grades. • Harassment (n) • Harassed (adj)
Inclement (adj): stormy, harsh; severe in attitude or action • The inclement weather kept us all cooped up inside the whole week. • No one who has committed a crime wants an inclement judge. • Inclemency (n)
Liquidate (v): to pay a debt or settle an account; to eliminate; to turn inventory into cash • After making a good profit, the business was able to liquidate its loan. • The nervous investor decided to liquidate his stock and put his money in the bank instead. • Liquidation (n)
Muse (v): to think about in a dreamy way; to daydream, ponder • When I was young, I liked to spend long hours musing about what I would be when I grew up. • She mused for a moment, then answered his question with a certain “Yes.” • Musings (n): the results of musing
Negligible (adj): so unimportant that it can be ignored. • The Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe had so many children already that finding another added a negligible amount of work to her day.
Perpetuate (v): to make something continue; to make permanent or long-lasting • Repeating nasty gossip only perpetuates it. • We hope that having a Fall Festival will be perpetuated. • Perpetual (adj): something that is repeated or has no end.
Precedent (n): an action or official decision that is used as an example for a similar action or decision at a later time • You do not want to set the precedent of letting students use their cell phones on one test, because they will want to use them on every test.
Punitive (adj): intended as punishment • The teacher was so angry with her students for not doing their homework that the quiz she gave them was definitely punitive! • The judge’s precedent helped later judges decide punitive damages for people who stole music.
Redress (v): to make something right(n): relief from wrong or injury; the act of making something right. • The child tried to redress breaking the lamp by fixing lunch for his mother. • Mother accepted her little boy’s redress and kissed him. • The judge ordered the man to pay a punitive fine of $2500 to redress his crime.
Sojourn (n): a temporary stay or visit(v): to stay for a period of time but not forever • If there is anything I can do to make your sojourn here easier, please tell me. • International students sojourn in the US while they finish college.
Urbane (adj): behaving in a relaxed and confident way in social situations • His urbane charm puts everyone at ease. • I wish I were more urbane at parties, but I never know what to say!