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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
Alloy (verb)   to commingle; to debase by mixing with something inferior; unalloyed means pure  
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Appropriate (verb)   to take for one’s own use; to confiscate  
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Arrest, arresting (verb/adj)   to suspend; to engage; holding ones attention; as in arrested adolescence, an arresting portrait  
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August (adj)   majestic, venerable  
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Bent (noun)   leaning, inclination, proclivity, tendency  
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Broach (verb)   to bring up; to announce; to begin to talk about  
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Brook (verb)   to tolerate; to endure; to countenance  
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Cardinal (adj)   major, as in a cardinal sin  
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Chauvinist (noun)   a blindly devoted patriotic  
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Color (verb)   to change as if by dyeing, i.e. to distort, gloss, or affect (usually the first)  
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Consequential (adj)   pompous, self-important (primary definitions are: logically following: important)  
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Damp (verb)   to diminish the intensity or check the vibration of a sound  
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Die (noun)   a tool used to shaping, as in a tool-and-die shop  
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Essay (verb)   to test or try; to attempt; to experiment  
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Exact (verb)   to demand; to call for; to require; to take  
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Fell (verb)   to cause to fall by striking  
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Fell (adj)   inhumanely cruel  
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Flag (verb)   to sag or droop; to become spiritless; to decline  
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Flip (adj)   sarcastic; impertinent, as in flippant; a flip remark  
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Ford (verb)   to wade across the shallow part of a river or stream  
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Grouse (verb)   to complain or grumble  
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Guy (noun)   a rope, cord, or cable attached to something as a brace or guide; to steady or reinforce using a guy: think “guide”  
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Intimate (verb)   to imply, suggest, or insinuate  
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List (verb)   to tilt or lean to one side  
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Lumber (verb)   to move heavily and clumsily  
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Meet (adj)   fitting, proper  
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Milk (verb)   to exploit; to squeeze every last ounce of  
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Mince (verb)   to pronounce or speak affectedly; to euphemize to speak too carefully. Also, to take tiny steps; to tiptoe  
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Nice (adj)   exacting, fastidious, extremely precise  
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Obtain (adj)   to be established, accepted, or customary  
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Occult (adj)   hidden, concealed, beyond comprehension  
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Pedestrian (adj)   commonplace, trite, unremarkable, quotidian  
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Pied (adj)   multicolored, usually in blotches  
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Pine (verb)   to lose vigor (as through grief); to yearn  
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Plastic (adj)   moldable, pliable, not rigid  
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Pluck (noun)   courage, spunk, fortitude  
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Prize (verb)   to pry, to press or force with a lever; something taken by force, spoils  
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Rail (verb)   to complain about bitterly  
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Rent (verb)   torn (past tense of rend); an opening or tear caused by such  
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Quail (verb)   to lose courage; to turn frightened  
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Qualify (verb)   to limit  
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Sap (verb)   to enervate or weaken the vitality of  
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Sap (noun)   a fool or nitwit  
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Scurvy (adj)   contemptible, despicable  
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Singular (adj)   exceptional, unusual, odd  
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Stand (noun)   a group of trees  
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Steep (verb)   to saturate or completely soak, as in to let a tea bag steep  
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Strut (noun)   the supporting structural cross-part of a wing  
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Table (verb)   to remove (as a parliamentary motion) from consideration  
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Tender (verb)   a proffer or offer  
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Waffle (verb)   to equivocate; to change one’s position  
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Wag (noun)   wit, joker  
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Abjure (verb)   to renounce or reject solemnly; to recant; to avoid  
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Adumbrate (verb)   to foreshadow vaguely or intimate; to suggest or outline sketchily; to obscure or overshadow  
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Anathema (noun)   a solemn or ecclesiastical (religious) curse; accursed or thoroughly loathed person or thing  
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Anodyne (adj/noun)   soothing; something that assuages or allays pain or comforts  
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Apogee (noun)   farthest or highest point; culmination; zenith  
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Apostate (noun)   one who abandons long-held religious or political convictions  
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Apotheosis (noun)   deification; glorification to godliness; an exalted example; a model of excellent or perfection  
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Asperity (noun)   severity, rigor; roughness, harshness; acrimony, irritability  
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Asseverate (verb)   to aver, allege, or assert  
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Assiduous (adj)   diligent, hard-working, sedulous  
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Augury (noun)   omen, portent  
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Bellicose (adj)   belligerent, pugnacious, warlike  
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Calumniate (verb)   to slander, to make a false accusation; calumny mean slander, aspersion  
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Captious (adj)   disposed to point out trivial faults; calculated to confuse or entrap in argument  
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Cavil (verb)   to find fault without good reason  
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Celerity (noun)   speed, alacrity; think accelerate  
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Chimera (noun)   an illusion; originally, an imaginary fire-breathing she-monster  
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Contumacious (adj)   insubordinate, rebellious; contumely means insult, scorn, aspersion  
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Debacle (noun)   rout, fiasco, complete failure  
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Denouncement (noun)   an outcome or solution; the unraveling of a plot  
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Descry ( verb)   to discriminate or discern  
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Desuetude (noun)   disuse  
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Desultory (adj)   random; aimless; marked by a lack of plan or purpose  
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Diaphanous (adj)   transparent, gauzy  
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Diffident (adj)   reserved, shy, unassuming; lacking in self-confidence  
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Dirge (noun)   a song of grief or lamentation  
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Encomium (noun)   glowing and enthusiastic praise; panegyric  
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Eschew (verb)   to shun or avoid  
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Excoriate (verb)   to censure scathingly, to upbraid  
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Execrate (verb)   to denounce, to feel loathing for, to curse, to declare to be evil  
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Exegesis (noun)   critical examination, explication  
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Expiate (verb)   to atone or make amends for  
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Extirpate (verb)   to destroy, to exterminate, to cut out, to exscind  
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Fatuous (adj)   silly, inanely foolish  
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Fractious (adj)   quarrelsome, rebellious, unruly, refractory, irritable  
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Gainsay (verb)   to deny, to dispute, to contradict, to oppose  
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Heterodox (adj)   unorthodox, heretical, iconoclast  
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Imbroglio (noun)   difficult or embarrassing situation  
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Indefatigable (adj)   not easily exhaustible; tireless, dogged  
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Ineluctable (adj)   certain, inevitable  
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Inimitable (adj)   one of a kind, peerless  
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Insouciant (adj)   unconcerned, carefree, heedless  
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Inveterate (adj)   deep rooted, ingrained, habitual  
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Jejune (adj)   vapid, uninteresting, nugatory; childish, immature, puerile  
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Lubricious (adj)   lewd, wanton, greasy, slippery  
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Mendicant (noun)   a beggar, supplicant  
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Meretricious (adj)   cheap, gaudy, tawdry, flashy, showy; attracting by false show  
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Minatory (adj)   menacing, threatening (reminds you of the Minotaur, a threatening creature indeed)  
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Nadir (noun)   low point, perigee  
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Nonplussed (adj)   baffled, bewildered, at a loss for what to do or think  
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Obstreperous (adj)   noisy and stubbornly defiant, aggressively boisterous  
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Ossified (adj)   tending to become more rigid, conventional, sterile, and reactionary with age; literally, turned into bone  
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Palliate (verb)   to make something seem less serious, to gloss over, to make less severe or intense  
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Panegyric (noun)   formal praise, eulogy, encomium; panegyrical means expressing elaborate praise  
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Parsimonious (adj)   cheap, miserly  
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Pellucid (adj)   transparent, easy to understand, limpid  
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Peroration (noun)   the concluding part of a speech; flowery, rhetorical speech  
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Plangent (adj)   pounding, thundering, resounding  
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Prolix (adj)   long-winded, verbose; prolixity means verbosity  
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Propitiate (verb)   to appease; to conciliate; propitious means auspicious, favorable  
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Puerile (adj)   childish, immature, jejune, nugatory  
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Puissance (noun)   power, strength; puissant means powerful, strong  
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Pusillanimous (adj)   cowardly, craven  
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Remonstrate (verb)   to protest, to object  
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Sagacious (adj)   having sound judgment; perceptive, wise; like a sage  
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Salacious (adj)   lustful, lascivious, bawdy  
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Salutary (adj)   remedial, wholesome, causing improvement  
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Sanguine (adj)   cheerful, confident, optimistic  
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Saturnine (adj)   gloomy, dark, sullen, morose  
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Sententious (adj)   aphoristic or moralistic; epigrammatic; tending to moralize excessively  
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Stentorian (adj)   extremely loud and powerful  
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Stygian (adj)   gloomy, dark  
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Sycophant (noun)   toady, servile, self-seeking flatterer; parasite  
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Tendentious (adj)   biased; showing marked tendencies  
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Timorous (adj)   timid, fearful, diffident  
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Tyro (noun)   novice, greenhorn, rank amateur  
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Vitiate (verb)   to corrupt, to debase, to spoil, to make ineffective  
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Voluble (adj)   fluent, verbal, having easy use of spoken language  
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