Word
|
Part
of Speech
|
Definitions,
Other Forms, and Examples
|
aberrant
|
adj.
|
deviating from
normal or correct.
|
abscond
|
v.
|
to leave secretly
and hide, often to avoid the law.
|
advocate
|
v., n.
|
to speak, plead,
or argue for a cause, or in another’s behalf. (n) -- one who advocates.
|
aggrandize
|
v.
|
to make greater,
to increase, thus, to exaggerate.
|
amalgamate
|
v.
|
to unite or mix.
(n) -- amalgamation.
|
ambiguous
|
adj.
|
vague; subject
to more than one interpretation
|
ambrosial
|
adj.
|
extremely pleasing
to the senses, divine (as related to the gods) or delicious (n: ambrosia)
|
anachronism
|
n.
|
a person or artifact
appearing after its own time or out of chronological order (adj: anachronistic)
|
anomalous
|
adj.
|
peculiar; unique,
contrary to the norm (n: anomaly)
|
antediluvian
|
adj.
|
ancient; outmoded;
(literally,before the flood)
|
antipathy
|
n.
|
hostility toward,
objection, or aversion to
|
arbitrate
|
v.
|
to settle a dispute
by impulse (n: arbitration)
|
assuage
|
v.
|
to make less
severe; to appease or satisfy
|
attenuate
|
v.
|
weaken (adj:
attenuated)
|
audacious
|
adj.
|
extremely bold;
fearless, especially said of human behavior (n: audacity)
|
aver
|
v.
|
to declare
|
banal
|
adj.
|
commonplace or
trite (n: banality)
|
barefaced
|
adj.
|
unconcealed,
shameless, or brazen
|
blandishment
|
n.
|
speech or action
intended to coax someone into doing something
|
bombast
|
n.
|
pompous speech
(adj: bombastic)
|
breach
|
n., v.
|
a lapse, gap
or break, as in a fortress wall. To break or break through.ex: Unfortunately,
the club members never forgot his breach of ettiquette.
|
burgeon
|
v., n.
|
to grow or flourish;
a bud or new growth (adj: burgeoning )
|
buttress
|
v., n.
|
to support. a
support
|
cadge
|
v.
|
to get something
by taking advantage of someone
|
caprice
|
n.
|
impulse (adj:
capricious)
|
castigate
|
v.
|
to chastise or
criticize severely
|
catalyst
|
n.
|
an agent of change
(adj: catalytic; v. catalyze)
|
caustic
|
adj.
|
capable of dissolving
by chemical action; highly critical: "His caustic remarks spoiled
the mood of the party."
|
chicanery
|
n.
|
deception by
trickery
|
complaisant
|
adj.
|
willingly compliant
or accepting of the status quo (n: complaisance)
|
conflagration
|
n.
|
a great fire
|
corporeal
|
adj.
|
of or having
to do with material, as opposed to spiritual; tangible. (In older writings,
coeporeal could be a synonym for corporal. This usage is no longer common)
|
corporal
|
adj.
|
of the body:
"corporal punishment." a non-commissioned officer ranked between
a sergeant and a private.
|
corroborate
|
v.
|
to strengthen
or support: "The witness corroborted his story." (n: corroboration)
|
craven
|
adj., n.
|
cowardly; a coward
|
culpable
|
adj.
|
deserving of
blame (n: culpability)
|
dearth
|
n.
|
lack, scarcity:
"The prosecutor complained about the dearth of concrete evidence
against the suspect."
|
deference
|
n.
|
submission or
courteous yielding: "He held his tongue in deference to his father."
(n: deferential. v. defer)
|
depict
|
v.
|
to show, create
a picture of.
|
deprecation
|
n.
|
belittlement.
(v. deprecate)
|
depredation
|
n.
|
the act of preying
upon or plundering: "The depredations of the invaders demoralized
the population."
|
descry
|
v.
|
to make clear,
to say
|
desiccate
|
v.
|
to dry out thoroughly
(adj: desiccated)
|
diatribe
|
n.
|
a bitter abusive
denunciation.
|
diffident
|
adj.
|
lacking self-confidence,
modest (n: diffidence)
|
disabuse
|
adj.
|
to free a person
from falsehood or error: "We had to disabuse her of the notion
that she was invited."
|
disparaging
|
adj.
|
belittling (n:
disparagement. v. disparage)
|
dispassionate
|
adj.
|
calm; objective;
unbiased
|
dissemble
|
v.
|
to conceal one's
real motive, to feign
|
dogged
|
adj.
|
stubborn or determined:
"Her dogged pursuit of the degree eventually paid off."
|
dogmatic
|
adj.
|
relying upon
doctrine or dogma, as opposed to evidence
|
eclectic
|
adj.
|
selecting or
employing individual elements from a variety of sources: "Many
modern decorators prefer an eclectic style." (n: eclecticism)
|
efficacy
|
n.
|
effectiveness;
capability to produce a desired effect
|
effluent
|
adj., n
|
the quality of
flowing out. something that flows out, such as a stream from a river
(n: effluence)
|
emollient
|
adj., n.
|
softening; something
that softens
|
emulate
|
v.
|
to strive to
equal or excel (n: emulation)
|
encomium
|
n.
|
a formal eulogy
or speech of praise
|
endemic
|
adj.
|
prevalent in
or native to a certain region, locality, or people: "The disease
was endemic to the region." Don't confuse this word with epidemic.
|
enervate
|
v.
|
to weaken or
destroy the strength or vitality of: "The heatenervated everyone."
(adj: enervating)
|
engender
|
v.
|
to give rise
to, to propagate, to cause: "His slip of the toungue engendered
much laughter."
|
enigma
|
n.
|
puzzle; mystery:
"Math is an enigma to me." (adj: enigmatic)
|
ephemeral
|
adj.
|
lasting for only
a brief time, fleeting (n: ephemera)
|
equivocal
|
adj.
|
ambiguous; unclear;
subject to more than one interpretation -- often intentionally so: "Republicans
complained that Bill Clinton's answers were equivocal." (v. equivocate)
|
erudite
|
adj.
|
scholarly; displaying
deep intensive learning. (n: erudition)
|
esoteric
|
adj.
|
intended for
or understood by only a few: "The esoteric discussion confused
some people." (n: esoterica)
|
eulogy
|
n.
|
a spoken or written
tribute to the deceased (v. eulogize)
|
exacerbate
|
v.
|
to increase the
bitterness or violence of; to aggravate: "The decision to fortify
the border exacerbated tensions."
|
exculpate
|
v.
|
to demonstrate
or prove to be blameless: "The
evidence tended to exculpate the defendant."(adj: exculpatory)
|
exorbitant
|
adj.
|
exceeding customary
or normal limits, esp. in quantity or price: "The cab fare was
exorbitant."
|
explicit
|
adj.
|
fully and clearly
expressed
|
extant
|
adj.
|
in existence,
still existing: The only extant representative of that species."
|
fathom
|
n., v.
|
a measure of
length (six feet) used in nautical settings. to penetrate to the depths
of something in order to understand it: "I couldn't fathom her
reasoning on that issue."
|
fawn
|
v.
|
to seek favor
or attention; to act subserviantly (n, adj: fawning)
|
feign
|
v.
|
to give false
appearance or impression: "He feigned illness to avoid going to
school." (adj: feigned)
|
fervid, fervent
|
adj.
|
highly emotional;
hot: "The partisans displayed a fervent patriotism." (n: fervor)
|
fledgling
|
n., adj.
|
a baby bird;
an inexperienced person; inexperienced.
|
florid
|
adj.
|
flushed with
a rosy color, as in complexion; very ornate and flowery: "florid
prose."
|
floundering
|
adj.
|
struggling: "We
tried to save the floundering business."
|
garrulous
|
adj.
|
verbose; talkative;
rambling: "We tried to avoid our garrulous neighbor."
|
gossamer
|
n., adj.
|
fine cobweb on
foliage; fine gauzy fabric; very fine: "She wore a gossamer robe."
|
guile
|
n.
|
skillful deceit:
"He was well known for his guile." (v. bequile; adj: beguiling.
Note, however, that these two words have an additional meaning: to charm
(v.) or charming (adj:), while the word guile does not generally have
any such positive connotations)
|
guileless
|
adj.
|
honest; straightforward
(n: guilelessness)
|
hapless
|
adj.
|
unfortunate
|
headlong
|
adj., adv.
|
headfirst; impulsive;
hasty. impulsively; hastily; without forethought: "They rushed
headlong into marriage."
|
homogenous
|
adj.
|
similar in nature
or kind; uniform: "a homogeneous society."
|
iconoclast
|
n.
|
one who attacks
traditional ideas or institutions or one who destroys sacred images
(adj: iconoclastic)
|
impecunious
|
adj.
|
penniless; poor
|
imperious
|
adj.
|
commanding
|
implication
|
n.
|
insinuation or
connotation (v. implicate)
|
imply
|
v.
|
to suggest indirectly;
to entail: "She implied
she didn't believe his story." (n: implication)
|
improvidence
|
n.
|
an absence of
foresight; a failure to provide for future needs or events: "Their
improvidence resulted in the loss of their home."
|
inchoate
|
adj.
|
in an initial
or early stage; incomplete; disorganized: "The act of writing forces
one to clarify incohate thoughts."
|
incorrigible
|
adj.
|
not capable of
being corrected: "The school board finally decided the James was
incorrigible and expelled him from school."
|
indelible
|
adj.
|
permanent; unerasable;
strong: "The Queen made an indelible impression on her subjects."
|
ineffable
|
adj.
|
undescribable;
inexpressible in words; unspeakable
|
infer
|
v.
|
to deduce: "New
genetic evidence led some zoologists to infer that the red wolf is actually
a hybrid of the coyote and the gray wolf."
|
ingenious
|
adj.
|
clever: "She
developed an ingenious method for testing her hypothesis."(n: ingenuity)
|
ingenuous
|
adj.
|
unsophisticated;
artless; straightforward; candid: "Wilson's ingenuous response
to the controversial calmed the suspicious listeners."
|
inhibit
|
v.
|
to hold back,
prohibit, forbid, or restrain (n: inhibition, adj: inhibited)
|
innocuous
|
adj.
|
harmless; having
no adverse affect; not likely to provoke strong emotion
|
insensible
|
adj.
|
numb; unconscious:
"Wayne was rendered insensible by a blow to the head." unfeeling;
insensitive: "They were insensibile to the suffering of others.:
|
insipid
|
adj.
|
lacking zest
or excitement; dull
|
insular
|
adj.
|
of or pertaining
to an island, thus, excessively exclusive: "Newcomers found it
difficult to make friends in the insular community."
|
intransigent
|
adj.
|
stubborn; immovable;
unwilling to change: "She was so intransigent we finally gave up
trying to convince her." (n: intransigence)
|
irascible
|
adj.
|
prone to outbursts
of temper, easily angered
|
laconic
|
adj.
|
using few words;
terse: "a laconic reply."
|
latent
|
adj.
|
present or potential
but not evident or active (n: latency)
|
laudable
|
adj.
|
praiseworthy;
commendable (v. laud)
|
leviathan
|
n.
|
giant whale,
therefore, something very large
|
loquacious
|
adj.
|
talkative
|
lucid
|
adj.
|
clear; translucent:
"He made a lucid argument to support his theory."
|
lugubrious
|
adj.
|
weighty, mournful,
or gloomy, especially to an excessive degree: "Jake's lugubrious
monologues depressed his friends."
|
magnanimity
|
n.
|
generosity and
nobility. (adj: magnanimous)
|
malevolent
|
adj.
|
malicious; evil;
having or showing ill will: "Some early American colonists saw
the wilderness as malevolent and sought to control it."
|
misanthrope
|
n.
|
one who hates
people: "He was a true misanthrope and hated even himself."
|
misnomer
|
n.
|
incorrect name
or word for something
|
misogynist
|
n.
|
one who hates
women
|
mitigate
|
v.
|
to make less
forceful; to become more moderate; to make less harsh or undesirable:
"He was trying to mitigate the damage he had done." (n: mitigation)
|
nefarious
|
adj.
|
wicked, evil:
"a nefarious plot."
|
noisome
|
adj.
|
harmful, offensive,
destructive: "The noisome odor of the dump carried for miles."
|
obdurate
|
adj.
|
hardened against
influence or feeling; intractable.
|
obviate
|
v.
|
to prevent by
anticipatory measures; to make unnecessary:
|
occlude
|
v.
|
to close or shut
off; to obstruct (n: occlusion)
|
opaque
|
adj.
|
not transparent
or transluscent; dense; difficult to comprehend, as inopaque reasoning
|
ossified
|
adj.
|
turned to bone;
hardened like bone; Inflexible: "The ossified culture failed to
adapt to new economic conditions and died out."
|
panegyric
|
n.
|
a writing or
speech in praise of a person or thing
|
peccadillo
|
n.
|
a small sin or
fault
|
pedantic
|
adj.
|
showing a narrow
concern for rules or formal book learning; making an excessive display
of one's own learning: "We quickly tired of his pedantic conversation."
(n: pedant, pedantry).
|
perfidious
|
adj.
|
deliberately
treacherous; dishonest (n: perfidy)
|
petulant
|
adj.
|
easily or frequently
annoyed, especially over trivial matters; childishly irritable
|
philanthropy
|
n.
|
tendency or action
for the benefit of others, as in donating money or property to a charitible
organization
|
phlegmatic
|
adj.
|
not easily excited;
cool; sluggish
|
placate
|
v.
|
to calm or reduce
anger by making concessions: "The professor tried to placate his
students by postponing the exam."
|
plastic
|
adj.
|
related to being
shaped or molded; capable of being molded. (n: plasticity n: plastic)
|
plethora
|
n.
|
excessively large
quantity; overabundance: "We received a p lethora of applications
for the position."
|
ponderous
|
adj.
|
heavy; massive;
awkward; dull: "A ponderous book is better than a sleeping pill."
|
pragmatic
|
adj.
|
concerned with
facts; practical, as opposed to highly principled or traditional: "His
pragmatic approach often offended idealists." (n: pragmatism)
|
precipice
|
n.
|
cliff with a
vertical or nearly vertical face; a dangerous place from which one is
likely to fall; metaphorically, a very risky circumstance
|
precipitate
|
v., n.
|
to fall; to fall
downward suddenly and dramatically; to bring about or hasten the occurrence
of something: "Old World diseases precipitated a massive decline
in the American Indian population."
|
precursor
|
n.
|
something (or
someone) that precedes another: "The assasination of the Archduke
was a precursor to the war."
|
prevaricate
|
v.
|
to stray away
from or evade the truth: "When we asked him what his intentions
were, he prevaricated."(n: prevarication; prevaricator)
|
prodigal
|
adj.
|
rashly wasteful:
"Americans' prodigal devotion to the automobile is unique."
|
propitiate
|
v.
|
to conciliate;
to appease: "They made sacrifices to propitiate angry gods."
|
Pulchritudinous
|
adj.
|
beautiful (n:
pulchritude)
|
pusillanimous
|
adj.
|
cowardly, timid,
or irreselute; petty: "The pusillanimous leader soon lost the respect
of his people."
|
quiescence
|
n.
|
inactivity; stillness;
dormancy (adj: quiescent)
|
rarefy
|
v.
|
to make or become
thin; to purify or refine (n: rarefaction, adj: rarefied)
|
reproof
|
n.
|
the act of censuring,
scolding, or rebuking. (v. reprove).
|
rescind
|
v.
|
to repeal or
annul
|
sagacious
|
adj.
|
having a sharp
or powerful intellect or discernment. (n: sagacity).
|
sanguine
|
adj.
|
cheerful; confident:
"Her sanguine attitude put everyone at ease."(Sangfroid (noun)
is a related French word meaning unflappibility. Literally, it means
cold blood)
|
sate
|
v.
|
to satisfy fully
or to excess
|
saturnine
|
adj.
|
having a gloomy
or morose temperament
|
savant
|
n.
|
a very knowledgable
person; a genious
|
sedulous
|
adj.
|
diligent; persevering;
persistent: "Her sedulous devotion to overcoming her background
impressed many." (n: sedulity; sedulousness; adv. sedulously)
|
specious
|
adj.
|
seemingly true
but really false; deceptively convincing or attractive: "Her argument,
though specious, was readily accepted by many."
|
superficial
|
adj.
|
only covering
the surface: "A superficial treatment of the topic was all they
wanted."
|
tacit
|
adj.
|
unspoken: "Katie
and carmella had a tacit agreement that they would not mention the dented
fender to their parents."
|
taciturn
|
adj.
|
habitually untalkative
or silent (n: taciturnity)
|
temperate
|
adj.
|
exercising moderation
and self-denial; calm or mild (n: temperance)
|
tirade (diatribe)
|
n.
|
an angry speech:
"His tirade had gone on long enough."
|
tortuous
|
adj.
|
twisted; excessively
complicated: "Despite public complaints, tax laws and forms have
become increasingly tortuous." Note: Don't confuse this with torturous.
|
tractable
|
adj.
|
ability to be
easily managed or controlled: "Her mother wished she were more
tractable." (n: tractibility)
|
turpitude
|
n.
|
depravity; baseness:
"Mr. Castor was fired for moral turpitude."
|
tyro
|
n.
|
beginner; person
lacking experience in a specific endeavor: "They easily took advantage
of the tyro."
|
vacuous
|
adj.
|
empty; without
contents; without ideas or intelligence:: "She flashed a vacuous
smile."
|
venerate
|
v.
|
great respect
or reverence: "The Chinese traditionally venerated their ancestors;
ancestor worship is merely a popular misnomer for this tradition."
(n: veneration, adj: venerable)
|
verbose
|
adj.
|
wordy: "The
instructor asked her verbose student make her paper more concise."
(n: verbosity)
|
vex
|
v.
|
to annoy; to
bother; to perplex; to puzzle; to debate at length: "Franklin vexed
his brother with his controversial writings."
|
viscous
|
adj.
|
slow moving;
highly resistant to flow: "Heintz commercials imply that their
catsup is more viscous than others'." (n: viscosity)
|
volatile
|
adj.
|
explosive; fickle
(n: volatility).
|
voracious
|
adj.
|
craving or devouring
large quantities of food, drink, or other things. She is a voracious
reader.
|
waver
|
v.
|
to hesitate or
to tremble
|
wretched
|
adj.
|
extremely pitiful
or unfortunate (n: wretch)
|
zeal
|
n.
|
enthusiastic
devotion to a cause, ideal, or goal (n: zealot; zealoutry. adj: zealous)
|
24 April 2013
GRE Word Lists
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