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list 9-16
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Accordant | Being in agreement or harmony; consonant |
| Albeit | Used to add information |
| Amorous | Inclined or disposed to love, esp. sexual love |
| Analogous | Comparable in certain respects; corresponding in some fashion |
| Assail | To attack vigorously or violently; assault |
| Astute | Marked by practical hardheaded intelligence; sagacious; clever; cunning |
| Auspicious | Promising success; propitious; opportune; favorable |
| Beget | To procreate or generate |
| Bellicose | Inclined or eager to fight; aggressively hostile; belligerent; pugnacious |
| Bereft | Deprived of somebody or something; to deprive ruthlessly or by force |
| Beseech | To request earnestly; to beg eagerly for; solicit |
| Brigand | A member of a gang, a robber or bandit |
| Capitulate | To surrender unconditionally or on stipulated terms; to give up resistance |
| Cavil | To raise irritating and trivial objections; find fault unnecessarily |
| Chastening | A rebuke for making a mistake |
| Confound | Archaic: to bring to ruin; to perplex or amaze |
| Copious | Large in quantity or number; abundant |
| Countenance | Appearance; a person's face or facial expression |
| Curate | Member of the clergy |
| Delusion | A false belief of opinion held in the face of evidence to the contrary |
| Deportment | Personal conduct; behavior |
| Deposition | The action of depositing something; removal from an office |
| Deprecating | To belittle; to urge reasons against; protest against |
| Discursive | Digressing from subject to subject; rambling |
| Disdain | Extreme contempt or disgust for something or somebody; to treat with contempt |
| Dubious | Doubtful; marked by or occasioning doubt |
| Ebullient | Overflowing with fervor, enthusiasm, or excitement; high-spirited |
| Emissary | A person sent on a special mission or errand |
| Emulate | To try to equal or excel; imitate with effort to equal or surpass |
| Entourage | Group of attendants or associates, as of a person of rank or importance |
| Epigram | A concise, witty, or pointed remark or saying that is tersely expressed |
| Errant | Deviating from the regular or proper cause; erring; straying |
| Ethereal | Of or relating to the regions beyond the earth; airy; light |
| Extol | To praise highly; laud; eulogize |
| Fatuous | Foolish or inane, esp. in an unconscious, complacent manner |
| Febrile | Pertaining to or marked by fever; feverish |
| Feign | To give a false appearance of; to represent falsely |
| Felicity | Intense happiness; the state of bliss |
| Gambol | To skip about in play; to leap about playfully; frolic |
| Garrison | A body of troops stationed in a fortified place |
| Garrulous | Excessively talkative in a rambling, roundabout manner, esp. about trivial matters |
| Glean | To collect or gather slowly and laboriously, bit by bit |
| Goad | A stick with a pointed or electrically charged end, for prodding into motion |
| Gratis | Without charge, cost, or payment |
| Imperious | Domineering in a haughty manner; intensely compelling; urgent; dictatorial |
| Incendiary | designed to cause fires |
| Incredulous | Skeptical; disinclined or indisposed to believe |
| Intercession | The act of pleading on somebody's behalf |
| Irksome | Annoying; irritating; exasperating; tiresome |
| Laconic | Using or involving the use of a minimum of words |
| Languid | Lacking in vigor or vitality; slack or slow |
| Languor | Sluggish; a relaxed comfortable feeling |
| Lineaments | Features or details of a face, body, or figure |
| Magnanimous | Very generous or forgiving, especially toward a rival |
| Morose | Gloomily or sullenly ill-humored, as a person or mood |
| Mutability | Prone to change; fickle; inconsistent |
| Nascent | Coming or having recently come into existence |
| Nonplussed | To cause to be at a loss as to what to say, think, or do; perplexed |
| Obliquely | Devious, misleading, or dishonest |
| Pernicious | Causing insidious harm or ruin |
| Pertinacity | The quality of being firm, decisive, and resolute |
| Plight | A dangerous, difficult, or otherwise unfortunate situation |
| Presage | Something that portends or foreshadows a future event |
| Prodigal | Wastefully or recklessly extravagant; lavish |
| Prolixity | Tiresome wordiness; tedious length |
| Proprietary | Pertaining to property or ownership |
| Quail | To give way; falter; to lose heart or courage in difficulty |
| Repartee | Conversation or speech characterized by quick, witty comments or replies |
| Resolute | A resolve or determination; a formal expression of opinion or intention made |
| Resplendent | Shining brilliantly; having great beauty or splendor |
| Salubrious | Favorable to or promoting health or well-being |
| Sardonic | Scornfully or cynically joking; mocking; sneering |
| Scrupulous | Having or showing a strict regard for what one considers right |
| Sinecure | Office or position requiring little or no work |
| Transcendent | Going beyond ordinary limits; surpassing; exceeding |
| Tumultuous | Full of riotousness; marked by disturbance; raising a great clatter and commotion |
| Ubiquitous | Present, appearing, or found everywhere |
| Ultimatum | A final, uncompromising proposal or statement of condition |
| Venerable | Accorded a great deal of respect, esp. because of age, wisdom, or character |
| Vigilant | Keenly watchful to detect danger; alert; wary |