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PSAT Test
English test
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| lacking variety; boring, dull | Humdrum |
| the state, quality, or character of being notorious or widely known | Notoriety |
| disgrace, dishonor, public contempt | Ignominy |
| enerous in forgiving an insult or injury; free from petty resentfulness or vindictiveness | Magnanimous |
| unduly demonstrative; lacking reserve | Effusive |
| haughtily disdainful or contemptuous | Supercilious |
| a model or pattern of excellence | Paragon |
| hard to understand; recondite; esoteric | Abstruse |
| requiring a high degree of scholarship or specialist knowledge to be understood | Recondite |
| intended for or understood by only an initiated few; obscure; secrete or highly confidential | Esoteric |
| rational and mentally clear; clear and easily understood | Lucid |
| not having features that are interesting or imaginative; lacking imagination | Prosaic |
| relating to the way administrative systems are organized; applying rules rigidly within an administrative system or government | Bureaucratic |
| Belie: | to disguise the true nature of something; to show that something is not true or real |
| Abhor: | to disapprove of or reject something very strongly |
| Levity | fremarks or behavior intended to be amusing, especially when they are out of keeping with a serious occasion |
| o make something obscure or unclear, especially by making it complicated; to make somebody confused | Obfuscate: |
| highly critical, eager to criticize people or things; expressing strong disapproval or harsh criticism | Censorious |
| performed w/o any preparation; prepared in advance but delivered without notes; skilled at speaking without preparation or notes | Extemporaneous |
| showing wisdom, good sense, or discretion, often with the underlying objective of avoiding trouble or waste | Judicious: |
| showing innocence and a lack of worldly experience; appearing honest and direct | Ingenuous |
| not obvious or definitely true and not to be doubted | Indubitable |
| unjustly harsh or severe; relating to the Athenian legislator Draco or his wide-ranging and harsh code of laws | Draconian: |
| straightforward, practical way of thinking about things or dealing with problems, concerned with results rather than with theories and principles | Pragmatism |
| humorless or suggesting strict self-denial; plain and simple, without luxury or self-indulgence | Austere |
| to repeat or discuss something unnecessarily or at too great a length | Belabor |
| happy, cheerful, and carefree; casually indifferent | Blithe |
| a drawing, description, or performance that exaggerates somebody’s characteristics | Caricature: |
| a feeling of vexation or humiliation due to disappointment about something | Chagrin |
| somebody who takes up a subject or interest in a superficial or desultory way | Dilettante |
| aimlessly passing from one thing to another; happening in a random, disorganized, or unmethodical way | Desultory: |
| to deprive a person or organization of a privilege, immunity, or legal right | Disenfranchise |
| of high standing; in a high or raised position | Eminent |
| example of excellence | Paragon |
| carefulness, caution, discretion | Prudence |
| to disapprove of something formally and strongly and renounce any connection with it; deny something; reject something that is offered | Repudiate: |
| a servile person who flatters somebody powerful for personal gain | Sycophan |
| timid | Timorous |
| outstanding skill especially in performing music | Virtuosity |
| zealous support of a cause, especially religious | Zealot: |
| passionate, enthusiastic | Ardent: |
| supporter or promoter of a cause | Exponent |
| silly and trivial; lacking in intellectual substance and not worth serious consideration | Frivolous |