1 / 21

Vocabulary Unit 6

Vocabulary Unit 6. First 10 words. anomalous. Feeling protective of my friend but knowing of his difficulties placed me in an anomalous position. . anomalous. (adj.) abnormal, irregular, departing from the usual S: exceptional, atypical, unusual

suki
Download Presentation

Vocabulary Unit 6

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. Vocabulary Unit 6 First 10 words

  2. anomalous • Feeling protective of my friend but knowing of his difficulties placed me in an anomalous position.

  3. anomalous • (adj.) abnormal, irregular, departing from the usual • S: exceptional, atypical, unusual • A: normal, regular, customary, typical, ordinary

  4. aspersion • Think twice before casting aspersions on his honesty, for he might be telling the truth.

  5. aspersion • (n.) a damaging or derogatory statement; the act of slandering or defaming • S: innuendo, misrepresentation, denigration • A: endorsement, testimonial, praise

  6. bizarre • Years from now I will look at this picture and wonder what sort of bizarre costume I was wearing.

  7. bizarre • (adj.) extremely strange, unusual • S: grotesque, fantastic, outlandish • A: normal, typical, ordinary, expected

  8. brusque • His request for a large loan for an indefinite length of time was met with a brusque refusal.

  9. brusque • (adj.) abrupt, blunt, with no formalities • S: curt, tactless, ungracious, gruff, rough • A: gracious, tactful, courteous, diplomatic

  10. cajole • With a smile, a joke, and a second helping of pie, she would cajole him into doing what she wanted.

  11. cajole • (v.) to coax, persuade through flattery or artifice; to deceive with soothing thoughts or false promises • S: wheedle, sweet-talk, inveigle • A: coerce, force, strong-arm

  12. castigate • After he castigated the unruly children, they settled down to study quietly.

  13. castigate • (v.) to punish severely; to criticize severely • S: chastise, rebuke, censure • A: reward, honor, praise

  14. contrive • She can contrive wonderful excuses, but when she tries to offer them, her uneasiness gives her away.

  15. contrive • (v.) to plan with ingenuity, invent; to bring about as the result of a scheme or plan. • S: devise, concoct, fabricate

  16. demagogue • Often a show of angry concern conceals the self-serving tactics of a demagogue.

  17. demagogue • (n.) a leader who exploits popular prejudices and false claims and promises in order to gain power • S: rabble-rouser

  18. disabuse • He thinks that all women adore him, but my sister will probably disabuse him of that idea.

  19. disabuse • (v.) to free from deception or error, set right in ideas or thinking • S: undeceive, enlighten, set straight • A: deceive, delude, pull wool over one’s eyes

  20. ennui • Some people seem to confuse sophistication with ennui.

  21. ennui • (n.) weariness and dissatisfaction from lack of occupation or interest, boredom • S: listlessness, languor • A: enthusiasm, liveliness, excitement, intensity

More Related