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Vocabulary

Vocabulary. Week 7. Vacillate (verb) Vacillation (noun). To swing indecisively from one course of action or opinion to another. I tend to vacillate between hot chocolate or a chai latte when I’m at Starbucks.

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Vocabulary

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  1. Vocabulary Week 7

  2. Vacillate (verb)Vacillation (noun) • To swing indecisively from one course of action or opinion to another. • I tend to vacillate between hot chocolate or a chai latte when I’m at Starbucks. • The coach’s vacillation about what play he wanted to do made all of us confused.

  3. Lassitude (noun) • Listlessness, fatigue, weariness • The student’s lassitude caused him fail his test. • I felt great lassitude after I ran a marathon.

  4. Garrulous (adjective) • Very talkative, loquacious • The garrulous girls made the manager kick them out of the movie theater. • Because we were so garrulous in class, we didn’t learn anything that day.

  5. Myriad (adjective, noun) • An extremely large number • There were networks connecting a myriad of computers. • There are myriad fish in the sea.

  6. Noxious (adjective) • Physically or mentally destructive; harmful • The noxious chemicals killed all of the fish. • The smell from the factory was noxious.

  7. Accost (verb) • To approach or speak to boldly with a demand or request • Please do not accost me in the hallway to ask about your grade. • A fan accosted Ryan Lochte, and he tore his MCL.

  8. Beatific (adjective) • Displaying or imparting joy • Dogs always have a beatific look on their faces. • The warm sun made him beatific.

  9. Nuance (noun) • Subtle variation in color, meaning, or some other quality • You must learn vocabulary so that you can understand the nuances of words. • Detectives understand the nuances of body language.

  10. Quagmire (noun) • A difficult or precarious situation that is tough to get out of; a swamp • When the boy was caught by the police for stealing, he was in a quagmire. • I found myself in a quagmire when I forgot all of my homework at home.

  11. Somber (adjective) • Dark, dull, grave, gloomy, serious • The funeral was very somber. • The gray day made me feel somber.

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