Revision List 6 Hangman

 
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oligarchy  a form of government in which all power is vested in a few persons or in a dominant class or clique; government by the few.  
muted  to deaden or muffle the sound of. to reduce the intensity of (a color) by the addition of another color.  
cloudburst  a sudden and very heavy rainfall.  
dereliction  deliberate or conscious neglect; negligence; delinquency; also the act of abandoning something.  
discredit  defame;also to give no credence to;disbelieve;also destroy confidence in an effort to discredit honest politicians.  
egalitarian  equality; asserting, resulting from, or characterized by belief in the equality of all people, esp. in political, economic, or social life.  
polarity  the presence or manifestation of two opposite or contrasting principles or tendencies.  
overreach  to reach or extend over or beyond; to defeat (oneself) by overdoing matters; to get the better of, esp. by deceit or trickery; outwit  
fracas  a noisy, disorderly disturbance or fight; riotous brawl; uproar.  
seethe  to surge or foam as if boiling.; to soak; to boil lightly, simmer  
plod  to walk heavily or move laboriously; trudge to plod under the weight of a burden.  
sodden  soaked with liquid or moisture; saturated.  
gainsay  to deny, dispute, or contradict. to speak or act against; oppose. To declare false; deny  
concur  to accord in opinion; agree; also to work together; also coincide  
prudery  excessive propriety or modesty in speech, conduct, etc.  
flag  to fall off in vigor, energy, activity, interest, etc. Public enthusiasm flagged when the team kept losing.  
bettor  a person who bets.  
lumber  to move clumsily or heavily, esp. from great or ponderous bulk overloaded wagons lumbering down the dirt road.  
desultory  lacking in consistency, or visible order; disconnected; fitful; random  
summarily  in a prompt or direct manner; immediately Also without notice; precipitately to be dismissed summarily from one's job.  
warp  To turn or twist (wood, for example) out of shape.  
trudge  to walk, esp. laboriously or wearily to trudge up a long flight of steps.  
forage  to wander or go in search of provisions. Also to search about; seek; He went foraging in the attic for old mementos.  
mince  To walk with very short steps or with exaggerated primness.  
vaunt  to speak vaingloriously of; boast of to vaunt one's achievements.  
torrid  Parched with the heat of the sun; intensely hot. Passionate; ardent  
homiletics  the art of preaching; the branch of practical theology that treats of homilies or sermons.  
tautology  Needless repetition of the same sense in different words; redundancy.  
tamp  to force in or down by repeated, rather light, strokes He tamped the tobacco in his pipe.  
jejune  without interest ; dull; insipid; also juvenile; immature; inexperienced a jejune novel.  
piquant  agreeably pungent or sharp in taste or flavor; pleasantly biting or tart. Also agreeably stimulating, interesting, or attractive  
raffish  gaudily vulgar or cheap; mildly or sometimes engagingly disreputable a matinee idol whose raffish offstage behavior amused millions.  
nonplused  to render utterly perplexed; puzzle completely.  
tractable  easily managed or controlled; docile; yielding  
umbrage  offense; annoyance; displeasure to feel umbrage at a social snub