Vocabulary G10

1. Askance [uh-skans] (adv.) – with suspicion, distrust or disapproval

The English teacher looked askance at the suggestion that students read compendiums of Dickens’ novels.

SYNONYMS: distrustfully, suspiciously, skeptically

2. Attenuate [uh-ten-yoo-yet] (v.) – to make thin or slender; to weaken or lessen in force, intensity, or value

After making sure the wound was clean, the doctor attenuated the victim’s pain.

SYNONYMS: thin out, dilute, water down

ANTONYMS: thicken, strengthen, bolster

3. Benign [bih-nahyn] (adj.) – gentle, kind; forgiving, understanding; having a favorable or beneficial effect; not malignant

Abraham Lincoln’s sensitive stepmother had a benign influence on the lonely boy who had lost his mother.

SYNONYMS: benevolent, salutary, salubrious, harmless

ANTONYMS: malevolent, deleterious

4. Cavil (v.) – to find fault in a petty way, carp; (n.) a trivial objection or criticism

I suggest you don’t cavil over small things, but focus on what is important.

Despite a few cavils I might make, I still find her to be an excellent poet.

SYNONYMS: (v.) nitpick, quibble

5. Charlatan [shahr-luh-tn] (n.) – one who feigns knowledge or ability; a pretender, impostor, or quack.

The reporter exposed the real estate agent as a charlatan who routinely deceived her customers.

SYNONYMS: fraud, mountebank

6. Decimate [des-uh-meyt] (v.) – to kill or destroy a large part of

Napoleon was able to decimate his enemy’s armies and lead his men to victory.

SYNONYMS: ravage, devastate

7. Foible [foi-buhl] (n.) – a weak point, failing, minor flaw

Backbiting is one human foible not likely to be eradicated.

SYNONYMS: shortcoming, defect, quirk

ANTONYMS: forte, virtue

8. Forgo (v.) – to do without, abstain from, give up

One of the best ways to lose weight is to forgo dessert.

SYNONYMS: refrain from, renounce

ANTONYMS: indulge in, partake of

9. Fraught [frawt] (adj.) – full of or loaded with; accompanied by

Even with advanced equipment, expeditions to Mt.Everest are fraught with danger.

SYNONYM: charged with

ANTONYM: devoid of, lacking, deficient in

10. Inure [in-yoor] (v.) – to toughen, harden; to render used to something by long exposure

The Inuit have become inured to the hardships of the long Arctic winters.

SYNONYMS: accustom, acclimate

11. Luminous [loo-muh-nuhs] (adj.) – emitting or reflecting light, glowing; illuminating

Walking under that luminous night sky induced in me weighty thoughts not yet pondered.

SYNONYMS: radiant, bright, refulgent, lustrous

ANTONYMS: dark, opaque, dim, murky

12. Obsequious [uhb-see-kwee-uhs] (adj.) – marked by slavish attentiveness; excessively submissive, often for purely self-interested reasons

Jane Austen ridiculed characters who were obsequious to the aristocracy but condescending to their social inferiors.

SYNONYMS: fawning, servile, sycophantic, mealymouthed

ANTONYMS: assertive, bumptious, overbearing, candid, frank, independent

13. Obtuse [uhb-toos] (adj.) – blunt, not coming to a point; slow or dull in understanding; measuring between 90° and 180°; not causing a sharp impression

The lieutenant was too obtuse to see the danger and led his company into harm’s way.

SYNONYMS: stupid, thick, dumb, mild, dull-witted

ANTONYMS: acute, perceptive, quick-witted

14. Oscillate [os-uh-leyt] (v.) – to swing back and forth with a steady rhythm; to fluctuate or waver

The terrified narrator in Poe’s story The Pit and the Pendulum watches the dreaded instrument oscillate as it slowly moves toward him.

SYNONYMS: vibrate, vacillate

15. Penitent [pen-i-tuhnt] (adj.) – regretful for one’s sins or mistakes; (n.) one who is sorry for wrongdoing

The thief was sincerely penitent.

In the Middle Ages, penitents often confessed their sins publicly and were punished publicly.

SYNONYMS: (adj.) remorseful, regretful, rueful, sorry

ANTONYMS: (adj.) unrepentant, remorseless

16. Peremptory [puh-remp-tuh-ree] (adj.) – having the nature of a command that leaves no opportunity for debate, denial, or refusal; offensively self-assured, dictatorial; determined, resolute

The board members resented the director’s peremptory tone of voice.

SYNONYMS: high-handed, unconditional

ANTONYMS: irresolute, tentative, mild, unassuming

17. Rebuff (v.) – to snub; to repel, drive away; (n.) a curt rejection, a check

The old man rebuffed his neighbors by refusing all offers of friendship.

Her rebuff of my invitation was quite rude.

SYNONYMS: (v.) spurn, repulse, reject; (n.) setback

ANTONYMS: (v.) accept, welcome

18. Reconnoiter [ree-kuh-noi-ter] (v.) – to engage in reconnaissance; to make a preliminary inspection

Infantry officers often ask for volunteers to reconnoiter the terrain ahead before moving ahead.

SYNONYM: scout

19. Shambles (n.) – a slaughterhouse; a place of mass bloodshed; a state of complete disorder/confusion, mess

The burglars made a complete shambles of the apartment in their search for money and jewelry.

20. Sporadic [spuh-rad-ik] (adj.) – occurring at irregular intervals, having no set plan or order

The soldiers heard sporadic gunfire from the other side of the river.

SYNONYMS: intermittent, spasmodic

ANTONYMS: constant, steady, continuous, uninterrupted

Vocabulary G10-1 – Complete the Sentence

  1. Life on the family farm has ______me to hard physical labor and long hours of unremitting toil.
  2. The general sent scouts on ahead of the army to ______the area for a suitable place to pitch camp.
  3. Although there had been some ______fighting earlier, the real battles of the Civil War did not begin until Bull Run in July 1861.
  4. Unless the Special Aide to the Assistant Section Manager involves a salary increase, I would just as soon ______it.
  5. The riot converted the quiet streets of that suburban community into a ghastly ______.
  6. Although the moon appears to be a(n) ______body, the fact is that it only reflects light received from the sun.
  7. As all kinds of wild rumors ran rampant through the besieged city, the mood of the populace ______between hope and despair.
  8. Good supervisors know that they can get more cooperation from their staff by making polite requests than by issuing ______orders.
  9. The man’s personality was a strange mixture of strengths and weaknesses, fortes and ______.
  10. I was totally taken aback when they ______my kind offers of assistance so rudely and nastily.

Vocabulary G10-2 – Complete the Sentence

  1. No doubt he’s very sorry he got caught, but that does not mean that he’s at all ______about what he did.
  2. Any “investment counselor” who promises to double your money overnight must be regarded as a(n) ______or a crook.
  3. Though my childhood recollections have been ______by the passage of time, they have not been totally effaced from my memory.
  4. In a typical James Bond movie, Agent 007 has a series of adventures that are ______with tongue-in-cheek peril.
  5. His statements have been so uniformly ______that I get the impression that he is wearing a permanent pair of mental blinders.
  6. Though critics ______at minor faults in the new Broadway show, the general public loved it.
  7. I was relieved to learn that the tumor on my arm was ______and my worst fears groundless.
  8. We look ______at any program that makes it harder for city dwellers to get out and enjoy the beauties of nature.
  9. During the 14th Century, the Black Death suddenly swept across Europe, ______the population and paralyzing everyday life.
  10. During imperial times, the Roman Senate was little more than a collection of ______

yes-men, intent upon preserving their own lives.

Vocabulary G10-3 - Synonyms

1. Quibble over who is at fault______

2. Exposed him as a complete fraud______

3. Vacillated between two choices______

4. Looked skeptically at their proposals______

5. Accustomed to extremes of temperature______

6. A storm that ravaged the countryside______

7. An attempt to scout the interior______

8. Unwilling to renounce her inheritance______

9. Shocked by the mess they had created______

10. A salutary effect on consumer confidence______

Vocabulary 10-4 –

Synonyms

11. Full of suspense and tension______

12. Willing to overlook its defects______

13. Will spurn his offer of marriage______

14. His high-handed challenge to our authority______

15. In the radiant circle of the spotlight______

Antonyms

16. Measures that may strengthen the economy______

17. An entirely unrepentant gambler and heel______

18. Her acute handling of the issue______

19. Assumed an overbearing manner______

20. His constant attention to detail______