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Princeton Review 2012

Quiz yourself by thinking what should be in each of the black spaces below before clicking on it to display the answer.
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Question
Answer
Acerbic (adj)   having a sour or bitter taste of character; sharp; biting  
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Aggrandize (verb)   to increase in intensity, power, influence, or prestige  
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Alchemy (noun)   a medieval science aimed at the transmutation of metals, especially base metals into gold (an alchemist is one who practices alchemy)  
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Amenable (adj)   agreeable; responsive to suggestion  
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Anachronism (noun)   something or someone out of place in terms of historical or chronological context  
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Astringent (adj)   having a tightening effect on living tissue; harsh; severe; something with a tightening effect on tissue  
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Contiguous (adj)   sharing a border; touching; adjacent  
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Convention (noun)   a generally agreed-upon practice or attitude  
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Credulous (adj)   tending to believe too readily; gullible (noun form: credulity)  
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Cynicism (noun)   an attitude or quality of belief that all people are motivated by selfishness (adj form: cynical)  
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Decorum (noun)   polite or appropriate conduct or behavior (adj form: decorous)  
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Derision (noun)   scorn, ridicule, contemptuous treatment (adj form: derisive; verb form: deride)  
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Desiccate (verb)   to dry out or dehydrate; to make dry or dull  
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Dilettante (noun)   one with an amateurish or superficial interest in the arts or a branch of knowledge  
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Disparage (verb)   to slight or belittle  
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Divulge (verb)   to disclose something secret  
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Fawn (verb)   to flatter or praise excessively  
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Flout (verb)   to show contempt for, as in a rule or convention  
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Garrulous (adj)   pointlessly talkative; talking too much  
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Glib (adj)   marked by ease or informality’ nonchalant; lacking in depth; superficial  
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Hubris (noun)   overbearing presumption or pride; arrogance  
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Imminent (adj)   about to happen’ impending  
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Immutable (adj)   not capable of change  
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Impetuous (adj)   hastily or rashly energetic; impulsive and vehement  
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Indifferent (adj)   having no interest or concern; showing no bias or prejudice  
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Inimical (adj)   damaging; harmful; injurious  
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Intractable (adj)   not easily managed or directed; stubborn; obstinate  
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Intrepid (adj)   steadfast and courageous  
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Laconic (adj)   using few words; terse  
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Maverick (noun)   an independent individual who does not go along with a group or party  
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Mercurial (adj)   characterized by rapid and unpredictable change in mood  
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Mollify (verb)   to calm or soothe; to reduce in emotional intensity  
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Neophyte (noun)   a recent convert; a beginner; novice  
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Obfuscate (verb)   to deliberately obscure; to make confusing  
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Obstinate (adj)   stubborn; hard headed; uncompromising  
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Ostentatious (adj)   characterized by or given to pretentious display; showy  
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Pervade (verb)   to permeate throughout (adj form: pervasive)  
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Phlegmatic (adj)   calm, sluggish, unemotional  
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Plethora (noun)   an overabundance; a surplus  
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Pragmatic (adj)   practical rather than idealistic  
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Presumptuous (adj)   overstepping due bounds (as of propriety or courtesy); taking liberties  
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Pristine (adj)   pure; uncorrupted; clean  
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Probity (noun)   adherence to the highest principles; complete and confirmed integrity; uprightness  
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Proclivity (noun)   a natural predisposition or inclination  
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Profligate (noun)   excessively wasteful; recklessly extravagant (noun form: profligacy)  
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Propensity (noun)   a natural inclination or tendency: penchant  
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Prosaic (adj)   dull; lacking in spirit or imagination  
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Pungent (adj)   characterized by a strong, sharp smell or taste  
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Quixotic (adj)   foolishly impractical; marked by lofty romantic ideals  
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Quotidian (adj)   occurring or recurring daily; commonplace  
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Rarefy (verb)   to make or become thin, less dense; to refine  
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Recondite (adj)   hidden; concealed; difficult to understand; obscure  
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Refulgent (adj)   radiant; shiny; brilliant  
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Renege (verb)   to fail to honor a commitment; to go back on a promise  
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Sedulous (adj)   diligent; persistent; hard-working  
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Shard (noun)   a piece of broken pottery or glass  
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Soporific (adj)   causing drowsiness; tending to induce sleep  
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Sparse (adj)   thin; not dense; arranged at widely spaces intervals  
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Spendthrift (noun)   one who spends money wastefully  
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Subtle (adj)   not obvious; elusive; difficult to discern  
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Tacit (adj)   implied; not explicitly stated  
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Terse (adj)   brief and concise in wording  
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Tout (verb)   to publicly praise or promote  
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Trenchant (adj)   sharply perceptive; keen; penetrating  
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Unfeigned (adj)   genuine; not false or hypocritical  
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Untenable (adj)   indefensible; not viable; uninhabitable  
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Vacillate (verb)   to waver indecisively between one course of action or opinion and another  
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Variegated (adj)   multicolored; characterized by a variety or patches of different color  
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Vexation (noun)   annoyance; irritation (noun form: vex)  
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Vigilant (adj)   alertly watchful (noun form: vigilance)  
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Vituperate (verb)   to use harsh condemnatory language; to abuse or censure severely or abusively; to berate  
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Volatile (adj)   readily changing to a vapor; changeable; fickle; explosive (noun form: volatility)  
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