100 words to Impress an Examiner!
(2008-06-28 10:51:32)
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杂谈 |
Here are 100 advanced English words which should you be able to use them in a sentence will impress even educated native speakers! Perfect if you want to impress the examiner in examinations like: IELTS, TOEFL and Cambridge CAE and CPE. If you are really serious about having an extensive and impressive vocabulary, try learning these .
Part ONE
1
aberration
(n.) something that differs from the norm (In 1974, Poland won the
World Cup, but the success turned out to be an aberration, and
Poland have not won a World Cup since).
2
abhor
(v.) to hate, detest (Because he always wound up getting hit in the
head when he tried to play cricket, Marcin began to abhor the
sport).
3
acquiesce
(v.) to agree without protesting (Though Mr. Pospieszny wanted to
stay outside and work in his garage, when his wife told him that he
had better come in to dinner, he acquiesced to her
demands.)
4
alacrity
(n.) eagerness, speed (For some reason, Simon loved to help his
girlfriend whenever he could, so when his girlfriend asked him to
set the table he did so with alacrity.)
5
amiable
(adj.) friendly (An amiable fellow, Neil got along with just about
everyone.)
6
appease
(v.) to calm, satisfy (When Jerry cries, his mother gives him
chocolate to appease him.)
7
arcane
(adj.) obscure, secret, known only by a few (The professor is an
expert in arcane Kashubian literature.)
8
avarice
(n.) excessive greed (The banker’s avarice led him to amass an
enormous personal fortune.)
9
brazen
(adj.) excessively bold, brash, clear and obvious (Critics
condemned the writer’s brazen attempt to plagiarise
Frankow-Czerwonko’s work.)
10
brusque
(adj.) short, abrupt, dismissive (Simon’s brusque manner
sometimes offends his colleagues.)
11
cajole
(v.) to urge, coax (Magda's friends cajoled her into drinking too
much.)
12
callous
(adj.) harsh, cold, unfeeling (The murderer’s callous lack of
remorse shocked the jury.)
13
candor
(n.) honesty, frankness (We were surprised by the candor of the
politician’s speech because she is usually rather
evasive.)
14
chide
(v.) to voice disapproval (Hania chided Gregory for his vulgar
habits and sloppy appearance.)
15
circumspect
(adj.) cautious (Though I promised Marta’s father I would bring
her home promptly by midnight, it would have been more circumspect
not to have specified a time.)
16
clandestine
(adj.) secret (Announcing to her boyfriend that she was going to
the library, Maria actually went to meet George for a clandestine
liaison.)
17
coerce
(v.) to make somebody do something by force or threat (The court
decided that David Beckham did not have to honor the contract
because he had been coerced into signing it.)
18
coherent
(adj.) logically consistent, intelligible (William could not figure
out what Harold had seen because he was too distraught to deliver a
coherent statement.)
19
complacency
(n.) self-satisfied ignorance of danger (Simon tried to shock his
friends out of their complacency by painting a frightening picture
of what might happen to them.)
20
confidant
(n.) a person entrusted with secrets (Shortly after we met, he
became my chief confidant.)
21
connive
(v.) to plot, scheme (She connived to get me to give up my plans to
start up a new business.)
22
cumulative
(adj.) increasing, building upon itself (The cumulative effect of
hours spent using the World English website was a vast improvement
in his vocabulary and general level of English.)
23
debase
(v.) to lower the quality or esteem of something (The large raise
that he gave himself debased his motives for running the
charity.)
24
decry
(v.) to criticize openly (Andrzej Lepper, the leader of the Polish
Self Defence party decried the appaling state of Polish
roads.)
25
deferential
(adj.) showing respect for another’s authority (Donata is always
excessively deferential to any kind of authority
figure.)
26
demure
(adj.) quiet, modest, reserved (Though everyone else at the party
was dancing and going crazy, she remained demure.)
27
deride
(v.) to laugh at mockingly, scorn (The native speaker often derided
the other teacher’s accent.)
28
despot
(n.) one who has total power and rules brutally (The despot issued
a death sentence for anyone who disobeyed his laws.)
29
diligent
(adj.) showing care in doing one’s work (The diligent researcher
made sure to double check her measurements.)
30
elated
(adj.) overjoyed, thrilled (When he found out he had won the
lottery, the postman was elated.)
31
eloquent
(adj.) expressive, articulate, moving (The best man gave such an
eloquent speech that most guests were crying.)
32
embezzle
(v.) to steal money by falsifying records (The accountant was fired
for embezzling €10,000 of the company’s funds.)
33
empathy
(n.) sensitivity to another’s feelings as if they were one’s
own (I feel such empathy for my dog when she’s upset so am
I!)
34
enmity
(n.) ill will, hatred, hostility (John and Scott have clearly not
forgiven each other, because the enmity between them is obvious to
anyone in their presence.)
35
erudite
(adj.) learned (My English teacher is such an erudite scholar that
he has translated some of the most difficult and abstruse Old
English poetry.)
36
extol
(v.) to praise, revere (Kamila extolled the virtues of a vegetarian
diet to her meat-loving boyfriend.)
37
fabricate
(v.) to make up, invent (When I arrived an hour late to class, I
fabricated some excuse about my car breaking down on the way to
work.)
38
feral
(adj.) wild, savage (That beast looks so feral that I would fear
being alone with it.)
39
flabbergasted
(adj.) astounded (Whenever I read an Agatha Christie mystery novel,
I am always flabbergasted when I learn the identity of the
murderer.)
40
forsake
(v.) to give up, renounce (I won't forsake my conservative
principles.)
41
fractious
(adj.) troublesome or irritable (Although the child insisted he
wasn’t tired, his fractious behaviour - especially his decision
to crush his jam sandwiches all over the floor - convinced everyone
present that it was time to put him to bed.)
42
furtive
(adj.) secretive, sly (Claudia’s placement of her drugs in her
sock drawer was not as furtive as she thought, as the sock drawer
is the first place most parents look.)
43
gluttony
(n.) overindulgence in food or drink (Helen’s fried chicken
tastes so divine, I don’t know how anyone can call gluttony a
sin.)
44
gratuitous
(adj.) uncalled for, unwarranted (Every evening the guy at the fish
and chip shop gives me a gratuitous helping of vinegar.)
45
haughty
(adj.) disdainfully proud (The superstar’s haughty dismissal of
her co-stars will backfire on her someday.)
46
hypocrisy
(n.) pretending to believe what one does not (Once the politician
began passing legislation that contradicted his campaign promises,
his hypocrisy became apparent.)
47
impeccable
(adj.) exemplary, flawless (If your grades were as impeccable as
your brother’s, then you too would receive a car for a graduation
present.)
48
impertinent
(adj.) rude, insolent (Most of your comments are so impertinent
that I don’t wish to dignify them with an answer.)
49
implacable
(adj.) incapable of being appeased or mitigated (Watch out: once
you shun Grandmother’s cooking, she is totally
implacable.)
50
impudent
(adj.) casually rude, insolent, impertinent (The impudent young
woman looked her teacher up and down and told him he was
hot.)