Vocabulary Week 17 Gold. Word 1: Lackluster Def: Not exciting, dull Sent: Away from autos, the...

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Transcript of Vocabulary Week 17 Gold. Word 1: Lackluster Def: Not exciting, dull Sent: Away from autos, the...

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Vocabulary Week 17 Gold Slide 2 Word 1: Lackluster Def: Not exciting, dull Sent: Away from autos, the economy is growing at a steady, lackluster pace. It's just kind of slow and steady and not very exciting. Chris Wiegand Slide 3 Word 2: Abrogate Def: To abolish, usually by authority Sent: Since September 11th we have seen the 1st, 4th, 5th, 6th and 8th amendments to the Constitution abrogated either in whole or in part. Michael Ruppert Slide 4 Word 3: Dingy (not a boat) Def: Dark, dirty and bad condition Sent: Everything is cleaner. Everything is dressed up. It's a better atmosphere, where it's not so dingy anymore. Mike Barnes Slide 5 Word 4: Hackneyed Def: Lacking in freshness or originality, commonplace Sent: The clich is a hackneyed idiom that hopes that it can still palm itself off as a fresh response. John Gross Slide 6 Word 5: Copious Def: In large amounts, profuse in expression Sent: People will spend copious amounts of time and money working on a costume, only to have no one recognize what character they're dressed as. Amy Lee Slide 7 Word 6: Erudite Def: Learned and scholarly, well-educated Sent: He was erudite, tough a classic journalist. When he talked about something, you knew he knew the territory. Larry King Slide 8 Word 7: Cabal Def: A small group of people making secret plans Sent: We are confident that the investigations will expose all shadowy cabals and financiers behind the destabilization. Ignacio Bunye Slide 9 Word 8: Imp Def: Small demon Sent: Of all the pestilence's dire, Including famine, flood, and fire; By Satan and his imps rehearsed, The neighbors' children are the worst. Stoddard King Slide 10 Word 9: Fawn (not a baby deer) Def: To seek praise by servile flattery Sent: I am called a dog because I fawn on those who give me anything, I yelp at those who refuse, and I set my teeth in rascals. Diogenes Slide 11 Word 12: Ransack Def: To go through a place stealing or damaging things Sent: Several of agitators and cops were injured when the police intervened to quell the ransacking mob. Asfandyar Khan Slide 12 Word 11: Ostentatious Def: Vain show of wealth or power to get others to admire you Sent: An ostentatious man will rather relate a blunder or an absurdity he has committed, than be debarred from talking of his own dear person. Joseph Addison Slide 13 Word 10: Insurgent Def: Person fighting against their government Sent: Based on the national elections that took place in January, we anticipate that insurgents will attempt to intimidate voters and deprive them of the opportunity to vote. Slide 14 Word 13: Connoisseur Def: A person with expert knowledge or the fine arts or expensive wines Sent: The connoisseur of art must be able to appreciate what is simply beautiful, but the common run of people is satisfied with ornament. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe Slide 15 Word 14: Precipice Def: Very steep cliff Sent: So you are lean and mean and resourceful and you continue to walk on the edge of the precipice because over the years you have become fascinated by how close you can walk without losing your balance. Richard Nixon Slide 16 Word 15: Willful Def: Stubborn and doing as one wants Sent: A little group of willful men reflecting no opinion but their own have rendered the great Government of the United States helpless and contemptible. W. Wilson Slide 17 Word 16: Rapture Def: Feeling of great happiness Sent: We're so engaged in doing things to achieve purposes of outer value that we forget the inner value, the rapture that is associated with being alive, is what it is all about. Joseph Campbell Slide 18 Word 17: Abridge Def: Not the full book, a shortened version of a book Sent: Every abridgement of a good book is a fool abridged. Michel de Montaigne Slide 19 Word 18: Indigent Def: An impoverished, needy person Sent: Democracy is when the indigent, and not the men of property, are the rulers. Aristotle Slide 20 Word 19: Harbinger Def: A sign or omen that something will happen soon, often something bad Sent: it was evident that Columbus had kindled a fire in every mariner's heart. That fire was the harbinger of a new era, for it was not to be extinguished. Charles K Adams Slide 21 Word 20: Banal Def: Boring and not original Sent: Some quirk in human nature allows even the most unspeakable acts of evil to become banal within minutes, provided that they occur far enough away to pose no personal threat. Iris Chang