Advanced Vocabulary Skills Full PDF
Advanced Vocabulary Skills Full PDF
Advanced Vocabulary Skills Full PDF
VOCABULARY
SKILLS
Donald J. Goodman
MUSKEGON COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Sherrie L. Nist
UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA
Carole Mohr
TOWNSEND PRESS
Martton, NJ 08053
Contents
Note: For ease of reference, the title of the passage that concludes each chapter appears in
parentheses.
Preface v
Introduction
UNIT ONE
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
1
2
3
4
5
6
(Apartment Problems)
(Hardly a Loser)
(Grandfaihcr at the Art Museum)
(My Brother's Mental Illness)
(A Get-Rich-Quick Scam)
(Holiday Blues)
5
9
13
17
21
25
29
UNIT TWO
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
(A Phony Friend)
(Coco the Gorilla)
(Our Annual Garage Sale)
(A Debate on School Uniforms)
(My Large Family)
(Alex's Search)
37
41
45
49
53
57
61
UNIT THREE
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
13
14
15
16
17
18
69
73
77
81
85
89
93
IV
Contents
UNIT FOUR
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
(Halloween Troubles)
(Thomas Dooley)
(Twelve Grown Men in a Bug)
(Adjusting to a Group Home)
(A Different Kind of Doctor)
(Grandpa and Music)
101
105
109
113
117
121
125
UNIT FIVE
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
133
137
141
145
149
153
157
Appendixes
A Limited Answer Key
163
B Dictionary Use
167
169
CHAPTER
U lit One
1
Previewing the Words
Find out how many of the ten words in this chapter you already know. Try to complete each sentence with
the most suitable word from the list below. Use each word once.
Leave a sentence blank rather than guessing at an answer. Your purpose here is just to get a sense of the
ten words and what you may know about them.
detriment
dexterous
discretion
facetious
gregarious
optimum
ostentatious
scrupulous
sensory
vicarious
when she goes for a job
with his
7. The
rock star displayed his wealth by driving around in a gold Rolls Roycc
and wearing huge diamond rings.
8. Our
_____
sensitivity decreases with age. By age 60, for example, most people have
lost 40 percent of their ability to smell and 50 percent of their taste buds.
9. Sunsets can be beautiful anywhere, but I feel the
sunset is out on the ocean, where there's nothing between you and the view.
Now check your answers by turning to page 163. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and to master the words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
Chapter 1
a. Smoking is such a detriment to health that each cigarette lakes an estimated minute an.
a half off the smoker's life.
2 dexterous
(dcks'-tor-os)
-adjective
a. I marveled at the dexterous juggler, who kept five balls in motion at once. I'm s
clumsy I probably couldn't juggle even one ball.
3 discretion
(di-skresh'-on)
-noun
a. Matt certainly didn't use discretion when he passed the police car at a speed of 80 miles
an hour.
4 facetious
(fo-se'-shos)
-adjective
a. My boss said he was going to put a sign saying "Ladies' Room" on his office door, u
attract more women, but he was only being facetious.
5 gregarious
(grs-ger'^-ss)
-adjective
a. Melissa is so gregarious that she prefers the company of others even when she studies.
6 optimum
(op'-ts-msm)
-adjective
a. The road was so icy that the optimum driving speed was about 10 miles per hour.
7 ostentatious
(os'-tsn-ta'-shss)
a. My aunt likes to show off with such ostentatious possessions as a gold cigarette lighter
rimmed wiih diamonds.
b. Amy is so ostentatious about praising and pleasing her boss that he must know she docs
it just to get his attention.
-adjective
b. My sister should have more discretion than to ask a woman who's put on some weigh)
''Are you pregnant?"
b. I guess Harry Truman was being facetious when he said, "If you can't convince them
confuse them."
b. Gregarious people are naturally drawn to work involving a lot of social contact, such a^
teaching and sales.
b. For optimum safety, put your money in a savings account or a certificate of deposit. If
you're willing to take a risk, invest in mutual funds.
8 scrupulous
(skr'-pyo-bs)
-adjective
a. The judge was scrupulous in never accepting bribes or allowing personal threats tu
influence his court decisions.
b. The senator appeared to be a scrupulous campaigner, but in fact he was taking illegi
campaign contributions from mobsters.
9 sensory
a. Our sensory experiences are interrelated. For instance, what we taste is greatl
influenced by what we smell.
(sen'-sa-re)
-adjective
10 vicarious
(vT-ker'-e-ss)
-adjective
b. A person in a flotation tank has limited sensory input. The tank is closed and dark, an'
the person floats on water that's body temperature. Thus he or she can barely see, hea
or feel a thing.
a. Gone with the Wind has given millions of people vicarious experience with life in th
South at the time of the Civil War.
b. People who can't afford to travel much can go on vicarious vacations by reading trayf"
magazines.
Chapter 1
2. dexterous
3. discretion
4. facetious
_^
5. gregarious
6. optimum
_'
7. ostentatious
8. scrupulous
9. sensory
_
10. vicarious
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
'Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
^Sentence Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
detriment
dexterous
discretion
facetious
gregarious
optimum
ostentatious
scrupulous
sensory
"
vicarious
in filling out your tax return, you should include even the cash you
about her knowledge, takes every opportunity to show off how much she
Now check your answers to these questions by turning to page 163. Going over the answers carefully will help
you prepare for the next two checks, for which answers are not given.
Chapter 1
^Sentence Check 2
Complete each sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
detriment
dexterous
discretion
facetious
gregarious
optimum
ostentatious
scrupulous
sensory
vicarious
a dancer as Frt
to your health.
9-10. In describing the heroine's work in the garden, the author provides enough
to give the reader a(n)
details
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
CHAPTER
2
Previewing the Words
Find out how many of the ten words in this chapter you already know. Try to complete each sentence with
the most suitable word from the list below. Use each word once.
Leave a sentence blank rather than guessing at an answer. Your purpose here is just to get a sense of the
ten words and what you may know about them.
collaborate
despondent
instigate
resilient
retrospect
rudimentary
scoff
squelch
venerate
/ealot
1. We
the eyesight.
at the belief now, but early sailors thought wearing an earring improved
2. Most Americans
time.
3.
Why does the foolishness of so many of our decisions become clear only in
4. Instead of "Elementary, my dear Watson," Sherlock Holmes might have said, "It's
(c)d on such
Now check your answers by turning to page 1&3. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and to master the words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
10
Chapter 2
a. When Sarah and I collaborated on an article for the school newspaper, we found it
difficult to work together.
2 despondent
(di-spon'-dom)
-adjective
a. Matt easily becomes despondent. If he gets a single F, he loses all hope of succeeding in
school.
3 instigate
(in'-sto-gat1)
-verb
4 resilient
(ri-zil'-ysnt)
-adjective
a. Cockroaches are so resilient that they can fully recover after exposure to a level of
radioactivity that would kill a human.
5 retrospect
(re'-trs-spekt')
a. In retrospect, it's clear that Mae should have gone to the doctor sooner.
-noun
b. Barbara Bush collaborated with Eileen Sterling Crawford in designing and stitching a
needlepoint rug. Their work now decorates the White House sitting room.
b. For months after his wife died, Mr. Craig was despondent. He even considered suicide.
b. British Captain Robert Jenkins instigated a war by showing his pickled car to officials
in 1738, saying the ear had been cut off by a Spanish patrol. The horrified British then
declared war on Spainthe War of Jenkins' Ear.
b. Plant life around Mount St. Helens was wonderfully resilient. Within months after the
volcano erupted, flowers grew in the ashes.
b. When Ms. Oliver was my English teacher, I thought she was overly strict and
demanding. In retrospect, however, I see she taught me more than anyone else about
how to read and write.
6 rudimentary
(r'-do-mcn'-tor-e)
-adjective
1 scoff
(skor)
-verb
a. The audience scoffed at the man playing a tune on a row of tin cans, but he seemed
unaware of their contempt.
8 squelch
(skwelch)
-verb
a. The fact that the church organ had been greatly damaged by mice didn't squelch the
very first performance of "Silent Night." The singers still performed that Christmas Eve
in 1818, accompanied instead by a guitar.
b. Tony scoffed at the reports that a severe hurricane was on its way until he saw the winds
snapping frees in two and lifting cars.
b. My history teacher shot me a dirty look when, during his lecture, I didn't quite manage
to squelch a burp.
9 venerate
(ven'-or-at1)
-verb
10 zealot
(zel'-at)
-noun
a. The Tlingit Indians venerate the wolf and the raven, and their totem poles illustrate
stories about these deeply respected animals.
b. The banquet guests showed how much they venerated the elderly teacher by rising
when she entered the room.
a. The Crusaders were Christian zealots who left their homes and families to fight to regain
the Holy Land.
b. Annie, a zealot about health, runs a hundred miles a week and never lets a grain of sugar
touch her lips.
Chaptor2
11
I_
1. collaborate
2. despondent
3. instigate
4. resilient
5. (in) retrospect
6.
__
7.
8.
_
9.
_ 10.
rudimentary
scoff (at)
squelch
venerate
zealot
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
'Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
^Sentence Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
collaborate
despondent
instigate
resilient
retrospect
rudimentary
scoff
squelch
venerate
zealot
3. Although the leader of the street gang wasn't at the robbery, he was the one who
it.
4. A
weapons.
(c)d
of the peace movement, Dawn will stand in the rain for hours to protest nuclear
5. Shakespeare is
understanding of human nature.
(e)d for the beauty and power of his words as well as for his deep
10. The Russians defeated Napoleon by giving up Moscow without a fight, saving their army for later battles. A
Russian officer explained: "Moscow is
Now check your answers to these questions by turning to page 163. Going over the answers carefully will help
you prepare for the next two checks, for which answers are not given.
12
Chapter 2
Sentence Check 2
Complete each sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
collaborate
despondent
instigate
resilient
retrospect
rudimentary
scoff
squelch
venerate
zealot
v'ilh only
carpentry skills, the 10-vear-old boys
building a box with a secret drawer.
3-4. "Everyone gets
(e)d on
7-8. At the time of the American Revolution, many people viewed those who
rebellion as troublemakers. In
when
_(e)d the
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
CHAPTER
3
Previewing the Words
Find out how many of the ten words in this chapter you already know. Try to complete each sentence with
the most suitable word from the list below. Use each word once.
Leave a sentence blank rather than guessing at an answer. Your purpose here is just to get a sense of the
ten words and what you may know about them.
ambiguous
dissident
embellish
inadvertent
inane
juxtapose
lethargy
sporadic
Squander
subsidixe
_s one year of
4. Every year, one student in our high school wins a scholarship that
college.
5. Beverly often
items at discount stores.
_s her money at expensive shops when she could buy the same
6. The hot weather made everyone feel drowsy. Even the teacher gazed out of the windows in a dreamyeyed
7.
arc not tolerated by a dictatorship. People who speak out against government
policy are usually imprisoned or executed.
8. Part of the humor of the Laurel and Hardy comedy team came from seeing a short fat man
(e)d to a tall thin man.
9. My parents think my plans to become a rock musician are
make much more sense to become an accountant or salesperson.
10.
Now check your answers by turning to page 163. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and to master the words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
13
14
Chapter 3
ambiguous
(am-big'-yoo-ss)
-. ^jective
a. The portrait of the Mona Lisa is famous for its ambiguous expression. Is the lady
smiling or sad?
b. The results of the dietary study are ambiguous. More research will be necessary to
clarify how important vitamin C is to health.
2 dissident
(dis'-s-dsnt)
-noun
a. Fearing imprisonment for speaking out against the government, the South American
dissident fled to the United States.
3 embellish
(cm-bcl'-ish)
-verb
a. Lauren embellished the door of her locker with dried flowers and photos of her cats.
b. The inside covers of the biology text had been embellished with colorful drawings of
seashells.
4 inadvertent
(in-ad-vur'-t'nl)
-adjective
a. The discovery of penicillin was inadvertent. One day, Alexander Fleming forgot to
cover a dish of bacteria, and some mold landed in the dish. The next day, Fleming found
the mold had killed some of the bacteria.
b. Some dissidents in the Catholic church favor female priests, birth control, and abortion.
b. The green color of Nancy's hair is inadvertent. When she dyed her hair, she overlooked
part of the instructions.
5 inane
(in-an1)
-adjective
a. With all that is known about the benefits of exercise, it is inane to limit your exercise to
walking to the table to eat.
b. The party conversation remained inane, never getting beyond such foolishness as whose
jeans were the most "awesome" color.
6 juxtapose
(inks'-ts-verb
a. The painter dramatically juxtaposed white birch trees and a dark gray sky.
7 lethargy
(lelh'-ar-je)
-noun
a. Wendy's cold symptoms disappeared in a few days except for the lethargy. She felt
wiped out for a week.
8 sporadic
(spo-rad'-ik)
-adjective
a. It rained continuously until noon. After that, the showers were only sporadic.
9 squander
(skwon'-dsr)
-verb
a. I thought my little sister would squander her allowance on toys, but she wasted it on
candy instead.
b. Vince squanders both his time and his money playing game after game in video arcades.
10 subsidize
(sub'-ss-dlz)
-verb
a. The day-care center is always looking for sponsors to subsidize its programs.
b. On her bed, Dottie juxtaposed her new dress and various scarves to see which would
match best.
b. I don't understand how Jill and Mike ever got together. She's always energetic, while he
can hardly overcome his natural lethargy long enough to get up to change the TV
channel.
b. Dave undertakes sporadic attempts to give up smoking, about every other month or so.
Chapters
15
2.
dissident
3. embellish
_
4. inadvertent
__ _ 5. inane
__
__
__
__ _
_
6.
7.
8.
9.
juxtapose
lethargy
sporadic
squander
contrast v
' "'V-
c. able to be interpreted in more than one way; uncertain; not clear ,..
d. without sense or meaning; silly; foolish
e. one who disagrees, especially with established political or religious
views f. to decorate; beautify or improve by adding details /
g. to support with a grant or contribution - .
h. to spend or use wastefully .
i. unintentional; accidental
_ 10. subsidize
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
'Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
ambiguous
dissident
embellish
inadvertent
inane
juxtapose
lethargy
sporadic
squander
subsidize
.
letters from him or his mother.
(e)d his bedroom ceiling with stars arranged like those in various
16
Chapter 3
^-Sentence Check 2
Complete each sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
ambiguous
dissident
embellish
inadvertent
inane
juxtapose
lethargy
sporadic
squander
subsidize
(c)d our club's Christmas party for the homeless so that we could
7-8. It's
_ to pay a lot of interest on your credit card bills. Why
your money on interest instead of buying what you can afford?
9-10. I don't think that the movie's
ending was
. I believe the
producer intended to leave the final outcome somewhat in doubt so that moviegoers will be curious to see the
sequel.
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
CHAPTER
4
i
. Previewing the Words
Find out how many of the ten words in this chapter you already know. Try to complete each sentence with
the most suitable word from the list below. Use each word once.
Leave a sentence blank rather than guessing at an answer. Your purpose here is just to get a sense of the
ten words and what you may know about them.
berate
estrange
euphoric
impetuous
infallible
maudlin
regress
relinquish
ubiquitous
/enith
1. My sister loves
their farm.
_(e)d his wife even more.
(e)d to
8. Scolding her children for climbing on the roof, my neighbor said, "This
behavior must stop. Think'before you act!"
9. Carrie was
ring. She felt like singing all day.
when she found the diamond that had fallen out of her engagement
Now check your answers by turning to page 163. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and to master the words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
17
18
Chapter 4
Figure out the meanings of the following ten words by looking closely and carefully at the context in which the
words appear. Doing so will prepare you for the matching test and practices on the two pages that follow.
1 berate
(be-rat')
-verb
a. Nick's mother often berated him. And when she wasn't scolding and criticizing him,
she was ignoring him.
2 estrange
(e-stranj1)
-verb
b. Goldie can accept reasonable, calm criticism, but she was angered when her boss loudly
berated her in front of everyone else in the office.
3 euphoric
(y-fr'-ik)
-adjective
b ;--,:' ! ' divorce, Hal didn't want to estrange his children, so he called and visited them
. . .-. .uphoric for several days after seeing my grades for last semester. To my
an w :cmcni ""d joy, they were all A's and B's.
b. Joanne was - phoric this morning. Her high spirits were the result of having gotten the
lead role in the school's production of Hello, Dolly.
4 impetuous
(im-pech'--os)
-adjective
a. Whenever I make impetuous decisions to buy clothes, I end up being dissatisfied. From
now on, I'll try to take time to think about my purchases.
5 infallible
(in-fal'-s-bsl)
-adjective
a. A calculator doesn't guarantee infallible bookkeeping. You can still add in the wrong
numbers.
6 maudlin
(mod'-lin)
-adjective
a. The verses in many greeting cards are often overly sentimental. I prefer humor to such
maudlin messages.
7 regress
a. Rita had come a long way in her fight against alcohol abuse, but after her husband left
her, she regressed to overdrinking.
(re-gres )
-verb
b. The impetuous youngsters threw snowballs at the passing cars without thinking about
what would happen if they hit or distracted a driver.
b. A sign over my sister's desk reads, "I'm infallible. I never make mistaks."
b. The authors of maudlin soap operas must feel that they haven't done their job unless
viewers are crying by the end of each show.
b. When my 12-year-old cousin Jackson doesn't get his way, he regresses to the temper
tantrums of a two-year-old.
1
8 relinquish
(ri-ling'-kwish)
-verb
a. Sports fans must relinquish beverages at the stadium entrance because bottles and cans
aren't permitted inside.
b. Donna decided to relinquish her position as head nurse. She didn't want responsibility
for an entire ward of patients when she lacked the staff needed to provide good care.
9 ubiquitous
(yoo-bik'-wo-tos)
-adjective
a. We postponed our plan to drive home on Sunday because the fog was ubiquitous. It
covered the entire island.
10 zenith
(ze'-nith)
-noun
b. Mites are ubiquitous. They live on top of ML Everest, in the depths of the ocean, in the
Antarctic, even around the roots of your body hairs.
a. Florence reached the zenith of her career when she became president of Ace Products.
b. At age 50, my uncle thinks he's passed the zenith of his life. But at age 58, my father
thinks the best is yet to come.
'
Chapter 4
19
1. berate
2. estrange
'' \
3. euphoric
4. impetuous
5. infallible
6. maudlin
7. regress
8. relinquish
__,
9. ubiquitous
i. overjoyed; high-spirited , .
__ '_
10. zenith
' .
'
,'
I
. .",
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
'Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
>*~Sentence Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
berate
estrange
euphoric
impetuous
infallible
maudlin
regress
relinquish
ubiquitous
zenith
of 18th-century music.
when the college that was her first choice accepted her.
," our boss said, "but I do expect you not to make the same
7. "I know I made a mistake," Liz said, "but you could have pointed it out quietly and politely. You didn't have to
me."
8. Before the mayor began his "Beautify Our City" program, the litter was
sidewalks seemed paved with garbage.
__.. Our
20
Chapter 4
5^Sentence Check 2
Complete each sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
berate
estrange
euphoric
impetuous
infallible
maudlin
regress
relinquish
ubiquitous
zenith
, we could
_._ _
__...
myself.
5-6. Since my father died, reminders of his life seem _^_____
(c)d to
of their athletic careers, they felt "on top of the world" in every way.
depressed that he c a n ' t even get out of bed. Shutting out everyone around h i m , he
(8)
s his family and friends. Then he (9)_J
(e)s himself for all
the faults he feels he has. Finally, he tries to kill himself. Again, he must go to the hospital.
When Gary takes his medicine, he does very well. He is charming, bright, full of life. But when he feels
good, he soon stops taking his medicine and begins to (10)
. Then we know he is
headed for another severe mood swing.
I love my brother dearly, but living with him is like living on a roller coaster. For all of our sakcs, I wish
we could help him more.
SCORES:
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
CHAPTER
5
t Previewing the Words
Find out how many of the ten words in this chapter you already know. Try to complete each sentence with
the most suitable word from the list below. Use each word once.
Leave a sentence blank rather than guessing at an answer. Your purpose here is just to get a sense of the
ten words and what you may know about them.
charlatan
corroborate
disseminate
diverge
dormant
hoist
illicit
irrevocable
precipitate
proliferation
5. You claim you were at the soccer game at the time of the crime. Can anyone
your story?
7. Since his stroke, Mr. Haley has fully recovered his ability to speak, but the loss of movement in his
right hand seems
^.
under the ground for years until they
Now check your answers by turning to page 163. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and to master the words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
21
22
Chapter 5
a. My grandmother was tricked by a charlatan who convinced her to turn over hundreds of
dollars of "cursed money."
2 corroborate
(ko-rob'-o-rat')
-verb
a. Tanya's report card corroborated her claim that she was doing well in school. It showed
she had received only A's and B's.
3 disseminate
(di-scm'-o-nat1)
-verb
a. Campaign workers poured into the city to disseminate literature about their candidate.
4 diverge
a. Robert Frost used two roads branching off in different directions as a symbol. He wrote,
"Two roads diverged in a wood, and II took the one less traveled by."
(dl-vurj')
-verb
b. It's hard to believe Sid's slory of a flying saucer in the park when no one else in ihc area
can corroborate his account.
b. Because radio, TV, and fax machines disseminate information so quickly, it's hard for a
government to hide world events and opinions from its citizens.
b. The brothers' paths diverged greatly. One became a famous lawyer, and the other ended
up in jail for armed robbery.
5 dormant
(dor'-mont)
-adjective
a. A visit to Puerto Rico reawakened Anita's dormant ability to speak Spanish, the
language of her childhood.
6 hoist
(hoist)
-verb
a. We need to hoist the sail, so grab hold of that rope and pull.
7 illicit
(il-lis'-it)
-adjective
b. Many insects lay eggs that remain dormant throughout the winter and hatch only with
the coming of warmer weather.
b. Let's go down and watch the crane hoist the big beams into place for the new
skyscraper.
b. When Joe files his tax returns, he reports only the legal income from his dry-cleaning
business, not the profits from the illicit gambling operation he runs out of a back room.
8 irrevocable
(ir-rev'-o-ko-bol)
-adjective
a. Patty apologized for her bitter criticism of Steven, but the harm to their friendship may
be irrevocable.
9 precipitate
(prc-sip'-D-tat')
-verb
a. Drinking alcohol while pregnant can precipitate the birth of a baby before it's fully
developed.
10 proliferation
(pr-lif-ar-'-shon)
-noun
b. Scientists aren't sure if the damage to the Earth's ozone layer is so serious that it's
irrevocable or if we can still reverse the damage.
b. The discovery that Elliot had set a building on fire precipitated his parents' decision to
take him for psychological counseling.
a. Doctors hoped a bone marrow transplant would halt the proliferation of cancer cells in
Mary's body.
b. I've tried to pull all the dandelions out of the yard, but their proliferation is too rapid for
me to keep up with.
23
Chapter 5
2. corroborate
j _ 3. disseminate
_
4. diverge
__^_ 5. dormant
-: - \
.._
6. hoist
7. illicit
8. irrevocable
9. precipitate
10. proliferation
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
'Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all,
^-Sentence Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
charlatan
corroborate
disseminate
diverge
dormant
hoist
illicit
irrevocable
precipitate
proliferation
in all directions.
7. The stone slabs are too heavy for us to lift, so we're bringing in a forklift to
the walkway.
8. The environmental group
to protest the event.
9. I'm afraid I can't
is, he's been in jail several times.
them onto
10. The
of homeless dogs and cats has become so great that about 17 million of them are
killed in U.S. animal shelters each year.
Now check your answers to these questions by turning to page 163. Going over the answers carefully will help
you prepare for the next two checks, for which answers are not given.
24
Chapter 5
^-Sentence Check 2
Complete each sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
1-2.
charlatan
corroborate
disseminate
diverge
dormant
hoist
illicit
irrevocable
precipitate
proliferation
T he map
in prison. Many
and the piano crashed onto the sidewalk. The damage was
7-8. The company president ordered employees not to
^_^_^_____
bankruptcy.
of
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
CHAPTER
6
Previewing the Word Parts
Common word partsalso known as prefixes, suffixes, and rootsare used in forming many words in
English. This page will introduce you to ten common word parts.
Try to match each word part on the left with its definition on the right. Use the words in parentheses as
hints to help you guess the meanings. If you can't decide on an answer, leave the space blank. Your purpose
here is just to get a sense of the ten word parts and what you may know about them. (You'll have another
chance to try this exercise after considering the word parts in context.)
Word Parts
Definitions
a. alive, lively
b. outside, beyond
c. time
d. free
f. before
g. voice, call
h. sleep
i. throw
j. killer, killing
Now go on to "Ten Word Parts in Context" on the next page. Working through this chapter will help you to
strengthen your knowledge of the word parts you already know and to master the word parts you're only half sure
of, or don't know at all.
Keep in mind that learning word parts can pay several dividends. Word parts can help with the spelling and
pronunciation of many words. They can also help you to unlock the meanings of unfamiliar words.
25
26
Chapter 6
a. Before you enter Mel's living room, you pass through a small anteroom, where guests
can leave their coats.
b. An antique is anything made in a time before ours, especially 100 years or more ago.
2 chrono-, chron
a. The novel went in reverse chronological order, that is, from the most recent events
backwards.
b. An acute medical problem is a short, severe one. In contrast, a chronic illness continues
over a long period of time.
3 -cide
a. Do the pesticides used in farming kill only pests? Or arc they harmful to humans as
well?
b. Genocide isn't simply the murder of a number of people. It's the planned killing of a
particular racial, cultural, or political group.
4 de-
a. When the two trains ran into each other, one derailed and the other stayed on track.
b. A strong kitchen fan can deodorize the kitchen by drawing away bad odors.
5 dorm
a. The volcano has been dormant for years, but scientists warn that it may awaken
someday soon.
b. The dormouse, or "sleeping mouse," got its name from its habit of hibernating through
the winter.
6 extra-
a. Charles studies hard for his classes, but he's also involved in extracurricular activities,
including soccer and chess.
b. Extrasensory perception is the ability, or seeming ability, to communicate beyond the
physical senses.
7 ject
a. The further away a projector is, the larger the picture it throws onto the screen.
b. The pilot ejected just before the crash. Fortunately, he was tossed a safe distance from
the plane.
8 liber, liver
a. Floyd is very liberal with his advice. He freely tells people whom he barely knows how
they should run their lives.
b. The Bible says that Moses helped to deliver his people from slavery.
9 viv, vit
a. People who survive a disaster may feel guilty that they lived when others died.
b. My elderly aunt has such vitality that she still works in a bakery part-time and walks
two or three miles a day.
10 voc, vok
a. Smells often evoke memories in me. A whiff of an old boyfriend's after-shave calls up
a clear image of him in my mind.
b. My father listens to vocal music as if it were performed only by instruments. He
doesn't listen to the words at all.
Chapter 6
27
a. alive, lively
2. chrono-, chron
b. outside, beyond
3. -cide
c. time
4. de-
d. free
5. dorm
6. extra-
f. before
___ 7. ject
8. liber, liver
g. voice, call
h. sleep
9. viv, vit
i. throw
j. killer, killing
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you arc sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
'Ten Word Parts in Context," you will know how to match each word part. Then you can use the matches to
help you in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions
at all.
^-Sentence Check 1
Complete each partial word in the following sentences with a word part from the box. Use each word part only
once. You may want to check off each word part as you use it.
anti-
chron
-cide
de-
dorm
extra-
ject
liber
vi \
voc
2. I was awfully tired when I got home from work, but a half-hour nap (re . .. ed)
_^____ rnc.
3. The veterinarian asked Rosa to hold her cat still while he gave it an (in .. . ion)
4. It yQuHon't empty the freezer before (. . .frosting]
the melting ice.
5. The conference was held on a college campus, so participants slept in the (. . . iiories}
instead of going to hotels.
6. People under stress have performed (. . . ordinary)
automobile off an accident victim.
7. Modern appliances (. . . ate) ____________^____ us from a good deal of household work. For instance,
the dryer frees us from hanging the laundry.
8. In ancient China, female (infanti . . .)
much less valuable than boys, who were not killed.
9. Leah has an amazing (. . . abulary)
difference between "Mr. Crocodile and Mr. Alligator."
"i
28
Chapter 6
^Sentence Check 2
Complete each partial word in the sentences below with a word part from the box. Use each word part once. If there
are two forms of a word part in the box, use the first one for this practice.
ante-, anti-
chron
-cide
de-
dorm
extra-
ject
liber
viv, vit
voc
( . . . tach) ________^____ these bedroom windows and to put in the new ones.
7-8. The king's closest advisers were at (.. . />)
until summoned.
(pro .. . ing)
(e . . . e) (4)
one's f a m i l y is not as warm or close as it "should" be. In the hopes of (in . . . ing)
(7)
family relationships, people may buy extravagant gifts. The financial burden then adds to the holiday
problems.
While (sui. . . ) (9)
blues.
SCORES:
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
Lhei
PART A
Choose the word that best completes each sentence and write it in the space provided.
1. ambiguous
sporadic
gregarious
rudimentary
2. collaborate
estrange
corroborate
juxtapose
3. disseminated
diverged
hoisted
squandered
4. precipitate
venerate
juxtapose
squelch
Asians tend to
5. despondent
illicit
inane
sensory
6.
If Bart's parents leave him alone with his sister for even 30 seconds, he
_. Since you
are so rarely alone, it's nice if you can enjoy the company.
he
to
disseminates
collaborates
instigates
hoists
his claim that the other driver had gone through a red
light.
campaign information for a
7. berates
scoffs
diverges
precipitates
When driving to Melissa's house, go left at the fork in the road, the point where
8. proliferation
detriment
discretion
euphoria
9. inadvertent
scrupulous
sensory
resilient
10. dexterous
facetious
ubiquitous
maudlin
the road
into two.
the images we look at must go to our brain in order for us to actually "sec" them.
when he said he
would cut a much bigger hole in my wall in order to fix the little hole, but that's
exactly what he did.
29
iO
11. squelch
venerate
berate
instigate
12. illicit
scrupulous
dormant
vicarious
13. inane
facetious
dormant
I tried to
looking all over his desk for the glasses he had pushed up on his head was too funny.
the trolley in order to return to the store where a salesclcrk had given him a nickel too
much in change.
Nineteenth-century French writer Alfred de Mussct said, "Know that there is often
hidden in us a
poet, always young and alive." It is up to us to
awaken that creative part of ourselves.
PART B
Circle C if the italicized word is used correctly. Circle I if the word is used incorrectly.
C I
14.
Valerie's idea of a great book is a maudlin story that has the reader laughing from start to finish.
C I
15.
Meeting my husband in the cafeteria for lunch was inadvertent. We had planned it over breakfast.
C I
16.
If get plenty of sleep, I'm pretty resilient. Otherwise, I'm slow to bounce back from illness.
C I
17.
I'm not surprised that Lucy is protesting the governor's new welfare policy. She is known for being
a dissident.
C I
18.
On my first day of work, I had to sit in the back room and berate the prices on hundreds of products.
C I
19.
In Wood Shop, we had to first learn rudimentary skills before we could actually make something.
C I
20.
The tattooed lady, who believed in reincarnation, had her arm embellished with the words "I'll be
back."
C I
21.
The music store owner was arrested for selling tapes and records which he had bought from an illicit
source.
22.
Rumors that the bank was losing money precipitated a panic. Hundreds of bank customers
demanded their savings.
C I
23.
My aunt and uncle are rich but ostentatious. Judging by their modest possessions, you'd never know
how much money they really have.
C I
24.
People still scoff ft the many wonderful designs drawn by Leonardo da Vinci almost 500 years ago
of such future inventions as the airplane, parachute, and submarine.
25.
Use discretion about where to consult with your doctor. If you run into him or her at church or'the
supermarket, it's not appropriate to ask about your warts or athlete's foot.
x4=
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
Complete each sentence with a word from the box. Use each word once.
ambiguous
charlatan
euphoric
infallible
irrevocable
juxtapose
lethargy
regress
relinquish
subsidize
vicarious
zealot
zenith
my identification card
way, giving
, If you
10. Mrs. Angclo was sho .ed to learn that the "doctor" she had been seeing for three years was a(n)
__. In reality, he had attended medical school for only two semesters.
11. When I asked my sis r whether my seven kids and I could come visit her for a week, her response
was so
.__
12. The Bradlcys won't go on vacation until their new puppy is fully trained. They're afraid he will
to his rug-ruining behavior if he stays at the kennel for a week.
13. After her first husba: J died from alcohol-related causes, Carry Nation became an anti-drinking
. One year as she crusaded around the country against alcohol, she
destroyed 20 saloons with a hatchet.
31
32
PART B
Circle C if the italicized word is used correctly. Circle I if the word is used incorrectly.
C
14.
Ana naturally became despondent when she learned that she had won a free trip to Honolulu.
15.
16.
Billy estranged people with his warm conversation and friendly manner.
17.
Earth happens to be a place where oxygen is ubiquitous, making the planet suitable for certain forms
of life.
18.
My father is so impetuous that he can't even place a lunch order without studying the menu fo.
fiftecn minutes.
'
(."
20.
Professor Sherman wants to collaborate on a new science textbook. He always prefers working wit
a co-author.
21.
When the survivor of the shipwreck grabbed onto the rope, he was hoisted up out of the water to trr
helicopter.
22.
During my childhood, we made sporadic visits to my grandparents' house. Not a Sunday passed that
we didn't see them.
(.'
23.
Donald squanders his money so quickly that a few days after receiving his paycheck, he's asking me
for a loan.
24.
The town council members agreed that playgrounds were a detriment to the community, so the>
approved funding for three more to be built next year.
25.
The hotel offers the optimum in accommodations. The only ones who ever return there (with frieni
and relations) are the roaches.
19.
"In retrospect," said the chairman of the,board, "I think the next f i v e years will be our mos
successful ever."
x4=
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
Complete each sentence in a way that clearly shows you understand the meaning of the boldfaced word. Take a
minute to plan your answer before you write.
Example: I was being facetious when I said that my parrot can tell the future. In fact, he's always wrong.
1. An illicit way to make a living is
_^
__^__
or j
3.
he
4. A zealot in the environmental movement would never
-ne
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
iey
33
34
PART B
After each boldfaced word are a synonym (a word that means the same as the boldfaced word), an antonym (a
word that means the opposite of the boldfaced word), and a word that is neither. Mark the antonym with an A.
Example:
accidental
inadvertent
intentional
playful
11. berate
scold
invite
praise
12
rudimentary
foolish
advanced
elementary
13.
detriment
advantage
contradiction
obstacle
14. inane
inexpensive
sensible
silly
15.
skillful
spiritual
clumsy
dexterous
PART C
Use five of the following ten words in sentences. Make it clear that you know the meaning of the word you use.
Feel free to use the past tense or plural form of a word.
ambiguous
charlatan
hoist
infallible
irrevocable
ostentatious
proliferation
scoff
scrupulous
ubiquitous
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
Listed in the left-hand column below are ten common word parts, along with words in which the parts are used.
In each blank, write in the letter of the correct definition on the right.
.Word Parts
Definitions
1. ante-, anti-
antechamber, anticipate
a. time
2. chrono-, chron
chronological, chronic
b. voice, eall
. 3. -cide
suicide, insecticide
. 4 . de-
detach, dcfogger
d. alive, lively
. 5. dorm
dormitory, dormant
e. killer, killing
. 6. extra-
extracurricular, extrasensory
f. free
. 7. ject
eject, reject
g. throw
_ 8. liber, liver
liberation, delivery
h. before
_ 9. viv, vit
survivor, vitality
i. sleep
vocal, evoke
j. outside, beyond
PART B
Find the word part that correctly completes each word. Then write the full word in the blank space. Not every
word part will be used.
ante-
chron
-cide
de-
dorm
extra-
ject
liver
vit
vok
13. In the refining process, white rice and white bread lose much of their ( . . . amiri)
content
14. Ventriloquists must be able to (pro . . . )
opening their mouths much.
15. Airplane passengers used to be let off outdoors. Now they usually ( . . . plane)
a ramp that leads directly into the airport.
onto
35
36
PART C
Use your knowledge of word parts to determine the meaning of the boldfaced words. Circle the letter of each
meaning.
16. He antedated his check to the IRS.
a. dated correctly
b. a picture of bacteria
c. a dish of bacteria
b. normal uterus
b. complicate
b. remained quiet
c. slept
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
CHAPTER
Unit Two
1
Previewing the Words
Find out how many of the ten words in this chapter you already know. Try to complete each sentence with
the most suitable word from the list below. Use each word once.
Leave a sentence blank rather than guessing at an answer. Your purpose here is just to get a sense of the
ten words and what you may know about them.
equivocate
fortuitous
impeccable
liaison
predisposed
propensity
reprehensible
sham
solace
solicitous
for fighting.
2. My aunt always looks stylish but not overdressed. Her taste in clothes is
3. After the bigger children leased him, the little boy ran to his parents for _
4. As head of the teachers' union, David is the
school board.
5. The waiter was overly
_^^______
everything all right here1/"
,_
6. The Thompsons never discipline their son at all. They respond to his most
conduct only by saying, "Kids will be kids."
7. I haven't met Carmen's grandfather yet, but I've heard so many wonderful stories about him that I'm
.
to like him.
_(e)d by saying
9. When Laurie asked me '0 take a bag of her old clothes to the Salvation Army, I made the
. discovery that we're the same size and can swap clothes.
10. In the story "The Ncckhcc," a woman works all her life to replace a diamond necklace she'd lost, only
to discover that the gems were a
Now check your answers b> turning to page 164. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your'knowledge of the words you already know and to master the words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
37
38
Chapter 7
a. I can't pin down whether or not my boss intends 10 give me a raise. When I ask about it,
he equivocates, saying, "You've been doing good work, Bob."
2 fortuitous
(for-too'-s-tos)
a. The birth of triplets wasn't entirely fortuitous. The mother had taken a fertility drug.
-adjective
3 impeccable
(im-pck'-o-bol)
-adjective
b. Hank doesn't want to come right out and tell Barb he doesn't love her. When she asks if
he does, he equivocates with a misleading answer.
b. It was strictly fortuitous that Vincc found his missing class notes. They happened to
drop out of his dictionary when it fell to the floor.
a. The candidate's opponents tried to "dig up dirt" on h i m , bat his conduct has been
impeccable.
b. Even at her audition for the play, Julie gave an impeccable performance. She read the
lines perfectly.
4 liaison
(le'-a-zon')
-noun
a. Because she speaks Spanish, Elsa sometimes acts as a liaison between the Mexican
workers and the plant foreman.
5 predisposed
a. Terry doesn't want to move, so she's predisposed to dislike the town she and her family
are moving to.
b. Being a Mel Gibson fan, I'm predisposed to enjoy any movie he's in.
(pre'-dis-pozd*)
-adjective
6 propensity
(pro-pen1 -s 3- te)
-noun
7 reprehensible
(rep'-ri-hen'-so-bsl)
-adjective
b. It's the Student Council president's job to be a liaison between ihc students and the
administration.
a. Cheryl knows she has a propensity to blab, so she warns her friends not to tell her
anything they wouldn't want repeated.
b. Mitch has a propensity to gain weight rapidly, so he watches what he cats.
a. For his reprehensible conduct in attacking the referee, Alan was forced to sit out the
next two games.
b. The company deserved the harsh criticism it received for its reprehensible failure to
clean up the oil spill.
sham
(sham)
-noun
a. Madame Latour, an art forger, imitated the style of famous artist Maurice Utrillo. Her
shams were done so skillfully that Utrillo himself was often fooled.
b. Karen's friendly concern for Ray is only a sham. Once she learns he's not wealthy, she'll
stop showing interest in him.
9 solace
(sol'-is)
-noun
a. After family quarrels, Tamara often finds solace in the quiet and privacy of her own
room.
b. Stroking my cat gives me comfort, especially when I need solace after some upsetting
event.
-V
10 solicitous
(S3-lis'-3-l3S
-adjective
a. The cab driver was solicitous about my safely, warning me away from dangerous areas
of the city.
b. Solicitous of her elderly neighbor's health, Marie checked in with him almost every day.
Chapter 7
39
2. fortuitous
3. impeccable
4. liaison
_ 5. predisposed
6. propensity
f. to be purposely vague
7. reprehensible
g. faultless; perfect
8. sham
9. solace
10. solicitous
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
'Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
^-Sentence Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
equivocate
fortuitous
propensity
reprehensible
impeccable
liaison
predisposed
sham
solace
solicitous
4. Mom, __^___________ of those in need, donated to homeless people all the warm clothing that she
rarely wore.
5. Rape is such a
they are.
crime that many citizens feel the penalties should be much harsher than
6. The elderly man lost his life savings when he invested in "gold mine certificates" that were a
7. It's hard to believe that Anne, with her
become an accountant.
8. Unexpectedly, I ran into an old friend now in business for herself. The
a job offer for me.
9. Olive acted as a
problems out themselves.
meeting led to
between her separated parents until she insisted that they talk their
40
Chapter 7
^Sentence Check 2
Complete each sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
equivocate
fortuitous
impeccable
liaison
predisposed
propensity
reprehensible
sham
solace
solicitous
to gamble excessively, he
between them.
5-6. I was
to like Nurse Bradley after I learned of her
care of
my father during his illness, but I found her surprisingly cold and unfriendly.
7-8. It was strictly
lhat no one was killed in the chemical plant explosion. The cause,
however, was no matter of chance, but the result of
carelessness on the part of
an employee.
9-10. Although the job applicant's qualifications seemed
. I learned through a few phone calls
that they were a
. The applicant had never held any of the positions on her rosume".
Sentence Check 2
% Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
CHAPTER
8
Previewing the Words
Find out how many of the ten words in this chapter you already know. Try to complete each sentence with
the most suitable word from the list below. Use each word once.
Leave a sentence blank rather than guessing at an answer. Your purpose here is just to get a sense of the
ten words and what you may know about them.
attrition
circumvent
cohesive
grievous
inundate
oblivious
reticent
robust
sanction
vociferous
the pothole.
4. Sports teams must constantly be looking for new talent to replace the players that are lost through
normal ________
5. Individual lines of the poem were very beautiful, but I didn't see how the lines fit together. To me, the
poem wasn't ___^
6. Now that my boss has __
have to begin organizing it.
7. Grigori Rasputin was so _
stabbed in the stomach, or poisoned.
..
_(e)d the idea of a company recycling program, we'll
that he didn't die when he was beaten with a club,
8. Drivers who suddenly turn and change lanes without signaling seem _
fact that there are other cars on the road.
9. The assassination of Mahatma Gandhi was a(n)
. painful by the fact that he had been dedicated to peaceful change.
10. The only way Hugh could eat the rubbery pancakes was to
syrup and slice them with a sharp knife.
to the
Now check your answers by turning to page 164. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and to master the words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
41
42
Chapter 8
a. If they didn't constantly hire new workers, big companies would shrink through the
natural attrition of workers leaving and retiring.
2 circumvent
(sur '-ksm- vent1)
-verb
a. If we take this roundabout route, we can circumvent the rush hour traffic.
3 cohesive
(ko-hes'-iv)
-adjective
a. Our baseball team isn't cohesive enough to win many games. The players don't seem to
work together for the good of the team.
4 grievous
(grev'-ss)
-adjective
a. The death of Ella's dog is especially grievous because he was her Seeing Eye dog.
b. The death of a loved one is always painful, but the death of one's child seems the most
grievous of all.
5 inundate
(in'-un-dat')
-verb
a. The flood waters inundated the farmer's field, destroying all his crops.
6 oblivious
(s-bliv'-e-as)
-adjective
a. It's easy to spot two people in love. They arc the ones who, oblivious to everyone else
present, see only each other.
7 reticent
(ret'-s-sont)
-adjective
a. Though gossipy about other people's social lives, Paul is reticent about his own.
8 robust
(r-busf)
-adjective
a. A number of previously robust weight lifters have ruined their health and vigor by
taking steroids.
b. Once an energetic, robust man, Mr. Rand has been considerably weakened by illness.
9 sanction
(sangk'-shsn)
-verb
a. By greeting the dictator with the utmost courtesy and fanfare, the premier seemed to
sanction the dictator's policies.
b. "I certainly don't sanction your quitting school," said Mike's father, "but I can't tell you
what to do."
10 vociferous
(vo-sif'-3r-9s)
-adjective
a. When a male loon feels that another loon is invading his territory, he gives a vociferous
cry of challenge.
b. The principal became angry and vociferous, shouting at students who tried to sneak out
of the fire drill.
b. The liberal arts college now has a lower rate of attrition. Many more students are
staying until graduation and specializing at other schools afterward.
b. A cohesive family usually has a better influence on a child than a family that hasn't
managed to hold together.
b. Following his brief announcement, the President was inundated with questions from
reporters.
b. The driver continued into the intersection, apparently oblivious to the fact that the light
had turned red.
b. When questioned by the police, the eyewitness to the murder was reticent because he
feared for his own life.
Chapter 8
43
2. circumvent
3. cohesive
4. grievous
5. inundate
6. oblivious (to)
7. reticent
8. robust
9. sanction
10. vociferous
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
'Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
^-Sentence Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
attrition
circumvent
cohesive
grievous
inundate
oblivious
reticent
robust
sanction
vociferous
4. A half-hour of aerobic exercise every other day or so will help you stay
5. One way to
6. If you want a(n)
experience.
(e)d with so much junk mail that the mailbox is crammed with it.
9. The cutting down of the rain forests has caused a dangerous rate of
in those forests.
10. Some people who would benefit from counseling avoid seeing a therapist because they are
about their private lives.
Now check your answers to these questions by turning to page 164. Going over the answers carefully will help
you prepare for the next two checks, for which answers are not given.
Chapter 8
44
^Sentence Check 2
Complete each sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
attrition
circumvent
cohesive
grievous
inundate
oblivious
reticent
robust
sanction
vociferous
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
CHAPTER
9
Previewing the Words
Find out how many of the ten words in this chapter you already know. Try to complete each sentence with
the most suitable word from the list below. Use each word once.
Leave a sentence blank rather than guessing at an answer. Your purpose here is just to get a sense of the
ten words and what you may know about them.
bolster
depreciate
indiscriminate
inquisitive
nebulous
relegate
replete
sedentary
tenet
terse
10. Whenever guests stay at our house for the weekend, my parents give them our room and
my sister and me to the attic cots.
Now check your answers by turning to page 164. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and to master the words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
45
46
Chapter 9
a. The chain that held the window open broke, so I had to bolster the window with a piece
of wood.
2 depreciate
a. The property depreciated in value when the city built a sewage treatment plant nearby.
(de-pre'-she-atT)
-verb
3 indiscriminate
(uV-di-skrim'-i-nit)
-adjective
b. When Lisa was in the hospital, visits from friends bolstered her spirits.
b. Opponents of (he death penalty feel it depreciates the value of a human life.
a. I confess that I'm indiscriminate about chocolate. I don't distinguish even between
fancy and dime store chocolatesI love them all equally.
b. Some people end up hopelessly in debt because of indiscriminate spending, so be
selective in your purchases.
4 inquisitive
(in-kwiz'-o-tiv)
-adjective
a. Inquisitive students usually do better than those who are less curious and less eager to
learn.
5 nebulous
a. Leonard never gives me any specific idea of what he wants for his birthday. When I ask
him, he gives a nebulous answer like "Oh, something interesting."
(neb'-ys-bs)
-adjective
b. When parents hear their three-year-old ask "Why?" for the millionth time, they may well
wish they had a less inquisitive child.
b. "Don't give nebulous answers on the test," said the history teacher. "The more specific,
the better."
6 relegate
(rel-3-gt1)
-verb
a. At family gatherings, we kids were always relegated to the kitchen while the adults got
to eat in the dining room.
7 replete
(ri-plet1)
a. The spring air was replete with the sweet scents of lilacs and cut grass.
-adjective
b. When our boss dislikes an employee, he relegates that person to a less important job at a
small branch office.
b. For Christmas, we gave my grandparents a wicker basket replete with teas, jams, and
crackers.
8 sedentary
(sed'-'n-ter'-e)
-adjective
a. My sedentary girlfriend jokes that the most exercise she ever gets is between her front
door and the car.
9 tenet
(ten'-it)
-noun
a. If everyone lived by the tenet "Never cause suffering," we'd all live in paradise.
10 terse
(trs)
-adjective
b. Bus drivers, writers, and others in sedentary occupations need to make a special effort
to exercise.
a. I was'hurt by Roger's terse response to my invitation. All he said was "No thanks."
b. Newspaper headlines need to say a lot in a few well-chosen words. An article about
Richard Burton wooing Elizabeth Taylor was headed by this terse summary: "His Biz is
Liz."
Chapter 9
47
1. bolster
2. depreciate
3. indiscriminate
4. inquisitive
5. nebulous
"
6. relegate
7. replete (with)
__
8. sedentary
t_
9. tenet
i. vague; unclear
^ _
10. terse
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
'Ten Words n Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
^-Sentence Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
bolster
depreciate
indiscriminate
inquisitive
nebulous
relegate
replete
sedentary
tenet
terse
, but I prefer
4. While houses and antiques often increase in value, most things, like cars and TVs,.
5. A large sign in the boys' treehousc stated their club's main
Allowed!!!"
6. The refrigerator in the expensive hotel was
7. The catcher worried that if he didn't start playing better, the manager would
the minor leagues.
8. Until I entered college, my ideas about my career were
idea of the type of work I'd like to do.
9. My active sister was always playing tag or jumping rope. I, more
front of the TV or hunched over a book.
10. The book Answers to 1001 Interesting Questions is the perfect gift for a(n)
him to
. But now I've got a clearer
, preferred to sit in
person.
Now check your answers to these questions by turning to page 164. Going over the answers carefully will help
you prepare for the next two checks, for which answers are not given.
48
Chapter 9
^-Sentence Check 2
Complete each sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
bolster
depreciate
indiscriminate
inquisitive
nebulous
relegate
replete
sedentary
tenet
terse
he
3-4. Dad was still in excellent condition. Nevertheless, as soon as he reached 60, the construction company
_^____
5-6.
travelers often visit the Leaning Tower of Pisa, to see how far it is leaning and if it's
being ^___
violence."
9-10. If Stan were more
he's totally.
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
CHAPTER
10
Previewing the Words
Find out how many of the ten words in this chapter you already know. Try to complete each sentence with
the most suitable word from the list below. Use each word once.
Leave a sentence blank rather than guessing at an answer. Your purpose here is just to get a sense of the
ten words and what you may know about them.
autonomy
bureaucratic
mandate
ostraci/.e
raucous
recourse
reiterate
tantamount
tenacious
Utopia
to asking to be robbed.
it at the end.
was a jump into the fireman's net
. She hated
Now check your answers by turning to page 164. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and to master the words you re
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
49
50
Chapter 10
a. The American colonists, sick of being ruled by the British, fought to gain autonomy.
2 bureaucratic
(byoor'-3-krat'-ik)
-adjective
a. When I worked for our city's bureaucratic parks department, I wasted hours filling out
forms.
3 mandate
(man'-dat1)
-noun
a. All union members voted for the wage increase, giving their leaders a clear mandate.
4 ostracize
a. Ever since James crossed the union picket lines, his co-workers have ostracized him.
They speak to him only when necessary, and no one sits with him during lunch.
(OS'-tTD-Sz')
-verb
b. Children begin to claim some autonomy at a very young age. The "terrible twos" are the
result of two-year-olds' struggles for independence.
b. Bureaucratic systems get bogged down with rules and official details that can actually
make them less productive.
b. Numerous letters to the senator revealed the voters' mandate to continue working for a
tax decrease.
b. Sabrina was ostracized by the other team members when they discovered she was using
drugs. They wanted nothing more to do with her.
5 raucous
(ro'-kss)
-adjective
a. The rock concert audience was so raucous that we feared the noise and commotion
would lead to violence.
6 recourse
(re'-kors)
-noun
a. "Unless you pay the money owed," the company threatened, "we'll have no recourse
but to sue you."
7 reiterate
(re-it'-3-rat')
-verb
a. The agency director stated, "I have said this before, but let me reiterate: Unless we
receive the funds to hire more staff, the children of this city will continue to suffer."
8 tantamount
(tan t'-3-mount')
-adjective
9 tenacious
(te-na'-shss)
-adjective
a. The cat's grip on the ledge was tenacious, but we weren't sure how long it could hang
on so firmly.
10 Utopia
(y-t'-pe-o)
-noun
a. Each person's idea of a Utopia is different. A situation that seems perfect to me might
make you miserable.
b. New Year's Eve is a terribly raucous holiday, with lots of "drunk and disorderly"
behavior.
b. "We tried treating your grandfather's illness with medication," the doctor explained, "but
it wasn't effective. The only recourse now is surgery."
b. I hate it when my husband isn't listening to me and I have to reiterate what I said over
and over.
b. The bitter young woman was tenacious in her belief that everyone was out to use and
abuse her. We couldn't convince her olherwise.
b. In 1888, Edward Bellamy described a Utopia in which each person would have a
comfortable income, work until the age of 45, and then enjoy a leisurely lifestyle.
Chapter 10
51
2. bureaucratic
3. mandate
4. ostracize
d.- tending to insist on strict rules and routine, often to the point of
hindering effectiveness
=-
-*,
!,?*&*
^^^^
5. raucous
6. recourse
f. independence; self-government
7. reiterate
8. tantamount (to)
9. tenacious
10. Utopia
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
'Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal s to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
>^Sentence Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
autonomy
recourse
bureaucratic
mandate
ostracize
raucous
reiterate
tantamount
tenacious
Utopia
^e a lot of
when convenient.
2.
3. When writing a letter of complaint to a company, state what you want the company to do about the problem in
the first paragraph, and then
'
to throwing away
on the class trip that the bus driver got a piercing headache from all
in her smoking habit, giving it up only after she saw her brother die of lung
is a place with unlimited video games, snacks, comic books,
52
Chapter 10
^-Sentence Check 2
Complete each sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
autonomy
bureaucratic
mandate
ostracize
raucous
recourse
reiterate
tantamount
tenacious
utopia
3-4. "Because of my
_
. supervisor," Nick complained, "I have to
the same information on five different forms."
5-6.
of voting
9-10. Dirk and Andy continued to run around wildly, yelling and screaming throughout the Little League game.
Finally, the umpire said, "If you two don't stop your
you permanently."
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
CHAPTER
11
Previewing the Words
Find out how many of the ten words in this chapter you already know. Try to complete each sentence with
the most suitable word from the list below. Use each word once.
Leave a sentence blank rather than guessing at an answer. Your purpose here is just to get a sense of the
ten words and what you may know about them.
clandestine
contingency
egocentric
exonerate
incongruous
indigenous
liability
prolific
reinstate
superfluous
1. Since corn is
until after America was discovered.
2. The innocent man was
confessed.
3. Lately, business at the store has been so slow that two of the three clerks seem
t
6. When Don returned to the company after two years' absence, he was
his former position.
7. The contemporary style of the Martins' new home looked
of 19th-century homes.
8.
_(e)d in
in the neighborhood
methods had to be used to help slaves escape. Some homes had secret
chambers for hiding slaves on their way North.
Now check your answers by turning to page 164. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and to master the words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
53
54
Chapter 11
a. The secret tunnels were part of a clandestine plan to hide from the invading army.
2 contingency
(kon-tm'-pn-sc)
-noun
a. Fayc thought her company might transfer her again to another c i t y . With that
contingency in mind, she decided to rent a house, not buy one.
3 egocentric
(c'-go-scn'-trik)
-adjective
a. "But enough about me," the egocentric author said to the interviewer. "Tell me, what do
you think of my book?"
4 exonerate
(cg-zon'-or-at1)
-verb
a. New evidence exonerated the falsely accused man, and he was released from prison.
5 incongruous
(in-kong'-gr-os)
-adjective
a. The cuckoo lays her eggs in other birds' nests, resulting in such an incongruous sight as
one large cuckoo chick among several tiny baby robins.
6 indigenous
(in-dij'-3-nos)
-adjective
7 liability
(H'-s-bil'-D-te)
-noun
8 prolific
(pro-lif'-ik)
-adjective
a. Rabbits deserve their reputation for being prolific. A female can produce three families
each summer.
9 reinstate
(re'-in-stat1)
-verb
a. The police officer was suspended when he was charged with shooting a fleeing suspect.
Later, however, Sergeant Marshall was reinstated.
10 superfluous
(soo-pr'-fl-ss)
-adjective
b. Our will provides for the contingency of our both dying young, by specifying who will
become our children's guardians.
b. Denie is so egocentric that she views every event solely in terms of how it will affect
her per onally.
b. The bank photos will exonerate Phillip by showing who the true robber is.
b. It's not really incongruous that a former general should be so active in the peace
movement. He's seen the horrors of war.
b. My parents eat only foods that are indigenous to their own region, but I enjoy trying
foods that are native to other areas.
b. Josephine thought that when she returned to school at the age of 40, her age would be a
liability. Instead, her life experience helped her as a student.
b. Picasso was prolific, having produced hundreds of paintings and more than 11,000
drawings and sketches.
b. The college had cancelled the folklore class, but demand for the class was so great that it
was reinstated.
a. Because my winter coat has a high button-up collar and a hood, a scarf would really be
superfluous. I could use a new pair of gloves, though.
b. In the phrase "wet rain," the word wet is superfluous. All rain is wet.
Chapter 11
55
1. clandestine
2, contingency
3. egocentric
c. out of place; inappropriate; having parts that are not in harmony or that
are inconsistent
4. exonerate
5. incongruous
_
_
6. indigenous
7. liability
'_
8. prolific
9. reinstate
_,
_l
_^
.
j_
10. superfluous
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
"Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you carj use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
^-Sentence Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
clandestine
contingency
egocentric
exonerate
incongruous
indigenous
liability
prolific
reinstate
superfluous
-looking couple.
2. Ben, who was temporarily suspended from the police force after the shooting incident, was later
d in his position.
3. Having poor handwriting is not much of a
4. Here, squirrels are red or gr^y, but I used to live in a state where black squirrels were
5. Although an earthquake has never struck here, our city has emergency plans for just such a
6. The rock performer was cha:ged with stealing music from a well-known composer, but he was later
d.
7. Flies are so
thousands of offspring.
operations,
words
10. Nan is so
that when her sister was getting married, Nan got angry at her for choosing
lavender bridesmaid dresses instead of a color more flattering to Nan.
Now check your answers to these questions by turning to page 164. Going over the answers carefully will help
you prepare for the next two checks, for which answers are not given,
56
Chapter 11
^-Sentence Check 2
Complete each sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
clandestine
contingency
egocentric
indigenous
liability
prolific
exonerate
incongruous
reinstate
superfluous
d himself from the charge that he had stolen from the company, he was
d as an accountant. He even got a raise by way of apology.
5-6. The
author has come out with yet another novel. Although she publishes numerous
words.
_______ to the
9-10. The crew wondered what should be done if the ship's mentally ill captain were to put the ship in danger. So
they had a(n)
SCORES:
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
CHAPTER
12
Previewing the Word Parts
Common word partsalso known as prefixes, suffixes, and rootsare used in forming many words in
English. This page will introduce you to ten common word parts.
Try to match each word part on the left with its definition on the right. Use the words in parentheses as
hints to help you guess the meanings. If you can't decide on an answer, leave the space blank. Your purpose
here is just to get a sense of the ten word parts and what you may know about them. (You'll have another
chance to try this exercise after considering the word parts in context.)
Word Parts
Definitions
b. trust, faith
c. straight, right
f. true, real
g. with, together
h. new
i. all
j. book
Now go on to "Ten Word Parts in Context" on the next page. Working through this chapter will help you to
strengthen your knowledge of the word parts you already know and to master the word parts you're only half sure
of, or don't know at al.
Keep in mind that learning word parts can pay several dividends. Word parts can help with the spelling and
pronunciation of many words. They can also help you to unlock the meanings of unfamiliar words.
57
58
Chapter 12
1 an-, a-
a. When she received an anonymous note from "an admirer," Jenny was just itching to
know who sent it.
b. Harold is completely apolitical. He never votes in local, state, or national elections; in
fact, he usually doesn't even know who the candidates arc.
2 biblio-, bibl-
a. Many bibliophiles came to the auction of Mr. Steffen's possessions. These book lovers
were eager to see his well-known book collection.
b. The first book ever printed was the Gutenberg Bible.
3 fid
4 -ism
5 nov
a. People are always trying to sell something new. This year's novelty seems to be bubble
gum cards with pictures of mud wrestlers.
b. An innovative cook, Maria thinks of fresh combinations, like potatoes and oranges, and
they come out tasting delicious.
6 pan-
a. As their name implies, the Pan-American games don't involve athletes from all over
the world, but from all the AmericasNorth America, Central America, and South
America.
b. Some people turn to drugs in hopes of finding a panacea, a remedy for all the problems
in their lives.
7 prim, prime
a. When you get deep into a forest, you can imagine yourself back in primeval times,
long before humans appeared on the scene.
b. Because prime cuts of meat are so expensive, I generally buy lower-rated cuts.
8 rect
a. The pool, a large rectangle, was surrounded by bushes in rows as straight as the sides
of the pool itself.
b. We don't learn by doing only those things we can do well, but by trying new things,
making mistakes, and rectifying them.
9 syn-, sym-
a. We'd better synchronize our watches before the race starts. Let's set them all right now,
at 1:46.
b. A syndrome is a group of symptoms that are typical of a particular disease.
10 ver
a. I thought Jesse was lying about having seen a UFO, but when neighbors showed up,
they verified his story.
b. A verdict should be an honest statement of how members of the jury judge a case.
Chapter 12
59
2. biblio-, bibl-
b. trust, faith
3.
c. straight, right
fid
4. -ism
5. nov
6. pan-
f. true, real
7. prim, prime
g. with, together
8. rect
h. new
9. syn-,sym-
i. all
10. ver
j. book
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
'Ten Word Parts in Context," you will know how to match each word part. Then you can use the matches to
help you in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions
at all.
^-Sentence Check 1
Complete each partial word in the following sentences with a word part from the box. Use each word part only
once. You may want to check off each word part as you use it.
a-
biblio-
tld
-ism
nov
pan-
prim
rect
syn-
ver
in . . el}
is either a perso n with no religious faith at all or someone co
lacking faith in respect to a particular religion.
2. I don't know how the magician did it, but he held up the (. . . _y)
thinking of.
3. Standing near the top of the mountain, Cliff filmed the (. . . orama)
valley.
4. The ( . . . ary)
of the entire
5. When people say "as the crow flies," they mean in a straight, (di... )
6. The (. . .graphy)
songs.
line.
believes
their shabby old
Now check your answers to these questions by turning to page 164. Going over the answers carefully will help
you prepare for the next two checks, for which answers are not given.
60
Chapter 12
-ism
a-
biblio-
fid
pan-
prim
reel
nov
sym-, syn-
ver
he (. . . ary)
principle of (. . . theism)
1-2. The
personal God, but that all of the universe is God.
is that
of books dealing with Hitler, the Nazis, and World War II.
orchestra must
of the conductor.
in the automotive
field. Because he doesn't want his new idea to leak out, he's only (con .. . ing)
few people he really trusts.
in a
thoroughly
and other places people gathered to
worship, he was not attracted by any organized religion. He came to believe that God existed in all of
nature, that the trees, stones and streams were'all holy parts of God. At first he thought his ideas were
( . . . el) (4)
(5)
in one form
or another is not all that new. Alex argued that since no one could (.. . ify) (1)
religious beliefs in scientific fashion, people would just have to accept their differences. But his parents
viewed him as totally (... religious) (8)
was an (in.. .el) (9)
his errors.
SCORES:
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
_____________
_^__
2. prolific
bureaucratic
cohesive
terse
3. recourse
mandate
tenet
liability
4. robust
terse
indigenous
superfluous
Felipe seems so
5.
inundated
equivocated
ostracized
depreciated
group. We stuck
person undertakes.
today that it's hard to imagine him so
6. reticent
replete
prolific
predisposed
Although Marian is open and talkative when the two of us are alone, she is
7. sedentary
tenacious
tantamount
nebulous
8. depreciated
reiterated
equivocated
circumvented
9. terse
clandestine
solicitous
fortuitous
Because of the
10. inundate
exonerate
bolster
equivocate
for a long time. But once the secret is out, the abuse will usually stop.
The table at the coffee shop was slanted, and the muffins were hard as rocks. So we
used one of the muffins to
__^___
62
11.
bureaucratic
solicitous
impeccable
robust
her last employer. But she soon found herself making many strict rules to keep her own
workers in line.
12. ostracize
sanction
inundate
circumvent
13.
tantamount
inquisitive
replete
grievous
system of
benefits because he provided no evidence that his health was bad enough to prevent him
from working.
with customs originally
intended to insure the couple's fertility, including having a wedding cake, throwing rice,
and tying shoes on the back of the car.
PART B
Circle C if the italicized word is used correctly. Circle I if the word is used incorrectly.
C I
14.
C I
15.
C I
16.
I think that Thco's behavior toward his sister is reprehensible. He shouldn't be allowed to mistreat
her so.
C I
17.
For many people, hearing a boyfriend or girlfriend say, "I just want to be friends" is tantamount to
total rejection.
C F
18.
Many people invest in art and antiques, hoping that their investments will eventually depreciate.
C I
19.
After sitting in a small office all day, Jane enjoyed more sedentary activities, such as racquetball or
tennis.
C I
20.
In my grandmother's former nursing home, only one nurse was at all solicitous. The others gave her
no care.
21.
Frannie is so nebulous when she talks that I always know exactly what she thinks and feels about a
subject.
C I
22.
After getting no satisfaction at the car dealership, Mom decided her best recourse would be the
president of the company.
23.
When Clarence arrived at camp, he was immediately ostracized by the other campers. He was
thrilled to be so warmly welcomed.
C I
24.
A tall tree indigenous to Australia has been successfully transplanted to the edge of the Sahara
Desert, where it keeps the desert from spreading.
C I
25.
My cousin is so egocentric that when the family got together for his sister's graduation, he assumed
the gathering was in honor of his new job as a fast-food manager.
x4 =
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
circumvent
exonerate
grievous
inundate
mandate
oblivious
predisposed
prolific
sham
solace
tenet
utopia
vociferous
4. We tried to
road was being repaired too.
5. The main
of the neighborhood "Girls are Great" club is the idea that girls
can do anything that boys can do.
6. Gerry was
another student's locker.
7.
Because his father and grandfather both had heart disease, my cousin worries that he may be
to the same disorder.
9. When the Bakers' young daughter died last year, they found
support group of other parents who had also lost a child.
with a
10. After telling a reader to kick her boyfriend out, the newspaper advice columnist was
(e)d with thousands of letters saying she was wrong.
11. When three-year-old Ginger doesn't get what she wants, she becomes so
that you can hear her screams all over the neighborhood.
12. The invitation we sent my parents to attend a friend's birthday party was a(n)
. We were actually inviting them to a surprise party in honor of their
anniversary.
13. The most
woman on record is a Russian peasant who lived in the early
1700's. She gave birth to sixty-nine childrensixteen pairs of twins, seven sets of triplets, and four
sets of quadruplets.
63
64
PART B
Circle C if the italicized word is used correctly. Circle I if the word is used incorrectly.
I 14.
I 15. Doris calls herself inquisitive because she likes to ask people so many questions, but personally, I
think she's just plain nosy.
16.
Indiscriminate in his choice of friends, my brother refuses to associate with people whose idea of a
good time is stealing a car.
17.
The student expelled for drug possession was reinstated in school only after completing a
rehabilitation program.
18. My uncle is quite terse. He talks for at least an-hour every time I call him.
19. In the overcrowded school, math classes were relegated to trailers behind the gym.
I 20.
I 21. Our company has grown by leaps and bounds through attrition.
22.
My meeting with Phil was fortuitous. We had planned to meet ever since Phil registered for the
conference in my hometown.
Although they planned an outdoor wedding, Heather and Tony wanted to be prepared for any
contingency. So they rented a large tent, in case of rain.
C 23. As a liaison between hospital staff and patients' families, Jon helped provide information about
relatives' conditions in language families could understand.
C
I 24. When she went away to college, Beth showed her autonomy by calling her parents every day and
asking their advice on each decision she faced, no matter how small.
C I 25. It seems incongruous that the Taylors, who are so health conscious, should allow their children to sit
in front of the TV for hours each day, munching on chips and cookies.
SCORE: (Numbercorrect)
x4 =
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
Complete each sentence in a way that clearly shows you understand the meaning of the boldfaced word. Take a
minute to plan your answer before you write.
Example: On our picnic, we carried a basket replete with
1.
A very terse answer to the question "Did you have fun at the dentist's office?" is: "
3.
4.
Marcie has a tendency to be vociferous. When the waitress brought her the wrong food, for example,
5.
6.
7.
8.
I have a propensity to ^
.. For example,
65
66
fortuitous
accidental
purposeful
riskv
forbidden
admirable
blameworthy
12. robust
healthv
dangerous
weak
13.
infertile
large
fruitful
14. oblivious
exciting
aware
unaware
15. nebulous
clear
strong
vaeue
11.
reprehensible
prolific
PART C
Use five of the following ten words in sentences. Make it clear that you know the meaning of the word you use.
Feel free to use the past tense or plural form of a word.
autonomy
clandestine
depreciate
exonerate
raucous
reiterate
relegate
sedentary
inquisitive
sham
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
Listed in the left-hand column below are ten common word parts, along with words in which the parts are used.
In each blank, write in the letter of the correct definition on the right.
Word Parts
Definitions
1. an-, a-
anesthesia, amoral
2. biblio-, bibl-
bibliography, Bible
b. all
3. fid
fidelity, confide
4. -ism
socialism, Judaism
d. new
5. nov
novel, innovate
e. straight, right
6. pan-
Pan-American, pantheism
7. prim, prime
primitive, prime
g. trust, faith
rectangle, direct
h. book
synchronize, sympathy
i. true, real
verify, verdict
j. with, together
__ 8. rect
9. syn-, sym10. ver
PART B
Find the word part that correctly completes each word. Then write the full word in the blank space. Not every
word part will be used.
an-
biblio-
fid
-ism
nov
pan-
prime
rect
syn-
ver
e, a(n) (. . . phile)
12. Zcr\(Buddh....)
13. ( . . . orexia)"_
67
68
PARTC
Use your4cnowlcdge of word parts to determine the meaning of the boldfaced words. Circle the letter of each
meaning.
16. Jessica was a novice at carpentry.
a, expert
b. beginner
c. worker
b. argument
c. workbook
b. patience
c. the masses
b intention
c. honesty
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
CHAPTER
Unit Three
13
Previewing the Words
Find out how many of the ten words in this chapter you already know. Try to complete each sentence with
the most suitable word from the list below. Use each word once.
Leave a sentence blank rather than guessing at an answer. Your purpose here is just to get a sense of the
ten words and what you may know about them.
advocate
antipathy
emancipate
idiosyncrasy
imminent
impede
inclusive
jurisdiction
precarious
preposterous
8. Merchants are angry that the construction barriers along Michigan Avenue
shoppers who wish to enter the stores.
9. According to the course description, "Starting Your Own Business" is a prettyclass. It begins with developing your idea and lakes you right through your first year of business,
10. The salesman promised that his combination vacuum cleaner/floor polisher/carpet shampooer would
people from hours of back-breaking housework.
Now check your answers by luming to page 164. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and to masier the words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
69
70
Chapter 13
2 antipathy
(an-ti'-po-thc)
noun
a. I can't believe that my sister is going to marry a guy she was expressing such antipathy
for just a few months ago.
3 emancipate
(e-man'-so-pat')
-verb
a. Abraham Lincoln is best remembered for his efforts to emancipate American slaves.
b. Bud's parents didn't understand why he hated school so much until they realized his
antipathy was due to a difficulty in seeing the blackboard.
b. When Allied troops entered German concentration camps at the end of World War II,
they emancipated thousands of starving prisoners.
4 idiosyncrasy
a. One of the famous pianist's idiosyncrasies was keeping a certain brand of mineral water
(id'-e-o-sing'-krs-se)
on stage while he performed.
-noun
b. Please don't mind my uncle's idiosyncrasy of asking very personal questions. He
doesn't realize how odd it seems to other people.
5 imminent
(im'-3-nont)
-adjective
6 impede
(im-pcd')
-verb
a. Will their teacher's three-week absence impede the students' progress in Spanish?
7 inclusive
(in-kl'-siv)
-adjective
a. The medical center's annual fee is inclusive, covering all visits and services.
8 jurisdiction
(joor'-is-dik'-shon)
-noun
a. You can't take a murder case to traffic court because the judge doesn't have jurisdiction
to hear a murder case.
b. When the township police realized the car bombing was beyond their jurisdiction, they
called in the state police.
9 precarious
(pre-ker'-e-os)
-adjective
10 preposterous
(pre-pos'-t3r-3s)
-adjective
b. Local beaches are open from June to September inclusive. No swimming is allowed
from October 1 to May 31.
b. The building's faulty electrical wiring puts all of the residents in a precarious situation.
a. Louis always has some preposterous business scheme in mind. Now he wants to open
up a doughnut shop in Antarctica.
b. The discovery of x-rays in 1895 led to some preposterous reactions. For example,
London merchants sold x-ray-proof underwear.
Chapter 13
71
2. antipathy
3. emancipate
_ 4. idiosyncrasy
_:
5. imminent
6. impede
7. inclusive
8. jurisdiction
h. a personal peculiarity
9. precarious
i. dangerous; risky
10. preposterous
j. about to happen
_.
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
'Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
^-Sentence Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
advocate
antipathy
emancipate
idiosyncrasy
imminent
impede
inclusive
jurisdiction
precarious
preposterous
1. For someone severely allergic to insect bites, a simple walk in the woods can be
2. Many experts __^____
3. The weekend auto show takes place from Friday through Monday
4. The defendant was called back into the courtroom when the announcement of the verdict was
5. I swore that nothing would
bottleneck made a liar of me.
'
7. Since the bank robber's thefts occurred in several states, the FBI was the agency with ____^__
in the case.
8. Burt thinks his
for everything that isn't "all-American" proves he's a great patriot, bui
I think a dislike of everything foreign shows ignorance.
9. When my little boy said there was a frog in his drinking cup, I laughed at the
until I looked and saw there really was one there.
__ 'dc
10. Ralph thought that Michiko's habit of taking her shoes off before entering a house was a(n)
C i_
T
72
Chapter 13
Check 2
Complete efech sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
advocate
antipathy
emancipate
idiosyncrasy
imminent
impede
inclusive
jurisdiction
precarious
preposterous
'
7-8. During the Civil War, President Lincoln's administration could not actually
because his government had no
the slaves
in the South.
belief that he's an evil
9-10. Ellen's ^
toward Jack is based on the
spy from a distant planet that is similar to Earth.
, extending even to animals others find less appealing, such as rats, which she
keeps as pets. Because she loves animals, Ann hates to see them caged. She objects to anything that
(2)
of
hers is letting her white rats run freely throughout her bedroom.
toward zoos. If Ann had
all
animals from captivity. Ann considers the idea that zoos protect animals to be (7)
because zoo captures cause the deaths of many animals, during both trapping and shipping. She believes that
the most (8)
life in the wild is preferable to the safest life in captivity. Well aware
freeing the animals with the hope that zoos will eventually close their doors forever.
SCORES:
Sentence Check 2
% Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
CHAPTER
14
Previewing the Words
Find out how many of the ten words in this chapter you already know. Try to complete each sentence with
the most suitable word from the list below. Use each word once.
Leave a sentence blank rather than guessing at an answer. Your purpose here is just to get a sense of the
ten words and what you may know about them.
austere
esoteric
facsimile
grotesque
mesmerixe
metamorphosis
notorious
perfunctory
provocative
travesty
facehow would
8. The contest instructions said, "Use only an original entry form. A copy machine
will not be accepted."
9. While most candidates were passionate on the topic of reducing weapons, one spoke in a merely
way, with little care or interest.
10. "This is a(n)
.," Maureen said angrily, handing me an ad showing the Statue of
Liberty wearing blue jeans and smoking a cigarette.
Now check your answers by turning to page 164. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and to master the words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
73
74
Chapter 14
a. Miss Stone dressed in a very austere manner. She never wore make-up, jewelry, or even
hair clips.
2 esoteric
(es'-s-tcr'-ik)
-adjective
a. The article on cancer treatment was esoteric. It contained too many technical terms and
assumed too much medical knowledge to be understood by people outside the
profession.
b. The white walls in Alan's den are almost empty, and the white furniture has simple lines.
This austere decor gives the room a pleasantly calm mood.
b. The poetry of Ezra Pound, filled with references to ancient Greek culture, is too esoteric
for most readers.
3 facsimile
(fak -sim' -o- le)
-noun
a. Instead of mailing a document, you can send a facsimile of it across the country in
seconds with a fax machine.
4 grotesque
(gro-tesk1)
-adjective
a. Many find the movie character E.T. adorable, but to me, the little alien is a grotesque
combination of babyish features and ancient-looking skin.
5 mesmerize
(mez'-mo-nz)
-verb
a. When driving at night, you can be mesmerized by the lines on the road or by taillights.
To avoid a hypnotic state, keep your eyes moving from front to side to rearview mirror.
6 metamorphosis
(met'-o-mor'-fa-sis)
-noun
7 notorious
(n-tr'-e-ss)
-adjective
a. The notorious outlaw Jesse James stole gold bars worth over a million dollars and
buried them in the Wichita Mountains in Oklahoma. The gold was never recovered.
8 perfunctory
(par-funk'-to-re)
-adjective
a. The doctor described the patient's illness in the most perfunctory way. He seemed to
take no interest whatsoever in the case.
9 provocative
(pro-vok'-o-tiv)
-adjective
a. All ads are intended to be provocative, but they can stir up interest and curiosity in
varying ways, through humor, information, and so on.
10 travesty
(trav'-is-te)
-noun
a. The fraternity skit, a travesty of college life, exaggerated and ridiculed many class and
dorm activities.
b. The production of Hamlet was a travesty. The director staged the entire play as if it
were a comedy instead of a tragedy.
b. Squinting his eyes and pulling down the corners of his mouth, the clown made a
grotesque face.
b. The intense look in the eyes of the woman in the photograph mesmerized me. I became
totally fascinated by we picture.
b. In Franz Kafka's famous story "The Metamorphosis," a man wakes up on his 30th
birthday and discovers he has turned into a cockroach.
b. In the Batman comics and TV series, the Joker and the Penguin were notorious
criminals who matched wits with the capcd crusader.
b. "Write a provocative essay," said our English teacher. "Make your reader interested in
what you have to say from the very first paragraph."
Chapter 14
75
1. austere
2. esoteric
3. facsimile
4. grotesque
5. mesmeri/e
6. metamorphosis
__
7. notorious
8. perfunctory
9. provocative
-__
10. travesty
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
"Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
-Sentence Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
auslere
esoteric
facsimile
grotesque
u-snu-
metamorphosis
notorious
perfunctory
pros oca t i v y
ravcst;
6. Legal documents arc usually worded in such __^__^_^_^^__ language that most people need a lawyer
to translate the "legalesc" into plain English.
7. As I watched the grandfather clock, I became _^____
back and forth, back and forth, back and forth.
8. Usually the therapist showed great interest in her patients, but today she was too tired and worried about her
own family to give more than _ __^_^_________ responses.
9. Our dorm room, so colorfully decorated with posters and knickknacks, looks
end of the school year, when we all take home our belongings.
_____ at the
76
Chapl
-Sentence Check 2
Complete each sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
penuiK'lon
1-2. The political cartoon, a ______
with tiny eyes and a huge mouth.
form,
. . .. Party
Here is a final opportunity for you to strengthen your knowledge of the ten words. First read the following passage
carefully. Then fill in each blank with a word from the box at the lop of this page. (Context clues will help you
figure out which word goes in which blank.) Use each word once.
On the afternoon of a friend's New Year's Eve c o s t u m e p a r t y , I made o n l y a(n)
(1)
effort to put together a costume. Uninterested in spending time on a complicated
costume, I tried to think of something so (2)
that it would be simple to makelike a
plain sheet over my head with the eyes cut out. Since I had a clean green sheet, I went as the ghost of a frog.
The party began for me in a very (3)
manner when the door was opened by
Elizabeth Taylor. That is, the person looked just like her, complete with a (4)
of
Taylor's 69-carat diamond, worn around the neck.
As I entered the party, I noticed Blackbeard and Captain Hook, two pirates (5)
for their murderous ways. When I approached to listen to Lheir conversation, however, I was disappointed.
Instead of being (6)
d by spellbinding tales of cut-throat adventure, I heard the
(7)
language of math majors.
Giving up any hope of understanding their conversation, I looked around for friends. But the
(8)
___ from ordinary people to the odd and famous was so complete that I hardly
recognized anyone. Most of the costumes were in good taste. One, though, was a (9)
of a beloved president. Dressed as Abraham Lincoln, someone wore a bull's-eye target, in a crude mockery
of that president's assassination. Another person, so (10)
as to be horrifying, had
eyes of two different sizes and a mouth twisted to one side.
In the course of the evening, I also met Cleopatra, Shakespeare, and Snoopy, among others. I may never,
again spend time in the company of so many celebrities.
SCORES:
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
CHAPTER
15
Previewing the Words
Find out how many of the ten words in this chapter you already know. Try to complete each sentence with
the most suitable word from the list below. Use each word once.
Leave a sentence blank rather than guessing at an answer. Your purpose here is just to get a sense of the
ten words and what you may know about them.
connoisseur
conspiracy
contrite
cursory
distraught
germane
lucid
plight
symmetrical
verbose
3. The king executed many of his top officials when he discovered their
him.
4. Jay's parents were
against
until they learned that he was not on the plane that crashed.
6. Because Professor Kane's writing lacks clarity, I was surprised to find his lectures to be so wonderfully
8. We made progress at the meeting until Henry brought up a topic that wasn't
the problem at hand.
9. It didn't take us long to reject the shabby apartment. After just a
the rental agent it wasn't acceptable.
10. Although many people find Doris to be
hearing her constant chatter.
to
tour, we told
Now check your answers by turning to page 165. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and to master the words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
77
78
Chapter 15
a. My sister has read so many Southern novels that she's quite a connoisseur of the
different authors and their styles.
2 conspiracy
(kon-spir'-o-se)
noun
a. The conspiracy to overthrow the government was started by two of the premier's own
advisors.
3 contrite
(kon-trit1)
-adjective
a. Dolores was especially contrite about tearing her sister's dress because she'd borrowed
it without permission.
4 cursory
(kur'-so-re)
-adjective
a. This morning, the auto mechanic didn't have time to give my car more than a cursory
inspection. He said he'd look it over more carefully and give me an estimate later.
5 distraught
(di-strot1)
-adjective
a. The parents of the little girl who wandered off in the crowded mall were distraught until
she was found.
6 germane
(jor-man1)
adjective
a. Stacy went to the law library to look up information that might be germane to her
client's case.
lucid
a. I usually find computer manuals horribly unclear, but this one is lucid.
(loo'-sid)
-adjective
8 plight
b. You couldn't call Pete a connoisseur of wines. He prefers the worst peach-flavored
slosh to fine French wine.
b. Although only Lee Harvey Oswald was arrested for John F. Kennedy's assassination,
many believe there was a conspiracy to kill the president.
b. Judges are often softer on offenders who truly regret their crimes. A criminal who is not
contrite is likely to get a stiffcr sentence.
b. Leah stayed up all night cramming for the exam. Joyce, however, gave her textbook only
a cursory review an hour before the test.
b. As the snowfall became heavier and heavier and my wife was later and later in getting
home from work, I became increasingly distraught about her safely.
b. It bothered Christine when her new boss asked if she had a boyfriend. That information
certainly wasn't germane to her job performance.
b. The scientist explained the greenhouse effect in such a lucid way that the entire audience
seemed to understand.
a. What's being done about the plight of the homeless?
(pin)
-noun
b. There was news of the explosion, but it was too soon to know much about the plight of
those trapped inside the mine.
9 symmetricai
(si-mc'-iri-kol)
-adjective
10 verbose
1
(vgr-bos )
-adjective
a. The children's sand castle was symmetrical, with a tower and flag on each side.
b. Tired of her symmetrical hairstyle, Jill had her hair cut short on one side and left long
on the other.
a. The verbose senator said, "At this point in time, we have an urgent and important need
for more monetary funds to declare unconditional war on the evils of drugs." The
reporter wrote: "The senator said we urgently need more money to fight drugs."
b. Gabe is the most verbose person I know. He'll always use ten words when one would
do.
/
79
Chapter 15
a. very troubled
2. conspiracy
3. contrite
4. cursory
5. distraught
6. germane
7. lucid
8. plight
9. symmetrical
10. verbose
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
'Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
>*~Sentence Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
connoisseur
conspiracy
contrite
cursory
distraught
germane
lucid
plight
Symmetrical
verbose
1. Claire was truly sorry for having started the argument with Sal. To show how
she sent him an apology card.
about the _ of the hostages.
__
she felt,
2.
Reports vary
alive.
3.
The _ garden has a central path with the same flowers and shrubs on both sides.
4.
A _ of Oriental art told me that my old Chinese vase is actually quite rare and valuable.
in writing than to be brief and clear.
5. It is easier to be
6. Benedict Arnold, an American officer during the Revolutionary War, was involved in a
__
to
help
the
British
win.
7. The teacher and classmates became irritated when Susan asked so many questions that weren't
_
to
the
class
discussion.
8. My parents expected my sister home by midnight. By the time she finally walked in at 1 a.m., they were greatly
9. Gary's teacher was so pleased with his clear explanation of a difficult theory that she wrote on his paper,
"Wonderfully
!"
10. My husband is no help when it comes to picking out dresses. He gives anything I show him a
inspection and says, "That's fine. Let's buy it and get out of here."
Now check your answers to these questions by turning to page 165. Going over the answers carefully will help
you prepare for the next two checks, for which answers are not given.
Chapter 15
80
Check 2
Complete each sentence below wiih two words from the box. Use each word once.
connoisseur
conspiracy
contrite
cursory
distraught
germane
lucid
plight
symmetrical
verbose
..
1-2. In the novel Rosemary's Baby, Rosemary becomes more and more
examination.
5-6.
about having caused the accident, but his regret won't improve
. She'll be handicapped forever.
to our discussion of the Age of Reason to mention that
architecture was especially popular during the period. Mental and physical balance
were both prized."
9-10. Believe it or not, too many words can make something more difficult to understand. Thus if the essay had not
been so
, it would have been more
.
It wasn't until noon that Daniel Cobb noticed the painting was missing. He was immediately
(1)
. As a (2)
of 19th-century French paintings, he well knew
the work's enormous value. He was so upset by his (3)
that when he phoned the police.
way. Instead, he found himself rambling so
he could scarcely think or talk in a (4)
fool interested only in hearing
much that he feared the police would think him a (5)
himself talk,
However, the police soon arrived at Cobb's magnificent home, a grand old (6)
building, with matching columns to the left and right of the front door. Leading the police to the room from
which the painting had been taken, Cobb began to explain. "Last night," he said, "my wife and I gave a dinner
party for several art experts. We showed them our entire collection. I remember the special attention that they
gave the painting now missing. At least, a few of them seemed to give it more than a merely
(7)
examination. I can only assume that we are the victims of a (8)
.
One of the guests must have arranged to sneak back into the house during the night and take the painting."
As Cobb finished speaking, his wife entered the room, having just returned from town. She was clearly
alarmed by the presence of the police. After Cobb quickly explained, however, she started to laugh. "Today's
Monday," she finally said.
"I hardly see how that's (9)
to our problem!" her husband responded.
"Remember, we told the Leeworth Art Association it could exhibit the painting today, for their annual
show. That's where I've been. I brought them the painting early this morning."
Cobb looked embarrassed but relieved. "Accept my sincere apology for having bothered you. I am most
(10)
," he said to the police officers. "Please stay and have some lunch."
SCORES:
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
CHAPTER
16
Previewing the Words
Find out how many of the ten words in this chapter you already know. Try to complete each sentence with
the most suitable word from the list below. Use each word once.
Leave a sentence blank rather than guessing at an answer. Your purpose here is just to get a sense of the
ten words and what you may know about them.
adept
encompass
entrepreneur
eradicate
homogeneous
presumptuous
sordid
standardize
stint
stringent
1. Although the TV star appears wholesome, it's rumored that her private life is
2. Frank is a(n)
3.
4. After her
5. My brother's habit of giving advice without being asked makes him seem
6. Dan calls himself a(n)
ground.
7. The dorm's curfew rule was
out for the night.
8. Why do so many people wish to
wrinkles and gray hair?
_(e)d what students must wear, they wore just about anything.
Now check your answers by turning to page 165. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and to master the words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
'
81
Figure out the meanings of the following ten words by looking closely and carefully at the context in which the
words appear. Doing so will prepare you for the matching test and practices on the two pages that follow.
1 a^ept
(o-dcpt')
-adjective
a. Justin is so adept at seeming innocent and truthful that people usually believe his lies.
2 encompass
(cn-kum'-pos)
-verb
3 entrepreneur
(on'-trs-pre-nur1)
a. Glenville has no shopping district, but it's growing so quickly that some smart
entrepreneur will probably sec the opportunity for new businesses there.
-noun
b. People enjoy visiting my parents, who arc adept at making guests feel welcome and
content.
b. Ned's self-improvement campaign encompassed reading the newspaper every day and
becoming active in a local environmental group.
b. My little neighbor is quite an entrepreneur. He took the four dollars he earned from his
lemonade stand, invested it in baseball cards, and sold them for eight dollars profit.
4 eradicate
(e-rad'-i-kai')
-verb
a. The earthquake eradicated an entire city block, yet it left buildings just one slieet away
undamaged.
5 homogeneous
(h'-m-jc'-nc-ss)
-adjective
a. The student body at Eastman High appears quite homogeneous, but there are significant
social and economic differences among the students.
6 presumptuous
(pre-zump'-choo-os)
-adjective
7 sordid
(sor'-did)
-adjective
a. Supermarket tabloids sell because many people are interested in sordid details about
celebrities' lives.
8 standardize
(stan'-dor-dTz1)
-verb
a. When the company standardized its pay scale, the salary for all types of jobs became
consistent throughout the company.
9 stint
(stint)
-noun
10 stringent
(strin'-jont)
-adjective
b. I was horrified when a power failure shut off my computer. Much of my term paper had
been completely eradicated.
b. If you ask personal questions in a job interview, the interviewer will think you're
presumptuous.
b. The reformed criminal now lectures at high schools on how to avoid the mistakes that
Jed him into a sordid life as a drug dealer.
b. If Jessica begins selling her soup, she'll have to standardi/e the ingredients. Now she
just puts in whatever she has on hand.
a. Ms. Jasper had the most stringent standards in the high school. Getting an A from her
was next to impossible.
b. Legislators should be held to a stringent code of ethics that opposes even the
appearance of improper behavior.
Chapter 16
83
2. encompass
b. highly skilled
3. entrepreneur
c. a period of work
4. eradicate
5. homogeneous
6. presumptuous
7. sordid
8. standardize
h. to include; contain
9. stint
_.'.. _
1
10. stringent
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
'Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
n the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all,
^-Sentence Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
adept
encompass
entrepreneur
eradicate
homogeneous
presumptuous
sordid
standardi/e
stint
stringent
1. It's_
of Amy to assume she's got the job when others arc still being interviewed.
at acupuncture.
than the love affair itself were the lies Sally told to conceal it from her husband.
4. My grandfather held many jobs during his life. He even put in a(n)
5. Joyce and Steven are working hard to
son.
6. The town is so .
related.
as a circus performer.
that a stranger could easily feel out of place. Many of the residents are even
8. My sister applied to several colleges, some with very high standards for their students and others with less
requirements.
9. Rick has just opened an auto repair shop. As a(n)
Association for the Self-Employed.
10. Should school curriculums be
design their own courses of study?
-.
Now check your answers to these questions by turning to page 165. Going over the answers carefully will help
you prepare for the next two checks, for which answers are not given.
84
Chapter 16
^-Sentence Check 2
Complete each sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
adept
encompass
entrepreneur
eradicate
homogeneous
presumptuous
sordid
standardize
stint
stringent
1 -2. A successful
is
past.
7-8. I've worked at the day-care center only one week, so it may be
but I think the center's program should ^
of me to suggest this,
more activities geared to shy children.
9-10. At a small alternative school, al! children were at first put into one large class. Later the children were divided
into smaller, more
classes. In addition, administrators decided to
curriculum so that all students of one grade would use the same texts.
the
as a waitress in a coffee shop to allow time for something tfetter to turn up. She
had been offered only one higher-paying job, as an exotic dancer in a bar, but she felt that work was too
-
(2)
At least she enjoyed the coffee shop. For someone used to a small, (3)
town, the
customers seemed to come in an enormous variety. Also, the low salary forced her to suck to a(n)
(4)
__^_ of a waitress to offer a business suggestion, Gina gave him a good idea about
his rental system. He could ask all his customers to fill out the same form.
signed up automatically for both stores at once. The man complimented Gina on her helpful advice.
Some time later, he stopped in at the coffee shop to say he needed a capable person to manage his new
store. He offered Gina the job. Within a year, she was the manager of three video stores and earning an
excellent salary. Her success, however, would never fully (10)
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
CHAPTER
17
Previewing the Words
Find out how many of the ten words in this chapter you already know. Try to complete each sentence with
the most suitable word from the list below. Use each word once.
Leave a sentence blank rather than guessing at an answer. Your purpose here is just to get a sense of the
ten words and what you may know about them.
exhort
masochist
flamboyant
foible
innocuous
magnanimous
meticulous
rancor
recrimination
repugnant
. He attends college full time, works two jobs, and does ten
4. When differences between people aren't settled, they may result in long-lasting
s. Each accused
Now check your answers by turning to page 165. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and to master the words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
85
86
Chapter 17
a. "Exhort your children to attend the drug meeting," said the school counselor to parents.
"Explain how much they'll gain if they attend. 1 '
2 flamboyant
(flam-boi'-ont)
-adjective
a. Lilly can't resist flamboyant clothes. She'd even wear a bright flowered dress to a
funeral.
3 foible
(foi'-bol)
-noun
a. Major character flaws arc hard to overlook, but foibles can often be easily tolerated.
4 innocuous
(in-nok'-y-os)
-adjective
5 magnanimous
(mag-nan'-3-mos)
-adjective
6 masochist
(mas'-s-kist)
-noun
a. Psychologists arc trying to understand why masochists gain satisfaction from suffering.
7 meticulous
(mo-tik'-y-Ios)
-adjective
a. When you proofread your writing, be meticulous and check every detail.
8 rancor
(ran'-kor)
-noun
a. The rancor between my two uncles has lasted since 1977, when Uncle John married the
woman to whom Uncle Ron had proposed.
9 recrimination
(ri-krim'-s-na'-shon)
-noun
10 repugnant
(ri-pug'-nont)
-adjective
b. When my mother was having trouble breathing, I exhorted her to go to the doctor.
Finally, she gave in to my urging and went.
b. With his silver piano, scquincd suits, and many rings, Liberacc was probably the world's
most flamboyant pianist.
b. Workers at the Poison Information Center can tell you if a household substance is
innocuous or harmful.
b. "A masochist's idea of a good time," said the comic, "is getting hit by a truck on the
way home from having all his teeth pulled."
b. Since bookkeeping requires careful, precise work, my boss wants to hire a meticulous
person for the job.
b. When there is long-lasting rancor between divorced parents, children often start to share
this bitterness.
b. The marriage counseling sessions began as a series of accusations between husband and
wife and never progressed beyond these recriminations.
a. The most beautiful pearl can seem repugnant when you think of it as the hardened
mucus of an oyster.
b. My parents found the way I ate certain foods to be offensive, but I see nothing
repugnant about mixing peas and ketchup into mashed potatoes.
Chapter 17
87
b. harmless
3. foible
4. innocuous
5. magnanimous
6. masochist
_ .
7. meticulous
8. rancor
( 9 J recrimination
10. repugnant
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
'Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
^-Sentence Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
exhort
flamboyant
foible
innocuous
njagnanimou.s
masochist
meticulous
ran cur
recrimination
rypuk'iiani
of the Greens to forgive the driver who ran into their little boy.
3. The opposite of a
4. A _
after day.
Xe)d the players to go to bed early the night before the game. Most
8. When one man yelled, "Your wild kids have ruined my lawn!" his next door neighbor yelled back this
: "Well, your dog has ruined my roses!"
9. Some jobs shouldn't be done in a(n)
sweeping a floor that's about to get dirty again?
10. On New Year's Day in Philadelphia, string bands called "Mummers" strut their stuff in
costumes designed to out-sparkle the showiest outfits of the other bands in the parade.
Now check your answers to these questions by turning to page 165. Going over the answers carefully will help
you prepare for the next two checks, for which answers are not given.
Chapter 17
88
>-Sentence Check 2
Complete each sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
exhort
flamboyant
foible
innocuous
magnanimous
masochist
meticulous
rancor
recrimination
repugnant
in our handwriting.
in forgiving each other's errors if they
between them.
as
'.
happy down on his knees, scrubbing the bathroom floor with a toothbrush (one of the "old" ones lhat be
replaced after using it for a week)?
Soon the accusations start, each bringing, in turn, a (9)_
. She yells, "You arc a sick
neatnik. You spend more time holding that vacuum cleaner than you spend holding me!" He responds, "If you
weren't so sloppy, I'd hold you more often. As it is, I have to climb over a mountain of junk just to get near
you!"
Eventually, the feelings of (10)
become too great to overcome. Another
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
.
CHAPTER
sv i i ;. .
a. many
b. time
c. hold
d. death
f. chief, ruler
g. life, breath
h. good, well
i. send
Now go on to "Ten Word Parts in Context" on the next page. Working through this chapter will help you to
strengthen your knowledge of the word parts you already know and to master the word parts you're only half sure
of, or don't know at all.
Keep in mind that learning word parts can pay several dividends. Word parts can help with the spelling and
pronunciation of many words. They can also help you to unlock the meanings of unfamiliar words.
89
90
Chapter 18
a. When she was very ill, Trina lay quietly in bed. We knew she was beginning to recover
when she sat up and talked in an animated fashion.
b. I never understood why pet rockswhich are, after all, inanimate objectsbecame so
popular. Who would want to adopt a pet that i s n ' t even breathing?
2 arch, -archy
a. Every superhero needs a powerful archenemy. For Batman, it's the clown-faced Joker.
b. The Amish family is a patriarchy. The father rules the household, and women and
children are expected to obey.
3 bene-, ben-
a. Day care has been a beneficial experience for Cheryl. She's become much less shy.
b. If Scott takes even one drink, his usually benign personality disappears and he becomes
mean and destructive.
4 -ee
a. The mayor must appoint another chief of police. His last appointee is unavailable due
to a two-year prison sentence.
b. After seeing my boss's problems first-hand, I know I'd rather be an employee than an
employer.
5 -logue
a. It's almost impossible to have a dialogue with Hal because he insists on doing all the
talking.
b. The prologue to the book explains that it's a journal kept by a sailor on a whaling ship
in 1826.
6 miss, mit
a. Although I use a telephone every day, I really have no idea how it transmits sound
waves across the miles.
b. In 1935, an entire German family was sent to Hawaii on a mission to spy for the
Japanese. Over the next few years, they gave much information on Pearl Harbor to
Japan.
7 mort
a. Ms. Patterson took her class to visit a mortician, who explained how he prepares a
body for burial.
b. There's a story about a man who was given the gift of never dying. Immortality turned
out to be a curse because he was constantly saddened by the deaths of all his friends.
8 poly-
a. Many kings of former times were polygamists. They had so many wives that they
might not have seen some for years at a time.
b. One great advantage of our polyethnic society is being able to enjoy the music and
foods of many cultures.
9 temper, tempo
a. The trailer in the Langs' yard is there temporarily, until the repairs on their house are
completed and they can move back in.
b. The chorus sang the difficult piece slowly at first. When they seemed sure of all the
notes, the director speeded up the tempo.
10 ten
a. For fighting in study hall, the girls were punished with detention. They were held in *
counselor's office after school for an hour every day for a week.
b. Tenant farmers hold the right to work someone else's land, for which they pay ren
with cash or a portion of the produce.
Chapter 18
91
a. many
b. time
c. hold
d. death
e. a specific type of speaking or writing
f. chief, ruler
g. life, breath
h, good, well
i. send
j. one who receives or experiences something; one who is
in a certain condition
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers arc correct. If you have studied the 'Ten
Word Parts in Context," you will know how to match each word part. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
^-Sentence Check 1
Complete each partial word in the following sentences with a word part from the box. Use each word part only
once. You may want to check off each word part as you use it.
anima
arch
bcne-
-ee
miss
mort
poly-
tempor
-logue
ten
92
Chapter 18
Check 2
Complete each partial word in the sentences below with a word part from the box. Use each word part once. If there
are two forms of a word part in the box, use \hcfirst one for this practice.
anima
arch
bene-, ben-
-ee
mit, miss
mor t
poly -
tempo r
-logue
ten
.
of the safety deposit box are (.. . arily)
7-8. The story of Frankenstein's monster is about a doctor who believed that a mere ( . . . al)
could have the power to ( . . . te)
a lifeless body.
authority wasn't questioned, but he wouldn't tolerate troublemakers. Community members were expected
to follow strictly the (. . . ets) (3)
members as his wives. He preached that his followers should value their eternal lives over their (. . . at)
(5)
existence, but much of his own time was spent driving around in a Rolls-
Royce. Every night the community would gather to hear Uncle's (mono . . . s) (6)
speeches that often lasted for hours. Many of his followers believed Uncle to be (im . . . al)
(7)
. Others admitted that he might die someday, but they expected his body to be
(9)
of the community, believed that God had sent him on a(n) (. . . ion)
(10)
to follow Uncle.
SCORES:
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
Choose the word that best completes each sentence and write it in the space provided.
1. austere
distraught
sordid
innocuous
2.
standardized
mesmerized
contrite
symmetrical
3. meticulous
precarious
austere
flamboyant
4. metamorphosis
connoisseur
jurisdiction
travesty
5. idiosyncrasy
antipathy
stint
facsimile
6. masochist
jurisdiction
plight
connoisseur
Having lived in Italy and studied cooking there, the newspaper's food critic is a
7. homogeneous
contrite
flamboyant
lucid
of Italian cuisine.
While the population of the United States includes a great variety of racial and
ethnic backgrounds, Japan's population is largely ____^__
8. stringent
verbose
notorious
magnanimous
9. rancor
recrimination
conspiracy
travesty
Some feel that a circus act in which costumed elephants dance or stand on their
10. facsimile
idiosyncrasy
foible
stint
heads is a
My
94
1 1 . lucid
germane
adept
imminent
12. cursory
imminent
contrite
grotesque
13. masochist
recrimination
facsimile
idiosyncrasy
A founder of the U.S. Steel Company was wealthy enough to have an expensive
gang members greedily attempted robbing two banks in one day, four were killed and
Ihe fifth captured.
appearance that he was called "The Elephant Man." Despite people's reactions to his
misshapen head and body, Mcrrick remained affectionate and gentle.
PART B
Circle C if the italicized word is used correctly. Circle I if the word is used incorrectly.
C I
14.
Only female black widow spiders are dangerous to humans. The males are entirely innocuous.
C I
15. The Beatles will always be famous because of their esoteric music.
C 1 16.
When Grandma's knee aches, she knows that a change in the wcauier is imminent.
C I 17.
Marsha, as verbose as always, signed her letter only "Best," instead of "Best wishes.1'
C I
18.
Ramps impede people in wheelchairs by allowing them to enter buildings more easily.
C I 19.
Lois and Manny got divorced three years ago, but they still feel such rancor that they refuse to
speak to each other.
C 20.
Two Saturday Night Live characters are masochists who brag to each other about their painful
experiences.
C I 21.
Sue always drives her flamboyant gray subcompact when she goes to the city because no one would
bother to steal it.
C I 22.
Valentine hearts are perfectly symmetrical, but the human heart's left and right sides differ in shape
and size.
C I 23.
Ricardo writes thoughtful essays and then spoils them by handing in a meticulous final draft filled
with spelling and typing errors.
24.
My cursory studying for final exams includes in-depth reviewing of my notes and re-reading
underlined portions of my textbooks.
25.
I didn't think I'd enjoy the dance concert, but I was mesmerized from start to finish by the wonderful
movement and music.
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
Complete each sentence with a word from the box. Use each word once.
advocate
conspiracy
contrite
emancipate
eradicate
exhort
foible
inclusive
lucid
facsimile
metamorphosis
preposterous
repugnant
1. The furry white and green mold on the tomato sauce was a(n)
2. Correct punctuation makes prose more
3. One of my
to overthrow him,
of a transcript isn't official unless it has been stamped with the seal
sight.
9. "It's a(n) allprice," the travel agent said. "Hotel, meals, flights both
wayseverything is covered in one package."
10. Environmentalists
stricter controls on American industry, which releases
billions of pounds of pollution into the air each year.
11. After Cristina learned to read at age 30, she experienced a(n) ^____
. She went
from shy to confident, got an interesting new job, and started taking college classes at night.
12. American women have yet to be
(e)d from violence. One in three women
experiences physical abuse by a boyfriend or husband, and one in twelve is a victim of rape or
attempted rape.
13. The man made the
claim that he had been taken aboard a Martian
spaceship by someone who looked like Woody Allen, except that his skin was green.
95
96
PART B
Circle C if the italicized word is used correctly. Circle I if the word is used incorrectly.
C
14.
15.
Vincent seemed presumptuous when, uninvited, he addressed his new employer by her first name.
16.
Fran threw a party to celebrate her plight of being chosen for the Olympic swimming team.
17.
The workshop lasted all day, but it still did not encompass all the information I needed to operate the
computer.
18.
The science museum has many provocative exhibits, including a giant heart that visitors can walk
through.
19.
Rose's "How are you?" always seems perfunctory, a matter simply of routine courtesy, not genuine
interest.
20.
The austere restaurant had a brightly colored flowered wallpaper and a thick red carpet.
21.
Years ago, some shrewd entrepreneur got the idea for selling "pet rocks" and made a fortune on
what became a fad.
22.
As a teen, I used to make fun of my sister's telephone recriminations to her boyfriend, such as "I
love you lots too."
23.
The yearbook meeting got side-tracked. Our discussion of different teachers' merits and flaws
wasn't germane to the topic of the photo layout.
I 24.
As kids, my brother and I loved staying with our stringent grandparents, who thought our wildest
behavior was "wonderfully energetic."
In his will, the magnanimous man did not leave a single penny to his family or to charity. Instead, he
stated that he had decided to keep all the money for himself.
25.
x4=
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
Complete each sentence in a way that clearly shows you understand the meaning of the boldfaced word. Take a
minute to plan your answer before you write.
Example: Kim must be an adept manager because
1.
2.
____^
4.
5.
7.
8.
10.
97
98
PART B
After each boldfaced word are a synonym (a word that means the same as the boldfaced word), an antonym (a
word that means the opposite of the boldfaced word), and a word that is neither. Mark the antonym with an A.
Example:
distraught
happy
troubled
guilty
11. rancor
noise
good will
bitterness
12. encompass
include
turn
omit
13. provocative
boring
foreign
interesting
aid
interfere with
unclear
loose
___ discover
14. impede
15. lucid
understandable
PART C
Use five of the following ten words in sentences. Make it clear that you know the meaning of the word you use.
Feel free to use the past tense or plural form of a word.
antipathy
cursory
eradicate
grotesque
idiosyncrasy
mesmerize
meticulous
plight
precarious
stint
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
(Word Parts)
PART A
Listed in the left-hand column below are ten common word pans, along with words in which the parts are used.
In each blank, write in the letter of the correct definition on the right.
Word Parts
Definitions
1. anima
animation, reanimate
a. to hold
2. arch
archenemy, patriarchy
b. send
3. bene-, ben-
beneficial, benign
4. -ee
trainee, refugee
d. many
5. -logue
monologue, travelogue
6. miss, mit
missile, transmit
f. good, well
7. mort
mortician, mortal
g. chief, ruler
8. poly-
polygamy, polygraph
h. time
9. tempor, tempo
temporarily, tempo
i. life, breath
10. ten
detention, contents
j. death
PART B
Find the word part that correctly completes each word. Then write the full word in the blank space. Not every
word part will be used.
anima
arch
bene-
-ee
-logue
miss
mort
poly-
tempor
ten
styles,
15. Stick insects are so named because when they don't move, they resemble (in . . . te)
twigs more than living insects.
99
100
PART C
Use your knowledge of word parts to determine the meaning of the boldfaced words. Circle the letter of each
meaning.
16. Instead of using the perfectly good words no and yes, Evan insists on using the polysyllabic words negative
and affirmative.
having
a. longer syllables
b. many syllables
c. time-consuming syllables
b. be inconvenient
c. hold
18. Giving the emissary a hollow nickel containing key information, the spy told him to get the nickel to army
headquarters.
a. king
b. recipient
b. doctor
20. After recovering from breaking many bones on a barrel ride over Niagara Falls, Bobby Leech was mortally
injured in 1911 from slipping on a banana peel.
a. painfully
b. fatally
c. strangely
x5 =
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
TJnit Four
CHAPTER
19
reviewing the Words
Find out how many of the ten words in this chapter you already know. Try to complete each sentence with
the most suitable word from the list below. Use each word once.
Leave a sentence blank rather han guessing at an answer. Your purpose here is just to get a sense of the
ten words and what you may know about them.
chide
coalition
commensurate
connotation
diabolic
dilapidated
integral
noxious
scenario
yen
3. The
to Christmas as candles
^_^_
s companies
habit. He referred to
Now check your answers by turning to page 165. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and to master the words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
101
102
Chapter 19
a. My parents chided me for getting sunburned, but my peeling skin hurt a lot more than
their scolding.
2 coalition
(ko'-o-lish'-on)
-noun
3 commensurate
(ko-mcn'-shoor-it)
-adjective
a. Most students who work hard eventually see results commensurate with their efforts.
b. Often, young dogs' paws seem overly large. With time, however, the rest of the body
catches up to be commensurate in size with the paws.
4 connotation
(kon'-s-ta'-shon)
-noun
a. For many of us, the word sea carries connotations of salty air and vast openness.
b. Elisc was right to chide me when I la/ily threw the aluminum can into the garbage
instead of washing it for recycling.
b. The government of Virginia City was once a coalition of one sheriff, two horse thieves,
three stage-coach robbers, and a couple of crooked gamblers.
b. The Japanese word for goodbye "sayonara" means "if it must be so" and thus has
the connotation of sadness at parting.
5 diabolic
(di'-o-bol'-ik)
-adjective
a. As part of his diabolic plan, the terrorist placed a bomb inside a suitcase that would
travel in the luggage area of the airplane.
6 dilapidated
(dD-lap'-o-dat'-id)
-adjective
a. The dilapidated home must have been a fine place once. Some broken windows are
made of stained glass, and the loose door hinges are all brass.
7 integral
(in'-ts-grol)
-adjective
b. Explorer Christopher Columbus was actually a diabolic man who demanded that Haitian
Indians regularly bring him gold. If they didn't, their hands were cut off.
b. My son's teddy bear is dilapidated, but he won't let it out of his sight long enough for
me to repair it.
b. Arguing seems to be an integral part of Laura and Nate's relationship. At least, they
seem to argue a lot.
8 noxious
(nok'-shos)
-adjective
a. Chocolate is extremely noxious to dogs and cats. Even a little can harm them.
9 scenario
(si-nr'-e-)
-noun
a. "I've worked out the drama's overall scenario," the playwright said, "but I haven't gone
beyond the basic plot."
10 yen
(yen)
-noun
b. When cleaning, don't mix ammonia and bleach. The noxious gas they produce could
land you in the hospital.
b. To help us plan for the future, some experts could get together and imagine various
possible scenarios of what might happen in the 21st century.
b. My yen for garlic bagel chips doesn't go away even when I've eaten a whole bag.
Chapter 19
103
_
L
1. chide
a. harmful to health
2, coalition
3. commensurate
4. connotation
5. diabolic
6. dilapidated
7. integral
8. noxious
9. scenario
10. yen
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers arc correct. If you have studied the
"Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
chide
coalition
commensurate
connotation
diabolic
dilapidated
integral
noxious
scenario
yen
doctor
d Rick for not following his advice about switching to a low-fat die
2. One Chinese emperor was so quick to have people executed that his officials got in the habit of saying their
last goodbyes if they were required to meet with their
ruler.
3. We may argue about whether character or plot is more important, but they are both
any novel.
4. The Sioux and Cheyenne Indians formed a
at the Battle of Little Big Horn.
5. Often, to satisfy a
equally strong urge for something salty.
to
6. The professor gave Dan an F on the exam because she thought it was the only grade
with his attempt to cheat.
7. Dictionaries usually don't give the
the meanings associated with words.
8. My parents always know when my friend Guy has paid a visit because his
which has a leaky radiator, leaves a pool of water in the driveway.
9. Cigarette smoke isn't hazardous only to the smoker. It is also
smoky air.
. old car.
to those who breathe UK
104
Chapter 19
^-Sentence Check 2
Complete each sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
chide
coalition
commensurate
connotation
diabolic
dilapidated
integral
noxious
scenario
yen
consists of a scries of
murders.
of power
part of it.
" technically refers to a strong desire for anything, for many people it
have recognized the holiday without it. As a Dutch girl, I limped door to door in crippling wooden shoes. As
a vampire with sharp fangs, I cut my lower lip every lime I said "Trick or treat." Even today the word
"Halloween" carries for me (2)
s of physical misery.
My (3)
for the perfect Halloween involved not only scaring others, but also
frightening myself. So I was willing to approach even the most scary-looking houses, ones sure to be haunted
or to belong to the most (4)
shutters banging in the wind. Even scarier than those places, however, were the (6)
of high school students. At any moment, these gangs might corner me and demand, "Your candy or your
life." I could be forced to die for the glory of Baby Ruth, Hershey's Kisses, and Three Musketeers.
My candy haul was always disappointing, never (7)
on my rounds. In addition, as soon as I returned home, my parents would order me to throw out all
unwrapped candy, since it might contain some (8)
SCORES:
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
CHAPTER
20
Previewing the Words
Find out how many of the ten words in this chapter you already know. Try to complete each sentence with
the most suitable word from the list below. Use each word once.
Leave a sentence blank rather than guessing at an answer. Your purpose here is just to get a sense of the
ten words and what you may know about them.
atrophy
deplore
deprivation
exacerbate
imperative
mitigate
objective
panacea
unprecedented
utilitarian
1. I prefer
gifts, such as pots and pans, to ones that serve no practical purpose.
2, A therapist worked with my grandmother after her stroke so that her muscles wouldn't
from lack of use.
3. Shelters
4. It is
the suffering of the homeless, but they don't solve the problem.
that Adrian pass his history final. Otherwise, he'll fail the course.
Now check your answers by turning to page 165. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and to master the words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
105
106
Chapter 20
a. Since unused muscles atrophy, a leg often becomes thinner as it remains in a cast.
2 deplore
(d e-pi or1)
-verb
3 deprivation
(dcp'-ro-va'-shon)
-noun
a. Food deprivation is so widespread that 60 million people starve to death each year.
4 exacerbate
(eg-zas'-or-bat)
-verb
a. Instead of soothing the baby, the playing of the music box only seemed to exacerbate
his crying.
5 imperative
(im-per'-s-tiv)
adjective
a. Renewing my driver's license today is imperative. Otherwise, the license will expire at
midnight.
6 mitigate
(mit'-s-gat)
-verb
a. Time has helped to mitigate Nicole's pain since Richard broke their engagement.
7 objective
(ob-jek'-tiv)
-adjective
a. All too often, people allow their prejudices to keep them from being objective in
judging others.
b. Scientists must try to be totally objective in their observations, putting aside all their
wishes and expectations.
panacea
(pan'-o-se'-a)
-noun
b. "If you watch any more trashy TV," my father said, "your brain will start to atrophy."
b. Roger deplored his coworkcrs' habit of stealing from the workplace, a practice he felt
was wrong.
b. Experiments on animals often involve food or water deprivation that forces the animal
to perform some task in order to relieve severe hunger or thirst.
b. Scratching a mosquito bite often exacerbates the discomfort by making the itch worse.
b. It is imperative that this letter reach Mr. Daley by tomorrow, so send it by Express Mail.
b. Six months of physical therapy has mitigated the paralysis Mr. Dobbs suffered during
his stroke, but he still has some difficulty using his right arm.
a. My aunt considers vitamins a panacea for all illness. She thinks they can cure even heart
disease.
b. Traveling salesmen used to go from town to town, selling bottles of tonic which they
claimed were a panacea for every ailment, from mumps to a sore throat.
9 unprecedented
(un-pres'-o-den'-tid)
-adjective
10 utilitarian
(y-til'-o-ter'-e-sn)
adjective
a. When Sandy won S50, she couldn't decide whether to be practical and buy something
utilitarian, like groceries, or to buy something very impractical, like a necklace.
b. The "standing room only" crowd at the spring concert was unprecedented, the first in
the school's history.
b. One difference between "arts" and "crafts" is that crafts arc generally more utilitarian.
They are usually created to serve some specific purpose.
Chapter 20
107
2. deplore
3. deprivation
4. exacerbate
5. imperative
6. mitigate
7. objective
g. necessary; urgent
8. panacea
9. unprecedented
10. utilitarian
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
'Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
^-Sentence Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
atrophy
deplore
deprivation
exacerbate
imperative
mitigate
objective
panacea
unprecedented
utilitarian
Whe n my kids go a weekend without pizza and TV while camping, they think they are suffering great
2.1 draped a cold, wet cloth over my eyes to
3. Don't move an accident victim with a back injury because movement might
injury.
4. John E Kennedy's election to the presidency was
5. No one.
__^ the
s drinking and driving more than Elena, whose son was killed by a drunk driver.
9. "I know that Mrs. Thomas cannot usually be disturbed while she's with a client," said the caller urgently, "but it
is
10. In Burma, some women lengthen their necks by stretching them with copper coils. This damages the muscles,
causing them to
Now check your answers to these questions by turning to page 165. Going over the answers carefully will help
you prepare for the next two checks, for which answers are not given.
Chapter 20
108
-Sentence Check 2
Complete each sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
atrophy
deplore
deprivation
exacerbate
imperative
mitigate
objective
panacea
unprecedented
utilitarian
hunger in countri
widespread _
3-4. Many people arc so opposed to change that they
about something, it is
day, as if it were a
They had no knowledge of basic hygiene and health care. For example, one boy with an infected leg had
been told to simply stay off the leg, which caused his other leg to (2)
was (3)_
. The ignorance
example, instruct a person to rub pig grease into a burn or treat an infection by chanting. Dooley
(4)
absolutely necessary, that the people learn modern medical knowledge, which would help them to replace
superstition with (6)
or easy (7)
(8)
made the effort to teach the communities how to care for themselves. Dooley believed that treatment without
instruction was (10)
only in the short term. In the long term, it was useless to treat
symptoms and allow the cause to continue. So, with the support of the local governments, Dooley set up
hospitals and taught the basics of hygiene, nursing and medical treatment. Even though Tom Dooley died at a
tragically young age, the work he started would benefit countless numbers of people.
SCORES:
Sentence Check 2
% Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
CHAPTER
21
Previewing the Words
Find out how many of the ten words in this chapter you already know. Try to complete each sentence with
the most suitable word from the list below. Use each word once.
Leave a sentence blank rather than guessing at an answer. Your purpose here is just to get a sense of the
ten words and what you may know about them.
decorum
espouse
exhilaration
exorbitant
extricate
facilitate
orthodox
rejuvenate
synchronize
tenuous
price.
1. Even if I were rich, I wouldn't pay the $200 those shoes cost. That's a(n)
2. The fly struggled, but failed to
relationship.
demands that you send a thank-you note even for wedding gifts you don't
4.
like.
5. The lively, victorious sound of a marching band gives many people a feeling of
6. The commercial suggested that the cereal would
19 asain."
7. The automatic doors in supermarkets
shopping carts.
8. We have to
our alarm clocks.
the clocks in our house. The kitchen clock is 10 minutes later than
10. When Father McKen/.ie brought electric guitars and drums into the church, he horrified the more
^
church instruments.
members of the congregation, who feel only the piano and organ are suitable
Now check your answers by turning to page 165. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and to master the words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
109
110
Chapter 21
2 espouse
(e-spouz')
-verb
b. Some politicians espouse whichever ideas they feel will be popular among the voters.
3 exhilaration
(eg-zil'-o-ra'-shon)
-noun
a. Feeling exhilaration after finishing our last final of the year, Jan and I skipped all the
way to the car.
4 exorbitant
(eg-zor'-b i-ton t)
-adjective
a. The U.S. military has spent exorbitant amounts on some items, including a toilet scat
that cost thousands of dollars.
b. Jack's huge old car eats up an exorbitant quantity of fuel.
5 extricate
(eks'-tri-kaf)
-verb
a. The Farrells' dog gets tangled up in his leash every day. He barks and barks until
someone extricates him.
6 facilitate
(fa-sil'-g-tat1)
-verb
7 orthodox
(or'-ths-doks')
-adjective
3 rejuvenate
(ri-j'-vo-nt')
-verb
9 synchronize
(sing'-krs-mz')
-verb
a. The drill team members synchronized their marching and also moved their flags at
precisely the same time.
10 tenuous
(ten'-y-ss)
-adjective
b. Susan felt such exhilaration when she won the stereo that she screeched for joy.
b. The newlywcds had overspent so much that they finally needed a counselor to help them
extricate themselves from a financial mess.
b. Successful people have learned that hard work greatly facilitates good luck.
b. The orthodox way of competing in a foot race is to wear running shoes, but a champion
Ethiopian runner competed in the Olympics barefoot.
b. The grass had become brown and matted, but a warm spring rain rejuvenated it, perking
it up and turning it green again.
b. The robbers synchronized their watches in order to arrive at the bank at the same
minute.
a. Carl's argument against the Equal Rights Amendment was tenuous. He had no
persuasive facts at all.
b. We made only tenuous plans to go the movies Friday night since we were hoping
something more exciting might come along.
Chapter 21
111
decorum
espouse
exhilaration
exorbitant
a. gladness; cheerfulness
b. to free from a tangled situation or a difficulty
c. having little substance; weak; poorly supported
d. correctness in behavior and manners; the standard of socially acceptable
behavior
e. to make (someone) feel or seem young again; to make (something) seem
fresh or new again
f. to support or argue for (an idea or cause)
g. to cause to occur at the same time; to cause (clocks and watches) to
agree in time
h. to make easier to do or to get
i. following established, traditional rules or beliefs, especially in religion;
following what is customary or commonly accepted
j. excessive, especially in amount; beyond what is reasonable or
appropriate
5. extricate
6. facilitate
7. orthodox
8. rejuvenate
9. synchronize
10. tenuous
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
'Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
^-Sentence Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
decorum
espouse
exhilaration
exorbitant
extricate
facilitate
orthodox
rejuvenate
syncnroni/t
tenuous
aging skin.
prices.
5. When the children learned they were going to the amusement park, they were filled with
6. Preparing some food platters ahead of time will ________________ your job when the guests arrive.
7. At age two, Patrick got his head stuck in an iron railing. His parents had to call the fire department to
him.
8. During the 1960s and 70s, many American folk singers used anti-war lyrics to
to the Vietnam War.
an end
9. New members of the water ballet club have trouble coordinating their swimming, but with practice, the group is
able to
its movements.
Now check your answers to these questions by turning to page 165. Going over the answers carefully will help
you prepare for the next two checks, for which answers are not given.
112
Chapter 21
^-Sentence Check 2
Complete each sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
decorum
espouse
exhilaration
exorbitant
extricate
facilitate
orthodox
rejuvenate
synchronize
tenuous
one's
9-10. My grandmother
d the use of garlic to _____
_____ breathing during a
child's chest cold. Sometimes she made us eat it, and sometimes she rubbed it on our chests.
just watch."
Then the bear of a man turned to the other 11 and said, "Okay, men, t h i s is no time for
(6)
. Forget good manners. Do anything you can to (7)
victory. Now, let's (8)
____
our start: Ready. Set. Go!"
Shoving, yelling, and cursing, the 12 men tried to squeeze into the car. "If they do gel in," I said to my
husband, "how will they ever (9)
themselves?"
Moments later, however, everyone was cheering. All 12 men were inside the car. And after a few
seconds, they exploded back out onto the ground. Filled with (10)
. at their success,
the sweaty men jumped up and down and hugged one another.
SCORES:
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
CHAPTER
22
Previewing the Words
Find out how many of the ten words in this chapter you already know. Try to complete each sentence with
the most suitable word from the list below. Use each word once.
Leave a sentence blank rather than guessing at an answer. Your purpose here is just to get a sense of the
ten words and what you may know about them.
assimilate
belligerent
demeanor
denunciation
dissipate
indolent
inherent
nonchalant
unassuming
unilateral
I. A(n)_
2. Amy pretended to be
very upset.
., and
that the most work she ever does is pushing the remote control
8. Doug and Lucas were going to be business partners, but when Doug kept dragging his feet, Lucas made
a(n)
9. The principal restates his __^____^________ of drugs and drug dealers whenever possible.
10. When Tasuma first came to the U.S. from Japan, he wasn't sure he could
American culture, but after a few months, he felt at home here.
into
Now check your answers by turning to page 165. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and to master the words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
113
114
Chapter 22
a. America has often been called a "melting pot" into which people of many different
cultures assimilate.
2 belligerent
(bo-lij'-o-ront)
-adjective
a. The belligerent bully is always eager to fight someone weaker than he is.
3 demesnor
(di-men'-ar)
-noun
a. Acceptable conduct at a ball game or party is quite different from proper demeanor in
church.
4 denunciation
(de-nun'-se-a'-shon)
-noun
a. In an unusual denunciation of parents, the community leader said, "Parents have not
been taking enough responsibility for their children."
5 dissipate
(dis'-o-pat1)
-verb
a. In the morning, the seaside air is misty, but by afternoon the moisture dissipates, leaving
the air clear and dry.
6 indolent
(in'-da-loni)
-adjective
a. Sue is so indolent that she thinks five minutes of work merits a coffee break.
7 inherent
(in-her'-om)
-adjective
a. Marco believes there's an inherent kindness in people, but I think people are naturally
selfish. Maybe we're both right.
8 nonchalant
(non'-shs-lont1)
-adjective
a. Because air travel is so commonplace today, many people have become nonchalant
about flying.
9 unassuming
(un'-D-soo'-ming)
-adjective
10 unilateral
(yoon'-o-Iat'-sr-ol)
-adjective
b. When Angle shook her fist and threatened to hit the teacher, she was suspended for her
belligerent behavior.
b. Gene's demeanor was quiet and controlled, but inside he was boiling with anger.
b. Many police officers objected to the mayor's public denunciation of their chief. Local
citizens, however, applauded the mayor's open disapproval.
b. After the fireworks, the crowd dissipated, breaking up into small groups and vanishing
into the night.
b. My uncle has been fired from three jobs for being indolent. He shows up on time, but he
does little work and leaves early.
b. An inherent danger of living in the San Francisco area is the possibility of earthquakes.
b. My friend was nonchalant about giving her oral report in class, but I was a nervous
wreck about giving mine.
Chapter 22
115
2. belligerent
3. demeanor
4. denunciation
5. dissipate
6. indolent
7. inherent
8. nonchalant
9. unassuming
10. unilateral
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
'Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
^Sentence Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
assimilate
belligerent
demeanor
denunciation
dissipate
indolent
inherent
nonchalant
unassuming
unilateral
6. Because she is a workaholic, my boss thinks that anyone who works less than 10 hours a day is
7. Airport security guards arc trained to observe people's _^_____^__^____ so as to notice any suspicious
behavior.
8. Even though Ali was the star of the team, he was always
team for their success.
9. Many Americans who work in other countries don't even try to
talk, and think American.
10. Governments are very reluctant to take
countries. They expect other countries to act as well.
Now check your answers to these questions by turning to page 165. Going over the answers carefully will help
you prepare for the next two checks, for which answers are not given.
116
Chapter 22
^-Sentence Check 2
Complete each sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
assimilate
belligerent
demeanor
denunciation
dissipate
indolent
inherent
nonchalant
unassuming
unilateral
____ way.
3-4. Tension was building between the two gangs in the park until, in a brave __________________
move, the
leader of one gang extended his hand to the leader of the other one. The two shook hands, the tension began
to
___^__
9-10. Because he is so
, Wcs is the kind of person who will
into the Japanese-run company. He is modest enough to be willing to adopt new habits.
easily
the way he
stomped his feet, clenched his fists, glared at peoplesaid, "You can make me come here, but you can't
make me like it." Like the other children, Ken had been sent to the group home by the court because his
parents were unable to care for him. His father had left two years before and had never called since. His
mother was drunk most of the time.
At age 11, Ken didn't want anyone taking care of him "like I'm a two-year-old." He was so angry about
being taken to the home that he was often (2)
fights over the smallest matters. Often, loo, he responded to the question "How are you getting on?" with the
general (3)
(4)
One day, Ken noticed that a quiet, small boy was being teased by a few older kids. Several others were
also watching, but they either joined in the teasing or did n o t h i n g to help. So Ken made the
(6)
move of standing up for the boy. When the boy thanked him, Ken was
(7)
, saying, "It was nothing." After that incident, Ken started to become more
Although Ken has never admitted to liking the group home, he was once heard saying, "Well, it's not
that bad."
SCORES:
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
CHAPTER
annihilate
criterion
emanate
holistic
placebo
proficient
staunch
subversive
vindicate
6. I don't believe in the witch-doctor's magic, but do feel that his "spells" can act as
7. No matter how badly they might play, the high school football team has a(n)
fan in Mr. Davis, who cheers them on at every game.
8. This treatment center takes a(n)
___ approach to drug addiction. Patients receive
counseling and emotional support as well as medical treatment.
9. The Church once viewed printing the Bible in a language oihcr than L a t i n to be a(n)
act aimed at destroying the Church's authority.
O. The editorial drew this
_: "Allowing industries to sprinkle the Earth with ever
more acid rain is like letting someone sprinkle your food with a daily-increasing amount of poison."
Now check your answers by turning to page 166. Fix any mistakes and f i l l in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and 10 master the words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
117
118
Chapter 23
a. To help students understand how we see, teachers often draw an analogy between an eye
and a camera.
2 annihilate
(o-m'-o-luV)
-verb
3 criterion
(kri-tr'-e-on)
-noun
4 emanate
(cm'-o-nat1)
-verb
a. Helen followed the stream of water leaking in her basement back to its source and found
that it emanated from a broken pipe.
5 holistic
(h-lis'-ik)
-adjective
a. Whereas Western cultures tend to divide everything up into parts, Eastern cultures
generally take a holistic view.
6 placebo
a. The doctor lost his license when it was found that the "nerve pills" he had been giving
numerous patients were actually sugar-pill placebos.
(pla-sc'-bo)
-noun
b. The commencement address, titled "You Are the Captain of Your Ship," used the
analogy of life as an ocean-going vessel that the captain must steer between the rocks.
b. In 1968, U.S. soldiers annihilated a village of Vietnamese in what became known as the
My Lai massacre.
b. Some advertisers aren't concerned about telling the truth. Their only criterion for a
good ad is that it increase sales.
b. The sounds that emanate from the bedroom tell rnc that Ruth is practicing her violin.
b. When my son had a headache and I was out of aspirin, I gave him cherry Kool-Aid as a
placebo. His belief that the drink was medicine seemed to ease his discomfort.
7 proficient
(pro-fish'-ont)
-adjeciive
a. It's not that hard to become proficient on a word processor. Be patient, and you'll
develop the necessary skill.
8 staunch
(stnch)
-adjeaive
a. The newspaper's horoscope predictions are often way off the mark, yet Jill remains a
staunch believer in astrology.
9 subversive
(sob-vr'-siv)
-adjective
a. To some, burning the American flag is a subversive act, aimed at destroying democracy.
To others, it is a healthy sign of freedom of speech.
10 v i n d i c a t e
(vin'-do-kaY)
-verb
a. One lawyer is famous for being able to vindicate his clients even when there's a great
deal of evidence against them.
b. Although the evidence clearly indicated that the mayor had taken bribes, he still had
staunch supporters.
b. The consulting company was simply a cover for a subversive ring of spies, working to
overthrow the government.
b. Accused of cheating on his geometry test, Greg vindicated himself by reciting several
theorems by heart, proving that he knew the work.
Chapter 23
119
2. annihilate
3. criterion
4. emanate
5. holistic
6. placebo
7. proficient
8. staunch
9. subversive
i. emphasizing the whole and the interdependence of its parts, rather than
the parts separately
10. vindicate
j. skilled; expert
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
"Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
^-Sentence Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
analogy
annihilate
criterion
emanate
holistic
placebo
proficient
staunch
subversive
vindicate
1. One
over draft records.
action taken by those who wanted to end the Vietnam War was pouring blood
(c)d by hunters.
6. A
view of business would take into account not just profits, but such things as
satisfied employees and a healthy environment.
7. The fortune teller claims that a halo of colored light
the color tells her all about the person's character.
(c)d her
10. In a lest of the new pain remedy, one group of headache sufferers was given the medication while another was
given only a(n)
Now check your answers to these questions by turning to page 166. Going over the answers carefully will help
you prepare for the next two checks, for which answers are not given.
120
Chapter 23
^-Sentence Check 2
Complete each sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
analogy
annihilate
criterion
emanate
placebo
proficient
staunch
subversive
holistic
vindicate
fe)d from the murderous cult leader that he was easily able to
an enure family.
by which I'll judge your papers," the teacher said, "is whether you show you
at con necting your ideas."
are
5-6. T he spy was accused of working to overthrow his government, but he was able to
himself by proving that it was his boss who was the
one.
7-8. To show the value of a
view, the doctor used a(n)
. She
compared a narrow view of a health problem to cutting off a tree's diseased leaves but ignoring the roots, where
the problem lies.
9-10. Val is a(n)
defender of
s, which he uses often. When his little
boy was afraid of monsters in his room at night, he sprayed the room with water and told him it was "antimonster medicine."
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
CHAPTER
24
^reviewing the Word Parts
Common word partsalso known as prefixes, suffixes, and rootsare used in forming many words in
English. This page will introduce you to ten common word parts.
Try to match each word pan on the left with its definition on the right. Use the words in parentheses as
hints to help you guess the meanings. If you can't decide on an answer, leave the space blank. Your purpose
here is just to get a sense of the ten word parts and what you may know about them. (You'll have another
chance to try this exercise after considering the word parts in context.)
Word Parts
Definitions
a. ten
b. having; characterized by
f. made of
g- eight
h. to will, choose
j. same
Now go on to "Ten Word Parts in Context" on the next page. Working through this chapter will help you to
strengthen your knowledge of the word parts you already know and to master the word parts you're only half sure
of, or don't know at all.
Keep in mind that learning word parts can pay several dividends. Word parts can help with the spelling and
pronunciation of many words. They can also help you to unlock the meanings of unfamiliar words.
121
122
Chapter 24
a. Phyllis was a beautician for 12 years before she opened her own beauty shop.
b. A politician must be a specialist both in government and in elections.
2 dec-
3 duct, due
a. When my father listens to classical music on the radio, he often swings his arms as if
he's conducting the orchestra.
b. Once each week, Marcia cleans the day-care center her children attend, and her
payment for that work is deducted from her bill.
4 -en
a. Hong can't wear a woolen sweater over his bare skin. The scratchy wool drives him
crazy.
b. When they opened the tomb of the ancient Egyptian king, the scientists were amazed by
all the golden bowls and necklaces.
5 horno-
a. The people working at the store are a pretty homogenous group. They're all between
25 and 32 years old, they're all married, and they've all had a year or two of college.
b. It's no secret that David is homosexual. He's always been open about his sexual
preference.
6 octo-, GC-
a. An octopus' eight arms may seem like a lot, but a squid has 10.
b. Although October is the tenth month of our calendar, it was the eighth monih of the
ancient Roman calendar.
-OU3
a. Maria dreams of having great fame, but she has no idea what she wants to be famous
for.
b. Felipe is so serious lately. He seems full of deep thoughts.
8 phi!, -phue
9 sur-
a. Tom polished the surface of the table until it shone like glass.
b. Once our chickens started laying eggs, we had such a surplus of eggs that we were
giving many away to our neighbors.
10 vol
a. Many retirees use their talents as volunteers in this country and throughout the world.
b. When Sally agreed to do the association's newsletter, she thought she'd be paid. She
didn't realize it was voluntary work.
Chapter 24
123
.
.
1. -cian
a. ten
2. dec-
b. having; characterized by
3. duct, due
4. -en
5. homo-
6. octo-, oct-
f. made of
7. -ous
g. eight
8. phil, -phile
h. to will; choose
9. sur-
10. vol
j. same
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the 'Ten
Word Parts in Context," you will know how to match each word part. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
^-Sentence Check 1
Complete each partial word in the following sentences with a word part from the box. Use each word part only
once. You may want to check off each word part as you use it.
-cian
dec-
duct
-en
homo-
oct-
-ous
phi!
sur-
vol
1. When President Bush spoke of "a thousand points of light," he was referring to thousands of people
(.. . unteering)
to help others.
3. If the pain isn't better by tomorrow, I really think she should see a (physi. . . )
4. Another name for the Ten Commandments is the (... alogue] ^^____
5. Since only eight people were in my high school choral class, we had a(n) (. . . tci)
instead of a choir.
6. If milk is not (. . . genized)
rises to the surface.
7. An (aque . . . )
is usually drawn along by gravity.
.
.
___
8. A true lover of his fellow man, the businessman was a well-known (. . . anihropist}
who gave money to many causes.
9. The only way the attendance for this year's school play can (.. . pass)
the play runs an extra night, since both nights were sold out last year.
10. The disappearance of that money from my wallet is quite (mysterl. . .)
_
last year's is if
. I'm sure the
124
Chapter 24
^Sentence Check 2
Complete each partial word in the sentences below with a word pan from the box. Use each word part once. If there
are two forms of a word part in the box, use tiic first one for this practice.
-cian
octo-, oct-
dec-
duct, due
-ous
-phile, phil
-en
sur-
vol
called UD a (. . . unteer]
he (mas i . . .)
and then seemed to saw her in half.
3-4. A ( . . . phone)
from the
homo-
of Snappe.
by looking at him.
9-10. Since Superman's x-ray vision cannot pass through lead, one criminal decided to (con ...)
his business in a room with (lead...)
walls.
(2)"
Voices."
When the other seven members of the group first heard him sing solos in his church, they invited him
to join them, not realizing he couldn't read music. He was determined not to fail them, and he worked hard
to (e . . . ate) (3)
. He wanted to
join the group for two reasons: he loved singing, and he had a crush on its lively young pianist.
The (. . . el's) (5)
everyone's greatest hopes. Grandpa used to say that their voices were so (. . . geneous)
(7)
that they sometimes sounded like a single voice singing all eight parts.
Eventually, this group became so successful that the members got paid instead of singing on a (. . . untary)
(8)
basis. One of their greatest professional thrills, said Grandpa, was being
loved classical music but had never sponsored a concert with a vocal group before.
But Grandpa always added that his biggest success in life was in marrying that (vivaci . . .)
(10)
young pianist.
SCORES:
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
T FOUR: Test 1
RT A
the word that best completes each sentence and write it in the space provided.
holistic
diabolic
unprecedented
unassuming
, exhilaration
decorum
connotation
atrophy
3.
synchronizes
vindicates
emanates
mitigates
Fairy tales, such as "Hansel and Gretel" have given stepmothers a reputation for
being
.
that few other
4, chide
extricate
mitigate
synchronize
5 . analogy
decorum
panacea
placebo
6. emanate
chide
assimilate
espouse
I had to
7 . exorbitant
objective
dilapidated
unprecedented
8. commensurate
proficient
tenuous
exorbitant
9. indolent
unilateral
holistic
subversive
In order to find a ring of spies trying to overthrow the government, the FBI agent
10.
demeanor
coalition
yen
placebo
van with no windows, my father suggested they take his car instead.
with
the little boy's misbehavior. All he did was cat a cookie before dinner.
pretended to be involved in
activities.
126
11. yen
criterion
panacea
denunciation
After keeping her angry feelings about her brother bottled up for months, Lani finally
exploded with a
12. espouse
annihilate
facilitate
vindicate
It's amazing how I can spend an hour cleaning up my children's room just to have em
13. utilitarian
unassuming
noxious
imperative
^___^^__ fumes coming from the plant when several of them became
mysteriously ill.
PART B
Circle C if the italicized word is used correctly. Circle I if the word is used incorrectly.
C I
14.
C I
15.
C I
16.
The cat is a naturally indolent creature who will happily doze in the sun all day.
C I
17.
The load of oil dumped on the highway facilitated the flow of traffic for more than three hours.
C I
18.
A genuine affection for young people is an integral part of being a successful teacher.
C I
19.
Since my old sneakers had fallen apart, I was pleased to find a new pair at an exorbitant price.
20.
Rather than assimilate into his new school, Brian picked fights and stole money from fellow
students.
21.
Off-screen, the movie star's manner is so unassuming that he is often unrecognized even by his fans.
C I
22.
Several neighborhood families formed a coalition to assist another f a m i l y who'd lost their home in a
fire.
C I
23.
After sitting through a movie in the very first row of the theater, I got such a yen that I had to take an
aspirin.
C I
24.
I learned that my neighbors espouse recycling when I read their letter to the editor encouraging
others to recycle.
25.
Although Sid had been calm throughout the trial, he grew quite nonchalant when he heard the
prosecutor call him a liar and a thief.
x4 =
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
"
atrophy
belligerent
connotation
criterion
deplore
objective
deprivation
placebo
extricate
rejuvenate
inherent
scenario
unilateral
aer is a(n)
about their
personalities.
I use in selecting clothing is that an item be made out of a comfortable
3. One
fabric.
5. The little boy's foot was so firmly caught in the folding chair that it took three adults to
it.
6. My mother was feeling twice her age before her trip to Arizona, but the relaxing vacation really
(e)d her.
7. Although I
know what to do about them.
8. The day after surgery, the nurses got Alonso to begin walking, to keep his muscles from beginning
to
9. To make his case to the jury, the lawyer went through a possible
events leading up to the murder.
10. Neither Jessie nor Mel would make a(n)
silence between them continued.
of the
11. When I bumped the car in front of me as I was parking, the other driver emerged and stormed toward
me in a most
manner.
12. The dictionary definition of "house" is "a building in which people live," but for many the word has
the
13. When little Sarah couldn't sleep, her mom gave her a glass of milk tinted red with food coloring and
called the
127
128
PART Ii
Circle C if the italicized word is used correctly. Circle I if the word is used incorrectly.
C
14.
The nursery school teacher used the analogy of a flower garden to describe her pupils, calling each
child a blossom with his or her own special beauty.
15.
My doctor certainly takes a holistic approach to my health. He says he's here to prescribe
medication, not to talk to patients.
16. I didn't know that Jerry was so proficient in geography until I saw that F on his report card.
C I 17. It is imperative that my sister get her cholesterol level down, as she is now at high risk for a heart
attack.
C
18.
A staunch reader of mysteries, Fred reads them rarely. He much prefers science fiction and
nonfiction.
119.
I 20. Jean, saying she wants her art to be utilitarian, makes ceramic bowls and teapots.
I 21.
During the convention, many participants dissipated into my room after dinner to drink coffee and
talk for hours.
I 22.
We've had snow in April for three of the last five years, so you see this year's April snow is
altogether unprecedented.
I 23.
It was bad enough just being grounded, but my father is going to mitigate my punishment by
stopping my allowance.
24.
My mother regards peppermint tea as an effective panacea and offers it as a cure for all kinds of ills:
colds, flu, and broken hearts.
I 25.
Lily's ankle sprain is severe, but the doctor told her a couple of days of bed rest will exacerbate the
injury enough so that she can walk again.
The accused murderer was vindicated when a man who looked just like him confessed.
x4=
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
Complete each sentence in a way that clearly shows you understand the meaning of the boldfaced word. Take a
minute to plan your answer before you write.
Example: Because Joanne had a sudden yen for M&Ms, she
1.
3.
5.
7.
I deplore
8.
9.
I am quite proficient at _
10.
__ because
. For example,
129
130
PARTS
After each boldfaced word are a synonym (a word that means the same as the boldfaced word), an antonym (a
word that means the opposite of the boldfaced word), and a word that is neither. Mark the antonym with an A.
Example:
utilitarian
_A
useless
practical
late
11. chide
avoid
praise
scold
12. unassuming
humble
immodest
curious
. effective
wicked
harmful
. accurate
beneficial
create
. destroy
justify
13. diabolic
14.
.good
noxious
15. annihilate
PART C
Use five of the following ten words in sentences. Make it clear that you know the meaning of the word you use.
Feel free to use the past tense or plural form of a word.
analogy
assimilate
denunciation
dilapidated
exorbitant
imperative
nonchalant
panacea
rejuvenate
yen
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
Definitions
1. -cian
electrician, musician
2. dec-
decathlon, decimal
b. eight
3. duct, due
conduct, deduct
c. having; characterized by
4. '-en
wooden, woolen
5. homo-
homosexual, homonym
6. octo-, oct-
octet, octave
marvelous, serious
g. to will, choose
8. phil,-phile
philanthropist, audiophile
h. same
9. sur-
surface, surpass
i. ten
voluntary, benevolent
j. made of
___ 1. -ous
10. vol
PART B
Find the word part that correctly completes each word. Then write the full word in the blank space. Not every
word part will be used.
-cian
dec-
duct
-en
homo-
octo-
-ous
-phile
sur-
vol
Donald.
12. In the ancient Roman calendar, ( . . . ember}
13. The (con .. . or} ___^___ ,^______ told the noisy students to cither quiet down or get off the bus.
14. In addition to technical knowledge, (morti.. . s)
and comforting.
15. When a new calendar system was adopted in England in 1752, many people felt it was (ridicul . . .)
that the day after September 2 was suddenly September 14.
131
132
UnitFouf
3t4
PART C
Use your knowledge of word parts to determine the meaning of the boldfaced words. Circle the letter of each
meaning.
16. My brilliant two-year-old just played a scale, a straight octave, on the piano.
a. 8-note scale
b. 3-note scale
c. 10-noie scale
b. excess
b. broken
c. large
19. Ever since visiting Germany, Carl has been a real Germanophile.
a. student of Germany
b. expert on Germany
c. admirer of Germany
20. Ana cleaned the entire apartment yesterday. She did it of her own volition.
a. supplies
b. choosing
c. day off
CHAPTER
Unit Five
25
Previewing the Words
Find out how many of the ten words in this chapter you already know. Try to complete each sentence with
the most suitable word from the list below. Use each word once.
Leave a sentence blank rather than guessing at an answer. Your purpose here is just to get a sense of the
ten words and what you may know about them.
disparity
obsequious
forestall
insidious
insinuate
interrogate
omnipotent
opportune
permeate1
retribution
5. When the Mafia boss was murdered, his son swore that the killer would get
"I'll shoot whoever did it," he said.
time to
10. When Angela remarked that Dustin had come into "an awful lot of money awfully quickly," she seemed
to
Now check your answers by turning to page 166. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and to master the words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
I JO
134
Chapter 25
2 forestall
(fr-stl1)
-verb
a. A certain li/.ard forestalls being captured by crawling into a crack in a rock and filling
its body with so much air that it can't be pulled out again.
3 insidious
(in-sid'-e-ss)
-adjective
a. Lymc disease is insidious because it starts with a nearly invisible tick bite.
4 insinuate
(in-sin'-y-Y)
-verb
a. He didn't come right out and say it, but Professor Shribcr insinuated that someone in
the class had gotten hold of the test early.
5 interrogate
(in-ter'-o-g1)
-verb
6 obsequious
(ob-sc'-kwe-ss)
-adjective
a. Each of the queen's advisers was more obsequious than the other, bowing as low as
possible and loudly agreeing with her every remark.
7 omnipotent
(om-nip'-s-tont)
-adjective
8 opportune
(op'-or-toon')
-adjective
a. I got a job at an especially opportune time. My student health insurance coverage was
about to run out, but now I'll be covered through my employer.
9 permeate
(pr'-me-t')
-verb
a. In the countryside, the sound of crickets often permeates the air on a hot summer
evening.
10 retribution
(re'-trs-byoo'-shsn)
b. Shirley and Jason don't let the disparity in their ages weaken their marriage, but Jason's
mother isn't happy with a daughter-in-law her own age.
b. Unable to forestall the destruction of the cherry orchard, we watched with regret as the
chainsaws sliced into the trees.
b. Many people fear farm chemicals are an insidious hazard. The chemicals don't seem
harmful, but cancer rates have started to increase.
b. "Paul's been seeing a lot of Lynn lately," Alan said, as if to i n s i n u a t e that Paul was
being unfaithful to his wife Joanne.
b. "You don't just ask casual questions about my dates," Leonard complained to his
parents. "You sit me down at the kitchen table and interrogate me."
b. Marge's obsequious behavior is having an effect opposite to what she intends. All of her
"yes sir's" and her flattering arc only annoying the boss.
b. The U.S. government is designed so that no one branch is omnipotent. The balance of
power would be lost if any single branch had all the power.
b. The opportune lime to sell a stock is just before its value goes down. Recognizing that
time, of course, is the hard part.
b. The drops of blue food coloring permeated the water in the bowl until the water was an
even shade of pale blue.
a. Some "sins" in life have their own built-in retribution. For example, if you eat an
unhealthy diet for too long, you receive the punishment of poor health.
b. The Indian tribal council asked the U.S. government for S30 million as retribution for
land that the Army had seized.
Chapter 25
135
2. forestall
3. insidious
4. insinuate
5. interrogate
6. obsequious
7. omnipotent
8. opportune
9. permeate
10. retribution
j. to question formally
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you arc sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
"Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
>^Sentence Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
disparity
forestall
insidious
insinuate
interrogate
obsequious
omnipotent
opportune
permeate
retribution
ins
4. In attempts to force answers from political prisoners, certain governments often beat those being
(c)d.
5. When the Earl of Essex betrayed Queen Elizabeth I of England by plotting to take her throne, his
was execution,
6. "There's quite a
you're asking for this automobile."
here," Jill objected to the car dealer, "between your cost and the price
7. Prescription drugs such as Valium can be ___________^ in their increasing hold over a person, who
may slip into addiction without noticing.
8. As king of England, Denmark, and Norway, Canute started to think that he was
actually ordered the tide to stop rising.
9. Instead of directly saying "Buy our product," many ads use slick images to
product will give a person more sex appeal, power, or prestige.
- He
that their
10. In private, Andrew speaks harshly of Professor Gray. To her face, however, he is the most
member of the class, ready to smile broadly at her and follow her every command.
Now check your answers to these questions by turning to page 166. Going over the answers carefully will help
you prepare for the next two checks, for which answers are not given.
136
Chapter 25
Check 2
Complete each sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
disparity
forestall
insidious
insinuate
interrogate
obsequious
omnipotent
opportune
permeate
retribution
between ihc day's total sales and the amount of cash in the register,
34. Uwasa(n)
seeped down,
^___
SCORES:
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
CHAPTER
26
Previewing the Words
Find out how many of the ten words in this chapter you already know. Try to complete each sentence with
the most suitable word from the list below. Use each word once.
Leave a sentence blank rather than guessing at an answer. Your purpose here is just to get a sense of the
ten words and what you may know about them.
complement
discreet
fastidious
flout
heinous
implement
implicit
impromptu
intuition
obtrusive
3. NASA expects to
4.
5.
7. The dress was elegantly styled, but a bit too plain. A colorful strand of beads would
it perfectly.
8. The Nazi war criminal was sentenced to death for the
thousands of deaths.
9. My cat is a(n)
cleans his whiskers afterward.
crime of ordering
eater. He eats any morsels thai drop onto the floor and carefully
10. Jean was taken by surprise when she was asked to sing at the wedding parly, but she made up a(n)
song about the bride and groom that delighted everyone.
Now check your answers by turning to page 166. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and to master the words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
137
138
Chapter 26
a. The new singer complemented the other voices, rounding out the group's sound.
2 discreet
a. "Be discreet about these drawings, Wilson. We don't want another company stealing our
designs."
b. Alihough the mayor was discreet about his dealings with organized crime figures, the
truth eventually came out.
(di-skrel')
-adjective
b. A red tie would complement Pedro's outfit, adding a needed touch of color to his gray
suit.
3 fastidious
(fas-tid'-e-as)
-adjective
a. Clyde is a fastidious carpenter who makes sure that all straight edges arc perfectly even.
4 flout
(flout)
-verb
a. I flouted my parents' ideas about dating and dated a person from the "wrong side of the
tracks."
b. Today, Ernie flouted the school's new rule against girls wearing panis by wearing a skirt
himself to school.
5 heinous
a. The heinous murder of a blind man in a wheelchair was a painful reminder of the human
capacity for evil.
(h'-nos)
-adjective
b. Tilly was a fastidious housekeeper who used toothbrushes and cotton swabs to clean
hard-to-reach places and washed the corners of the kitchen floor on her hands and knees.
b. Many Americans feel that the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were
heinous acts that should never have been permitted to happen.
6 implement
(im'-pto-ment')
-verb
a. After carefully planning the robbery, the couple couldn't bring themselves to implement
their plan.
7 implicit
(im-plis'-it)
-adjective
a. A threat was implicit in the gambler's angry statement: "I don't like being cheated."
8 impromptu
(im-promp'-too1)
-adjective
9 intuition
(in'-t-ish'-on)
-noun
a. "The minute I met your mother," my father said, "my intuition told rne that we'd get
married some day."
10 obtrusive
(ab-tr'-siv)
-adjective
a. Mr. Phclps doesn't realize that the contrast between his real hair and his toupee is so
obtrusive.
b. My brother can't help it when his stuttering becomes obtrusive. It gets very noticeable
when he grows nervous.
b. Stewart often has excellent ideas for starting a business, but he never follows through
and implements them.
b. When Lin discovered that Barry also had brought his guitar, she suggested an
impromptu duct.
b. "I paint by intuition," the artist said. "In a flash, I see how a work should look. I don't
really think it out."
,--
Chapter 26
139
2. discreet
3. fastidious
4.
5. heinous
flout
6. implement
d. undesirably noticeable
e. wise in keeping silent about secrets and other information of a delicate
nature; prudent
f. performed or spoken without practice or preparation
7. implicit
g. extremely evil
8. impromptu
9. intuition
10. obtrusive
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
"Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to cheek definitions at all.
>^$entence Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
complement
discreet
fastidious
flout
heinous
implement
implicit
impromptu
intuition
obtrusive
1. Rachel's
2. Nudist colonies
when talking
6. To
their plan for a surprise attack on the girls' club, the boys needed several squirt
guns and a gallon of grape juice.
7. Hemingway was so
before he felt it was right.
8. White wine is said to
but I can't tell the difference.
about his writing that he rewrote the ending of one novel 44 limes
some meals and red wine to add the finishing touch to others,
9. When Alicia signed her card "Warm regards," Mario thought the
only warm regards, not love."
10. I wish my brother's lack of manners weren't so
the restaurant to wipe his greasy hands off on his pants.
Now check your answers to these questions by turning to page 166. Going over the answers carefully will help
you prepare for the next two checks, for which answers are not given.
140
Chapter 26
Check 2
Complete each sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
complement
discreet
fastidious
flout
heinous
implement
implicit
impromptu
intuition
obtrusive
told me that a man who ironed his bed sheets was too
1-2. My
Ty
_____
(e)d by
"Dolphin killers, dolphin killers." But the president felt the chanting was
protesters thrown out.
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
,,
,.
.. CHAPTER
R fi
27
expedite
extenuating
fraudulent
innuendo
rebuke
redeem
subordinate
transgress
vehement
5. Paula's mother
dress without her permission."
6. I knew my parents would dislike my plan to live with my boyfriend, but I d i d n ' t expect their objections
I
to be so _
'
'
_,
(e)d
s of the
'10. The twins couldn't have been more different. While one earned his living in totally honest ways, the
other was always working on one ^
It
__ scheme or another.
Now check your answers by turning to page 166. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and to master ihe words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
141
142
Chapter 27
a. Their agreement on all aspects of the wedding was auspicious for Jen and Robert's
marriage. They took it as a sign their marriage would be a success.
2 expedite
(cks'-po-dt1)
-verb
a. To expedite payment on an insurance claim, make sure you write down all the required
information before mailing the form.
b. Lisa's A on the first test of the semester was an auspicious start to the school year, a
promise of good grades to come.
3 extenuating
a. I know I promised to come to the party, but there were extenuating circumstances: my
(ck-sten'-y-'-ting)
car broke down.
-adjective
b. When my father had a heart attack, I missed my final exam. Due to the extenuating
circumstances, my professor gave me another chance to take the exam.
4 fraudulent
(fro'-JD-bnt)
-adjective
a. Leroy was jailed for filing fraudulent income tax returns. He had been cheating the
government for years.
b. The painting was only a copy, but the fraudulent art dealer led the buyer to believe that
it was an original masterpiece.
5 innuendo
(in'-y-en'-d)
-noun
a. No one came right out and said it, but there were innuendos that the company's real
estate project was funded by illegal means.
6 rebuke
(ri-byk1)
-verb
a. When the puppy chews the furniture, rebuke him in a harsh voice.
7 redeem
(ri-dem')
-verb
a. The restaurant had to work hard to redeem itself after the Board of Health gave it a
rating of "unsatisfactory."
8 subordinate
(so-bor'-ds-nit)
-adjective
a. I take orders from the manager of the restaurant, and she's subordinate only to the
owner.
9 transgress
(trans-gres')
-verb
10 vehement
(ve'-o-mont)
-adjective
a. The elderly man was vehement in his refusal to move out of his apartment. "I don't care
if the bulldozers come," he said. "I'm staying!"
b. When her boyfriend slapped her, Nell responded with vehement anger, vowing, "Thai's
the last time you'll ever touch me!"
b. When Bill said, "Emily's home sick. Again," the innuendo was that she probably just
felt like taking another day off.
b. Although my father has scolded me many times in private, he's never rebuked me in
public.
b. When Jeff's parents were angry with him for neglecting his chores, he redeemed
himself by being extra helpful around the house.
b. The U.S. District Courts are lower than the U.S. Court of Appeals, which, in turn, is
subordinate to the Supreme Court,
b. Deborah knew she had transgressed against her family's wishes by selling the ring her
grandmother had given her.
Chapter 27
143
2. expedite
3. extenuating
4. fraudulent
d. intense; forceful
5. innuendo
__<
6. rebuke
__
7. redeem
8. subordinate
j>
9. transgress
10. vehement
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
"Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
^-Sentence Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
auspicious
expedite
extenuating
fraudulent
innuendo
rebuke
redeem
subordinate
transgress
vehement
3. Any notice telling you that you've won a free car or trip is more likely to oe .
honest.
4. To _. '
line.
than
your registration process, have all the necessary forms completed before you get in
'
'-
in her opposition to the proposed department budget cuts. She let everyone
10. "Yes, this woman murdered her husband," said the lawyer. "But there were .
circumstances. He had attacked her a number of times and threatened to kill her."
Now check your answers to these questions by turning to page 166. Going over the answers carefully will help
you prepare for the next two checks, for which answers are not given.
144
Chapter 27
^-Sentence Check 2
Complete each sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
auspicious
expedite
extenuating
fraudulent
innuendo
rebuke
redeem
subordinate
traasgress
vehement
When he was 18, Tony was arrested for possession and sale of cocaine. He knew he'd
(1)
(e)d against the law, but he didn't think of himself as a drug dealer. He'd just
been selling a little to friends, he told himself, as a favor.
On the way to the police station, he decided to claim that there were (2)
circumstances. He'd say he had been holding the drugs for a friend. He would probably be released quickly.
But when he gave his phony excuse to the police captain, the captain's response did not seem
(3),
for a quick release. "Sit down, boy," said the captain. "I've heard it all before.
Your excuse.is probably just as (4)
as counterfeit money." Turning to a(n)
(5)
officer, the captain said, "Book him."
At first, Tony was startled, but then he thought, "My father will get me out of this." He knew his dad
could afford to pay the bail and could speak to influential people who would (6)
his
release. His father, however, refused to get him off. With (7)
anger, his father
(8)
(e)d him, saying, "You got yourself into this. Now you'll take the consequences."
Jail was worse than Tony had imagined. He found the other prisoners terrifying. When they mocked him
with cries of "poor little rich boy," a(n) (9)
suggesting that his life had been loo easy,
he feared an attack. He got through his nine-day stay in jail without physical harm, but it entirely changed his
view. It had given him plenty of time to realize that he had a serious d r u g problem. To
(10)
himself in his family's eyes and to have a worthwhile life, he needed to stop
using drugs. Yet he still had the strong desire to get high.
So at his court hearing, Tony asked to be sent to a drug treatment center rather than to jail. Now, six
years later, Tony is still "clean." And he still wonders what would have happened if the police captain and his
father hadn't made him take the consequences of his actions.
SCORES:
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
CHAPTER
28
Previewing the Words
Find out how many of the ten words in this chapter you already know. Try to complete each sentence with
the most suitable word from the list below. Use each word once.
Leave a sentence blank rather than guessing at an answer. Your purpose here is just to get a sense of the
ten words and what you may know about them.
deride
derogatory
fabricate
impending
macabre
misconstrue
paramount
quandary
turbulent
validate
1.
2. Maria and Tom are busy making last-minute arrangements for their
3. The body of the woman who had fallen 30 floors to the pavement was a(n)
sight.
4. It's not true that Clint Eastwood is Larry's uncle. Larry just
get attention.
5. For a deer to grow large antlers, getting the right minerals in his diet is of
importance.
6. Mike often makes
her to her face.
___
9. Before being allowed to sell a new drug in the U.S., companies must provide evidence to
that the drug is effective,
10. My older brother
_(c)d me for dating a guy six inches shorter than myself,
saying, "Together, you make a beautiful stepladder."
Now check your answers by turning to page 166. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and to master the words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
145
146
Chapter 28
-verb
a. One comedian loves to deride members of the audience. He says they know his
mocking is all in fun.
b. Walter went on a diet after several classmates derided him by c a l l i n g him "Lardo" and
"Blimpy."
2 derogatory
(di-rog'-D-tor'-e)
-adjective
a. The man's derogatory remark about his boss caused him to get fired.
3 fabricate
(fab'-ri-kat1)
-verb
a. Supermarket tabloids often fabricate ridiculous stories, such as "Boy is Born Wearing
Green Sneakers."
4 impending
(im-pend'-ing)
-adjective
a. If Gary didn't wait to study until his final exams were impending, he wouldn't have to
cram so hard.
5 macabre
(mo-kob'-ro)
-adjective
a. The scene of the hatchet murder was macabre, with blood and body parts all over the
place.
6 misconstrue
a. Unaware that all-black outfits are "in," Frank misconstrued Ann's black tights, dress,
and jacket as signs of mourning.
b. The derogatory article suggested that the company president had no ability, but got his
job only because he was related to the chairman of the board.
b. When she handed in her term paper late, Diane fabricated an excuse about her computer
destroying her disk. The truth is that she doesn't even work on a computer.
b. "Because of the company's impending move," the office manager said, "don't order any
new supplies this month."
b. The Fall of the House of Usher is a macabre tale in which someone is buried alive.
b. Many people misconstrue Robert Frost's line "Good fences make good neighbors."
They think it's the poet's own opinion, forgetting that the statement is spoken by an
unncighborly character.
7 paramount
Cpar'-3-mount')
-adjective
a. Good tire tracuon is of paramount importance for safety when you arc driving on rainslick and curving roads.
8 quandary
(kwon'-ds-re)
-noun
a. Bonita was in a q u a n d a r y over whether to take the boring high-paying job or the
exciting low-paying one.
9 turbulent
(tr'-by-lsnt)
-adjective
a. The t u r b u l e n t air made the plane move so wildly that passengers felt as if they were on
a roller-coaster ride.
10 validate
(vaT-3-dt1)
-verb
b. My retired parents are in a quandary over whether they should move to Florida, where
it's too hot half the year, or stay in upstate New York, where it's loo cold half the year.
b. When Mr. Warner gets drunk, his household goes from calm to t u r b u l e n t as he starts
yelling and throwing things.
a. Many studies have validated claims that smoking involves serious health risks.
b. Most people believe that Columbus sailed westward to validate the theory that the world
is round. In fact, at that time it was well known that the world s round.
Chapter 28
147
1. deride
___
2. derogatory
3. fabricate
4. impending
5. macabre
6. misconstrue
f. to misinterpret; misunderstand
7. paramount
8. quandary
9. turbulent
10. validate
i. about to happen
j. foremost; of greatest concern or importance; chief in rank or authority
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
"Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
^-Sentence Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
deride
derogatory
fabricate
impending
macabre
misconstrue
paramount
quandary
turbulent
validate
in our thoughts.
4. Sally
girlfriend.
5. When my daughter said her teacher was "different," I wasn't sure if she meant it in a complimentary or a(n)
way.
6. Dwane didn't show up for the final exam because he hadn't studied, but he
about his car having broken down.
d a story
7. In our psychology class, our team assignment was to make a statement about human nature and then to try to
the statement with supporting evidence.
8. Phil is in a
. He doesn't know whether to buy the car of his dreams, on a loan, or a less
desirable car that he can buy outright.
9. On a calm sunny day, it's hard to think about the fact that the sun is shining because of numerous nuclear
reactions causing
masses of fire.
148
Chapter 28
^-Sentence Check 2
Complete each sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
deride
derogatory
fabricate
impending
macabre
misconstrue
paramount
quandary
turbulent
validate
3-4. I was in a
seeing a(n)
goal is
d fake results to make it look as though he had, in fact, proven his theory.
7-8. Before the trial began, the newspaper printed
His lawyer felt the negative publicity was making it impossible for the
9-10. When Craig called Peggy "the perfect secretary," she
trial to be fair.
her, but to
K-Mart rumor, for example, someone who wanted to discredit the store made the story up. Other times,
rumors start with a misinterpretation. When a magazine article compared the way a worm farm turns out bait
to the way McDonald's turns out hamburgers, a reader (2)
McDonald's itself was using worms in its food. The story quickly spread.
Sometimes, too, people will make a(n) (3)
(4)
someone they are angry at or jealous of. We've all heard rumors like "Josie got
an A because she's dating the teacher," or "Al isn't in school today because his arrest for being a Peeping
Tom is (5)
, and so he fled."
No story is too gruesome to make the rounds, not even the (6)
tale of "devil
worshippers" who cut up children and hung their heads in trees. To you, the story may sound ridiculous, but
many believed it. Some parents, in fact, were in a (7)
children.
Yes, rumors are everywhere, spreading fear, damaging reputations, and turning calm situations into
(8)
(10)
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
CHAPTER
29
Previewing the Words
Find out how many of the ten words in this chapter you already know. Try to complete each sentence with
the most suitable word from the list below. Use each word once.
Leave a sentence blank rather than guessing at an answer. Your purpose here is just to get a sense of the
ten words and what you may know about them.
adroit
constituent
contend
irreparable
pinnacle
platitude
promiscuous
repudiate
spontaneous
stigma
3.
___
4. The artist
in Missouri.
_ people are more likely to come down with sexually transmitted diseases.
s that he was bom in Paris, but he was actually born in a small town
s, hoping
6. Connie apologized to Juan for her angry words, but I'm afraid the damage to ihcir friendship is
9. Although the suspect claimed to have been in bed at the time of the shooting, a number of witnesses
fe)d his story by saying that they'd seen him on the street.
, so he would think it was a
10. I tried to make my movie invitation to Nick sound
spur-of-the moment idea and not something I'd been nervously planning for days.
Now check your answers by turning to page 166. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and to master the words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
149
150
Chapter 29
2 constituent
(kon- such' -60- snt)
-noun
3 contend
(kon-tend')
-verb
a. When a relative goes in for a major operation, it's comforting to know that he or she is in
the hands of an adroit surgeon.
b. Jane is such an adroit salesperson that she can reach anyone on the phone and get her
foot in any door.
">
a. Our senator is genuinely intcreslcd in how her constituents feel about important issues,
so that she can truly represent the voters of our state.
b. Many of Councilman Hall's constituents live in poverty, so one way he helps those he
represents is by working for programs to assist the poor.
a. John contended that smoking hasn't hurt his health, but he fell into a fit of coughing
right after making that claim.
b. The brochure for the concert series contends that the pianist is "the most loved in the
world.''
4 irreparable
(ir-rcp'-o-ra-bal)
-adjective
a. The car accident caused irreparable harm. Bernard won't ever regain the full use of his
right arm.
5 pinnacle
a. The pinnacle of the Smiths' Christmas tree was so high that no room was left for a star
between the trcctop and the ceiling.
-noun
6 platitude
(plat'-o-tood1)
-noun
b. The vase was broken into so many jfteces that the damage was irreparable.
b. To Roberta, being elected Student Council president was the pinnacle of her high school
years, not even surpassed by being a cheerleader.
a. Some conversations arc composed entirely of platitudes: "How arc you?" "Not bad;
how arc you?" "Can't complain." "Well, good to see you." "Yes, we've got to get
together some time."
b. Tired of platitudes, I made no response to the clerk's well-meaning but overused "Have
a nice day!"
7 promiscuous
(pr-mis'-ky-os)
-adjective
a. In this age of AIDS, it's especially important to be selective about a sexual partner.
Being promiscuous can have deadly results.
8 repudiate
(ri-py'-de-T)
-verb
a. When his biography appeared, the actor repudiated it, saying it was written without his
cooperation and was filled with lies.
b. Since the famous millionaire's death, several people have claimed to be his children, but
their claims have been repudiated in court.
9 spontaneous
(spon-ta'-ne-ss)
-adjective
10 stigma
(stig'-ms)
-noun
a. When challenged to a duel, Desmond fled. He preferred the stigma of being a coward to
cither killing or dying.
^j
b. There used to be a stigma attached to divorce, but now divorce is so common that it's no
longer considered a disgrace.
b. When it comes to women, Ned and Tony are opposites. Tony is very choosy about the
women he sees, but Ned is promiscuous.
Chapter 29
151
1. adroit
2. constituent
3. contend
4. irreparable
5. pinnacle
6. platitude
7. promiscuous
8. repudiate
9. spontaneous
10. stigma
j. to claim to be true
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers are correct. If you have studied the
"Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
^-Sentence Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
adroit
constituent
contend
irreparable
pinnacle
platitude
promiscuous
repudiate
spontaneous
stigma
chess players can make it seem that their opponent is ahead when in fact he or she is
really about to lose.
6. Many people believe that the works of William Shakespeare represent the ___
achievement in English drama.
7. Our football game wasn't planned, but the __
we walked across the field.
of
8. When Galileo
(e)d that the sun, not the Earth, was the center of our planetary system,
the Church forced him to deny his findings.
9. Some elected representatives vote as the majority of their
others vote their own personal choice, even if it is the minority opinion.
10. When Jimmy tells me his problems, I don't know what to say, so I end up mumbling mere
s like "That's too bad" or "Oh well, what can you do?"
Now check your answers to these questions by turning to page 166. Going over the answers carefully will help
you prepare for the next two checks, for which answers are not given.
152
Chapter 29
^-Sentence Check 2
Complete each sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
adroit
constituent
contend
irreparable
pinnacle
platitude
promiscuous
repudiate
spontaneous
stigma
he
ability to find a job.
3-4. "No matter how often Kevin
harm to s
_ of success as an architect.
rumors
that I was
"He's one of us." His speeches never sounded rehearsed, but (3)
beautiful baby!" seemed heartfelt. In every way, the mayor seemed to be at the (5)
of
political success.
Eventually, however, rumors spread that he had engaged in (6).
behavior. There
were reports that this "model family man" had paid hush money to former lovers and had visited prostitutes.
Then the city's largest newspaper published an interview with a call girl who (7)_
that the mayor was her client. The mayor couldn't (8)
(e)d
from politics.
SCORES:
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on thcJnsidc back cover of the book,
CHAPTER
30
Previewing the Words
Find out how many of the ten words in this chapter you already know. Try to complete each sentence with
the most suitable word from the list below. Use each word once.
Leave a sentence blank rather than guessing at an answer. Your purpose here is just to get a sense of the
ten words and what you may know about them.
abrasive
admonish
antithesis
culmination
docile
emulate
hierarchy
incapacitate
prognosis
tumult
me with laughter.
Martin Luther King, Jr., and have his inner strength and
7. The guide was relieved to find the hikers unhurt in the woods, but he
for straying so far from the trail.
8. On New Year's Eve, there was such a(n)
could be heard at least 20 blocks away.
9. The military has a strict
the orders given by someone of higher rank.
companion than
(c)d them
in Times Square that the crowd
Now check your answers by turning to page 166. Fix any mistakes and fill in any blank spaces by writing in the
correct answers. By doing so, you will complete this introduction to the ten words.
You're now ready to strengthen your knowledge of the words you already know and to master the words you're
only half sure of, or don't know at all. Turn to the next page.
153
154
Chapter 30
(o-bra -siv)
-adjective
2 admonish
(ad-mon'-ish)
-verb
a. When the little girl spent her entire allowance on candy bars, her parents admonished
her for wasting money.
3 antithesis
(an-tith'-s-sis)
-noun
a. My preference for loud heavy-metal music is the antithesis of my brother's passion for
classical music played at low volume.
4 culmination
(kul'-ms-na'-shon)
-noun
5 docile
(dos'-al)
-adjective
a. Drugs and operations have been used in mental hospitals to make violent patients docile,
so that they could be easily handled.
6 emulate
(em'-y-lt1)
-verb
a. Some young people wish to emulate drug dealers because the youngsters see only the
dealers' quickly gotten wealth.
7 hierarchy
(h'-sr-r'-ke)
-noun
a. Even in so-called "classless" societies, a social and economic hierarchy divides people
according to status and income.
8 incapacitate
(in'-ks-pas'-s-tat1)
-verb
a. The lecture was cancelled because the speaker was incapacitated by the flu.
9 prognosis
(prog-no'-sis)
noun
10 tumult
(t'-mult')
-noun
b. Our puppy is so smart that we usually have to admonish him only once or twice in a
serious tone of voice to get him to stop doing something.
b. Lou congratulated Faye on receiving the scholarship, but his friendly words were the
antithesis of his jealous feelings.
b. At first I was pleased with the docile behavior of the children I'd come to babysit for,
but that behavior changed the moment their parents drove away.
b. Jessie tried to emulate her older sister whenever possible. Jessie even had her hair cut in
the same style as her sister's.
b. Pamela soon learned that she wasn't permitted to communicate directly with the
company president. She had to pass any suggestions or requests up through the levels of
the company hierarchy.
b. My mother can't tolerate alcohol. The smallest glass of wine incapacitates her for
anything but giggling and sleeping.
a. The doctor's prognosis wasn't good. He said my uncle probably had only two months to
live.
b. Unless strict legislation is passed to reduce acid rain, the prognosis for the world's
forests will remain poor.
a. Hockey audiences are often wild and noisy, but the tumult becomes even greater during
a "sudden death" overtime, when the first team to score wins.
b. Tracy enjoys the tumult at the Fourth of July fireworks, but I hate all the noise and
commotion of the crowds.
^
Chapter 30
155
2. admonish
3. antithesis
4. culmination
___
5. docile
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
emulate
hierarchy
incapacitate
prognosis
tumult
CAUTION: Do not go any further until you are sure the above answers arc correct. If you have studied the
"Ten Words in Context," you will know how to match each word. Then you can use the matches to help you
in the following practices. Your goal is to reach a point where you don't need to check definitions at all.
^-Sentence Check 1
Complete each sentence below with the most suitable word from the box. Use each word once.
abrasive
admonish
antithesis
culmination
docile
emulate
hierarchy
incapacitate
prognosis
tumult
1. The
see the band.
of the audience at the concert was so great that I could hardly hear the music or
2.1 rubbed off the non-stick surface of my frying pan by cleaning it with a(n)
3. A sprained ankle
5. There is a clear
can learn to multiply and divide.
6. Mother
that she was pleased.
cleanser.
Elvis Presley," my mother said, "please imitate his onstage energy and
Now check your answers to these questions by turning to page 166. Going over the answers carefully will help
you prepare for the next two checks, for which answers are not given.
156
Chapter 30
^-Sentence Check 2
Complete each sentence below with two words from the box. Use each word once.
abrasive
admonish
antithesis
culmination
docile
emulate
hierarchy
incapacitate
prognosis
tumult
of her verv
sister.
her completely.
5-6.
Laura moved steadily up the company _ until she became president. This final position
was
the
7-8.
of
years
of
effort.
Although I admire Cory in many ways, his loud, _ manner toward those who disagree
__
9-10. I didn't expect the children to be completely still and silent in the car, but 1 finally had to
_
them
for
all
the
.'in
the
back
seat.
I don't expect
a supervisor to be my pal,
when I've done something wrong. Keller, however, was constant and harsh in his criticisms. His
(2) _
personality
made
every
bookkeeper
in
the
department
miserable.
He
was
the
complete (3) _ . _ of Ms. Bordcn, our previous boss. She had been so thoughtful and
efficient that
we
(5)
bookkeepers
some
Within
weeks,
all
had tried
to
until
even
(4) _ her.
they
the
could
most
(6) _
In
contrast,
hardly
add
Keller's
two
employees
and
were
mere
presence
could
rebellious.
The
two.
getting
(7)_ _ of our anger came when Keller yelled loudly at a new employee in front of
everyone else, making her cry. Furious, we all decided to go over Keller's head in the company
(8)
and
complain
we
settled down
directly
same
quickly
to his boss.
afternoon,
and
simply
causing
told her
at first
that
a huge
the
(10) _ for
the
department
wasn't good that the company would soon need to replace every bookkeeper if Keller stayed. That was
Friday afternoon. On Monday morning, we had a new boss.
V
SCORES:
Sentence Check 2
Final Check
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
Choose the word that best completes each sentence and write it in the space provided.
1. interrogates
incapacitates
misconstrues
insinuates
2. fastidious
auspicious
impending
promiscuous
3. docile
obsequious
heinous
paramount
The man's
4. subordinate
promiscuous
vehement
omnipotent
5. emulated
rebuked
fabricated
The mayor
starving.
only
validated
6. emulated
permeated
contended
repudiated
A severe lifcstvlc
7.
When the public learned that the senator had accepted bribes, many of his
constituents
pinnacles
intuitions
tumults
8. insinuate
vindicate
expedite
deride
Since I needed the lax forms as soon as possible, requested them by phone rather
9. platitudes
stigmas
hierarchies
pinnacles
The length of an Academy Award acceptance speech may depend on the number of
10. derogatory
omnipotent
extenuating
irreparable
matters.
uttered.
a writer
158
11. prognosis
constituent
innuendo
quandary
12. complement
fabricate
contend
validate
13. implemented
redeemed
derided
interrogated
He's rich but doesn't care about money; she's poor and cares about it a lot.
example, that she's a light eater. "As soon as it's light, she starts to eat."
PART B
Circle C if the italicized word is used correctly. Circle I if the word is used incorrectly.
C I
C
14.
15.
Since light travels faster than sound, lightning is a sign of impending thunder.
My trip began with the auspicious event of my luggage getting lost between airports.
C I
16.
Those who view the world as a hierarchy usually assume that they should be at the top of it.
C I
17.
To forestall completion of his college credits, Jim will continue his course work right through the
summer.
C I
18.
A snake's digestive juices are so docile that they quickly turn bone into powder.
C I
19.
A baseball injury caused irreparable damage to Howard's left eye, which was left sightless.
20.
The play's opening-night performance was the spontaneous result of months of rehearsing.
C T
21.
Margery's remark about my new beard was certainly derogatory. She said, "Now you look like an
armpit."
C I
22.
There was an odd disparity between the small, shabby house and the new Cadillac always parked in
its driveway.
C I
23.
Because my friend phoned at an opportune timejust before the end of a suspenscful mysteryI
hurriedly asked, "Can I call you back?"
C I
24.
The scientist had the courage and honcsly to repudiate his earlier theory when he discovered new
evidence that contradicted it.
C I
25.
Just as humans often admonish each other by shaking hands, elephants often greet each other by
intertwining their trunks.
x4 =
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
abrasive
adroit
antithesis
contend
emulate
extenuating
implicit
impromptu
intuition
pinnacle
quandary
stigma
validate
cockroach is
which is on the outside.
2. Hal's anger was
3. Don't use a(n)
attached to it.
of its frigid
6. My
told me to stay away from anyone who called me "Darling" after only
five minutes of acquaintance.
7. I tried to
her readiness to spend it.
8. Mitch
s at he deserved a higher grade in history, but I think ihe teacher was
generous in giving him a C.
9. From the mountain's snowy
that hid the valley below.
_^____
159
1 60
PART B
Circle C if the italicized word is used correctly. Circle I if the word is used incorrectly.
C
14.
City streets with names like Oak, Pine, and Elm seem fraudulent when there aren't any trees on the
streets.
115.
Bonnie is so discreet that the minute someone tells her a secret, she gets, on the phone to pass it
along.
16.
Some people feel we transgress against nature when we try to create life in a test tube.
17. It's more difficult to deal with innuendos against oneself than to fight out-and-out accusations.
18.
119.
The circus clown's beaming smile and insidious makeup made all the children at the party laugh.
I 20.
The book's number-one place on the best-seller list was the culmination of months of advertising.
I 21.
No matter how clean you are, you have millions of obtrusive bacteria rolling and darting across your
face.
22.
A vehement supporter of the^ovemor, my aunt intends to campaign energetically for him before the
next election.
I 23.
We had a turbulent day at the park, just relaxing on the grass, snoozing, and enjoying the picnic we
had packed.
I 24.
It would be fitting retribution if my brother, who stays on the phone for hours at a time, had to live
in some country with a 20-year waiting period for phone service.
I 25.
Even the most paramount worker at the very bottom of the ladder gets as much vacation time as
anyone else who has been with our company for the same length of time.
As obsequious as ever, Daniel refused to get in line for the fire drill.
SCORE: (Numbercorrect)
x4 =
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
Complete each sentence in a way that clearly shows you understand the meaning of the boldfaced word. Take a
minute to plan your answer before you write.
Example: Jeff should be discreet about the party because
1.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Maureen obviously had fabricated her excuse. She told the teacher,
7.
10. When Len said that his brother would never even give him the time of day, he meant to insinuate that
161
PART B
After each boldfaced word are a synonym (a word that means the same as the boldfaced word), an antonym (a
word that means the opposite of the boldfaced word), and a word that is neither. Mark the antonym with an A.
Example:
fraudulent
weak
honest
dishonest
11. adroit
clumsv
skillful
loud
12. disparity
equality
difference
sadness
13. heinous
hidden
noble
wicked
14. deride
mock
explore
praise
15. expedite
ease
interfere
remove
PART C
Use five of the following ten words in sentences. Make it clear that you know the meaning of the word you use.
Feel free to use the past tense or plural form of a word.
antithesis
complement
contend
emulate
intuition
irreparable
paramount
quandary
rebuke
spontaneous
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
Enter your scores above and in the vocabulary performance chart on the inside back cover of the book.
An Important Note: Be sure to use this answer key as a learning tool only. You should not turn to this key
until you have considered carefully the sentence in which a given word appears.
Used properly, the key will help you to learn words and to prepare for the activities and tests for
which answers are not given. For ease of reference, the title of the "Final Check" passage in each chapter
appears in parentheses.
Chapter 1 (Apartment Problems)
Previewing the Words
1. detriment
2. vicarious
3. discretion
4. gregarious
5. scrupulous
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
dexterous
ostentatious
sensory
optimum
facetious
Sentence Check 1
1. discretion
2. detriment
3. dexterous
4. gregarious
5. scrupulous
6. ostentatious
7. vicarious
8. optimum
9. sensory
10. facetious
Sentence Check. 1
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
despondent
resilient
instigate
collaborate
zealot
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
rudimentary
despondent
instigate
zealot
venerate
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
scoff
collaborate
squelch
retrospect
resilient
sporadic
embellish
inadvertent
subsidize
squander
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
lethargy
Dissident
juxtapose
inane
ambiguous
1. lethargy
2. sporadic
3. subsidize
4. inadvertent
5. squander
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
embellish
juxtapose
dissident
ambiguous
inane
estrange
regress
impetuous
euphoric
zenith
Sentence Check 1
1. regress
2. zenith
3. euphoric
4. relinquish
5. estrange
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
infallible
berate
ubiquitous
maudlin
impetuous
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
charlatan
hoist
proliferation
precipitate
corroborate
Sentence Check I
6. illicit
7. irrevocable
8. dormant
9. disseminate
10. diverge
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
diverge
charlatan
irrevocable
dormant
precipitate
6. illicit
7. hoist
8. disseminate
9. corroborate
10. proliferation
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
extraordinary
liberate
infanticide
vocabulary
anachronism
163
164
propensity
impeccable
solace
liaison
solicitous
Sentence Check 1
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
reprehensible
predisposed
equivocate
fortuitous
sham
\.
2.
3.
4.
5.
solace
impeccable
predisposed
solicitous
reprehensible
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
sham
propensity
fortuitous
liaison
equivocate
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
cohesive
grievous
inundate
attrition
reticent
circumvent
reticent
vociferous
attrition
cohesive
Sentence Check I
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
sanction
robust
oblivious
grievous
inundate
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
indiscriminate
bolster
nebulous
sedentary
relegate
1. oblivious
2. vociferous
3. sanction
4. robust
5. circumvent
replete
tenet
terse
depreciate
inquisitive
Sentence Check I
1. terse
2. indiscriminate
3. bolster
4. depreciate
5. tenet
6. replete
7. relegate
8. nebulous
9. sedentary
10. inquisitive
Utopia
tantamount
reiterate
recourse
ostracize
Semence Check 1
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
tenacious
mandate
bureaucratic
autonomy
raucous
\.
2.
3.
4.
5.
autonomy
Ostracize
reiterate
tantamount
raucous
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
tenacious
Utopia
bureaucratic
mandate
recourse
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
exonerate
prolific
clandestine
superfluous
egocentric
indigenous
exonerate
superfluous
liability
prolific
Sentence Check 1
6. reinstate
7. incongruous
8. Clandestine
9. contingency
10. egocentric
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
incongruous
reinstate
liability
indigenous
contingency
infidel
very
panorama
primary
direct
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
bibliography
synonyms
Hinduism
atheist
renovate
6.
7.
8.
910.
advocate
imminent
impede
inclusive
emancipate
idiosyncrasy
jurisdiction
antipathy
precarious
preposterous
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
precarious
advocate
inclusive
imminent
impede
6. emancipate
7. jurisdiction
8. antipathy
9. preposterous
10. idiosyncrasy
mesmerize
metamorphosis
notorious
grotesque
austere
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
esoteric
provocative
facsimile
perfunctory
travesty
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
travesty
notorious
provocative
grotesque
facsimile
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
esoteric
mesmerize
perfunctory
austere
Metamorphosis
connoisseur
symmetrical
conspiracy
distraught
plight
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
lucid
contrite
germane
cursory
verbose
Sentence Check 1
1. contrite
2. plight
3. symmetrical
4. connoisseur
5. verbose
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
conspiracy
germane
distraught
lucid
cursory
entrepreneur
stringent
eradicate
homogeneous
standardi/e
Sentence Check 1
1. presumptuous
2. adept
3. sordid
4. stint
5. eradicate
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
homogeneous
encompass
stringent
entrepreneur
standardize
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
innocuous
rancor
recrimination
meticulous
flamboyant
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
commensurate
connotation
dilapidated
noxious
scenario
Sentence Check. 1
1. deprivation
2. mitigate
3. exacerbate
4. unprecedented
5. deplore
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
utilitarian
objective
panacea
imperative
atrophy
Sentence Check 1
1. decorum
2. tenuous
3. rejuvenate
4. exorbitant
5. exhilaration
6. facilitate
7. extricate
8. espouse
9. synchronize
10. orthodox
Sentence Check I
1. inherent
2. dissipate
3. belligerent
4. denunciation
5. nonchalant
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
sordid
adept
encompass
stint
presumptuous
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
flamboyant
masochist
repugnant
rancor
exhort
Sentence Check 1
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
foible
innocuous
recrimination
meticulous
magnanimous
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
dismissed
postmortem
polygraph
animation
nominees
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
repugnant
magnanimous
masochist
foible
exhort
yen
connotation
diabolic
integral
dilapidated
Sentence Check I
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
coalition
chide
noxious
commensurate
scenario
6. unprecedented
7. deplore
8. exacerbate
9. deprivation
10. panacea
exorbitant
extricate
tenuous
Decorum
exhilaration
6. rejuvenate
7. facilitate
X. synchroni/.c
9. espouse
10. orthodox
\.
2.
3.
4.
5.
chide
diabolic
integral
coalition
yen
indolent
demeanor
unassuming
assimilate
unilateral
165
166
emanate
annihilate
proficient
criterion
vindicate
Sentence Check I
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
placebo
staunch
holistic
subversive
analogy
permeate
Obsequious
interrogate
omnipotent
retribution
flout
intuition
implement
implicit
obtrusive
auspicious
transgress
expedite
subordinate
rebuke
Chapter 28 (Rumors)
Previewing the Words
}, Turbulent
2. impending
3. macabre
4. fabricate
5. paramount
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
discreet
complement
heinous
fastidious
impromptu
pinnacle
adroit
Promiscuous
contend
constituent
incapacitate
prognosis
abrasive
antithesis
docile
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
disparity
insidious
omnipotent
insinuate
obsequious
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
intuition
flout
heinous
impromptu
discreet
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
implement
fastidious
complement
implicit
obtrusive
Sentence Check 1
6. vehement
7. extenuating
8. redeem
9. innuendo
10. fraudulent
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
subordinate
transgress
fraudulent
expedite
redeem
6. auspicious
7. vehement
8. rebuke
9. innuendo
10. extenuating
Sentence Check I
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
derogatory
quandary
misconstrue
validate
deride
6. irreparable
7. stigma
8. platitude
9. repudiate
10. spontaneous
permeate
forestall
opportune
interrogate
retribution
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Sentence Check 1
holistic
emanate
analogy
vindicate
placebo
Sentence Check 1
6. opportune
7. insidious
8. forestall
9. disparity
10. insinuate
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
6. homogenized
7. aqueduct
8. philanthropist
9. surpass
10. mysterious
1. subversive
2. annihilate
3. staunch
4. criterion
5. proficient
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
macabre
paramount
impending
misconstrue
derogatory
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
fabricate
validate
quandary
turbulent
deride
Sentence Check 1
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
promiscuous
repudiate
stigma
irreparable
Adroit
6. pinnacle
7. spontaneous
8. contend
9. constituent
10. platitude
Sentence Check 1
6. emulate
7. admonish
8. tumult
9. hierarchy
10. culmination
\.
2.
3.
4.
5.
tumult
abrasive
incapacitate
antithesis
hierarchy
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
admonish
prognosis
docile
culmination
emulate