Skilled Wedding Planner Dehli Arranges You Wedding with Perfection
What’s the password? O If you want to leave the room, in addition to having your planner, you must...
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Transcript of What’s the password? O If you want to leave the room, in addition to having your planner, you must...
What’s the password?O If you want to leave the room, in addition
to having your planner, you must do one of the following:O Say the word and definitionO Say the synonym(s)/ antonym(s)O Use the password correctly in a sentence
O Feel free to include these words in writing assignments and class discussions.
lexicon(n) a dictionary; a specialized vocabulary used in a particular field or place.
synonyms: jargon; argot
example sentence: Having grown up in the inner city, Shawn was familiar with the lexicon of the streets.
Password 9/6-9/9
sanction(n) permission; support
example sentence: The teacher gave sanction to the student’s odd but harmless habit of doing his homework in crayon.
Password 9/12-9/19
ambivalent(adj) having opposing attitudes or feelings toward a person, thing, or idea; unable to decide.
synonyms: uncertain; waveringantonyms: certain; resolute
example sentence: Doug felt ambivalent about his job; although he hated the pressure, he loved the challenge.
Password 9/20-9/23
quixotic(adj) very idealistic; impractical; caught up in romantic notions.
antonyms: realistic; practical
example sentence: As a young man, he had the quixotic notion that he could single-handedly end poverty in the country.
Password 9/26-10/3
cliché (n) a worn-out idea or overused expression.
synonyms: platitude; banality
example sentence: The candidate promised new ideas, but spouted the same old clichés after her election.
Password 10/4-10/7
droll(adj) amusing in an odd or whimsical way.
synonyms: quaint
example sentence: Xander had a droll manner of telling stories that kept everyone entertained.
Password 10/10-10/17
deprecate(v) to express strong disapproval of
synonyms: deploreantonyms: approve; praise
example sentence: Tim stopped offering new ideas after the other workers deprecated his first suggestion.
Password 10/18-10/21
ominous(adj) threatening; foreboding evil
synonyms: sinisterantonyms: comforting
example sentence: We went on our picnic despite the ominous rainclouds.
Password 10/24-10/31
ostracize(v) to banish; to shut out from a group or society by common consent
synonyms: exileantonyms: accept
example sentence: The strict religious community ostracized Eli when he married a woman of another faith.
Password 11/1-11/4
obstreperous(adj) aggressively boisterous; stubborn and defiant
antonyms: meek; tractable
example sentence: The obstreperous mob of looters was finally subdued by an icy blast from the fire hose.
Password 11/7-11/14
novice(n) a beginner; one who is inexperienced
synonyms: apprentice; tyroantonyms: master
example sentence: The older lawyer took the novice under her wing and showed him the ropes.
Password 11/15- 11/18
grandiloquent(adj) pompous or high-flown in speech
synonyms: pretentiousantonyms: plain-spoken
example sentence: Marcus gets grandiloquent when speaking of the theatre, assuming no one knows as much or has as refined a taste as he.
Password 11/29-12/2
dilettante(n) One who merely dabbles in an art or science
synonyms: amateur; triflerantonyms: expert; professional
example sentence: The dilettante felt that his superficial knowledge of art qualified him to judge the artist’s work.
Password 12/5-12/12
pertinent(adj) having to do with the subject at hand; relevant
antonyms: unrelated; extraneous
example sentence: The lecturer took questions as long as they were pertinent and enriched the discussion.
Password 12/13-12/16
exhort(v) to urge on with stirring words
synonyms: encourage
example sentence: During halftime, the coach exhorted his team to “win one for the Gipper.”
Password 12/19-12/22
liege(n) A lord, master, or sovereign
synonym: kingantonyms: commoner, servant
example sentence: While the servants pledged their loyalty to the liege, they did not always like or respect him.
Password 1/3-1/6
fallacy(n) A mistaken notion; a misconception
antonym: truth
example sentence: My grandmother still clings to the fallacy that the world is flat.
Password 1/9-1/18
parsimonious(adj) excessively thrifty; stingy
synonyms: cheap; frugalantonyms: extravagant
example sentence: Ebenezer Scrooge was a parsimonious old man.
Password 1/19-1/30
inherent(adj) essential
synonym: intrinsicantonyms: extrinsic; extraneous
example sentence: Exhaust and air-pollution are inherent features and drawbacks of the automobile.
Password 1/31-2/3
impregnable(adj) not able to be conquered
synonym: unbeatable antonym: vulnerable
example sentence: The Greek warriors were unable to conquer the impregnable Trojan fortress.
Password 2/14-2/17
befuddle(v) to confuse; to perplex
synonyms: bewilder, flusterantonyms: clarify, elucidate
example sentence: Street maps always befuddle me, so my friend navigates when we take road trips.
Password 2/21-2/24
indiscreet(adj) not wise or judicious; imprudent, as in speech or action
synonym: flagrantantonym: prudent
example sentence: Ron was fired shortly after his indiscreet actions at the office party.
Password 2/27-3/5
heinous(adj) hatefully or shockingly evil
synonyms: abhorrent; horrid
example sentence: The jury was shocked by the young woman’s heinous crimes.
Password 3/6-3/9
magnanimous(adj) noble; generous in forgiving; free from petty feelings or acts
synonym: generousantonyms: petty; mean
example sentence: Allowing the man who had insulted him to stay for dinner was a magnanimous gesture on Robert’s part.
Password 3/12-3/19
epistle(n) A letter or literary composition in letter form
example sentence: Brian spent years writing lengthy, unsent epistles to his former girlfriend.
Password 3/20-3/23
formidable(adj) arousing fear or awe
synonym: intimidating
example sentence: When the hulking, 250-lb man stepped into the ring, George knew that he had to face a formidable opponent.
Password 3/26-4/2
gargantuan(adj) of huge or extraordinary size and power
synonyms: gigantic; hugeantonym: tiny
example sentence: Milltown’s players were gargantuan compared with the small guys on our team.
Password 4/17-4/20
sycophant(n) A flatterer; one who fawns on others in order to gain favor
synonym: toadyantonym: contrarian
example sentence: Teri was such a sycophant that she laughed loudly at her supervisor's awful jokes.
Password 4/23-4/30
bawdy(adj) indecent; humorously obscene
synonyms: risqué; lewdantonyms: innocent; clean
example sentence: When some called the new sitcom bawdy, the toy company quickly withdrew its sponsorship.
Password 5/1-5/4
myriad(n) A very large number(adj) too numerous to be counted
synonyms: (n) host; multitudesynonyms: (adj) countless; innumerable
example sentence: (n) After my break-up, my mom fed me the old line about there being a myriad of fish in the sea.example sentence: (adj) The biologist spent her entire career categorizing the myriad plant species of the rain forest.
Password 5/7-5/14
prodigal(adj) reckless, wasteful, and extravagant
synonyms: wastrel; libertineantonym: prudent
example sentence: The prodigal actor was notorious for his lavish, excessive, and unruly lifestyle.
Password 5/15-5/18
tenuous(adj) not dense or thick; having little substance
synonyms: unconvincing; fragileantonyms: strong; cogent
example sentence: Even though it was published, the dissertation put forth a very tenuous theory on intelligence.
Password 5/21-5/29
subjugate(v) to dominate, conquer, or bring under control
antonym: free
example sentence: Plantation owners subjugated their slaves and forced them to do manual labor.
Password 5/30-6/4
pithy(adj) full of meaning; concise
synonym: succinctantonym: verbose
example sentence: The pithy statements in greeting cards are often short and sweet.
Password 6/5-6/8