1-2 2-2 3-2 Flashcards

1
Q

infraction

A

a violation or infringement of a law or agreement

Boys, meanwhile, are twice as likely as girls to be suspended for the same infraction, a gap that race compounds.

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2
Q

amalgamate

A

Blend, merge, or unite

With the sunset of the pandemic, educators now perceive that education in a post-pandemic world must amalgamate the advantages of online instruction with important pedagogical goals associated with in-person teaching.

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3
Q

ameliorate

A

Improve; make better or more bearable

American Airlines is offering pilots raises of nearly 17% by the end of 2024, a sign that the airline is trying to ameliorate the staffing shortages that have plagued the industry.

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4
Q

amortize

A

Gradually pay off a debt, or gradually write off an asset (청산하다)

Retailers that own facilities generally view them as long-term investments and amortize them over thirty years

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5
Q

anachronism

A

Something that is not in its correct historical time; a mistake in chronology, such as by assigning a person or event to the wrong time period

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6
Q

analgesia

A

Pain relief; inability to feel pain

… the accidental discovery of a connection between analgesia and inflammation opened a new pathway to pain treatment

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7
Q

annul

A

Make void or null, cancel, abolish (usually of laws or other established rules)

Unfortunately, his arrogance annuls the many generous favors he does for the people

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8
Q

anodyne

A

Medicine that relieves pain (noun); soothing, relieving pain (adj); not likely to offend or arouse tensions

the otherwise anodyne comments sounded quite inflammatory when taken out of context

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9
Q

axiom

A

Self-evident truth requiring no proof; universally or generally accepted principle

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10
Q

balk

A

Refuse to proceed or to do something

Some large health care organizations may balk at handing over their data to AWS

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11
Q

banal

A

Lacking freshness and originality; cliché

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12
Q

bane

A

Something that ruins or spoils

national frontiers have been more of a bane than a boon for mankind

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13
Q

base

A

Morally low, mean, dishonorable; of little or no value; crude and unrefined; counterfeit

their base obedience to every unprincipled action ordered by their leader

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14
Q

baying

A

Howling in a deep way, like a dog or wolf

the mob was baying for revenge

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15
Q

belie

A

to give a false impression of; contradict

His manner and appearance belie his age.
The evidence belies their claims of innocence.

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16
Q

benign

A

Harmless; favorable; kindly, gentle, or beneficial; not cancerous

Both malicious and benign apps use code libraries to interact with the OS kernel

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17
Q

bent

A

Personal inclination or tendency

18
Q

besiege

A

overwhelm, crowd in on or surround

The Defense Ministry says Russia’s decision to besiege rather than attack the plant means many Russian units cannot be redeployed somewhere else in the country

19
Q

bevy

A

a large group of collection

The team had the rookie quarterback Joe Burrow and his bevy of talented weapons, which nearly pulled the team to a title

20
Q

bifurcate

A

To fork into two branches or divide into two halves

Google’s decision to move away from individualized user tracking in ad operations means digital advertising could bifurcate, with a Google ecosystem that has one set of rules and the rest of the web following another

21
Q

circumspect

A

Cautious, prudent; careful to consider the circumstances and consequences

diplomacy required a circumspect response

22
Q

clamber

A

Climb awkwardly or with difficulty, scramble

We clambered up the steep hill

23
Q

clamor

A

Noisy uproar or protest, as from a crowd; a loud, continuous noise

The clamor over the assassination of Daria Dugina highlights the prominence of her fellow pro-war Russian ultras

24
Q

clinch

A

Make final or settle conclusively; to fasten or hold together

The new evidence clinches the case.
Her work on the project should clinch her a promotion.

25
Q

cloying

A

Disgusting or distasteful by reason of excess; excessively sweet or sentimental (신물이 나는)

After a while, the softness of his voice becomes cloying.

26
Q

coagulate

A

Cause a liquid to become solid or semisolid; Cause a liquid to become solid or semisolid

Galleries tend to coagulate around other galleries, maximizing foot traffic

27
Q

coalesce

A

come together, unite; fuse together;

a group of young reformers who gradually coalesced into a political movement
The party officials behind the scenes have urged candidates to step aside and coalesce around one candidate to help defeat the opposing party

28
Q

coda

A

something that serves to round out, conclude, or summarize and usually has its own interest

The university’s supporting role in the college admissions scandal serves as a kind of coda to a dark tale to privilege, amorality and coverups

29
Q

coffer

A

Chest for storing valuables; financial resources, a treasury

The community didn’t see the money flow into the tax coffer until after the debt was retired

30
Q

cogent

A

Very convincing, logical

The results of the DNA fingerprinting were the most cogent evidence for acquittal

31
Q

collude

A

Conspire; cooperate for illegal or fraudulent purposes

President Biden blames the surge in prices on large firms that dominate markets and collude to raise prices

32
Q

commensurate

A

The same in size, extent, etc., equivalent; proportional

The White House asked the states to suspend their own gas taxes or provide commensurate relief to customers

33
Q

compendium

A

Concise but complete summary; a list or collection

His book is an invaluable compendium of anecdotes about his experiences in the TV trenches

34
Q

complaisant

A

Eager to please; cheerfully complying

Shinzo Abe, who hosted Trump in Tokyo, has been as complaisant as any world leader in courting the unpredictable US president

35
Q

compliant

A

Obeying, submissive; following the requirements

36
Q

prudent

A

acting with or showing care and thought for the future

no prudent money manager would authorize a loan without first knowing its purpose

37
Q

indulgent

A

having or indicating a tendency to be overly generous to or lenient with someone

Russia has been increasingly indulgent to their remaining few allies in Eastern Europe

38
Q

conspire

A

to join in a secret agreement to do an unlawful or wrongful act

The firms conspired to monopolize and restrict trade

39
Q

impersonate

A

pretend to be (another person) as entertainment or in order to deceive someone

it’s a very serious offense to impersonate a police officer

40
Q

capitulate

A

surrender, cease to resist