Top 200 GRE Words - Part 2 Flashcards

101-200

1
Q

IMPLACABLE:

A

unable to be calmed down or made peaceful

His rage at the betrayal was so great that he remained IMPLACABLE for weeks

INEXORABLE, RELENTLESS, UNRELENTING

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2
Q

INCHOATE:

A

not fully formed; disorganized

The ideas expressed in Nietzsche’s mature work also appear in an INCHOATE form in his earliest writing

INCOMPLETE, AMORPHOUS

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3
Q

INGENUOUS:

A

showing innocence or childlike simplicity

She was so INGENUOUS that her friends feared that her innocence and trustfulness would be exploited when she visited the big city.

GUILELESS, ARTLESS, NAIVE

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4
Q

INIMICAL:

A

hostile, unfriendly

Even though a cease-fire had been in place for months, the two sides were still INIMICAL to each other

ADVERSE, ANTAGONISTIC, RECALCITRANT

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5
Q

INNOCUOUS:

A

harmless

Some snakes are poisonous, but most species are INNOCUOUS and pose no danger to humans

BENIGN, HARMLESS

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6
Q

INSIPID:

A

lacking interest or flavor

The critic claimed that the painting was INSIPID, containing no interesting qualities at all.

BANAL, BLAND, DULL

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7
Q

INTRANSIGENT:

A

uncompromising; refusing to be reconciled

The professor was INTRANSIGENT on the deadline, insisting that everyone turn the
assignment in at the same time

IMPLACABLE, INEXORABLE, OBDURATE, OBSTINATE, UNRELENTING, UNYIELDING

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8
Q

INUNDATE:

A

to overwhelm; to cover with water

SUBMERGE, ENGULF

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9
Q

IRASCIBLE:

A

easily made angrily

the Hun’s IRASCIBLE and violent nature made all who dealt with him fear for their
lives.

IRRITABLE

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10
Q

LACONIC:

A

using few words

CONCISE, TACITURN

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11
Q

LAMENT:

A

to express sorrow; to grieve

The children continued to LAMENT the death of the goldfish weeks after its demise

GRIEVE, MOURN

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12
Q

LAUD:

A

to give praise; to glorify

EXTOL

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13
Q

LAVISH:

A

to give unsparingly (v.); extremely generous or extravagant (adj.)

She LAVISHED the puppy with so many treats that it soon become overweight and spoiled.

LUXURIANT, OPULENT, EXTRAVAGANT

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14
Q

LETHARGIC:

A

acting in an indifferent or slow, sluggish manner

LANGUID, TORPID

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15
Q

LOQUACIOUS:

A

talkative

GARRULOUS, VERBOSE

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16
Q

LUCID:

A

clear and easily understood

LIMPID

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17
Q

LUMINOUS:

A

bright, brilliant, glowing

INCANDESCENT, LUCENT

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18
Q

MALINGER:

A

to evade responsibility by pretending to be ill

A common way to avoid the draft was by MALINGERING-pretending to be mentally or physically ill so as to avoid being taken by the Army

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19
Q

MALLEABLE:

A

capable of being shaped

DUCTILE, PLIABLE

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20
Q

METAPHOR:

A

a figure of speech comparing two different things; a symbol

ANALOGY

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21
Q

METICULOUS:

A

extremely careful about details

CONSCIENTIOUS, PRECISE, SCRUPULOUS

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22
Q

MISANTHROPE:

A

a person who dislikes others

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23
Q

MITIGATE:

A

to soften; to lessen

ALLAY, ASSUAGE, MOLLIFY

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24
Q

MOLLIFY:

A

to calm or make less severe

ALLAY, MITIGATE, ASSUAGE

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25
Q

MONOTONY:

A

lack of variation

TEDIUM

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26
Q

NAIVE:

A

lacking sophistication or experience

ARTLESS, CREDULOUS, GUILELESS

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27
Q

OBDURATE:

A

hardened in feeling; resistant to persuasion

TENACIOUS, INTRANSIGENT, UNYIELDING

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28
Q

OBSEQUIOUS:

A

overly submissive and eager to please

The OBSEQUIOUS new associate made sure to compliment her supervisor’s tie and agree with him on every issue

COMPLIANT, SERVILE, SUBSERVIENT

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29
Q

OBSTINATE:

A

stubborn, unyielding

INTRANSIGENT, STUBBORN TENACIOUS

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30
Q

OBVIATE:

A

to prevent; to make unnecessary

The river was shallow enough to wade across at many points, which OBVIATED the need for a bridge.

FORESTALL, PROHIBIT

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31
Q

OCCLUDE:

A

to stop up; to prevent the passage of

A shadow is thrown across the Earth’s surface during a solar eclipse,when the light from the sun is OCCLUDED by the moon

OBSTRUCT, BARRICADE

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32
Q

ONEROUS:

A

troublesome and oppressive; burdensome

ARDUOUS, EXACTING, LABORIOUS

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33
Q

OPAQUE:

A

OPAQUE:

impossible to see through; preventing the passage of light

OBSCURE

34
Q

OPPROBRIUM:

A

public disgrace

After the scheme to embezzle the elderly was made public, the treasurer resigned in utter OPPROBRIUM.

DISCREDIT, DISGRACE, IGNOMINY, OBLOQUY

35
Q

OSTENTATION:

A

excessive showiness

36
Q

PARADOX:

A

a contradiction or dilemma

37
Q

PARAGON:

A

model of excellence or perfection

STANDARD

38
Q

PEDANT:

A

someone who shows off learning

The graduate instructor’s tedious and excessive commentary on the subject soon gained her a reputation as a PEDANT

39
Q

PERFIDIOUS:

A

willing to betray one’s trust

The actress’s PERFIDIOUS companion revealed all of her intimate secrets to the gossip columnist

DISLOYAL, TREACHEROUS, TRAITOROUS

40
Q

PERFUNCTORY:

A

done in a routine way; indifferent

APATHETIC

41
Q

PERMEATE:

A

to penetrate

IMBUE

42
Q

PHILANTHROPY:

A

charity; a desire or effort to promote goodness

ALTRUISM

43
Q

PLACATE:

A

to soothe or pacify

APPEASE, CONCILIATE

44
Q

PLASTIC:

A

able to be molded, altered, or bent

The new material was very PLASTIC and could be formed into products of vastly different shape.

ADAPTABLE, DUCTILE, MALLEABLE

45
Q

PLETHORA.

A

excess

GLUT

46
Q

PRAGMATIC:

A

practical as opposed to idealistic

47
Q

PRECIPITATE:

A

to throw violently or bring about abruptly; lacking deliberation

Upon learning that the couple married after knowing each other only two months, friends and family members expected such a PRECIPITATE marriage to end in divorce

ABRUPT, IMPULSIVE, IlMPETUOUS

48
Q

PREVARICATE:

A

to lie or deviate from the truth

EQUIVOCATE, PERJURE

49
Q

PRISTINE:

A

fresh and clean; uncorrupted

50
Q

PRODIGAL:

A

lavish, wasteful

EXTRAVAGANT, LAVISH, PROFLIGATE, SPENDTHRIFT

51
Q

PROLIFERATE:

A

to increase in number quickly

Although he only kept two guinea pigs initially, they PROLIFERATED to such an extent that he soon had dozens

PROCREATE

52
Q

PROPITIATE:

A

to conciliate; to appease

The management PROPITIATED the irate union by agreeing to raise wages for its members.

APPEASE, CONCILIATE

53
Q

PROPRIETY:

A

correct behavior; obedience to rules and customs

DECENCY, DECORUM

54
Q

PRUDENCE:

A

wisdom, caution, or restraint

ASTUTENESS, CIRCUMSPECTION

55
Q

PUNGENT:

A

sharp and irritating to the senses

CAUSTIC, PIQUANT, POIGNANT

56
Q

QUIESCENT:

A

motionless

Many animals are QUIESCENT over the winter months, minimizing activity in order to conserve energy.

LATENT, DORMANT

57
Q

RAREFY:

A

to make thinner or sparser

Since the atmosphere, RAREFIES as altitudes increase, the air at the top of very tall mountains is too thin to breathe

ATTENUATE, THIN

58
Q

REPUDIATE:

A

to reject the validity of

The old woman’s claim that she was Russian royalty was REPUDIATED when DNA tests showed she was of no relation to them.

DISAVOW, RENOUNCE, DISOWN

59
Q

RETICENT:

A

silent, reserved

Physically small and RETICENT in her speech, Joan Didion often went unnoticed by those upon whom she was reporting

INTROVERTED, TACITURN

60
Q

RHETORIC:

A

effective writing or speaking

Lincoln’s talent for RHETORIC was evident in his beautifully expressed Gettysburg
Address

ELOQUENCE, ORATORY

61
Q

SATIATE:

A

to satisfy fully or overindulge

62
Q

SOPORIFIC:

A

causing sleep or lethargy

The movie proved to be so SOPORIFIC that soon loud snores were heard throughout the theater.

HYPNOTIC, SOMNOLENT

63
Q

SPECIOUS:

A

deceptively attractive; seemingly plausible but fallacious

The student’s SPECIOUS excuse for being late sounded legitimate, but was proved otherwise when his teacher called his home.

ILLUSORY, PLAUSIBLE, SPURIOUS

64
Q

STIGMA:

A

a mark of shame or discredit

STAIN, TAINT

65
Q

STOLID:

A

unemotional; lacking sensitivity

APATHETIC, INDIFFERENT

66
Q

SUBLIME:

A

lofty or grand

GLORIOUS, REGAL, MAGNIFICENT

67
Q

TACIT:

A

done without using words

Although not a word had been said, everyone in the room knew that a TACIT agreement had been made about which course of action to take.

IMPLICIT, IMPLIED, UNSAID

68
Q

TACITURN:

A

silent, not talkative

The clerk’s TACITURN nature earned him the nickname “Silent Bob.”

RETICENT, LACONIC

69
Q

TIRADE:

A

long, harsh speech or verbal attack

DIATRIBE, HARANGUE, OBLOQUY

70
Q

TORPOR:

A

extreme mental and physical sluggishness

After surgery, the patient experienced TORPOR until the anesthesia wore off

71
Q

TRANSITORY:

A

temporary, lasting a brief time

EPHEMERAL, EVANESCENT

72
Q

VACILLATE:

A

to sway physically; to be indecisive

FLUCTUATE, OSCILLATE

73
Q

VENERATE:

A

to respect deeply

REVERE

74
Q

VERACITY

A

filled with truth and accuracy

CANDOR, FIDELITY

75
Q

VERBOSE:

A

wordy

LOQUACIOUS

76
Q

VEX:

A

to annoy

ANNOY, NETTLE, PEEVE, IRK

77
Q

VOLATILE:

A

easily aroused or changeable; lively or explosive

FICKLE, ERRATIC, CAPRICIOUS, INCONSISTENT

78
Q

WAVER:

A

to fluctuate between choices

VACILLATE, DITHER, OSCILLATE

79
Q

WHIMSICAL:

A

acting in a fanciful or capricious manner; unpredictable

ERRATIC, CAPRICIOUS, FLIPPANT

80
Q

ZEAL:

A

passion, excitement

ARDENCY, FERVOR