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Vocabulary Week 1 2 Gold. Word 1: Serendipity Def: Not looking for but finding something useful or wonderful by chance Sent: In reality, serendipity accounts for one percent of the blessings we receive in life, work and love. The other 99 percent is due to our efforts. Peter McWilliams.
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Word 1: Serendipity Def: Not looking for but finding something useful or wonderful by chance Sent: In reality, serendipity accounts for one percent of the blessings we receive in life, work and love. The other 99 percent is due to our efforts. Peter McWilliams
Word 2: NefariousDef: Evilanddishonest Sent: Only a government that is rich and safe can afford to be a democracy, for democracy is the most expensive and nefariouskind of government ever heard of on earth. Mark Twain
Word 3: PugnaciousDef: Person that wants to argue and fightSent: It is unfair to blame man too fiercely for being pugnacious; he learned the habit from Nature. Christopher Morley
Word 4: LanguorDef: Mental and physical lazinessSent: Moderation is the languor and sloth of the soul, Ambition its activity and heat. François de la Rochefoucauld
Word 5: Palatable Def: Good enough to eat or drink Sent: Good lies need a leavening of truth to make them palatable. William Mcilvanney
Word 6: Pariah Def: Person that is rejected, an outcast Sent: [They are] social pariahs, irrationally ostracized by their communities because of medically baseless fears of contagion. Stewart Oneglia
Word 7: NegligibleDef: So small or slight to be importantSent: The market has already come to the conclusion that the medium-term impact of Katrina will be negligibleif not net positive.
Word 8: Crone Def: A withered, witchlike old woman Sent: These days, the witches are hardly oldcrones with twisted noses. They've got fishnets and you'd just want to jump in their cauldrons. John Majdoch
Word 9: Dabble Def: To take part in or do somethingbutnotveryseriouslySent: Poetry is an art, and chief of the fine art; the easiest to dabble in, the hardest in which to reach true excellence. Edmund Clarence Stedman
Word 10: CulpableDef: Deserving blame, censure; blameworthySent: If he had broken the law, or was more culpable, perhaps. It was an accident. It wasn't an intentional violation. John Nash
Word 11: Deft Def: Quick and skillful in movementSent: He can hit any shot and he's got a deft touch around the greens. Chris Haack
Word 12: DemiseDef: The ending or death of somethingSent: Reports of my demise are greatly exaggerated. Mark Twain
Word 13: Fraternize Def: To associate or be friendly with the enemy Sent: There's absolutely no way you can go barreling into second and dump a guy on a double play… when you've been fraternizing with him before a game. Frank Robinson
Word 14: Consensus Def: Agreement reached by a group Sent: A consensusmeans that everyone agrees to say collectively what no one believes individually. Abba Edan
Word 15: DestituteDef: Having no money or possessionsSent:The worst solitude is to be destitute of sincere friendship. Francis Bacon
Word 16: Debunk Def: To prove that an idea or belief is false Sent: We've gone in and talked face to face with kids who have dropped out of school. What they're telling us debunks popular assumptions.J Bridgeland
Word 17: Antiquated Def: No longer useful for modern needs Sent:You see, antiquatedideas of kindness and generosity are simply bugs that must be programmed out of our world. And these cold, unfeeling machines will show us the way. Bill Gates
Word 18:LenientDef: To punish less severely Sent: But the airline might file sooner, maybe in the next couple of months, to take advantage of the more lenient bankruptcy laws. Jim Corridore
Word 19: PanoramaDef: View in which you see a wide areaSent: We can't just have mainstream behavior on television in a free society, we have to make sure we see the whole panoramaof human behavior.Jerry Springer
Word 20: DissipateDef: To scatter /weaken and finally disappearSent: To penetrate and dissipate these clouds of darkness, the general mind must be strengthened by education. Thomas Jefferson