click below
click below
Normal Size Small Size show me how
Beyond Hit Parade
Princeton Review 2010 GRE Vocab
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| alloy | (verb) to commingle; to debate by mixing with something inferior; unalloyed means pure |
| appropriate | (verb) to take for one's own use, confiscate |
| arrest, arresting | (verb/adjective) to suspend; to engage; holding one's attention: as in arrested adolescence, an arresting portrait |
| august | (adjective) majestic, venerable |
| bent | (noun) leaning, inclination, proclivity, tendency: He had a naturally artistic bent. |
| broach | (verb) bring up, announce, begin to talk about |
| brook | (verb) to tolerate, endure, countenance |
| cardinal | (adjective) major, as in cardinal sin |
| chauvinist | (noun) a blindly devoted patriot |
| color | (verb) to change as if by dyeing, i.e., to distort, gloss or affect (usually the first): Yellow journalism colored the truth. |
| consequential | (adjective) pompous, self-important (primary definitions are: logically following; important) |
| damp | (verb) to diminish the intensity or check the vibration of a sound |
| die | (verb) a tool used for shaping, as in a tool-and-die shop |
| essay | (verb) to test or try; attempt, experiment: The newly born fawn essayed a few wobbly steps. |
| exact | (verb) to demand, call for, require, take: Even a victorious war exacts a heavy price. |
| fell | (verb) to cause to fall by striking: The lumberjacks arrived and felled many trees. |
| fell | (adjective) inhumanely cruel: Fell beasts surrounded the explorers |
| flag | (verb) to sag or droop, to become spiritless, to decline: Think of a flag on a windless day, as in her flagging spirits |
| flip | (adjective) sarcastic, impertinent, as in flippant: a flip remark |
| ford | (verb) to wade across the shallow part of a river or stream |
| grouse | (verb) to complain or grumble |
| guy | (noun/verb) a rope, cord, or cable attached to something as a brace or guide; to steady or reinforce using a guy: Think guide |
| intimate | (verb) to imply, suggest, or insinuate: Are you intimating that I cannot be trusted? |
| list | (verb) to tilt or lean to one side: The ship's broken mast listed helplessly in the wind. |
| lumber | (verb) to move heavily and clumsily: Lumbering giants on land, walruses are actually graceful swimmers |
| meet | (adjective) fitting, proper: It is altogether meet that Jackie Robinson is in the baseball hall of fame |
| milk | (verb) to exploit; to squeeze every last ounce of: I milked the position for all it was worth |
| mince | (verb) pronounce or speak affectedly, euphemize, speak too carefully: Don't mince words. Also, to take tiny steps, tiptoe |
| nice | (adjective) exacting, fastidious, extremely precise: He made a nice distinction between the two cases |
| obtain | (adjective) to be established, accepted, or customary: Those standards no longer obtain |
| occult | (adjective) hidden, concealed, beyond comprehension |
| pedestrian | (adjective) commonplace, trite, unremarkable, quotidian |
| pied | (adjective) multicolored, usually in blotches: The Pied Piper of Hamlin was so called because of his multicolored coat |
| pine | (verb) to lose vigor (as through grief); to yearn |
| plastic | (adjective) moldable, pliable, not rigid |
| pluck | (noun) courage, spunk, fortitude: Churchill's speeches inspired the pluck of his countrymen during the war |
| prize | (verb) to pry, to press or force with a lever; something taken by force, spoils: The information was prized from him. |
| rail | (verb) to complain about bitterly: Early American progressives railed against the railroad barons |
| rent | (verb/noun) torn, past of rend: He rent his garments; an opening or tear caused by such: a large rent in the fabric |
| quail | (verb) to lose courage, turn frightened |
| qualify | (verb) to limit: Let me qualify that statement |
| sap | (verb) to enervate or weaken the vitality of: That race sapped my strength |
| sap | (noun) a fool or nitwit: Don't be a sap! |
| scurvy | (adjective) contemptible, despicable: He was a scurvy old reprobate |
| singular | (adjective) exceptional, unusual, odd: He was singularly well-suited for the job |
| stand | (noun) a group of trees |
| steep | (verb) to saturate or completely soak, as in to let a tea bag steep: She was steeped in esoteric knowledge |
| strut | (noun) the supporting structural cross-part of a wing |
| table | (verb) to remove (as a parliamentary motion) from consideration: They tabled the motion and will consider it again later |
| tender | (verb) to proffer or offer: He tendered his resignation |
| waffle | (verb) to equivocate; to change one's position: His detractors say that the President waffle's too much; he can never make up his mind |
| wag | (noun) wit, joker: Groucho Marx was a well-known wag |