GRE Words #7 Word Scramble
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Question | Answer |
Paleontology (noun) | study of past geological eras through fossil remains |
Pallid (adj) | lacking color or liveliness |
Paragon (noun) | model of excellence or perfection |
Partisan (adj) | one-sided; committed to a party or group or cause; prejudiced |
Pathological (adj) | departing from normal condition |
Pathos (noun) | quality that causes a feeling of pity or sorrow |
Patois (noun) | a regional dialect; nonstandard speech; jargon |
Paucity (noun) | scarcity |
Penchant (noun) | inclination |
Peregrination (noun) | a wandering from place to place |
Peremptory (adj) | imperative; leaving no choice |
Perfidious (adj) | faithless; disloyal; untrustworthy |
Perigee (noun) | point in an orbit that is closest to the Earth |
Permeable (adj) | penetrable |
Perturb (verb) | to disturb greatly; make uneasy or anxious; cause a body to deviate from its regular orbit |
Perturbation (noun) | disturbance |
Pervasive (adj) | having the tendency to permeate or spread throughout |
Petulant (adj) | rude; peevish |
Phoenix (noun) | mythical, immortal bird that lives for 500 years, burns itself to death, and rises from its ashes; anything that is restored after suffering great destruction |
Physiognomy (noun) | facial features |
Piety (noun) | devoutness |
Piquant (adj) | appealingly stimulating; pleasantly pungent; attractive |
Pique (noun) | fleeting feeling of hurt pride |
Pique (verb) | to provoke or arouse |
Placid (adj) | calm |
Plaintive (adj) | melancholy; mournful |
Plasticity (noun) | condition of being able to be shaped or formed; pliability |
Platonic (adj) | spiritual; without sexual desire; theoretical |
Plumb (verb) | to determine the depth; to examine deeply |
Plume (verb) | to congratulate oneself in a self-satisfied way |
Plutocracy (noun) | society ruled by the wealthy |
Porous (adj) | full of holed; permeable to liquids |
Poseur (noun) | person who affects an attitude or identity to impress others |
Pragmatism (noun) | practical way of approaching situations or solving problems |
Prate (verb) | to talk idly; chatter |
Preamble (noun) | preliminary statement |
Precarious (adj) | uncertain |
Precept (noun) | principle; law |
Preempt (verb) | to supersede; appropriate for oneself |
Prehensile (adj) | capable of grasping |
Premonition (noun) | forewarning; presentiment |
Presage (verb) | to foretell; indicate in advance |
Presumptuous (adj) | rude; improperly bold |
Preternatural (adj) | beyond the normal course of nature; supernatural |
Primordial (adj) | original; existing from the beginning |
Problematic (adj) | posing a problem; doubtful; unsettled |
Profound (adj) | deep; not superficial |
Profundity (noun) | the quality of being profound |
Prohibitive (adj) | so high as to prevent the purchase or use of; preventing; forbidding |
Propriety (noun) | correct conduct; fitness |
Proscribe (verb) | to condemn; forbid; outlaw |
Proscriptive (adj) | relating to prohibition |
Provident (adj) | providing for future needs; frugal |
Punctilious (adj) | careful in observing rules of behavior or ceremony |
Purport (verb) | to profess; suppose; claim |
Purport (noun) | intended or implied |
Paean (noun) | a song or hymn of praise and thanksgiving |
Palliate (verb) | to make something seem less serious, to gloss over, to make less severe or intense |
Panegyric (noun) | formal praise, eulogy, encomium |
Parody (noun) | a humorous imitation intended for ridicule or comic effect, esp. in literature and art |
Parsimonious (adj) | cheap, miserly |
Pedagogy (noun) | the profession or principles of teaching or instructing |
Pedantic (adj) | overly concerned with the trivial details of learning or education; show-offish about one's knowledge |
Pedestrian (adj) | commonplace, trite, unremarkable, quotidian |
Pellucid (adj) | transparent, easy to understand, limpid |
Penurious (adj) | penny-pinching; excessively thrifty; ungenerous |
Penury (noun) | poverty; destitution |
Perennial (adj) | recurrent through the year or many years; happening repeatedly |
Perfidy (noun) | intentional breach of faith; treachery |
Perfunctory (adj) | cursory; done without care or interest |
Pernicious (adj) | extremely harmful; potentially causing death |
Peroration (noun) | the concluding part of a speech; flowery, rhetorical speech |
Perspicacious (adj) | acutely perceptive; having keen discernment |
Peruse (verb) | to examine with great care |
Pervade (verb) | to permeate throughout |
Phlegmatic (adj) | calm; sluggish; unemotional |
Pied (adj) | multicolored, usually in blotches |
Pine (verb) | to lose vigor (as through grief); to yearn |
Pious (adj) | extremely reverent or devout; showing string religious devotion |
Pirate (verb) | to illegally use or reproduce |
Pith (noun) | the essential or central part |
Pithy (adj) | precise and brief |
Placate (verb) | to appease; to calm by making concessions |
Plangent (adj) | pounding, thundering, resounding |
Plastic (adj) | moldable, pliable, not rigid |
Platitude (noun) | a superficial remark, esp. one offered as meaningful |
Plethora (noun) | an overabundance; a surplus |
Pluck (noun) | courage, spunk, fortitude |
Plummet (verb) | to plunge or drop straight down |
Polemical (adj) | controversial; argumentative |
Pragmatic (adj) | practical rather than idealistic |
Prattle (verb) | to babble meaninglessly; to talk in an empty and idle manner |
Precipitate (adj) | acting with excessive haste or impulse |
Precipitate (verb) | to cause or happen before anticipated or required |
Precursor (noun) | one that precedes and indicates or announces another |
Predilection (noun) | a disposition in favor of something; preference |
Preen (verb) | to dress up; to primp to groom oneself with elaborate care |
Prescience (noun) | foreknowledge of events; knowledge of events prior to their occurrence |
Presumptuous (adj) | overstepping due bonds (as of propriety or courtesy); taking liberties |
Prevaricate (verb) | to deliberately avoid the truth; to mislead |
Pristine (adj) | pure; uncorrupted; clean |
Prize (verb) | to pry, to press or force with a lever; something taken by force, spoils |
Probity (noun) | adherence to highest principles; complete and confirmed integrity; uprightness |
Proclivity (noun) | a natural predisposition or inclination |
Prodigal (adj) | recklessly wasteful; extravagant; profuse; lavish |
Prodigious (adj) | abundant in size, force, or extent; extraordinary |
Profligate (adj) | excessively wasteful; recklessly extravagant |
Profuse (adj) | given or coming forth abundantly; extravagant |
Proliferate (verb) | to grow or increase swiftly and abundantly |
Prolific (adj) | producing large volumes or amounts; productive |
Prolix (adj) | long-winded, verbose |
Propensity (noun) | a natural inclination or tendency; penchant |
Propitiate (verb) | to appease; to conciliate |
Prosaic (adj) | dull; lacking in spirit or imagination |
Puerile (adj) | childish, immature, jejune, nugatory |
Puissance (noun) | power, strength |
Pungent (adj) | characterized by a strong, sharp smell or taste |
Pusillanimous (adj) | cowardly, craven |
Putrefy (verb) | to rot; to decay and give off a foul odor |
Quagmire (noun) | marsh; difficult situation |
Quibble (verb) | to argue over insignificant and irrelevant details |
Quorum (noun) | number of members necessary to conduct a meeting |
Quaff (verb) | to drink deeply |
Quail (verb) | to lose courage; to turn frightened |
Qualify (verb) | to limit |
Qualms (noun) | misgivings; reservations; causes for hesitancy |
Queries (noun) | questions; inquiries; doubts in the mind; reservations |
Querulous (adj) | prone to complaining or grumbling; peevish |
Quiescence (adj) | stillness; motionless; quality of being at rest |
Quixotic (adj) | foolishly impractical; marked by lofty romantic ideals |
Quotidian (adj) | occurring or recurring daily; commonplace |
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redsoxaddict13
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