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Some Words
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=========
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## Words List
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+ euclidean
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> (adj)relating to geometry as developed by Euclid
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- euclidean distance
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- euclidean geometry
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+ zip through
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> (v)to go somewhere or do something very quickly
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- If you zip through a page in less than an hour, you are probably going too fast.
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- A lot of questions zip through his mind.
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+ internalize
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> (v)if you internalize a particular belief, attitude, behaviour etc, it becomes part of your character
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- Over time, she internalized her parents' attitudes.
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- You should ponder and internalize each definition.
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+ beige
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> (adj)a pale brown colour
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- The walls are beige.
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- Definitions are in beige boxes and theorems are in blue boxes.
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+ bestow
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> (v)to give someone something of great value or importance
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- honours bestowed on him by the Queen
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- Bestowing proper credit on all the contributors would be a difficult task that I have not undertaken.
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+ in lieu of
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> (adv)in place of
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- extra time off in lieu of payment
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+ preliminary
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> (adj)happening before something that is more important, often in order to prepare for it</br>
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(n)something that is said or done first, to introduce or prepare for something else</br>
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(n)one of the games in the first part of the competition, when it is decided who will go to the main competition
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- a preliminary draft
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- After the usual preliminaries, the chairman made his announcement.
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- Four teams will be eliminated in the preliminaries.
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+ arithmetic
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> (n)the science of numbers involving adding, multipying, etc.
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- teaching the usual rules of reading, writing and arithmetic.
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+ derive
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> (v)to get something, especially an advantage or a pleasant feeling, from something</br>
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(v)to develop from something else</br>
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(v)to get a chemical substance from another substance
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- Many students derived enormous satisfaction from the course.
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- patterns of behaviour that derive from basic beliefs
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- The enzyme is derived from human blood.
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+ enzyme
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> (n)a chemical substance that is produced in a plant or animal, and helps chemical changes to take place in the plant or animal.
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+ commutativity
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> (n)In mathematics, a binary operation is commutative if changing the order of the operands does not change the result.
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+ cumbersome
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> (adj)A cumbersome system or process is very complicated and inefficient.</br>
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(adj)large and heavy and therefore difficult to carry, wear, or handle
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- Although the machine looks cumbersome, it is actually easy to use.
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- and old and cumbersome computer system
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+ analogue
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> (n)something having the property of being analogous to something else.
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+ pentagon
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> (n) a flat shape with five sides and five angles
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+ hexagon
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> (n) a shape with six sides
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+ equilateral
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> (adj)A shape or a figure that is equilateral has sides that are all the same length.(equi + lateral)
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- an equilateral triangle
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+ lateral
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> (adj)relating to the sides of something, or movement to the side
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- He estimated that the lateral movement of the bridge to be between four and six inches.
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+ temperate
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> (adj)Temperate is used to describe a climate or a place which is never extremely hot or extremely cold.
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- The Nile Valley keeps a temperate climate throughout the year.
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+ in rude health
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>(adv)to be extremely healthy
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- To that extent at least, American democracy remains in rude health.
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+ desolate
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> (adj)A desolate place is empty of people and lacking comfort.</br>
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(adj)A desolate person feels sad, lonely and without hope.
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- a desolate landscape of flat green fields
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- He was desolate without her.
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+ whence
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> from where
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- No one ordered him back whence he came.
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+ asylum
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> (n)protection given to someone by a government because they escaped from fighting or political trouble in their own country</br>
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> (n)a mental hospital
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- He has been granted (political) asylum in France.
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- He applied for asylum in 1987 after fleeing the police back home.
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+ lunatic
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> (n) someone who behaves in a crazy or very stupid way -- often used humorously</br>
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> (n) a very offensive word for someone who is mentally ill</br>
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> (adj)insane and believed to be affected by the phases of moon</br>
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- The hotel is run by a lunatic!
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- a dangerous lunatic
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- lunatic behaviour; lunatic asylum = asylum
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+ legislature
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> (n)an institution that has the power to make or pass laws
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- The proposals before the legislature include the creation of two special courts to deal exclusively with violent crimes.
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+ truce
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> (n)an agreement between enemies to stop fighting or arguing for a short time, or the period for which this is arranged, ceasefire.
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- They agreed to call a truce.
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- There was an uneasy truce between Alex and Dave over dinner.
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+ animate
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> (adj)living</br>
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(v)to give life or energy to something
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- Natural philosophy involved the study of all aspects of the material world, animate and inanimate.
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- Laughter animated his face for a moment.
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+ wretched
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> (adj)someone who is wretched is very unhappy or ill, and you feel sorry for them</br>
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(adj)Someone who feels wretched feels very unhappy</br>
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(adj)You use wretched to describe someone or something that you dislike or feel angry with</br>
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(adj)extremly bad or unpleasant; miseralbe
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- the poor, wretched girl
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- I feel really wretched and confused.
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- Wretched woman, he thought, why the hell cannot she wait?
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- I was shocked to see their wretched living conditions.
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+ formidable
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> (adj)very powerful or impressive, and often frightening
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- The new range of computers have formidable processing power.
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- The building is grey, formidalbe, not at all picturesque.
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+ picturesque
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> (adj)a picturesque place is pretty and interesting in an old-fashioned way.</br>
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(adj)picturesque languages uses unusual, interesting, or sometimes rude words to describe something</br>
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(n)picturesque things
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- a quiet fishing village with a picturesque harbour
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- a picturesque account of his trip to New York
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- lovers of the picturesque
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+ thence
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> (adj)from there or following that
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- We went to Trieste, and thence by train to Prague.
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- the conversion of sunlight into heat and thence into electricity
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+ posterity
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> (n)all the people in the future who will be alive
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- a priceless work of art that must be kept for posterity
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+ diligent
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> (adj)someone who is diligent works hard and is careful and thorough
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- a diligent student
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+ skilful
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> (adj) = skillful(American)
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+ offspring
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> (n)a person's children or an animal's young
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- Eleanor was now less anxious about her offspring than she had once been.
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- a young mother trying to control her offspring
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+ approximate
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> (adj)close but not exact</br>
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(v)to be close to a particular number</br>
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(v)to be similar to but not exactly the same as something
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- This figure approximates to a quarter of the UK's annual consumption.
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- Your story only approximates to the real facts.
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+ antecedent
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> (n)An antecedent of something happened or existed before it and was similar to it in some ways.
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- We shall first look briefly at the historical antecedents of this theory.
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+ frugal
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> (adj)careful to buy only what is necessary; (oppo)extravagant</br>
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> frugality(n)
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- He led a remarkably frugal existence.
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+ henceforth
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> (adv)from this time on
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- never to permit the child henceforth to enter his former home
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+ sanitary
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> (adj)relating to the ways that dirt, infection, and waste are removed, so that places are clean and healthy for people to live in</br>
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(adj)clean and not causing any danger to people's health
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- Diseases were spread through poor sanitary conditions.
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- Often, the camps were not very sanitary.
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+ hereditary
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> (adj)A hereditary characteristic or illness is passed on to a child from its parents before it is born</br>
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(adj)A title or position in society that is hereditary is one that is passed on as a right from parent to child
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- a hereditary disease
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- The position of the head of the state is hereditary.
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+ serf
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> (n)In former times, serfs were a class of people who had to work on a particular person's land and could not leave without that person's permission
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+ squalor
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> (n)the condition of being dirty and unpleasant because of a lack of care or money
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- He was out of work and living in squalor.
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+ aristocracy
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> (n)a class of people in some countries who have a high social rank and special titles.
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- a member of the aristocracy
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+ rabble
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> (n)a noisy crowd of people who seem likely to cause trouble
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- a rabble of angry youths
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+ destitute
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> (adj)having no money, no food, no home, etc</br>
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be destitute of sth: to be completely without something
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- The floods left many people destitute.
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- a man who is destitute of mercy
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+ sedition
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> (n)speech, writing, or actions intended to encourage people to disobey a government
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- Government officials charged him with sedition.
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+ ordinance
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> (n)a law, usually of a city or town, that forbids or restricts an activity
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- a city ordinance that says park must be closed at 11 p.m.
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- a wise ordinance of Nature
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+ wax
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> (v)to become larger, more powerful, etc
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- The moon is waxing.
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+ wane
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> (v)If something wanes, it becomes gradually weaker or less, often so that it eventually disappears.
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- My enthusiasm for the project was waning.
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- Interest in the show has waxed and waned.
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+ perish
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> (v)to die, especially in a terrible or sudden way.
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- Hundreds perished when the ship went down.
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- Most of the butterflies perish in the first frosts of autumn.
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+ annals
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> (n, pl)in the annals of sth, means in the whole history of sth
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- one of the most unusual cases in the annals of crime
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- He has become a legend in the annals of military history.
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+ mentor
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> (n)an experienced person who advises and helps a less experienced person</br>
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(v)to give someone help and advice over a period of time, especially help and advice related to their job
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- Leon Sullivan was my mentor and my friend.
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- He had mentored scores of younger doctors.
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## 8th, Sep
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+ genome
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> (n)all the genes in one type of living thing
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- the human genome
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+ kin
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> (n)your relatives
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+ kinship
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> (n)a family relationship</br>
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(n)a strong connection between people
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- The ties of kinship may have helped the young man find his way in life.
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- She evidently felt a sense of kinship with the woman.
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+ befriend
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> (v)to behave in a friendly way towards someone, especially someone who is younger or needs help
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- They befriended me when I first arrived in London as a student.
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- The film's about an elderly woman and a young nurse who befriends her.
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+ ancestry
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> (n)the members of your family who lived a long time ago
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- Her mother is of German ancestry.
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- Helen's family can trace their ancestry back to the 1700s.
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+ ethnic
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> (adj)relating to a particular race, nation, or tribe and their customs and traditions.</br>
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(adj)cooking, fashion etc from countries that are far away, which seems very different and unusual.
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- The school teaches pupils from different ethnic groups.
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- ethnic music, a magnificent range of ethnic fabrics
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+ see
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> (v)make sure that something is done
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- See that you take care of her.
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+ disrupt
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> (v)to prevent something from continuing in its usual way by causing problems
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- Climate change could disrupt the agricultural economy.
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- Anti-war protestors disrupted the debate.
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+ disruptive
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> (adj)causing problems and preventing something from continuing in its usual way.
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- way to handle disruptive pupils
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- Alcohol can produce violence, disruptive behaviour.
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+ pick pace
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> (v)pick up speed
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- Pick up the pace, guys - we are late.
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## 9th, Sep
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+ abdicate
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> (v)to give up the position of begin king or queen</br>
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(v)to refuse to be responsible for something, when you should be or were before
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- The king was forced to abdicate the throne.
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- The government has largely abdicated its responsibility in dealing with housing needs.
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+ the writing is on the wall
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> mean that there are clear signs that something will fail or no longer exist
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- The writing is on the wall for the local football club: bankruptcy seems certain.s
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|
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+ monarch
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> (n)a king or queen
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- He was an absolute monarch.(arbitrary king)
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+ monarchy
|
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> (n)a system in which a country is ruled by a king or queen.</br>
|
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(n)a country that has a monarch
|
||||
|
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- a serious debate about the future of the monarchy
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- Britain is a constitutional monarchy
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|
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+ polarize
|
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> (v)to divide into clear separate groups with opposite beliefs, ideas, or opinions, or to make people do this
|
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|
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- The issue has polarized the country.
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- As the car rental industry polarizes, business will go to the bigger companies.
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|
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+ transcendence
|
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> (n)the quality of being able to go beyond normal limits or boundaries
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|
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- The Arab-American Society promotes the transcendence of racial and religious differences.
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|
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+ infest
|
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> (v)if insects, rats etc infest a place, there are a lot of them and they usually cause damage</br>
|
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(v)if things or people you do not want infest a place, there are too many of them
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|
||||
- The prison is infested with rats.
|
||||
- Crime and drugs are infesting the inner cities.
|
||||
- an area infested with holiday homes
|
||||
|
||||
+ downside
|
||||
> (n)The downside of a situation is the aspect of it which is less positive, pleasant, or useful than its other aspects.
|
||||
|
||||
- The downside of this approach is a lack of clear leadership.
|
||||
|
||||
## 10th, Sep
|
||||
+ symbolic
|
||||
> (adj)Something that is symbolic of a person or thing is regarded or used as a symbol of them.
|
||||
|
||||
- Yellow clothes are worn as symbolic of spring.
|
||||
- Today's fighting is symbolic of the chaos which the country is facing.
|
||||
|
||||
+ embody
|
||||
> (v)to be a very good example of an idea or quality, represent.
|
||||
|
||||
- She embodies everything I admire in a teacher.
|
||||
|
||||
+ strive
|
||||
> (v)to make a great effort to achieve something
|
||||
|
||||
- We must continue to strive for greater efficiency.
|
||||
- He strives hard to keep himself very fit.
|
||||
|
||||
+ intrusive
|
||||
> (adj)affecting someone's private life or interrupting them in an unwanted and annoying way.
|
||||
|
||||
- They found the television cameras too intrusive.
|
||||
|
||||
+ embodiment
|
||||
> (n)someone of sth that represents or is very typical of an idea of quality.
|
||||
|
||||
- He is the embodiment of evil.
|
||||
- A baby is the embodiment of vulnerability.
|
||||
|
||||
+ sweeping
|
||||
> (adj)affecting many things, or making an important difference to something.</br>
|
||||
(adj)sweeping statement: a statement etc that is too general and that does not consider all the facts.
|
||||
|
||||
- They want to make sweeping changes to education policies.
|
||||
- sweeping generalizations about women drivers.
|
||||
|
||||
+ reckless
|
||||
> (adj)not caring or worrying about the possible bad or dangerous results of your action.
|
||||
|
||||
- He was accused of causing death by reckless driving.
|
||||
- a reckless disregard for safety
|
||||
- He ran into the burning house with reckless abandon(= without caring about the danger).
|
||||
|
||||
+ discern
|
||||
> (v)to notice or understand something by thinking about it carefully</br>
|
||||
> (v)to be able to see something, but not clearly
|
||||
|
||||
- Officials are keen to discern how much public support there was.
|
||||
- We could just discern a town in the distance.
|
||||
|
||||
+ lame
|
||||
> (adj)unable to walk properly because your leg or foot is injured or weak.</br>
|
||||
> (n)people who are lame</br>
|
||||
> (adj)a lame excuse or explanation is weak and difficult to believe.
|
||||
|
||||
- She gave some lame excuse about missing the bus.
|
||||
- "Lovely house!"I said lamely.
|
||||
|
||||
+ scrutiny
|
||||
> (n)careful and thorough examination of someone or something.
|
||||
|
||||
- His private life came under media scrutiny.
|
||||
- Careful scrutiny of the company's accounts revealed a whole series of errors.
|
||||
|
||||
+ dearth
|
||||
> (n)a situation in which there are very few of something that people want or need.
|
||||
|
||||
- a dearth of job opportunties.
|
||||
- Construction had slowed because of a dearth of labourers.
|
||||
|
||||
+ collective
|
||||
> (adj)shared or made by every member of a group or society.</br>
|
||||
> (n)A collective is a business or farm which is run, and often owned, by a group of people.
|
||||
|
||||
- a collective devision made by all board members.
|
||||
- our collective responsiblity for the environment
|
||||
|
||||
+ morale
|
||||
> (n)the level of confidence and positive feelings that people have, especially people who work together, who belong to the same team etc.
|
||||
|
||||
- The media feels pressure to keep the morale of the country up in war time.
|
||||
- low staff morale
|
||||
- A win is always good for morale.
|
||||
|
||||
+ moral
|
||||
> (n)principles and beliefs concerning right and wrong behaviour.</br>
|
||||
> (adj)relating to beliefs about what is right or wrong.
|
||||
|
||||
- If we accept that certain babies should be allowed to die, we place doctors in a moral dilemma.
|
||||
- the corruption of public morals
|
||||
|
||||
+ ethical
|
||||
> (adj)relating to principles of what is right and wrong, moral.
|
||||
> (adj)morally good or correct
|
||||
|
||||
- The use of animals in scientific tests raised difficult ethical questions.
|
||||
- I don't think it's echical for you to accept a job you know you can't do.
|
||||
|
||||
+ doctrine
|
||||
> (n)a set of beliefs that form an important part of a religion or system of ideas.</br>
|
||||
> (n)a formal statement by a government about its future plans
|
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|
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- traditional doctrine of divine power
|
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- Marxist doctrine
|
||||
- the announcement of the Truman Doctrine.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user