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Ultimate
WORD POWER ®

y — A : A la rge number.
1. Thirt n .
.
M a n y . C : A lot. D: Ample
B :
.
n — A : Pleasurable .
u ile-provoking
2 . F adj.
a b le . C : S m
B: Enjoy
D: Amusing. C h allenges.
A: T e s ts . B :
3. Quizzes n.—
D: Games.
C: Inquiries. p.
— A : Im p r ove. B: Lift u
4. Enrich v .
to . D: Better.
C: A d d q u a li ty
— A : W o r d s commonly
yn
5. Vocabular
.
. B : W o r d s understood.
use d
o f w o rd s . D : Word list.
C: Collection
OK00143702
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Ultimate
WORD POWER ®

The Reader’s Digest Association, Inc.


Pleasantville, New York • Montreal

Copyright © 2006 by The Reader’s Digest Association, Inc.


All rights reserved. Unauthorized reproduction, in any manner, is prohibited.
Reader’s Digest and Word Power® are registered trademarks of
The Reader’s Digest Association, Inc.
ISBN: 0-7621-0759-6
Printed in the United States
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Contents
Introduction 4

FAVORITE SUBJECTS ROOTS AND BRANCHES

Romance Words 5 Words With Interesting Origins 27

Food Words 7 Words From Ancient Greece 29

Citizenship Words 9 Words From Gaelic 31

Law Enforcement Words 11 Words That Start With “Qu” 33

Travel Words 13 Words That Contain “Ten” 35

Ocean Words 15 Adverbs 37

Science Words 17

Weather Words 19

Gardening Words 21

Bird Words 23

Finance Words 25
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FUN WITH LANGUAGE BIG TALKERS

Commonly Founding Father Words 53


Mispronounced Words 39
Isaac Asimov Words 55
Wonderful Word Pairs 41
Broadway Musical Words 57
Small Words With Big Meanings 43
Kelsey Grammer Words 59
Phrases Drawn From
the Animal Kingdom 45 William Safire Words 61

Embellishment Words 47 Bob Dylan Words 63

“Hip” Kid Words 49

Recent Additions
to the Dictionary 51
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INTRODUCTION
We use it almost every waking moment of our lives, but few of us
know many details about the English language. The facts are
plenty stunning, though:

> The number of English words, if you include scientific


and technical terms, totals about 1 million. That makes it
by far the wordiest of the world’s languages (by
comparison, French has roughly 100,000 words).

> How did it get so big? Easy—by borrowing. Roughly


80 percent of English words are based on words from
other languages.

> An estimated 750 million people speak English around


the world. Of those 350 million consider it their
mother tongue.

> The average educated English-speaking person knows


about 20,000 words.

> The typical person uses just 2,000 of those words in a week.
It’s that last statistic that is most amazing to us. For all the reading,
e-mailing, writing and talking we do in a week, you’d think we’d be
a little richer in our word usage! So while we hope you find Ulti-
mate Word Power to be fun and entertaining, we also hope you put
it to good use. Here are 500 words that are fun to say, expressive,
useful, and a notch above your everyday “Hello,” “What’s for din-
ner?” and “Pick your clothes up off the floor!”
Word Power has been a particularly popular feature in Reader’s
Digest for several decades running, and today, the National Word
Power Challenge is engaging hundreds of thousands of children in
expanding their vocabulary. As our name implies, Reader’s Digest
believes strongly in the pleasures and benefits of the written word.
A rich vocabulary is the pathway to better ideas, a greater under-
standing of our world, and fuller communication with friends,
family, and colleagues. So enjoy the 30 challenges on the pages
ahead. And maybe, in a few weeks, your 2,000 words will suddenly
be 2,500!
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FAV O R I T E S U B J E C T S

ROMANCE WORDS
“They do not love that do not show their love,” wrote William Shakespeare.
To inspire you to use the language of romance, this quiz is dedicated to
words of passion. Choose the answer you think is best and check your results
on the next page. And guys, even if you get all the words right, remember—
romance goes beyond words. So don’t forget the roses!

1 . allure n.—A: fragrance. 11 . fidelity n.—A: forgiveness.


B: turnoff. C: appeal. D: appear- B: broad-mindedness. C: con-
ance. stancy. D: determination.
2. woo v.—A: to excite. B: court. 12. enamored adj.—A: set free.
C: inspire. D: escort. B: filled with love. C: idealistic.
3. smitten adj.—A: rejected. D: attracted.
B: tempted. C: indifferent. D: in- 13. tryst (trist) n.—A: marital
fatuated. pledge. B: embrace. C: pet name.
4. dulcinea (dul sih NAY uh) n.— D: lovers’ meeting.
A: soft murmurings. B: love let- 14. uxorious (uk SOR ee us) adj.—
ter. C: assortment of chocolates. A: jubilant. B: devoted to one’s
D: sweetheart. wife. C: complimentary. D: curi-
5. congenial adj.—A: compatible. ous.
B: chatty. C: possessive. D: sup- 15. coquette n.—A: girlfriend. B: shy
portive. person. C: flirt. D: bride.
6. dalliance n.—A: delayed gratifi- 16. concord (CON cord) n.—A: har-
cation. B: amorous play. C: feel- mony. B: lasting relationship.
ing of unity. D: separation. C: disagreement. D: innocence.
7. sentient (SEN shunt) adj.— 17. indelible adj.—A: subconscious.
A: sensational. B: nonsensical. B: beyond words. C: attractive.
C: sensitive. D: sensible. D: permanent.
8. myrtle n.—symbol of A: fate. 18. lothario n.—A: chef. B: seducer.
B: love. C: children. D: eternity. C: ex-husband. D: actor.
9. fervent adj.—A: tender. B: seri- 19. pine v.—A: to complain.
ous. C: passionate. D: trusting. B: praise. C: compromise.
10. blandishment n.—A: flattery. D: yearn.
B: embarrassment. C: gift. 20. oscular adj.—pertaining to
D: showy display. A: vision. B: physical strength.
C: kissing. D: your horoscope.

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WORD POWER I F AV O R I T E S U B J E C T S

ANSWERS:
1 . allure —[C] Appeal; charm; as, the 11 . fidelity —[C] Constancy; loyalty;
allure of her smile. Old French as, I’ve never questioned your fi-
alurer (to attract; originally, a refer- delity. Latin fidelis (faithful).
ence to the lure used by a falconer). 12. enamored —[B] Filled with love;
2. woo —[B] To court; seek the favor as, The student became enamored
or love of; as, I wooed her for years. of the girl at the next desk. French
Middle English wowe. amour (love).
3. smitten —[D] Strongly and sud- 13. tryst —[D] A secret meeting
denly infatuated or in love; as, She arranged by lovers; as, They ren-
was smitten first by his looks. From dezvoused for a midnight tryst.
smite (to hit hard). Middle English triste (appointed
4. dulcinea —[D] Sweetheart; lady- station in hunting).
love; as, He had found his dulcinea. 14. uxorious —[B] Exceedingly de-
In the Cervantes novel, Don voted to one’s wife; as, My husband
Quixote idealized the peasant girl uxorious? Hardly! Latin uxor (wife).
Dulcinea. 15. coquette —[C] Flirtatious woman;
5. congenial —[A] Compatible in as, At parties she’s always the co-
character or nature; pleasant and quette. French, from coquet (young
agreeable. Latin con- (together) and rooster).
genialis (productive, joyous). 16. concord —[A] Harmony; agree-
6. dalliance —[B] Amorous, flirta- ment; as, a relationship marked by
tious play or act; as, True love is no concord. From Latin concors (liter-
mere dalliance. From dally (to act ally, hearts together).
or talk playfully). 17 . indelible —[D] Permanent; unre-
7. sentient —[C] Sensitive; capable of movable; as, You occupy an indeli-
feeling; aware; as, For the first time ble place in my heart. Latin
he seemed more than just sentient. indelebilis (indestructible).
Latin sentire (to feel). 18. lothario —[B] Seducer or rake; de-
8. myrtle —[B] Symbol of love. The ceiver; as, Don’t lose your heart to
fragrant evergreen plant was con- that lothario. From a character in a
sidered sacred to Venus, the Roman 1703 play, The Fair Penitent.
goddess of love and beauty. 19. pine —[D] To yearn; long; as, She
9. fervent —[C] Passionate; having pined for her absent lover. Middle
great warmth and intensity; as, fer- English pinen (to torment).
vent desires. Latin (boiling). 20. oscular —[C] Pertaining to kissing;
10. blandishment —[A] Flattery; word as, Valentine’s Day is perfect for
or action that tries to coax; as, With some oscular activity. Latin oscu-
frequent blandishments, he hoped to larum (little mouth; kiss).
change her mind. Latin blandus
(soothing).
VOCABULARY RATINGS
10-14 Good 15-17 Excellent 18-20 Exceptional
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FOOD WORDS
For many people, the holidays mean eating—and more eating. In his book,
Eating Your Words: 2000 Words to Tease Your Taste Buds, William Grimes of
The New York Times serves up the necessary ingredients for this hearty
quiz. Please dig in.

1 . sugarplum n.—A: fruit pie. 9. braise v.—to cook A: quickly.


B: liquor-soaked plum. C: ball- B: slowly. C: in broth. D: without
shaped candy. D: mulled cider adding salt.
sweetener. 10. florentine adj.—served with
2. mesquite n.—A: spicy sauce. A: eggs. B: rice. C: spinach.
B: wood used in cooking. D: warm Italian bread.
C: barbecue restaurant. D: type 11 . shirr v.—A: to mix together.
of oven. B: bake. C: trim the fat. D: pound
3. effervescent adj.—A: fizzy. flat.
B: transparent. C: overflowing. 12. aioli n.—A: type of cooking oil.
D: simmering. B: low-fat butter. C: small whisk.
4. ramekin n.—A: small baking dish. D: garlicky mayonnaise.
B: Chinese noodle. C: vegetable 13. macerate v.—A: to slice length-
broth. D: large kettle. wise. B: chew carefully.
5. gherkin n.—A: bean soup. C: soften. D: stir slowly.
B: frilly apron. C: juicing device. 14. viscous adj.—A: thick. B: rotten.
D: pickle. C: runny. D: overcooked.
6. julienne v.—A: to remove the pit. 15. latke n.—A: sugar cookie.
B: mash into pulp. C: cook veg- B: dough ball served in soup.
etables on a grill. D: cut into C: seasoned meatball. D: potato
thin strips. pancake.
7. aspic n.—A: clear jelly. B: game 16. roux n.—A: root vegetable.
bird. C: calculation to modify B: mixture used in making
recipes. D: roasting pan. sauces. C: serving spoon. D: cup
8. stollen n.—A: after-dinner drink. used for serving poached eggs.
B: sweet bread. C: type of bean.
D: meat pie.

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WORD POWER I F AV O R I T E S U B J E C T S

ANSWERS
1 . sugarplum —[C] Small candy in 9. braise —[B] To cook slowly in fat
the shape of a ball or disc; sweet- and little moisture in a closed pot.
meat. Please don’t fill up on those The first step in making a success-
sugarplums before dinner is served. ful beef stew: Braise the meat care-
2. mesquite —[B] Wood of spiny fully.
trees or shrubs native to the south- 10. florentine —[C] Served with
western United States that is often spinach. His idea of a special break-
used for grilling food. To my mind, fast? An order of eggs florentine.
the best barbecued ribs have that 11 . shirr —[B] To bake until set. What
authentic mesquite aroma. makes those shirred eggs so tasty is
3. effervescent —[A] Fizzy; giving the dollop of heavy cream he adds
off bubbles. She prefers seltzer to before putting them in the oven.
plain bottled water because it’s ef- 12. aioli —[D] Mayonnaise seasoned
fervescent. with garlic. Dip those french fries in
4. ramekin —[A] A small baking dish this aioli, not that boring old
for preparing individual portions. ketchup.
To make the perfect popovers, use 13. macerate —[C] To soften or sepa-
ramekins instead of muffin tins. rate by steeping in fluid. Blend the
5. gherkin —[D] A small cucumber cranberries and oranges together
used for pickling. I’ll skip the potato until fine; add in sugar; then allow
chips, but a gherkin or two would go to macerate for two days until
nicely with this sandwich. using.
6. julienne —[D] To cut into thin 14. viscous —[A] Resistant to flowing
strips. Once you’ve peeled those in a fluid or semifluid; thick, sticky.
carrots, would you please julienne The hot fudge was so viscous that
them for the salad? she had trouble getting it out of the
7. aspic —[A] A clear savory jelly. jar and onto her ice cream.
Let’s leave time to prepare the tra- 15. latke —[D] Potato pancake. I al-
ditional aspic in that odd hat- ways look forward to Hanukkah—
shaped mold my brother gave us. not for the presents, but because I’ll
8. stollen —[B] A sweet yeast bread get all the latkes I can eat.
of German origin containing fruit 16. roux —[B] Cooked mixture of flour
and nuts. That loaf of my mother’s and fat used to thicken a soup or
stollen I brought to work yesterday? sauce. If you burn the roux, you bet-
I left it by the office coffee maker ter start over; otherwise, no one’s
and it was gone in five minutes. going to want to eat your gumbo.

VOCABULARY RATINGS
10-12 Good 13-14 Excellent 15-16 Exceptional
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CITIZENSHIP WORDS
Our nation, its welfare, and our relationships with other countries have
been much on our minds lately. So it is an opportune time to review words
that relate to citizenship, diplomacy and current events. The final word
(number 15) was new to us—and it’s tough, but give it a try!

1 . nationalism n.—A: ethnic her- 9. despotic adj.—A: despairing.


itage. B: political party. C: patri- B: magical. C: extremely bom-
otism. D: pride. bastic. D: tyrannical.
2. unilateralist n.—someone who 10. casus belli n.—an event that
A: acts alone. B: acts suspicious. A: triggers a declaration of war.
C: is tenacious. D: is dogmatic. B: causes confusion. C: makes
3. preempt v.—A: to claim. B: arrive church bells ring. D: is an omen
early. C: select. D: oppose. of good weather.
4. stateless adj.—lacking a A: pass- 11 . sanctions n.—A: rewards.
port. B: nationality. C: bank B: rooms in a church. C: puni-
statement. D: visa. tive measures. D: terms of em-
ployment.
5. civitas n.—A: body of people.
B: body of law. C: good manners. 12. consensus n.—A: implicit social
D: characteristics of civilians. contract. B: burden. C: collective
opinion. D: understanding be-
6. mandate n.—A: division of the
tween two people.
United Nations. B: legal impedi-
ment. C: South African town- 13. accord n.—A: treaty. B: diplo-
ship. D: authorization to act. matic agreement. C: peace.
D: letter of intent.
7. enfranchise v.—A: to vote. B: ex-
tend credit. C: grant citizenship. 14. onus n.—A: misrepresentation.
D: open a store. B: body of work. C: guilt.
D: obligation.
8. appeasement n.—A: forgiving
and forgetting. B: yielding to de- 15. vexillology* n.—A: the art of an-
mands. C: real estate regulation. noying people. B: the study of
D: obsession with one’s appear- flags. C: a branch of meteorol-
ance. ogy. D: a military science.
*Give yourself an extra 5 ratings points if
you know this one!

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WORD POWER I F AV O R I T E S U B J E C T S

ANSWERS
1 . nationalism —[C] Patriotism; loy- 9. despotic —[D] Tyrannical; oppres-
alty to one’s own nation; as, The sive; as, Many Third World govern-
rally in Washington was imbued ments are despotic. From the Greek
with the spirit of nationalism. despotes (master).
2. unilateralist —[A] Someone who 10. casus belli —[A] An event that
acts alone or on behalf of only one triggers or justifies a declaration of
side, party or nation; as, Recent war; as, Pearl Harbor was a casus
newspaper accounts have described belli.
President Bush as a unilateralist. 11 . sanctions —[C] Punitive measures
3. preempt —[A] To claim; forestall usually taken by several nations to-
by acting first. From preemption, gether, designed to put pressure on
based on Latin praeemere (buy be- another country; also, approvals.
forehand). Latin sancto.
4. stateless —[B] Lacking a national- 12. consensus —[C] Collective opin-
ity; as, Those who seek political ion or judgment; as, It was the con-
asylum are sometimes stateless. sensus we should act now. Latin
From Latin status. consentire.
5. civitas —[A] Body of people con- 13. accord —[B] Diplomatic agree-
stituting a politically organized ment without the binding force of a
community; as, Flags visually repre- treaty; as, The Camp David accords
sent the civitas of a nation. Latin. were meant to be a framework for
6. mandate —[D] Authorization to peace in the Middle East.
act, given to a representative by the 14. onus —[D] Obligation or task, espe-
electorate; any authoritative order cially a difficult one; as, The onus of
or command. From Latin mandare peacekeeping around the world has
(give as commission). often fallen to Americans. Latin
7. enfranchise —[C] To grant or (load, burden).
admit to citizenship; to set free; as, 15. vexillology —[B] Study of flags; as,
Liberation movements seek to en- Someone with no background in
franchise the citizenry. From Middle vexillology may confuse the Irish
French enfranchir (to free). and Italian flags. Latin vexill(um).
8. appeasement —[B] Yielding to
often unreasonable demands; pacifi-
cation; as, Allowing a dictator free
rein is appeasement of the worst
sort. Middle English apesen.

VOCABULARY RATINGS
10-11 Good 12-13 Excellent 14-15 Exceptional
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LAW ENFORCEMENT WORDS


Back in a simpler time, the only cop lingo you had to know was “Book ’em,
Danno.” It’s a lot tougher to follow the dialogue between the detectives and
the DAs on “Law and Order” and the many other police shows that seem to
dominate television these days. Here are some words to help you talk the talk.

1 . Mirandize v.—A: to frisk. B: ad- 9. bailiff n.—A: court officer.


vise of legal rights. C: question. B: bondsman. C: fugitive. D: ju-
D: coerce a confession from. dicial assistant.
2. appellant n.—someone who 10. recognizance n.—A: lineup.
A: makes a plea. B: files a police B: disguise. C: obligation. D: in-
report. C: falsifies his name. creased patrols.
D: recruits. 11 . remand v.—A: to set free.
3. expedite v.—A: to turn over. B: bring to trial again. C: send
B: issue a warning. C: walk the back. D: handcuff.
beat. D: do quickly. 12. bench warrant n.—A: security
4. skell n.—A: tainted physical evi- guard. B: order to arrest. C: su-
dence. B: vagrant. C: con man. perior court judge. D: permis-
D: police informant. sion to speak.
5. recidivism n.—A: withholding in- 13. perpetrator n.—A: snitch.
formation. B: racial profiling. B: crime-doer. C: suspect. D: re-
C: fingerprint analysis. D: re- peat offender.
lapse into crime. 14. depose v.—A: to affirm under
6. arraign v.—A: to postpone. oath. B: corroborate. C: specu-
B: bring before a court to an- late. D: slouch.
swer charges. C: testify. 15. due process n.—A: just punish-
D: award a favorable verdict. ment. B: waiting period. C: bu-
7. backlog n.—A: intentional delay. reaucratic red tape. D: course of
B: low-priority incident. C: un- laws and procedures.
finished cases. D: cop hangout. 16. exculpatory adj.—relating to
8. adjudicate v.—A: to do paper- A: opening trial arguments.
work. B: treat equally. C: deter- B: disavowal. C: criminal behav-
mine. D: bribe. ior. D: exoneration.

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WORD POWER I F AV O R I T E S U B J E C T S

ANSWERS
1 . Mirandize —[B] To advise some- 9. bailiff —[A] An officer, similar to a
one being arrested of his rights, sheriff, who keeps order in the
under the Miranda rule, to remain court. Old French (porter).
silent and have an attorney present 10. recognizance —[C] A legal obliga-
during questioning. From the U.S. tion or bond binding a person to ap-
Supreme Court decision Miranda v. pear for trial. Middle English.
Arizona.
11 . remand —[C] To send a prisoner
2. appellant —[A] A person who or accused person back into cus-
makes a plea for judgment from a tody to await trial or further investi-
higher authority; as, The appellant gation; as, He was remanded to the
hoped a technicality would void his county jail while the grand jury was
verdict. Latin appellare (accost). selected. Old French remander (to
3. expedite —[D] To complete send word back).
quickly or in a timely fashion; as, 12. bench warrant —[B] Order issued
Defense motions made it impossi- by a judge or court for an arrest; as,
ble to expedite the trial. From Latin Worried the suspect might flee, the
ex- (out) and pedis (foot), meaning DA requested a bench warrant.
to free feet from fetters.
13. perpetrator —[B] A person who
4. skell —[B] Vagrant; police term for commits a crime; as, A SWAT team
someone who looks like a drug user searched the abandoned building
or seems down-and-out. Shortened for the perpetrator. (In cop talk,
form of skeleton. shortened to perp.)
5. recidivism —[D] Relapse into a 14. depose —[A] To affirm or testify
former behavior, especially criminal under oath, often in writing; as, The
activities. From Latin re- (back) and witness was deposed beforehand.
cadere (to fall). Old French deposer (to put down).
6. arraign —[B] To bring before a 15. due process —[D] The course of
court to hear and answer charges. legal proceedings that protect an in-
Latin ad- (to) and ratio (reason). dividual’s rights and liberties; as, In
7. backlog —[C] An accumulation of democracies, citizens are entitled to
cases that the legal system is inca- due process of the law.
pable of dealing with in a timely 16. exculpatory —[D] Relating to vin-
manner; as, Busy municipal courts dication; tending to clear from guilt.
often have a backlog of months. Latin ex- and culpare (to blame).
8. adjudicate —[C] To determine or
judge; as, His claim will be adjudi-
cated. Latin ad- and judicare
(judge).

VOCABULARY RATINGS
10-12 Good 13-14 Excellent 15-16 Exceptional
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TRAVEL WORDS
It may be two weeks at the shore, or perhaps a grand tour of Europe, or
something as simple as a long weekend with the grandparents. Whatever
we choose, most of us sure love our vacations. Before you hit the road or fly
the friendly skies, take our quiz of words you might need on holiday.

1 . agoraphobia n.—fear of A: flying. 10. baksheesh n.—A: tip. B: hallu-


B: getting lost. C: public places. cinogenic drug. C: babble.
D: furry animals. D: head covering.
2. cay (key) n.—A: passageway. 11 . sultry adj.—A: unhappy. B: swel-
B: reef. C: monetary unit. tering. C: assorted. D: colorful.
D: valley. 12. antipodean adj.—A: on foot.
3. amenities n.—A: useful features. B: opposite. C: unhealthful.
B: formal introductions. D: cleansing.
C: taxes. D: young pickpockets. 13. turista n.—A: tour bus. B: illness.
4. halcyon adj.—A: foreign. B: tiring. C: visa stamp. D: foot pain.
C: happy. D: mazelike. 14. contraband n.—A: money belt.
5. traipse v.—A: to rush. B: walk B: Latin musical group. C: cus-
aimlessly. C: violate. D: crush. toms inspector. D: illegal goods.
6. red-eye n.—A: complicated form. 15. tarn n.—A: tall tale. B: mountain
B: poorly lit room. C: bar. lake. C: meadow. D: runway.
D: overnight flight. 16. ambiance n.—A: hostility. B: tem-
7. brasserie n.—A: lingerie shop. porary camp. C: atmosphere.
B: airplane crew. C: restaurant. D: medical vehicle.
D: souvenir stand. 17. incidentals n.—A: short encoun-
8. queue n.—A: question. B: side ters. B: minor expenses. C: for-
road. C: gate. D: waiting line. bidden carry-ons. D: mementos.
9. concierge n.—A: wine specialist. 18. estivate v.—A: to change clothes.
B: headwaiter. C: service repre- B: guess at. C: exert oneself.
sentative. D: busboy. D: pass the summer.

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WORD POWER I F AV O R I T E S U B J E C T S

ANSWERS
1 . agoraphobia —[C] Extreme fear of 11 . sultry —[B] Sweltering; hot and
public places or crowds; as, My ago- humid; as, sultry August days. From
raphobia kept me housebound. Middle English swelten (to swoon
Greek agora (marketplace). away).
2. cay —[B] Reef or low bank of coral 12. antipodean —[B] Directly oppo-
or sand; as, We went snorkeling to site, especially in reference to sides
explore the cay. Spanish cayo. of the earth; as, The antipodean day
3. amenities —[A] Useful or desir- is the day gained when crossing the
able features of a place; as, a resort International Dateline. Greek an-
with impressive amenities. Latin tipodes (having the feet opposite).
amoenus (pleasant). 13. turista —[B] Gastrointestinal ill-
4. halcyon —[C] Idyllically happy; ness afflicting travelers; as, A street
peaceful; as, the halcyon summers snack gave me turista. Spanish
on Cape Cod. From Greek alkyon (tourist).
(kingfisher), in legend a bird that 14. contraband —[D] Goods that have
could calm the seas. been imported or exported illegally.
5. traipse —[B] To walk aimlessly or From Italian contra (against) and
wearily; wander; as, We traipsed all bando (ban).
over town looking for an ATM. Of 15. tarn —[B] Mountain lake; as, This
uncertain 16th-century origin. trail through the woods leads to the
6. red-eye —[D] Overnight flight; as, tarn. Old Norse tjörn (literally, a
I took the red-eye to be at work on hole filled with water).
Monday morning. 16. ambiance —[C] Atmosphere; char-
7. brasserie —[C] Informal restau- acter; as, the hotel’s luxurious am-
rant, usually with a selection of biance. French (surroundings).
drinks. French, from brasser (to 17 . incidentals —[B] Minor expenses
brew). or items; as, Make sure you have
8. queue —[D] Waiting line; as, a cash for incidentals. From Latin in-
queue that stretched for blocks. cidere (to fall upon, happen to).
French, from Latin cauda (tail). 18. estivate —[D] To pass or spend the
9. concierge —[C] Hotel service rep- summer in a certain activity, espe-
resentative who assists guests with cially (like some animals) in a dor-
special arrangements. French (origi- mant state; as, Snails estivate, but
nally, warden of a castle or prison). children shouldn’t. From Latin aes-
tivatus (resided during summer).
10. baksheesh —[A] In Egypt, a form
of tip or bribe; as, A little baksheesh
might get you in the museum a lot
quicker. From Persian bakhshidan
(to give).
VOCABULARY RATINGS
10-12 Good 13-15 Excellent 16-18 Exceptional
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OCEAN WORDS
When life gets too fast and crazy, nothing puts things in perspective better
than standing along the ocean’s edge, watching the waves, listening to the
gulls, feeling the sand and rocks beneath our feet. If only the words of
oceanography were as calming! The Cousteau Society website (cousteau.org)
helped us create this quiz by, um, deepening our ocean knowledge.

1 . atoll n.—A: coral reef encircling 9. scuttle v.—A: to float. B: sink.


a lagoon. B: steep cliff. C: sound C: cut precisely. D: dive.
of a ship’s bell. D: fishing net. 10. frond n.—A: microscopic ocean
2. tack v.—A: to harvest. B: alter di- plant. B: large tidal pool. C: en-
rection. C: drift. D: lose speed. dangered shellfish. D: large leaf.
3. corolla n.—A: reddish coral. 11 . halyard n.—A: rope that raises
B: undersea cave. C: tidal wave. sail. B: ship’s kitchen. C: anchor
D: flower petals. chain. D: veteran sailor.
4. littoral adj.—relating to A: a 12. mutate v.—A: to relocate. B: turn
fish’s diet. B: breathing appara- suddenly. C: change. D: eat in-
tus. C: ship cargo. D: the discriminately.
seashore. 13. piscatory adj.—relating to
5. gestate v.—A: to grow. B: carry A: plant life. B: fish or fishing.
during pregnancy. C: approach. C: scuba gear. D: beach sand.
D: swim in formation. 14. regenerate v.—A: to add new
6. estuary n.—A: where ocean traits. B: use twice. C: produce
meets river. B: deep-sea preda- anew. D: eat one’s own young.
tor. C: ocean bed. D: lighthouse. 15. osmosis n.—A: prehistoric fish.
7. floe n.—A: unit of tidal measure. B: how coral reproduces.
B: type of whale. C: floating ice C: movement of water mole-
sheet. D: air-tank mouthpiece. cules. D: steady loss of appetite.
8. pelagic adj.—relating to A: an- 16. kelp n.—A: tiniest shark. B: dol-
cient sea creatures. B: big waves. phin sound. C: knot used by
C: the open sea. D: seaweed. sailors. D: type of seaweed.

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WORD POWER I F AV O R I T E S U B J E C T S

ANSWERS
1 . atoll —[A] Coral island consisting 9. scuttle —[B] Sink or wreck, espe-
of a reef surrounding a lagoon. Who cially by making holes. They de-
wouldn’t love to chuck it all and es- cided to scuttle the old ship to
cape to an atoll in the Pacific? create an artificial reef.
2. tack —[B] Alter direction when 10. frond —[D] Large leaf, usually on a
sailing. If you see clouds on the palm or fern. On days when the
horizon, it’s time to tack toward heat gets unbearable, I like to fan
shore—in a hurry. myself with a palm frond.
3. corolla —[D] Flower petals; inner 11 . halyard —[A] Rope used to hoist a
whorl of floral leaves. The corolla of sail. The captain ordered me to pull
each sea-grass flower was visible hard on the halyard as we prepared
from the surface through the crystal- to leave the harbor for the open sea.
clear water. 12. mutate —[C] Change. Pollution
4. littoral —[D] Relating to—or grow- can cause harmless plants to mutate
ing on or near—a shore, especially into toxic killers.
of the sea. What kind of strategies 13. piscatory —[B] Relating to fish or
can we come up with to stop the fishing. That seafood chowder
further erosion of our littoral habi- Frank whipped up last night was a
tats? piscatory delight.
5. gestate —[B] Carry in the uterus 14. regenerate —[C] Produce anew.
during pregnancy. Whales gestate Some experts believe our ocean
for up to two years before giving fishing stocks are becoming too de-
birth. pleted to regenerate.
6. estuary —[A] A water passage 15. osmosis —[C] Movement of water
where the tide meets a river cur- molecules, via a membrane, from an
rent. A Pacific salmon must pass area of low-salt concentration to
through a coastal estuary before one of high-salt concentration.
making its way upriver to spawn. While it may sound like a harmless
7. floe —[C] Floating ice formed in a process, osmosis can actually kill a
large sheet on the surface of a body freshwater fish placed in salt water.
of water. During harsh winters, the 16. kelp —[D] Large brown seaweed
ice floes drifting south on the Hud- found in cold waters. I’m used to
son River can be immense. having kelp tangled around my legs
8. pelagic —[C] Of, relating to, or liv- when I’m swimming, not having it
ing or occurring in the open sea. served to me in a salad.
The pelican is among the best-
known pelagic birds.

VOCABULARY RATINGS
10-12 Good 13-14 Excellent 15-16 Exceptional
16
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SCIENCE WORDS
We created this quiz using words from the new American Heritage Science
Dictionary. We took it easy too—there’s nothing like a science dictionary
for words as long as a sentence! Instead, we chose words that show up in
everyday conversation but that aren’t quite common.

1 . bayou n.—A: wooded area. 9. deciduous adj.—A: shedding,


B: narrow bay. C: rotten stump. as with leaves. B: inconclusive.
D: marshy stream. C: divisible by units of ten.
2. fissure n.—A: crack. B: crease. D: related to sound, as in vol-
C: dip. D: seam. ume.
3. concave adj.—A: curved outward. 10. tundra n.—A: arid plain.
B: completely flat. C: curved in- B: shootlike plant leaf. C: cold,
ward. D: linked together in a treeless area. D: extremely flam-
series. mable substance.
4. hexagon n.—A: six-sided shape. 11 . slough v.—A: to separate.
B: nine-sided shape. C: man- B: shed. C: wash. D: mix.
made fiber. D: twelve-sided 12. simian adj.—A: resembling a
shape. monkey. B: chemically volatile.
5. secrete v.—A: to steal. B: elimi- C: polished. D: raw.
nate. C: stretch out. D: produce 13. malleable adj.—A: erroneous.
and discharge. B: precise. C: unable to be
6. absorption n.—act of A: expand- shaped. D: able to be shaped.
ing. B: removing. C: assimilating. 14. berm n.—A: type of beaker. B: ce-
D: purifying. lestial body. C: narrow ledge.
7. proboscis n.—A: microscopic D: iceberg.
creature. B: testing device. 15. indigenous adj.—A: marked by
C: sound theory. D: nose. a reddish blue tint. B: native to a
8. inoculate v.—A: to eliminate en- particular region. C: made via
tirely. B: increase slowly. C: cre- volcanic action. D: in a fixed mi-
ate as new. D: introduce for gratory pattern.
purposes of protection.

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WORD POWER I F AV O R I T E S U B J E C T S

ANSWERS
1 . bayou —[D] Sluggish, marshy 10. tundra —[C] Cold, treeless, usually
stream linked to a river, lake or gulf. lowland area of far northern re-
Let’s take my old boat out on the gions. I’m not sure that planning a
bayou. picnic out on the tundra is a good
2. fissure —[A] Narrow crack in a idea.
rock’s face. Clawing at the nearest 11 . slough —[B] To shed, as with an
fissure, I tried to pull myself up. outer layer of skin. The kids got a
3. concave —[C] Curved inward, like kick out of watching that king cobra
the inside of a circle or sphere. My slough its skin.
binoculars could use new concave 12. simian —[A] Resembling or char-
lenses. acteristic of apes or monkeys. I
4. hexagon —[A] A polygon with six don’t know how the boss tolerates
sides. His drawing of hexagons all of his scratching and other
looks like a honeycomb. simian antics.
5. secrete —[D] To produce and dis- 13. malleable —[D] Capable of being
charge a substance. There are cells shaped when subject to pressure.
in the pancreas that secrete the hor- Sculpting with iron, I was surprised
mone insulin. to find out what a malleable sub-
stance it is when it’s hot.
6. absorption —[C] Process by which
one substance, such as a solid, takes 14. berm —[C] Narrow, man-made
up or assimilates another substance, shelf or ledge, typically at the top or
such as a liquid, through tiny pores bottom of a slope; man-made
or spaces between molecules. A mound or wall of earth. If you must
paper towel will pick up that spilled walk along the berm at the top of
milk by absorption. the dike, please be careful.
7. proboscis —[D] Long snout or 15. indigenous —[B] Native to a par-
trunk; nose. We stared at the ele- ticular region or environment. I
phant’s proboscis as it swayed to never thought black bears were in-
and fro. digenous to this area, but I’ve come
across three of them rooting around
8. inoculate —[D] To introduce a vac- in my trash cans in the past year.
cine or other agent into a body to
create or hike immunity to a dis-
ease. The soldiers were inoculated
against typhoid.
9. deciduous —[A] Shedding leaves at
the end of a growing season and re-
growing them at the beginning of
the next season. When fall arrives
and the rakes come out, I often wish
I had fewer deciduous trees in my
backyard. VOCABULARY RATINGS
7-9 Good 10-12 Excellent 13-15 Exceptional
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WEATHER WORDS
In the days before 24-hour weather reporting, hey, there was always the
window. But back then we didn’t have Al Roker, esteemed forecaster and
Quiz Master of RD’s National Word Power Challenge. We predict you’ll
breeze through his weather-ese.

1 . barometer n.—instrument used 9. cumulus adj.—of clouds with


to measure A: wind speed. B: at- A: sharp outlines. B: wispy
mospheric pressure. C: cloud trails. C: blobby shapes. D: gray
cover. D: thunderstorm activity. tops.
2. convection n.—A: transport of 10. jet stream n.—A: horizontal air
heat and moisture. B: overheat- stream. B: westerly flow. C: in-
ing. C: mold. D: cold snap. fluence on weather patterns.
3. dew point n.—temperature to D: high-altitude winds.
which air must be cooled to be 11 . trough n.—area of A: precipi-
A: comfortable to humans. tation. B: heat. C: low atmos-
B: saturated. C: moderately pheric pressure. D: cold.
moist. D: able to form ice crys- 12. blizzard n.—storm with A: wet,
tals. heavy snow. B: thunder and
4. cirrus adj.—of clouds that are lightning. C: dry, driving snow.
A: high and delicate. B: dense. D: sleet and snow.
C: low and thick. D: towering. 13. cold front n.—A: transition zone.
5. UV index n.—indicator of A: sun- B: approaching storm. C: Arctic
burn. B: heat. C: radiation. weather pattern. D: wind gust.
D: cloud cover. 14. wind chill n.—A: chance of frost.
6. Doppler radar n.—equipment to B: perceived cold. C: gusts
measure A: wind velocity. B: ra- higher than 50 m.p.h. D: storm
dial velocity. C: downdrafts. warning.
D: squall severity. 15. meteorology n.—science of
7. cell n.—A: air current. B: weather A: weather. B: atmosphere.
forecasting room. C: isolated C: climate. D: informed predic-
storm. D: vortex. tions.
8. Fujita scale n.—measure of
A: earthquake severity. B: wind
damage intensity. C: flood po-
tential. D: tornado activity.
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WORD POWER I F AV O R I T E S U B J E C T S

ANSWERS
1 . barometer —[B] Instrument used the fact, based on damage. A very
to measure atmospheric pressure. violent tornado might be an F3 (158-
Low barometric pressure likely 206 m.p.h.).
means clouds and rain. When pres- 9. cumulus —[A] Of clouds with
sure is high, air is forced closer to sharp outlines. They develop verti-
the ground, preventing clouds. cally as domes or towers and have
2. convection —[A] Transport of heat rounded tops and horizontal bases.
and moisture, especially by updrafts The top often looks like a cauli-
and downdrafts in an unstable at- flower.
mosphere. Thunderstorms are one 10. jet stream —[A, B, C & D] The jet
form of convection. stream is a horizontal, westerly flow
3. dew point —[B] Temperature to of air that’s normally found at high
which air must be cooled to be satu- altitudes. Our weather is closely re-
rated. In layman’s terms, how much lated to the position and strength of
water is in the air compared with the jet stream.
what it can hold. The dew point can 11 . trough —[C] Elongated area of low
indicate the likelihood of fog and atmospheric pressure, also known
thunderstorms. as an upper-level low. Preceded by
4. cirrus —[A] Of clouds that are high stormy weather and colder air at
(16,000 feet and more), delicate and the surface.
wispy. 12. blizzard —[C] Storm with dry,
5. UV index —[C] Indicator of radia- wind-driven snow. Commonly lots
tion, or exposure to ultraviolet rays. of storms are called blizzards, but
It’s measured at noon, ranked from technically they need to last at least
0 to 15, and is highest on a clear 3 hours and reduce visibility to
summer day. Without sunscreen, under 1 km to qualify.
you’ll burn. 13. cold front —[A] Transition zone
6. Doppler radar —[B] Equipment to between cold air that’s advancing to
measure radial velocity (motion) replace warmer air. Also, the “lead-
toward or away from the radar. The ing edge” of a cold air mass.
latest high-resolution Doppler is 14. wind chill —[B] Perceived cold.
NEXRAD. It shows where precipita- The difference between the actual
tion is occurring, where it’s going temperature and how it feels when
and how fast it’s going there. the wind is factored in. So if it’s 17°
7. cell —[A] Air current; a single up- out with a 10 m.p.h. wind, it feels
draft, downdraft or couplet of both. like 5°.
It’s often seen as a vertical dome, as 15. meteorology —[A, B, C & D] All of
in a towering cumulus cloud. these are part of the meteorologist’s
8. Fujita scale (F scale) —[B] Meas- profession.
ure of wind damage intensity from
F0 to F5. It ranks wind speed after VOCABULARY RATINGS
8-10 Mild 11-12 Warm 13-15 Hot, Hot, Hot!
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GARDENING WORDS
While not everyone enjoys the work it takes to have a beautiful yard,
there are few who don’t appreciate beautiful flowers, soft, weed-free
grass, and a bountiful garden. Savor, too, these words—all related to gar-
dening and plants.

1 . herbaceous adj.—A: edible. 11 . sucker n.—A: melon. B: caterpil-


B: green and leaflike. C: tasty. lar. C: weed. D: unwanted shoot.
D: vinelike. 12. blanch v.—A: to exclude light.
2. leggy adj.—A: invasive. B: with B: trim. C: overwater. D: sun-dry.
many roots. C: long and thin. 13. cultivar n.—A: wildflower. B: gar-
D: covered with aphids. dener’s tool. C: cultivated vari-
3. hybrid n.—A: fake. B: pure vari- ety. D: expert gardener.
ety. C: producer. D: composite. 14. dieback n.—Deterioration
4. biennial n.—Plant that A: takes A: from the root. B: from tips.
two years to grow. B: blooms C: across a crop. D: inside fruit.
twice a year. C: has two stems. 15. bolt v.—A: to secure with stakes.
D: blossoms in pairs. B: produce seeds early. C: pinch
5. leach v.—A: to cling to. B: add back. D: grow underground.
lime. C: dissolve out. D: discolor. 16. humus n.—A: dry dirt. B: bright
6. drip line n.—A: watering device. color. C: organic residue.
B: perimeter of tree. C: erosion. D: rock.
D: mark left by condensation. 17. perennial n.—Plant that A: lasts a
7. thatch n.—A: dead grass. B: clus- year. B: flowers. C: grows from
ter of fruit. C: rake. D: disease. bulbs. D: returns year after year.
8. loam n.—A: sand. B: acid. C: al- 18. deadhead v.—A: to remove flow-
kaline deposit. D: rich soil. ers. B: pull weeds. C: stunt
9. variegated adj.—A: in rows. growth. D: squish bugs.
B: having different colors. C: ge- 19. trug n.—A: lawn pest. B: old
netically altered. D: well wa- root. C: basket. D: climber.
tered. 20. rhizome n.—A: underground
10. heirloom n.—A: squash. B: an- stem. B: cornstalk. C: pesticide.
tique vegetable. C: trellis. D: rose petal.
D: protective netting.

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WORD POWER I F AV O R I T E S U B J E C T S

ANSWERS
1 . herbaceous —[B] Green and 11 . sucker —[D] Unwanted shoot from
leaflike, with soft, nonwoody tis- the stem or root that draws nutrients
sues; as, Herbaceous plants die back from the flower or fruit; as, Remove
to the roots at the end of the grow- suckers from staked tomato plants.
ing season. Latin herbaceus (grassy). 12. blanch —[A] To exclude light by
2. leggy —[C] Long and thin; straggly; covering; as, Blanch endive to make
as, Inadequate light can cause the leaves more tender. Old French
plants to grow tall and leggy. blanchir (to whiten).
3. hybrid —[D] Composite of two dif- 13. cultivar —[C] Plant variety that
ferent species or varieties, espe- has been produced and maintained
cially when bred for a desirable by cultivation, rather than grown in
trait. Latin hybrida (offspring of a the wild.
tame sow and a wild boar). 14. dieback —[B] Deterioration from
4. biennial —[A] A plant that takes the tips of branches or shoots
two years to complete its growth caused by disease or pests, leading
cycle; as, Flowering biennials usu- to the death of the plant.
ally bloom in the second season. 15. bolt —[B] To produce seeds prema-
5. leach —[C] To dissolve out; as, turely; as, Lettuce tends to bolt in
Heavy rains have leached minerals midsummer heat. Old English
from the soil. Old English leccan (to (arrow).
water). 16. humus —[C] Organic residue in
6. drip line —[B] Perimeter of a tree soil; as, Topsoil is rich in humus.
where water drips from overhang- Latin (earth, ground).
ing leaves; as, Fertilize a tree along 17 . perennial —[D] Plant that grows
the drip line. back year after year for three sea-
7. thatch —[A] Buildup of dead grass sons or more. Latin perennis
between soil and lawn; as, Remove (through the year).
thatch so nutrients can reach the 18. deadhead —[A] To remove faded
soil. Old English theccan (to cover). or dead flowers; as, Deadhead plants
8. loam —[D] Rich, balanced, fertile to encourage further blooming.
soil; as, Loam holds moisture well. 19. trug —[C] Basket made of wood
Middle English lam (clay). strips for carrying flowers or veg-
9. variegated —[B] Having streaks or etables. British, of uncertain origin.
spots of different colors; as, varie- 20. rhizome —[A] Underground, hori-
gated ivy. zontal stem that produces shoots
10. heirloom —[B] Vegetable variety and roots; as, Most common irises
from the 19th century, preserved by grow from rhizomes. Greek rhiza
the passing of seeds from one gen- (root).
eration to the next; as, Heirlooms
are known for their robust flavor.
VOCABULARY RATINGS
10-14 Good 15-17 Excellent 18-20 Exceptional
22
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BIRD WORDS
We listen to their songs, watch them soar, and marvel at their lives, but only
a small percentage of us know many details about birds. That’s changing,
though—backyard bird watching is one of America’s fastest-growing hob-
bies. These words will help your knowledge of birds take flight.

1 . plumage n.—A: downward 10. chaparral n.—A: shrubby habitat.


swoop. B: feathers. C: dense for- B: windstorm. C: desert environ-
est. D: edible seeds. ment. D: marsh.
2. forage v.—A: to move forward. 11 . frugivorous adj.—feeding A: on
B: fly in circles. C: search for small mammals. B: frequently.
food. D: destroy crops. C: on fruit. D: on fish.
3. fledgling n.—A: distinctive mark- 12. predation n.—act of A: nesting.
ing. B: tightened claw. C: hawk B: migration. C: plundering.
trainer. D: young bird. D: reproduction.
4. granivorous adj.—feeding A: on 13. savanna n.—A: stream. B: migra-
greens. B: rarely. C: on grains. tory pattern. C: group of swans.
D: in flocks. D: grassland.
5. clutch n.—A: nest of eggs. B: spot 14. diurnal adj.—A: eating twice
for bird-watching. C: trained daily. B: active during daytime.
hawk. D: field mouse. C: in constant motion. D: prone
6. aquiline adj.—related to A: water- to sleeping for long periods of
fowl. B: eagles. C: small birds. time.
D: tropical breeds. 15. taxonomy n.—A: preservation of
7. carrion n.—A: type of buzzard. an animal group. B: studying
B: decaying flesh. C: mud nest. and tracking of species. C: clas-
D: bird-watching tool. sification of organisms. D: stuff-
ing of animals.
8. molt v.—A: to shed. B: build a
nest. C: migrate to the south. 16. crest n.—A: breast markings.
D: migrate to the north. B: perch. C: tail feather. D: tuft.
9. keratin n.—A: bird’s eye. B: type
of egret. C: substance in a bird’s
bill. D: kind of enclosure.

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WORD POWER I F AV O R I T E S U B J E C T S

ANSWERS
1 . plumage —[B] Feathers. You can 10. chaparral —[A] Habitat composed
always tell the cardinal by its dis- of shrubby plants adapted to dry
tinctive red plumage. summers and moist winters. As
2. forage —[C] To wander in search cities along California’s coast grow,
of food. Birds that don’t fly south chaparral is disappearing and some
for the winter must forage intensely birds are struggling to survive.
once the snow comes. 11 . frugivorous —[C] Feeding on fruit.
3. fledgling —[D] Young bird; imma- I put some apple slices in the feeder
ture, inexperienced person. We for the frugivorous birds.
were so happy to see the fledgling 12. predation —[C] Act of plundering
make his way back to the nest. or preying. There are few displays
4. granivorous —[C] Feeding on of predation as dramatic as a pere-
grains or seeds. Would a granivo- grine falcon swooping in for the
rous bird like a handful of Cheerios? kill.
5. clutch —[A] Nest of eggs; bunch or 13. savanna —[D] Mixture of grass-
group. My son’s class was surprised lands and scattered trees. You can
to come across a clutch of robins’ expect to see finches living in sa-
eggs during their nature walk today. vannas throughout the world.
6. aquiline —[B] Of, relating to, re- 14. diurnal —[B] Active chiefly in the
sembling an eagle; curving like an daytime; recurring daily. She wakes
eagle’s beak. From this angle, she up each morning to sounds of the
appears to have an extremely diurnal birds in her backyard trees.
aquiline profile. 15. taxonomy —[C] Classification, esp.
7. carrion —[B] Dead, decaying flesh. orderly classification of plants and
I’d rather not wind up as carrion for animals according to their natural
the buzzards. relationships. If you studied taxon-
omy, you’d know that blackbirds
8. molt —[A] To shed, as with feath- and orioles are closely related.
ers, hair, shell, horns; to cast off. I
am guessing that the bird will molt 16. crest —[D] Tuft on the head of a
when it gets a bit older. bird or other animal; something
suggesting an upper edge or limit.
9. keratin —[C] Fibrous protein that That kingfisher has a particularly
serves as the outer layer of a bird’s shaggy crest, don’t you think?
bill. Beneath the keratin cover, the
parrot’s beak has a bony frame.

VOCABULARY RATINGS
10-12 Good 13-14 Excellent 15-16 Exceptional
24
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FINANCE WORDS
Many people only focus on their financial condition around tax time. Still,
you can dazzle your accountant with your command of high-finance jargon
by learning these words of finance. Then drone on about your investment
savvy until his eyes glaze over. He’ll be putty in your hands.

1 . zombie n.—A: inept stockbroker. 9. bellwether n.—A: omen of a bear


B: insolvent company. C: little- market. B: name of the opening
traded security. D: write-off. bell on the NYSE. C: indicator
2. default v.—A: to fail to pay on of trends. D: blue-chip stock.
time. B: foreclose. C: engage in 10. annuity n.—A: canceled loan.
short-selling. D: forgive a loan. B: investment instrument. C: in-
3. insider n.—a person who A: re- surance policy. D: secret partner.
ports illegal practices. B: has 11 . hedge v.—to invest in order to
privileged information. C: pre- A: reduce risk. B: exclude cer-
dicts market changes. D: gos- tain industries. C: seem contrar-
sips. ian. D: support “green” causes.
4. teenie n.—A: penny stock. B: un- 12. shelter v.—A: to launder money.
dervalued fund. C: inexperi- B: reduce taxes. C: trick in-
enced trader. D: 1/16 of a point. vestors. D: protect assets.
5. fiduciary n.—one who A: holds 13. arbitrage n.—A: portfolio diver-
assets for another. B: gives fi- sification. B: earnings projec-
nancial advice. C: keeps stocks tion. C: illegal trading. D: simul-
long-term. D: offers credit. taneous buying and selling.
6. contrarian adj.—an investment 14. margin n.—A: use of borrowed
style that is A: deceptive. B: not funds to buy securities. B: profit.
profitable. C: cautious. C: difference between opening/
D: against market trends. closing price. D: loss.
7. prospectus n.—A: positive out- 15. OTC adj.—of A: small transac-
look. B: banking agreement. tions. B: unlisted stocks. C: P/E
C: profit-and-loss statement. ratios. D: brokers’ licenses.
D: formal business document.
8. syndicate n.—A: financial con-
sortium. B: banking agreement.
C: oil cartel. D: underwriter.

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WORD POWER I F AV O R I T E S U B J E C T S

ANSWERS
1 . zombie —[B] Insolvent company 9. bellwether —[C] A leading indica-
that is still doing business. You tor of trends. A bellwether stock can
know ... the living dead. Zombies are help traders gauge the direction of
an unwise investment. the market.
2. default —[A] Fail to pay interest or 10. annuity —[B] In its fixed form, it’s
principal when due. The IRS takes a an investment instrument that
dim view of taxpayers who default. makes predetermined payments
3. insider —[B] A person who has over a specific time period. A vari-
privileged, nonpublic information able annuity has a minimum guar-
about a company. Corporate direc- antee, but payments fluctuate.
tors and officers are insiders. 11 . hedge —[A] Invest to reduce the
4. teenie —[D] A measure of value (in risk of adverse changes in the price
the stock market) representing 1/16 of an asset. Investors often hedge
(.0625) of a point. The difference when they’re unsure where the
between the opening and closing market’s going.
price of a stock is often just a teenie. 12. shelter —[B] Reduce taxes by
5. fiduciary —[A] A person or insti- choosing investments offering fa-
tution legally authorized to hold as- vorable tax treatment. The IRS
sets in trust for another and to closely watches those who shelter
manage them for the other’s benefit. their income.
6. contrarian —[D] An investment 13. arbitrage —[D] Simultaneous sale
style that bucks market trends and and purchase of a security or com-
popular opinion. David Denby’s modity to profit from a price differ-
book American Sucker is a tale of ential, often on different exchanges.
contrarian investing. 14. margin —[A] Use of borrowed
7. prospectus —[D] A formal busi- money to purchase securities. In a
ness document with legal standing, margin account, the stocks you own
laying out a company’s capitaliza- are collateral for the loan. You
tion, sales projections and the like. could be forced to sell them if the
Investors should study a prospectus market fell and you got a margin
before putting money into an IPO. call.
8. syndicate —[A] Consortium of 15. OTC —[B] Of stocks unlisted on an
bankers, insurers and others who exchange (over-the-counter). The
temporarily work together on, say, NASDAQ is an OTC marketplace.
an underwriting to spread the risk.

VOCABULARY RATINGS
10-11 Good 12-13 Excellent 14-15 Exceptional
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ROOTS AND BRANCHES

WORDS WITH
INTERESTING ORIGINS
Ever wonder how words are born? If so, check out Word Histories and
Mysteries (American Heritage Dictionaries). This book probes the roots
of dozens of words we toss around every day. We tossed 16 of them into
this quiz.

1 . bumpkin n.—A: loudmouthed 9. pariah n.—A: talking bird. B: out-


pest. B: unsophisticated person. cast. C: tropical fruit. D: manner
C: poor relative. D: country of speaking.
road. 10. winsome adj.—A: victorious.
2. chortle v.—A: to jostle. B: resist B: cheerful. C: thoughtful. D: an-
strenuously. C: snort like a noying.
horse. D: chuckle. 11 . caprice n.—A: large beetle.
3. kiosk n.—A: vendor’s small B: ankle-length garment. C: leap.
structure. B: open-air theater. D: impulsive notion.
C: Russian pastry. D: wooden 12. pander v.—A: to cater to others’
barrel. weaknesses. B: praise. C: offer
4. filibuster v.—A: to cut patterns solutions. D: seek help from.
into. B: add to. C: delay so as to 13. hermetic adj.—A: wandering.
prevent action. D: punch softly. B. lonely, exiled. C: airtight, im-
5. dervish n.—A: tiny African ro- pervious. D: analytical.
dent. B: root vegetable. C: one 14. lucre n.—A: money. B: good for-
who dances wildly. D: layer of tune. C: clear in thought. D: lack
skin. of conviction.
6. hobnob v.—A: to avoid. B: ap- 15. internecine adj.—A: marked by
proach warily. C: associate fa- collaboration. B: endless. C: mu-
miliarly. D: stomp. tually destructive. D: infrequent.
7. ilk n.—A: sort or kind. B: Asian 16. zither n.—A: highest point.
fabric. C: type of hardwood tree. B: flowering shrub. C: arrow
D: opposite. holder. D: stringed instrument.
8. dirge n.—A: sharp edge. B: song
of grief. C: balloon-style airship.
D: uncontrolled anger.

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WORD POWER I ROOTS A N D B RA N C H ES

ANSWERS
1 . bumpkin —[B] Awkward, unso- 9. pariah —[B] Outcast.[Fr. Tamil
phisticated person.[Probably fr. paraiyan, “drummer” from lower
Middle Dutch bommekijn, “little class or caste.] The group may treat
barrel,” or Flemish boomken, a new member like a pariah.
“shrub.”] What sort of bumpkin eats 10. winsome —[B] Generally pleasing;
with his hands? cheerful.[Fr. Old English wynn,
2. chortle —[D] To laugh or chuckle, “joy.”] Your winsome expression
esp. in satisfaction.[Coined by tells me you’re happy to see me.
Lewis Carroll in Through the Look- 11 . caprice —[D] Impulsive notion.[Fr.
ing Glass, 1872.] Having aced the Italian capriccio, “state of fright” in
midterm, he chortled at the teacher. which one’s hairs stand up like
3. kiosk —[A] Small structure with those of a hedgehog.] Jetting off to
one or more open sides, used for Spain is the kind of caprice he’s
selling goods, services.[Fr. Turkish known for.
kösk, “pavilion.”] I get my gum at 12. pander —[A] To cater to others’
the kiosk near the bus stop. weaknesses.[Derived fr. Pandare in
4. filibuster —[C] Delay so as to pre- Chaucer’s Troilus and Criseyde, “go-
vent action, esp. in a legislative between in sexual intrigues, pro-
body.[Fr. Dutch vrijbuiter, “free- curer.”] Don’t pander to the voters.
booter,” via Spanish filibustero.] 13. hermetic —[C] Airtight; impervi-
Don’t try to filibuster your way out ous.[Fr. New Latin hermeticus, “per-
of doing your chores. taining to alchemy,” for Hermes,
5. dervish —[C] Member of Muslim Greek god of alchemy.] My con-
order known to move as though en- tainer has a hermetic seal.
tering a trance; one who dances 14. lucre —[A] Money; profit.[Fr. Latin
with the same abandon.[Fr. Persian lucrum, “monetary gain.”] Let’s split
darvesh, “religious mendicant.”] She the lucre from our lemonade stand.
moved like a whirling dervish.
15. internecine —[C] Mutually de-
6. hobnob —[C] To associate famil- structive.[Fr. Latin internecinus,
iarly; drink together.[Fr. Middle “murderous.”] The clash between
English hab or nab, “give or take.”] the seniors and freshmen is the
It’s time to hobnob with the bosses. worst internecine dispute this
7. ilk —[A] Sort or kind.[Fr. Old Eng- school has seen.
lish ilca, “same.”] I’m afraid I don’t 16. zither —[D] Stringed
like to read books of that ilk. instrument.[Fr. Latin cithara.] He’s a
8. dirge —[B] Song or hymn of pretty good guitar player, but I’m
grief.[Fr. Latin dirige, “direct.”] The not sure he’s ever tried his hand at
sadness of the funeral dirge haunts the zither.
me.

VOCABULARY RATINGS
10-12 Good 13-14 Excellent 15-16 Exceptional
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WORDS FROM ANCIENT GREECE


Thanks to their rotating summer and winter schedules, we are never more
than two years away from the next Olympics. Which means it’s always a
good time to tackle words with roots in ancient Greece. Consider this quiz
something of a vocabulary odyssey—and let the games begin.

1 . cacophony n.—A: false state- 10. panorama n.—A: movie screen.


ment. B: sweet chocolate cake. B: all-night diner. C: arid plain.
C: ancient casket. D: harsh D: unobstructed view in all di-
sound. rections.
2. oenophile n.—A: food lover. 11 . paradigm n.—A: clear example.
B: wine lover. C: wine hater. B: brief drumroll. C: best of its
D: purple flower. kind. D: set of two coins.
3. spartan adj.—A: vast. B: lacking 12. demagogue v.—A: to lead by
in luxury. C: combative. D: of a emotional appeal. B: show.
checked or plaid design. C: discuss politics. D: explain in
4. synthesize v.—A: to make from shorthand.
plastic. B: grow. C: combine. D: 13. onomatopoeic adj.—related to
develop a theory. A: words that sound like what
5. calisthenics n.—A: rubbing of they mean. B: dry atmosphere.
rough skin. B: tong-like tool. C: nomadic people. D: free-verse
C: form of exercise. D: changes. poetry.
6. calliope n.—A: disaster. B: pre- 14. ethos n.—A: upper regions of
cise handwriting. C: organ-like space. B: sympathy. C: guiding
instrument. D: unwelcome beliefs. D: shame.
guest. 15. euphoric adj.—A: harmonious.
7. asphyxiate v.—A: to clean skin. B: elated. C: rural. D: inherited.
B: help breathe. C: become ob- 16. synchronize v.—A: to fix. B: turn
sessed with. D: deny breath. repeatedly. C: share. D: make
8. Arcadian adj.—A: pastoral. happen at the same time.
B: birdlike. C: related to coin-
operated games. D: dark green.
9. tautological adj.—A: redundant.
B: tight. C: illogical. D: relating
to ships and sea.

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WORD POWER I ROOTS A N D B RA N C H ES

ANSWERS
1 . cacophony —[D] Harsh or discor- 9. tautological —[A] Redundant;
dant sound. How am I supposed to containing needless repetition.
get to sleep with that constant ca- “The giant was big” is a tautological
cophony coming from upstairs? statement, to say the least.
2. oenophile —[B] Lover or connois- 10. panorama —[D] Unobstructed or
seur of wine. You’re known as such complete view of an area in every
an oenophile that I’d rather let you direction. You can’t beat the
pick the wine. panorama from the top of the Em-
3. spartan —[B] Marked by simplic- pire State Building.
ity, or avoidance of luxury. I’m 11 . paradigm —[A] Example, espe-
ditching all my electronic devices cially an outstandingly clear or typi-
and living a more spartan lifestyle. cal one. For a literary paradigm in
4. synthesize —[C] To combine parts the area of obsession, see Captain
to form a whole. Try to synthesize Ahab in Moby Dick.
your skills into an exciting new ca- 12. demagogue —[A] To lead by using
reer. emotional appeals and popular prej-
5. calisthenics —[C] Systematic, udices. Why is he trying to dema-
rhythmic bodily exercises. Let’s do gogue his way to victory if he knows
calisthenics every day before lunch it’s wrong?
to try to improve the children’s fit- 13. onomatopoeic —[A] Related to the
ness. use of words whose sound suggest
6. calliope —[C] Keyboard instru- their sense. Terms like buzz and
ment resembling an organ, consist- hiss give her poetry an ono-
ing of whistles sounded by steam or matopoeic quality.
compressed air. The carousel 14. ethos —[C] Distinguishing charac-
slowed to a stop, but the calliope ter, sentiment, moral nature or
played on. guiding beliefs. The idea of cheat-
7. asphyxiate —[D] To cause a lack ing in any way offends my personal
of oxygen in the body, usually by in- ethos.
terruption of breathing. I know you 15. euphoric —[B] Elated. The eu-
didn’t ask my opinion, but I think phoric smile on my face is there be-
you should loosen that tie before cause I just found out I’m getting a
you asphyxiate yourself. raise.
8. Arcadian —[A] Idyllically pastoral, 16. synchronize —[D] Make happen or
innocent or simple. Taking in the exist at precisely the same time.
Arcadian view from the farmhouse Let’s synchronize our departures so
porch, I decided I needed more we both get to the stadium at 6:30.
time off before returning to the city.

VOCABULARY RATINGS
9-10 Bronze 11-13 Silver 14-16 Gold
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WORDS FROM GAELIC


Sláinte is táinte! (slawn-chuh iss tawn-chuh!) That’s an Irish toast to your
health and wealth. That might be a new expression for you, but you’ll likely
be surprised by the number of words that made their way into English from
Gaelic, the parent language of Irish and Scots Gaelic. Here are 17 good ones.

1 . keen v.—A: to sail. B: shout. 11 . brogue n.—A: dishonest person.


C: giggle. D: wail. B: shoe. C: elaborate needle-
2. smidgen n.—A: smear of mud or work. D: foreign language.
dirt. B: short person. C: small 12. dun adj.—A: grayish brown.
amount. D: tiny dove. B: boring. C: uneducated. D: mo-
3. bard n.—one who A: is excluded. rose.
B: is angry. C: rides horses. 13. kibosh n.—A: bad advice.
D: writes poetry. B: magic spell. C: nonsense.
4. cairn n.—A: alligator. B: collec- D: smoked sausage.
tion of stones. C: spinning 14. slew n.—A: large number.
wheel. D: statue. B: hunter’s kill. C: horse-drawn
5. smithereens n.—A: deep valleys. carriage. D: chimney air duct.
B: particles of dirt. C: silver 15. glean v.—A: to garden. B: polish
pitchers. D: small pieces. to a bright shine. C: scowl.
6. glom v.—A: to grab. B: boast. D: gather.
C: indulge. D: depress. 16. hooligan n.—A: thug. B: tin whis-
7. galore adv.—A: in excess. B: in an tle player. C: commotion.
awkward manner. C: in plentiful D: street gang.
amounts. D: in an elegant way. 17. slogan n.—A: long walk. B: un-
8. dour adj.—A: sullen. B: brave. tidy person. C: distinctive
C: tart. D: penniless. phrase. D: rhyming song.
9. reel v.—A: to capsize. B: sway.
C: catch. D: sympathize.
10. blather v.—A: to annoy. B: wash.
C: stutter. D: talk foolishly.

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WORD POWER I ROOTS A N D B RA N C H ES

ANSWERS
1 . keen —[D] To wail in lament for 11 . brogue —[B] Sturdy shoe (and
the dead; as, While the bagpipes originally a peasant’s heavy shoe);
played, the keening widow was led also, strong Irish accent in the pro-
from the church. As an adjective, nunciation of English. Irish bróg
keen means acute or piercing. From (shoe).
the Irish caoine (lament). 12. dun —[A] A dull grayish brown.
2. smidgen —[C] A small amount; as, Also, a description of a horse of that
The photographer asked the girl to color. From Old Irish donn (dark).
move a smidgen to the left. From 13. kibosh —[C] Nonsense; most often
Gaelic smidin or smitch (small used in the phrase “put the kibosh
amount or insignificant person). on,” meaning put an end to. Perhaps
3. bard —[D] Once, a person who from Gaelic cie báis (cap of death).
wrote and recited epic poetry; Kye-bosh was used in Dickens’s
today, an accomplished poet. From Sketches of Boz, 1836.
bàrd (poet of a certain rank). 14. slew —[A] A large number or
4. cairn —[B] A pile of stones set up quantity; as, A slew of people
as a monument or landmark. From waited for the mayor-elect to arrive.
càrn (heap, pile). From Irish sluagh (crowd or army).
5. smithereens —[D] Small pieces; 15. glean —[D] To gather, learn, find
as, The mirror was broken into out; as, The detective tried to glean
smithereens. From the Irish clues from the crime scene. From
smidiríní (fragment, little bits). Old Irish do-glenn (he gathers).
6. glom —[A] To catch or grab; to 16. hooligan —[A] A young thug or
steal. From glam (snatch at, grab). street hoodlum. From Irish surname
7. galore —[C] In plentiful amounts; Houlihan or O hUallachain. An
as, The victory was celebrated with 1890s music-hall song about the
food and drink galore. Irish go leor, rowdy Hooligan family was popular
Gaelic gu leòr (enough, plenty). at the same time that a street gang
of that name terrorized London.
8. dour —[A] Sullen; gloomy; as, The
headmaster had a dour disposition. 17 . slogan —[C] A distinctive phrase
Gaelic dùr (rough and rocky land), often associated with a product or
borrowed from the Latin durus political party; as, Eisenhower cam-
(hard and severe). paigners wore buttons with the slo-
gan “I Like Ike.” From Irish slogorne
9. reel —[B] To sway from a blow or (battle cry), Gaelic sluagh ghairm
shock, often as in dizziness; as, Her (army cry; call to the multitude).
mind reeled at her husband’s accu-
sation. Also, as a noun, a Celtic
dance. Gaelic righil.
10. blather —[D] To talk foolishly or
babble; as, He blathered on, making
feeble excuses. Gaelic blether or VOCABULARY RATINGS
11-13 Good 14-15 Excellent 16-17 Exceptional
bladar (chatter).
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WORDS THAT START WITH “QU”


We wanted to think up a quirky quiz, something a little queer and quixotic,
and it came to us! Here are 16 words that start with “qu”—some common,
some quite challenging. But don’t quit!

1 . quisling n.—A: traitor. B: young 10. quiescent adj.—A: psychic.


goose. C: hissing sound. D: ec- B: translucent. C: inactive. D: in
centric person. turmoil.
2. quiddity n.—A: oddness. B: finan- 11 . quixotic adj.—A: impractical.
cial security. C: fine point. B: mesmerizing. C: sappy.
D: stock transaction. D: mood-altering.
3. query v.—A: to dig deep. B: ques- 12. quell v.—A: to sound off. B: sur-
tion. C: accuse. D: explore. render. C: usurp. D: suppress.
4. quidnunc n.—A: falsehood. 13. quibble v.—A: to bicker. B: make
B: snow shelter. C: busybody. bets. C: fidget. D: play mind
D: clam from Maine. games.
5. querulous adj.—A: ornery. B: in- 14. quorum n.—A: Senate chamber.
quisitive. C: open to criticism. B: medicinal substance. C: ma-
D: full of complaints. jority. D: Arabic letter.
6. quizzical adj.—A: comical. 15. quail v.—A: to cry loudly.
B: stumped. C: watchful. D: full B: shiver from the cold. C: feel
of questions. under the weather. D: lose heart.
7. quintessence n.—A: uniqueness. 16. quantum adj.—A: related to as-
B: credibility. C: sweetest part. tronomy. B: significant. C: math-
D: purest form. ematical. D: giant-sized.
8. quasar n.—A: celestial object.
B: laser gun. C: molecule.
D: ousted dictator.
9. quandary n.—A: word puzzle.
B: dilemma. C: English maze of
hedges. D: target.

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WORD POWER I ROOTS A N D B RA N C H ES

ANSWERS
1 . quisling —[A] Traitor; someone 10. quiescent —[C] Inactive, at rest; as,
who double-crosses his country by A winter landscape often appears
aiding an invading enemy. After Vid- quiescent. Latin, from the present
kun Quisling, the Norwegian politi- participle of quiescere (to rest).
cian who betrayed his country to the 11 . quixotic —[A] Impractical; foolishly
Nazis and became its puppet ruler. idealistic, like Don Quixote, hero of
2. quiddity —[C] Fine point or subtle the Cervantes novel, who tries in a
distinction in an argument; as, The chivalrous but unrealistic way to res-
professor’s erudition made it difficult cue the oppressed and fight evil; as,
to grasp the quiddity of his lecture. Some people consider Ralph Nader
Latin quidditas (essence of a thing). to be a quixotic crusader.
3. query —[B] To question, ask about; 12. quell —[D] To suppress, silence; as,
as, Few people queried his absence The police were called to quell the
from the office. Latin quaere. disturbance in the neighborhood.
4. quidnunc —[C] Busybody; person Old English cwellan (to kill).
eager to know the latest news and 13. quibble —[A] To bicker or complain
gossip; as, Our chatty barber is also about trivial matters; as, With all the
the local quidnunc. Latin, literally couple’s quibbling, it’s a wonder
“what now?” they’re still together. From Latin quis
5. querulous —[D] Full of complaints; (who) and then quibus (by what
given to finding fault; as, He was an- things), which gave rise to the noun
noyed with all her querulous re- form of quibble (equivocation).
marks. Latin queri (to complain). 14. quorum —[C] A majority, in most
6. quizzical —[A] Comical; also, puz- cases; the number of members of a
zled. As the little girl took a bite of group required to be present to
spinach, the quizzical look on her conduct official business; as, With-
face made her family laugh. out a quorum, the board of directors
couldn’t pass the resolution.
7. quintessence —[D] The purest
essence or form of a thing. In an- 15. quail —[D] To lose heart or
cient philosophy, the fifth essence courage in the face of difficulties or
was believed to compose the heav- danger; as, A Doberman will not
enly bodies. Latin quinta (fifth) es- quail from an intruder. Middle
sentia (essence). Dutch quelen (suffer, be ill).
8. quasar —[A] Celestial object that 16. quantum —[B] Significant and sud-
emits powerful light and radio den; as, The company experienced
waves from beyond our galaxy. a quantum increase in productivity.
Originally an acronym coined in the Latin quantus (how much).
1960s from quasi-stellar object.
9. quandary —[B] Dilemma; state of
uncertainty; as, Difficult decisions
can often leave one in a quandary. VOCABULARY RATINGS
Unknown origin. 10-12 Good 13-14 Excellent 15-16 Exceptional
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WORDS THAT CONTAIN “TEN”


Let us honor the number ten by challenging ourselves with words that
begin or end with it. Listen for the ten in everyday words: Often it’s shy and
silent, but other times it’s bold, demanding your attention.

1 . tenacious adj.—A: vicious. B: ex- 10. christen v.—A: to name. B: in-


tremely ambitious. C: persistent. duct. C: pray. D: sprinkle.
D: succulent. 11 . tendril n.—A: bird call. B: ballet
2. chasten v.—A: to rub raw. move. C: threadlike plant organ.
B: scold. C: follow closely. D: hat.
D: seal tightly. 12. batten n.—A: hood. B: strip of
3. tendentious adj.—A: biased. wood. C: wand. D: boat.
B: risky. C: superficial. D: arro- 13. tenet n.—A: small covering.
gant. B: Eastern philosophy. C: doc-
4. molten adj.—A: milky. B: feath- trine. D: lodger.
ery. C: glowing. D: liquefied by 14. hearten v.—A: palpitate. B: irk.
heat. C: endear. D: encourage.
5. tenor n.—A: portly Italian man. 15. tender v.—A: to offer formally.
B: purport. C: high point. B: count. C: marinate. D: mas-
D: wooden flute. sage.
6. tauten v.—A: to genuflect. B: in- 16. heighten v.—A: inform. B: salute.
struct. C: tease. D: tighten up. C: intensify. D: stimulate.
7. marten n.—A: cat. B: weasel. 17. tenderfoot n.—A: young boy.
C: tropical bird. D: fish. B: novice. C: hiker. D: horse
8. tensile adj.—A: stretchable. trainer.
B: shimmery. C: slender. D: on
edge.
9. tenuous adj.—A: rigid. B: abrupt.
C: plentiful. D: flimsy.

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WORD POWER I ROOTS A N D B RA N C H ES

ANSWERS
1 . tenacious —[C] Persistent in ad- 9. tenuous —[D] Flimsy; lacking a
hering to something valued or ha- sound basis; as, The judge dis-
bitual; highly retentive; as, a missed the lawsuit because of tenu-
tenacious memory. Latin tenax ous evidence. Latin tenuitas
(holding fast). (thinness).
2. chasten —[B] Scold; punish with 10. christen —[A] To name; dedicate;
the aim of correcting or improving; baptize; as, The owner christened
also, to purify; as, Reward humility, his yacht with a bottle of Dom
chasten pridefulness. Old French Pérignon. Old English cristen.
chastier. 11 . tendril —[C] Threadlike, often spi-
3. tendentious —[A] Biased; favoring ral part of a climbing plant used for
or promoting a point of view; as, support; as, Tendrils from a pump-
Talk-show hosts often take a ten- kin covered the garden fence. Mid-
dentious approach to topics. Latin dle French tendron (a sprout).
tendentia (tendency). 12. batten —[B] Board or strip of
4. molten —[D] Liquefied by heat; as, wood used on sailboats and in con-
Molten lava from Hawaii’s Kilauea struction to span joints or reinforce.
volcano is a constant threat to Middle English batent (finished
nearby homes. From Greek meldein board).
(to melt). 13. tenet —[C] Any doctrine, principle
5. tenor —[B] Purport; drift or gen- or opinion held as true by a group;
eral meaning; also, the second high- as, the tenets of conservatism. From
est range of the male singing voice; Latin tenere (to hold).
as, The tenor of the President’s 14. hearten —[D] Encourage; cheer
speech was patriotic. Latin tenere up; as, Your kind words heartened
(to hold). me. Middle English herte.
6. tauten —[D] To tighten or pull 15. tender —[A] To make an official
close together. Old English togian offer; present formally for accept-
(to pull). ance; as, to tender one’s resignation.
7. marten —[B] Member of the 16. heighten —[C] Intensify; increase;
weasel family, which lives in north- as, Musical scores helped heighten
ern forests and is prized for its fur. suspense in Hitchcock films. From
Middle English martren. Old English hiehtho.
8. tensile —[A] Capable of being 17 . tenderfoot —[B] Novice; raw, inex-
stretched or drawn out; as, Plastics perienced person; also, newcomer
are tested for tensile strength. Latin to ranching or mining lands in the
tensus. Old West.

VOCABULARY RATINGS
10-13 Good 14-15 Excellent 16-17 Exceptional
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ADVERBS
Here we spotlight the most versatile modifiers in the English language—
the adroit adverbs. They usually wear an -ly ending like an ID badge and
stand ready and able to intensify verbs, amplify adjectives or even rev up
other adverbs.

1 . jauntily—A: with jerky motion. 11 . inscrutably—A: solemnly.


B: in a lively manner. C: heavily. B: with great tenderness.
D: at an angle. C: mysteriously. D: without
2. wantonly—A: drily. B: rudely. laughing.
C: unjustifiably. D: seriously. 12. eminently—A: quietly. B: with
3. contritely—A: pompously. B: in modesty. C: very. D: religiously.
brief. C: humbly. D: at rest. 13. expeditiously—A: selfishly.
4. pusillanimously—A: cordially. B: with curiosity. C: in an effi-
B: aggressively. C: with sarcasm. cient way. D: laboriously.
D: timidly. 14. egregiously—A: violently. B: ex-
5. manifestly—A: aptly. B: regu- tremely. C: superbly. D: eagerly.
larly. C: plainly. D: with skill. 15. indubitably—A: formally. B: in
6. ignominiously—A: in a tasteful an awkward way. C: without
way. B: without grounds. C: fool- question. D: easily.
ishly. D: dishonorably. 16. decorously—A: heavily. B: po-
7. unequivocally—A: cruelly. litely. C: warmly. D: vigorously.
B: conclusively. C: harmlessly. 17. blithely—A: sadly. B: hopelessly.
D: uncomfortably. C: with sly intent. D: cheerfully.
8. meretriciously—A: with merit. 18. vicariously—A: loudly. B: by sub-
B: deceptively. C: neatly. D: joy- stitute. C: with deliberation.
fully. D: daringly.
9. obsequiously—A: cruelly. B: in a 19. utterly—A: repeatedly. B: in no
stubborn way. C: proudly. D: like time. C: fully. D: superficially.
a servant. 20. preposterously—A: absurdly.
10. profusely—A: in a stingy man- B: boringly. C: humorously.
ner. B: without limitation. D: unconventionally.
C: subtly. D: obscenely.

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WORD POWER I ROOTS A N D B RA N C H ES

ANSWERS
1 . jauntily —[B] In a lively manner; 11 . inscrutably —[C] Mysteriously; in
lightly; as, The actor stepped jaun- an incomprehensible way; as, The
tily onto the stage. From French judge gazed inscrutably at the jury.
gentil (noble, gentle). 12. eminently —[C] Very; to a high de-
2. wantonly —[C] Unjustifiably; reck- gree; as, She is eminently qualified.
lessly; as, They wantonly disregard Latin eminere (to stand out).
my advice. Middle English wan- 13. expeditiously —[C] In an efficient
towen (undisciplined). way; speedily; as, We reached our
3. contritely —[C] Humbly; with re- destination expeditiously. Latin ex-
morse and regret; as, She sighed pedire (literally, to free the feet, as
contritely over her error. From Latin from a trap).
contritus (worn down). 14. egregiously —[B] Extremely; in a
4. pusillanimously —[D] Timidly; in notorious or glaring fashion; as, His
a faint-hearted way; as, He left the behavior was egregiously selfish.
room pusillanimously at the first Latin egregius (preeminent).
hint of discord. Latin pusillus (very 15. indubitably —[C] Without ques-
small) and animus (spirit). tion or doubt; as, indubitably true.
5. manifestly —[C] Plainly; in a way 16. decorously —[B] Politely; with
that is easily understood; as, a mani- proper manners; as, The audience
festly wise decision. Latin manufes- applauded decorously. Latin decor
tus (literally, struck with the hand). (grace, beauty).
6. ignominiously —[D] Dishonorably; 17 . blithely —[D] Cheerfully; in a
with disgrace; as, to retreat igno- lighthearted, carefree way; as, Chil-
miniously. Latin ignominia (literally, dren blithely ignore our cautions.
depriving of one’s name).
18. vicariously —[B] By substitute;
7. unequivocally —[B] Conclusively; through the experience of another;
without conditions; as, I support as, vicariously thrilling. Latin vicar-
him unequivocally. From un- (not) ius (substituting).
and Latin aequivocus (ambiguous).
19. utterly —[C] Fully; to a total ex-
8. meretriciously —[B] Deceptively; tent; as, The house was utterly
in an insincere or vulgar way; as, He ruined. Middle English utter (out-
argued meretriciously. Latin mere- ward).
trix (prostitute).
20. preposterously —[A] Absurdly;
9. obsequiously —[D] Like a servant; ridiculously; as, He was preposter-
obediently; as, The staff was obse- ously underdressed for the occa-
quiously attendant to their boss’s sion. Latin praeposterus (literally,
needs. Latin obsequi (to yield). with the back part forward).
10. profusely —[B] Without limitation;
extravagantly; as, She praised the
policeman profusely. Latin profun-
dere (to pour forth). VOCABULARY RATINGS
10-14 Good 15-17 Excellent 18-20 Exceptional
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FUN WITH LANGUAGE

COMMONLY
MISPRONOUNCED WORDS
What a difference one little letter (or two) makes—between saying some-
thing correctly and putting your foot in your mouth! This quiz consists of
commonly mispronounced words. The wrong—but popular—way to say
them is in parentheses next to the word. (And in a few cases, the “wrong”
way is in the dictionary.)

1 . cardsharp (card shark) n.— 10. pernickety (persnickety) adj.—


A: cheater. B: expert. C: magi- A: spiteful. B: fussy. C: whole-
cian. D: Japanese delicacy. some. D: greedy.
2. affidavit (affadavid) n.—A: sum- 11 . tenterhooks (tenderhooks) n.—
mons. B: statement. C: religious Nails that hold: A. meat. B: flags.
tract. D: court order. C: clothing. D: plants.
3. lambaste (lambast) v.—A: to 12. candidate (cannidate) n.—A: op-
shear wool. B: stitch. C: berate. ponent. B: seeker. C: revealing
D: saturate. photo. D: apology.
4. miniature (miniture) adj.— 13. founder (flounder) v.—A: to
A: shriveled up. B: microscopic. swim poorly. B: stumble. C: dis-
C: reduced. D: invisible. cover. D: forget.
5. liable (libel) adj.—A: flexible. 14. asterisk (asterik) n.—A: danger.
B: dishonest. C: at fault. D: re- B: space rock. C: computer chip.
sponsible. D: starlike mark.
6. orient (orientate) v.—A: to re- 15. prerogative (perogative) n.—
main still. B: adjust. C: look A: opinion. B: wealth. C: privi-
skyward. D: spin around. lege. D: knowledge.
7. peremptory (preemptory) adj.— 16. relevant (revelant) adj.—A: en-
A: final. B: interrupted. C: re- lightening. B: boisterous.
quired. D: depleted. C: important. D: relating to.
8. barbiturate (barbituate) n.— 17. excerpt (excerp) n.—A: plagia-
A: tonic. B: sharp object. rism. B: selection. C: bestseller.
C: sedative. D: cleaning agent. D: omission.
9. dilate (dialate) v.—A: stall. B: ex- 18. recur (reoccur) v.—A: to agree.
pand. C: swell. D: contract. B: heal. C: happen. D: pester.

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WORD POWER I FUN WITH LANGUAGE

ANSWERS
1 . cardsharp —[A] Professional 11 . tenterhooks —[C] Hooks or bent
cheater at cards; as, Saloons of the nails on a framework that hold cloth
Old West were full of cardsharps. taut for setting and drying. Often
2. affidavit —[B] Written statement used to signify tension or suspense;
given under oath; as, an affidavit as, The murder mystery kept him
submitted to the court. Latin fidere on tenterhooks. French tendre (to
(to trust). stretch).
3. lambaste —[C] Berate; scold; also 12. candidate —[B] Seeker of office;
beat or whip soundly; as, The someone vying for a position or se-
mayor lambasted the crooked police lected for an honor; as, the best can-
chief. Of Scandinavian origin. didate for the job. Latin candidus
(white), a reference to the togas
4. miniature —[C] Reduced; on small worn by office seekers in ancient
scale. Originally, small pictures in Rome.
medieval manuscripts. Latin
miniare (to color with red lead). 13. founder —[B] Stumble; fail utterly;
to fill with water and sink as with
5. liable —[D] Responsible; legally ships; as, The project foundered.
obligated; likely to suffer from; as, Old French fondrer (fall to the bot-
Manufacturers are liable for prod- tom).
uct defects. Old French lier (to
bind). 14. asterisk —[D] Small starlike sym-
bol used in writing and printing as a
6. orient —[B] To adjust to one’s cir- reference mark, omission, etc. From
cumstances or surroundings, espe- the Greek aster (star).
cially in reference to the east. Latin
oriens (sunrise). 15. prerogative —[C] Privilege or
right by virtue of rank or position;
7. peremptory —[A] Final; leaving no as, woman’s prerogative to change
opportunity for debate or denial; as, her mind. Latin (voting first).
her peremptory refusal to share cus-
tody. Latin perimere (to destroy). 16. relevant —[D] Relating to the mat-
ter at hand; pertinent; as, informa-
8. barbiturate —[C] Sedative; hyp- tion relevant to the case. Latin
notic drug; as, Doctors may pre- relevare (to lift up).
scribe barbiturates to treat
insomnia. 17 . excerpt —[B] Small selection from
a book or document; as, The author
9. dilate —[B] To expand; make discussed an excerpt of his novel.
wider; as, Her eyes dilated with sur- Latin excerpere (to pick out).
prise. Latin dilatare (spread out).
18. recur —[C] To happen again; re-
10. pernickety —[B] Fussy; hard to turn to mind, as recurring thoughts
please; meticulous; as, Editors are of one’s first love. Latin recurrere (to
known to be pernickety about gram- run back).
mar. Scottish.
VOCABULARY RATINGS
10-12 Good 13-15 Excellent 16-18 Exceptional
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WONDERFUL WORD PAIRS


Some words have been together so long they’re like old married folks.
Where would hunky be without dory? High and dry, that’s where! In this
quiz we’ve gathered the Fred and Gingers of our language.

1 . cut and run v.—A: to dance. 9. hue and cry n.—A: complaints.
B: take a loss. C: depart. D: sail B: struggle. C: regrets. D: public
into the wind. clamor.
2. flotsam and jetsam n.—A: valu- 10. dark horse n.—A: long shot.
ables. B: useless items. C: fishing B: outsider. C: guarded secret.
tackle. D: chemical by-products. D: Independent party candidate.
3. talk turkey v.—A: to speak in 11 . nip and tuck adj.—A: closely con-
code. B: speak candidly. C: hag- tested. B: aesthetically superior.
gle. D: mislead. C: stylishly dressed. D: tipsy.
4. paper tiger n.—A: weak nation. 12. lion’s share n.—A: stolen goods.
B: phony corporation. C: child’s B: the best portion. C: surplus.
party game. D: fallen regime. D: controlling interest.
5. red herring n.—A: fish from trop- 13. hem and haw v.—A: to sew.
ical waters. B: chess move. B: dawdle. C: delay. D: hesitate.
C: misleading clue. D: down- 14. cloud nine n.—A: grave circum-
and-out neighborhood. stance. B: freedom. C: purgatory.
6. yin and yang n.—principles of D: state of exaltation.
A: harmony. B: Chinese medi- 15. sticky wicket n.—A: scandal.
cine. C: physics. D conflict reso- B: lewd remark. C: awkward sit-
lution. uation. D: opponent.
7. mumbo jumbo n.—A: babble.
B: seafood stew. C: excuses.
D. spice mixture.
8. hammer and tongs adv.—A: with
proper training. B: noisily.
C: willy-nilly. D: vigorously.

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WORD POWER I FUN WITH LANGUAGE

ANSWERS
1 . cut and run —[C] Depart; leave felons were obliged to shout or cry
hastily; as, Hosts don’t like guests out if they spotted the culprit.
who cut and run. From the days Anglo-French hu et cri.
when ships had ropes of hemp. To 10. dark horse —[A] Long shot; an al-
leave a mooring quickly, a sailor most unknown contestant regarded
could cut the vessel’s anchor rope. by just a few as the likely winner; as,
2. flotsam and jetsam —[B] Useless Being a dark horse candidate, the
items; odds and ends. Literally, cargo politician’s odds of media coverage
thrown overboard. Old French floter were slim. A horse-racing term.
(to float) and Latin jactare (to throw). 11 . nip and tuck —[A] Closely con-
3. talk turkey —[B] To speak can- tested; equally likely to win or lose;
didly, frankly. Possibly from talks as, The two boys were nip and tuck
between Indians and settlers about in the spelling bee.
the wild turkey supply, or from 12. lion’s share —[B] The biggest and
hunters mimicking bird sounds. best part, or the entire thing; as, Ac-
4. paper tiger —[A] A country or cording to the will, the oldest
person appearing powerful but daughter gets the lion’s share of the
weak in actuality. Oriental in origin. inheritance. From the Aesop’s fable
5. red herring —[C] Misleading clue; in which the lion takes all the spoils
diversion; also, a financial prospec- of a hunt.
tus issued before an IPO. From the 13. hem and haw —[D] To hesitate
practice of dragging a fish across a while talking; speak noncommit-
trail to mislead fox hunting dogs. tally; as, He hemmed and hawed to
6. yin and yang —[A] Principles of avoid answering. Originating in the
harmony and balance. In Chinese 17th century, this term echoed the
philosophy, yin represents the nega- sound of someone clearing his
tive, dark and feminine; yang, the throat (as in Ahem!) and then stam-
positive, bright and masculine. Op- mering to find the right words.
posite yet complementary, their in- 14. cloud nine —[D] State of exaltation
teraction influences our destiny. or euphoria; as, I’ve been on cloud
7. mumbo jumbo —[A] Babble; sense- nine since hearing the good news.
less language meant to confuse; also, Supposedly a meteorological term
an incantation. From a West African for the cumulonimbus cloud, which
word for a masked figure. stretches vertically to great heights.

8. hammer and tongs —[D] Vigor- 15. sticky wicket —[C] Awkward situ-
ously; with great energy and deter- ation. In cricket, a wicket is the set
mination; as, He went at the project of sticks in the ground at which the
hammer and tongs. Reflecting the bowler aims the ball. This area be-
use of a blacksmith’s main tools. comes “sticky” and difficult to play
in during damp weather.
9. hue and cry —[D] Public clamor or
outcry; as, a hue and cry against the VOCABULARY RATINGS
war. Historically, those in pursuit of 10-12 Good 12-13 Excellent 14-15 Exceptional
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SMALL WORDS
WITH BIG MEANINGS
You’ve likely heard the expression “Big things come in little packages.” For
proof, consider these puny but powerful words. Despite having just three or
four letters, these words add oomph to sentences like hot sauces add spark
to food.

1 . mote n.—A: meaningless argu- 10. ergo conj.—A. however. B: never-


ment. B: deep trench. C: small theless. C: unless. D: therefore.
speck. D: brief correspondence. 11 . mar v.—A: to damage. B: normal-
2. coy adj.—A. cowardly. B: modest. ize. C: meet expectations. D: vi-
C: hooded. D: crude. brate or shake.
3. jibe v.—A: to be in harmony. 12. pall v.—A: to grow cloudy. B: be-
B: play jazz music. C: tease re- come tiresome. C: horrify.
lentlessly. D: cast away. D: conduct an opinion survey.
4. crux n.—A: calamity. B: cross- 13. apt adj.—A: off topic. B: agile.
piece on a ladder. C: construc- C: oafish. D: likely.
tion debris. D: main point. 14. glib adj.—A: readily fluent. B: sar-
5. mete v.—A: to whine or com- castic. C: flashy. D: malicious.
plain. B: introduce. C: distribute. 15. gawk v.—A: to exhale deeply.
D: act submissively. B: stare stupidly. C: talk inces-
6. faux adj.—A: socially embarrass- santly. D: wish.
ing. B: alluring. C: critically 16. wry adj.—A: distilled. B: twisted.
flawed. D: artificial. C: painful. D: torn up.
7. opus n.—A: artistic composition. 17. rout n., v.—A: overwhelming de-
B: sea animal. C: visual lens. feat. B: heated quarrel. C: spe-
D: ornamental border. cific course. D: fixed procedure.
8. noir adj.—A: bleakly pessimistic. 18. boor n.—someone who is A: dull.
B: tightly coiled. C: offensive. B: shy. C: rude. D: loud.
D: overly harsh.
9. tic n.—A: spot of color. B: blood-
sucking arachnid. C: sudden
spasm. D: end of a pencil.

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WORD POWER I FUN WITH LANGUAGE

ANSWERS
1 . mote (rhymes with moat) —[C] 10. ergo (ur go) —[D] Therefore; as, I
Small speck or particle, especially think, ergo I am (Cogito ergo sum).
of dust; as, Oscar was a slob and A Latin word, most commonly
Felix despised every mote of dust. found in legal and scientific docu-
2. coy (rhymes with Roy) —[B] Mod- ments.
est; affectedly shy or reserved; as, 11 . mar —[A] Damage the attractive-
She was coy about whether she and ness or appeal of someone or some-
her boyfriend planned marriage. thing; as, The antique armoire was
3. jibe —[A] Be in harmony or agree; marred by several deep gouges.
as, Reports of the housing market’s 12. pall (rhymes with fall) —[B] Be-
decline don’t jibe with the facts. come tiresome; make dull or dis-
4. crux —[D] Main point; heart of the tasteful; as, The novelty of my job
matter; as, The district attorney palled after a few weeks of commut-
quickly got to the crux of his closing ing.
argument. 13. apt —[D] Likely, prone; suitable for
5. mete (rhymes with meet) —[C] Dis- the purpose; as, an apt remark.
tribute; apportion by measure; as, A Also, quick to learn, bright.
will metes assets to heirs. 14. glib —[A] Readily fluent, often in-
6. faux (rhymes with foe) —[D] Artifi- sincerely so; quick with a response;
cial; fake; as, Some people wear as, The crowd at the town meeting
faux fur for ideological reasons. But found the mayor’s assurances too
a faux pas is a socially embarrassing glib.
mistake. 15. gawk (rhymes with walk) —
7. opus (oh pis) —[A] Artistic compo- [B] Stare stupidly; gape; as, It’s hard
sition, usually numbered in music; not to gawk at celebrities you see.
literary work; as, The author la- 16. wry (rhymes with rye) —
bored at his 1,000-page opus for [B] Twisted or lopsided; bitingly
10 years. ironic or amusing; as, a wry smile.
8. noir (nu ar) —[A] Bleakly pes- 17 . rout (rhymes with doubt) —
simistic; dark; as, Grim films are [A] Overwhelming defeat; as, The
called cinema noir. French for primary was a rout for the incum-
“black.” bent. As a verb, to beat decisively;
9. tic —[C] Sudden spasm or muscu- also, to root out or find by searching.
lar contraction; as, Facial tics are 18. boor (rhymes with poor) —
very common. [C] Rude, unmannerly person; as,
Only a boor would ignore a dinner
invitation.

VOCABULARY RATINGS
10-12 Good 13-15 Excellent 16-18 Exceptional
44
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PHRASES DRAWN
FROM THE ANIMAL KINGDOM
Take a walk on the wild side and test your knowledge of these words and
phrases that all have connections to the animal kingdom. And don’t be dis-
mayed—their bark is worse than their bite.

1 . buffalo v.—A: to push down. 10. duck soup n.—A: confused situa-
B: baffle. C: polish. D: chuckle. tion. B: easy task. C: weak oppo-
2. dogged adj.—A: tired. B: shabby- nent. D: dilemma.
looking. C: tenacious. D: full of 11 . bevy n.—A: large group. B: an-
enthusiasm. gled surface. C: shiver. D: well-
3. white elephant n.—A: classic car. worn path.
B: all-cheese pizza. C: full moon. 12. loaded for bear adj.—A: angry.
D: burdensome possession. B: burdened. C: fully prepared.
4. phoenix n.—A: flirt. B: illusion. D: ill-equipped.
C: survivor. D: opponent. 13. greenhorn n.—someone who is
5. pecking order n.—A: fast-food A: overly sensitive. B: aggres-
menu. B: frivolous command. sive. C: loud. D: inexperienced.
C: sneak attack. D: hierarchy. 14. kangaroo court n.—A: mock tri-
6. feral adj.—A: soft. B: catlike. bunal. B: springboard. C: long
C: domesticated. D: wild. trial. D: Australian racket sport.
7. eat crow v.—A: to challenge. 15. lionize v.—A: treat as a celebrity.
B: struggle. C: admit mistake. B: shame. C: honor. D: eulogize.
D: bow to pressure. 16. brood v.—A: to conspire. B: think
8. jackal n.—A: comedian. B: wild deeply. C: insult. D: bury.
card. C: leader of the pack. 17. ferret v.—A: to search. B: hide.
D: flunky. C: store. D: disclose.
9. lupine adj.—A: stretched out.
B: eccentric. C: keenly aware.
D: savage.

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WORD POWER I FUN WITH LANGUAGE

ANSWERS
1 . buffalo —[B] To baffle; overawe; 10. duck soup —[B] Easy task or as-
intimidate by show of power; as, signment. Unfortunately, tracing the
The lawyer tried to buffalo the wit- history of the phrase is not duck
ness. From the noun; perhaps taken soup. Its origins are unclear.
from the verb “cow,” to frighten. 11 . bevy —[A] Large group; as, a bevy
2. dogged —[C] Stubbornly tena- of beauties on the runway. Origi-
cious; persistent in effort; as, The nally, a reference to quails closely
detective was dogged in following gathered on the ground.
leads. 12. loaded for bear —[C] Fully pre-
3. white elephant —[D] Possession pared, especially for confrontation;
that is a burden or hard to get rid of. as, He went to the meeting loaded
From tales that kings of Siam gave for bear. Bear hunters took maxi-
such animals as gifts, the upkeep of mum powder and shot for their
which was meant to ruin the recipi- firearms.
ents. 13. greenhorn —[D] Inexperienced
4. phoenix —[C] Survivor; remark- person; raw recruit; novice. Origi-
able person. In mythology, a unique nally, a young ox with new, or
bird that lived for centuries, burned “green,” horns.
on a funeral pyre and rose from the 14. kangaroo court —[A] Self-
ashes to live again. appointed mock tribunal that disre-
5. pecking order —[D] Hierarchy of gards normal legal procedure. Ap-
authority or status; as, the man- parently so-called because justice
ager’s position in the pecking order. progresses by leaps and bounds.
From behavior among birds. 15. lionize —[A] Treat as a celebrity or
6. feral —[D] Wild; untamed; as, Feral object of interest; as, The dinner
cats roamed the alleys. Latin ferus. was meant to lionize the mayor.
7. eat crow —[C] To admit a mistake; 16. brood —[B] To think deeply; dwell
accept humiliating defeat; as, If I’m on; worry; as, She brooded over her
wrong, I’ll eat crow. Thought to be growing debts. Figurative use based
based on a crow-eating incident on the sense of birds sitting on
during the War of 1812. eggs.
8. jackal —[D] Flunky; accomplice, 17 . ferret —[A] To search; rummage;
especially in disreputable acts. as, ferret around the desk. From the
From the animal, which feeds on use of the animal in hunting rabbits.
carrion and hunts in packs.
9. lupine —[D] Savage; vicious; wolf-
like; as, A lupine struggle to succeed
the CEO ensued. Latin lupus (wolf).

VOCABULARY RATINGS
10-13 Good 14-15 Excellent 16-17 Exceptional
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EMBELLISHMENT WORDS
It’s not bad advice to avoid using a $5 word when a 50¢ word will do. But
every now and then, a big word is just the thing to embellish your corre-
spondence or conversation. Here are 15 to try.

1 . serendipity n.—A: peace and 9. sybaritic adj.—A: Web-savvy.


quiet. B: luck. C: joy. D: fate. B: achy. C: self-indulgent.
2. twee adj.—A: small. B: three- D: prudent.
sided. C: shy. D: quaint. 10. flummery n.—A: water park.
3. ingratiate v.—A: to pay back. B: head on a beer. C: cheap
B: pledge servitude to. C: seek motel. D: nonsense.
favor. D: charm. 11 . penultimate adj.—A: superbly
4. panache n.—A: array of bright written. B: conclusive. C: next to
colors. B: European hat. C: flam- last. D: highest.
boyance. D: originality. 12. lugubrious adj.—A: multitalented.
5. feckless adj.—A: free from im- B: healthy. C: tightfitting. D: ex-
perfection. B: ineffective. C: un- cessively mournful.
inhibited. D: emotional. 13. preen v.—A: to praise. B: primp.
6. quotidian adj.—A: everyday. C: smooth over. D: take to task.
B: verbose. C: constant. D: meek. 14. puckish adj.—A: overly cheerful.
7. hector v.—A: to browbeat. B: disclike. C: gullible. D: mis-
B: jeer. C: impress upon. D: sup- chievous.
port. 15. chortle v.—A: to chuckle glee-
8. donnybrook n.—A: tiny stream. fully. B: tease playfully. C: walk
B: stalemate. C: rowdy brawl. sluggishly. D: talk incessantly.
D: dapper fellow.

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WORD POWER I FUN WITH LANGUAGE

ANSWERS
1 . serendipity —[B] Luck in finding after a Dublin, Ireland, suburb,
something accidentally; as, the which until 1855 hosted a fair con-
serendipity of getting the first job stantly fraught with rowdiness.
you apply for. Coined by English au- 9. sybaritic —[C] Self-indulgent; de-
thor Horace Walpole after heroes of siring of luxury; as, For many, the
the Persian fairy tale The Three ’80s was a decade of sybaritic pleas-
Princes of Serendip (Sri Lanka), who ures. From Sybaris, an ancient
make lucky discoveries. Greek city in southern Italy known
2. twee —[D] Dainty; quaint; affect- for its wealth and extravagance.
edly clever; as, It was a twee room, 10. flummery —[D] Nonsense; empty
the way it was decorated with pil- compliment; also, any soft food, es-
lows and doilies. British expression, pecially custard or gruel. Welsh
from children’s pronunciation of llymru (soured oatmeal).
“sweet.”
11. penultimate —[C] Next to last; as,
3. ingratiate —[C] To seek favor by the penultimate position on the race
getting into someone’s good graces; track. Latin paene (almost) and ul-
as, You’d be wise to ingratiate your- timus (last).
self with the new boss. Latin in gra-
12. lugubrious —[D] Mournful or very
tiam (for the favor of).
sad, especially to the point of being
4. panache —[C] Flamboyance; grand ridiculous; as, Their lugubrious con-
manner; also, a plume of feathers or versation seemed out of place at the
tassels on a helmet; as, Liberace party. Latin lugere (to mourn).
dressed with panache. Latin pinna
13. preen —[B] Primp; dress smartly;
(feather, wing).
also, of birds, to clean and trim
5. feckless —[B] Ineffective; incom- feathers with the beak. Middle Eng-
petent; having no sense of responsi- lish preonen (to prick with a pin).
bility; as, His feckless attempts to fix
14. puckish —[D] Full of mischief;
the roof showed his lack of interest.
impish; as, I won’t tolerate any
Of Scottish origin, from combina-
more of your puckish behavior! In
tion of “effect” and “less.”
English folklore, Puck is a trouble-
6. quotidian —[A] Everyday; recur- making sprite. Middle English puke
ring daily; as, Stockbrokers are (devil).
eager for their quotidian market re-
15. chortle —[A] To chuckle or snort
ports. Latin cottidi.
gleefully; as, The comedian was a
7. hector —[A] To browbeat; bully; hit, drawing many chortles from the
harass. Name of the Trojan War crowd. Coined by English writer
hero, later slain by the Greek war- Lewis Carroll in Through the Look-
rior Achilles to avenge the death of ing Glass, probably a combination
his friend Patroclus. of “chuckle” and “snort.”
8. donnybrook —[C] Brawl; free-for-
all; as, An argument can sometimes VOCABULARY RATINGS
escalate into a donnybrook. Named 9-11 Good 12-13 Excellent 14-15 Exceptional
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“HIP” KID WORDS


Do you have one-way conversations with teenagers because you have no
idea what they’re saying? This quiz will give you the dope (info) on how to
talk their dope (cool) talk. Yo!

1 . down adj.—A: in agreement with. 9. my bad n.—A: my bad self. B: my


B: type of jacket Santa wears. mistake. C: my generation.
C: furry. D: attractive. D: my problem.
2. hooptie n.—A: motorized sleigh. 10. crib n.—A: furniture for a
B: merriment. C: old car. D: an- manger. B: residence. C: dead
nual tradition. end. D: childish person.
3. tight adj.—A: fantastic. B: un- 11 . player n.—a person who A: dates
comfortable. C: grumpy. many at once. B: follows trends.
D: cheap. C: goes to clubs. D: enjoys board
4. whatevs interj.—A: don’t worry, games.
be happy. B: no comment. 12. yo interj.—A: ouch. B: hey. C: part
C: I see. D: who cares? of a secret message. D: ugh.
5. jet v.—A: to go sledding. B: use 13. dis v.—A: to gossip. B: challenge.
Jet Skis. C: leave in a hurry. C: struggle. D: insult.
D: drive fast. 14. peace out salutation—A: happy
6. wack adj.—A: difficult. B: weird birthday. B: see you later. C: tra-
or strange. C: extremely tired. ditional greeting at church serv-
D: overly excited. ices. D: check it out.
7. chill v.—A: to be unfriendly. 15. homey n.—A: rustic person.
B: become angry. C: stiffen. B: close friend. C: feel of your
D: relax. house. D: singer.
8. bling-bling n.—A: a twinkling 16. phat adj.—A: well put-together.
star. B: expensive item. C: cham- B: flirtatious. C: condition after
pagne cocktail. D: hand signal. Thanksgiving dinner. D: ener-
getic.

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WORD POWER I FUN WITH LANGUAGE

ANSWERS
1 . down —[A] In agreement with; 10. crib —[B] A house, apartment or
willing; as, I’m down for a road trip any kind of residence; as, Come on
to Florida at spring break. over to my crib and we’ll watch the
2. hooptie —[C] Old car that’s in bad game. In Victorian times, it was
shape; as, It may be a hooptie, but slang for one’s lodgings.
it’s better than nothing at all. 11 . player —[A] A person who dates
3. tight —[A] Fantastic; cool; interest- many people at the same time; as,
ing; as, Have you heard the new CD Tom’s such a player. He has a differ-
from Dido? It is totally tight! ent girl every weekend. Also spelled
playa.
4. whatevs —[B] No comment; short
for whatever. Adolescent equivalent 12. yo —[B] Hey or hello; an attention-
of “what will be, will be.” Also, getter; as, Yo, Jeremy, you coming?
whatev. Can be doubled as a greeting; as,
Yo, yo, Mike, what’s up? Can be sub-
5. jet —[C] Leave in a hurry; as, I’d stituted for a name; as, Let’s get
better jet or the rents (parents) will some dinner, yo.
be all bent out of shape.
13. dis —[D] To insult, dishonor or dis-
6. wack —[B] Weird or strange; un- respect; as, My brother said he’d be
fair or unacceptable; as, You’re there, but he dissed us and never
breaking up with me? That’s wack. showed up.
Also wacked.
14. peace out —[B] See you later;
7. chill —[D] To relax or calm down; goodbye; as, Gotta go to dinner.
often used with “out”; as, Let’s just Peace out for now. Perhaps a combi-
chill at my house tonight; or, Get- nation of Peace, man and Over and
ting that C is no big deal. You need out.
to chill out.
15. homey —[B] A close friend; as, I’m
8. bling-bling —[B] Something ex- going skiing with my homeys next
pensive; often jewelry, especially month. Also spelled homie. Proba-
diamonds; also can be an adjective bly derived from term homeboy, a
meaning “flashy”; as, His girlfriend person from one’s hometown or
is all about the bling-bling. neighborhood.
9. my bad —[B] My mistake or fault; 16. phat —[A] Well put-together; ex-
It’s my bad that we haven’t finished cellent; great; as, That song has a
shopping yet. really phat bass line.

VOCABULARY RATINGS
10-12 Good 13-14 Excellent 15-16 Exceptional
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RECENT ADDITIONS
TO THE DICTIONARY
Has your vocabulary grown old and tired? Our changing world and shifting
interests have added hundreds of new words and meanings to the English
language in just the last two decades. Try some of these newbies!

1 . bork v.—A: to hit. B: jump over. 9. fashionista n.—someone who is


C: attack. D: fasten. A: clothing-savvy. B: a designer.
2. netizen n.—A: career counselor. C: a right-winger. D: intriguing.
B: Internet user. C: resident. 10. wannabe n.—one who A: takes
D: weaver. identities. B: has aspirations.
3. cocooning n.—the practice of C: studies kangaroos. D: is
A: staying at home. B: oversleep- angry.
ing. C: knitting. D: making silk. 11 . ecotourism n.—traveling A: very
4. tree hugger n.—A: South Ameri- cheaply. B: around the equator.
can frog. B. environmentalist. C: to natural lands. D: in teams.
C: many-winged insect. D: ar- 12. prioritize v.—A: to organize.
borist’s tool. B: send early. C: join a
5. codependent adj.—pertaining to monastery. D: boast.
A: relationships. B: intimidation. 13. pathography n.—A: study of
C: lawsuits. D: having children. tropical diseases. B: sports med-
6. karaoke n.—A: canoe. B: martial icine. C. biography. D: X rays.
arts. C: singing. D: nightclub. 14. agita n.—A: fright. B: anxiety
7. nutraceutical n.—A: supple- C: restlessness. D: harmony.
mented food. B: healthy seed. 15. channel v.—A: to influence.
C: pharmacy. D: vitamin. B: dig. C: listen. D: get across.
8. digerati n.—people who know
about A: math. B: soil. C: elec-
tronic hookups. D: computers.

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WORD POWER I FUN WITH LANGUAGE

ANSWERS 9. fashionista —[A] Someone who is


1 . bork —[C] To attack someone, es- savvy about fashion trends, is styl-
pecially in the media. From Judge ish or works in the industry. From
Robert Bork, whose nomination to fashion and the Italian -ista.
the Supreme Court was blocked by 10. wannabe —[B] One who aspires,
negative information. often vainly, to emulate or attain the
2. netizen —[B] A person who uses success and prominence of another
the Internet. A combination of Net person. Derivative of I wanna be.
and citizen. 11 . ecotourism —[C] Traveling to nat-
3. cocooning —[A] Spending leisure ural, unspoiled areas; as, Ecotourism
time at home, especially watching has raised awareness of the fragility
TV or using a VCR. of rain forests.
4. tree hugger —[B] Environmental- 12. prioritize —[A] To organize ac-
ist; campaigner for the preservation cording to importance; as, One key
of trees and forests, who literally to time management is learning to
hugs a tree to prevent its being cut prioritize.
down. 13. pathography —[C] Biography fo-
5. codependent —[A] Regarding cusing on the negative elements of
a relationship based on addiction a subject, popularized by U.S.
or unhealthy dependence; as, writer Joyce Carol Oates; also, the
Psychiatrists look for codependent study of the effects of illness on a
behavior in families with problems. historical person’s life.
6. karaoke —[C] The act of singing 14. agita —[B] Anxiety or agitation;
along to music videos from which heartburn or indigestion; as, Too
the vocals have been eliminated. much stress causes agita. From Ital-
From the Japanese kara (empty) ian agitare.
and oke (orchestra). 15. channel —[D] To get across or con-
7. nutraceutical —[A] A food or vey the spirit and style of someone
other substance that has been sup- else; as, Her outfit suggested she
plemented with ingredients be- was channeling Liza Minnelli.
lieved to have health benefits. From
the combination of nutrition and
pharmaceutical.
8. digerati —[D] Those with knowl-
edge about computers; as, The pub-
lisher specialized in books for the
digerati. From the combination of
digital and literati.

VOCABULARY RATINGS
10-11 Good 12-13 Excellent 14-15 Exceptional
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B I G TA L K E R S

FOUNDING FATHER WORDS


It seems that each political election, we are bombarded with negative ads
and emotionally charged debates. Some call it “extreme campaigning.” But
there was a time we expected better from our leaders. Our first President,
George Washington, was the epitome of humility and sincerity. These
words, spoken from the heart, come from his inaugural address.

1 . vicissitudes n.—A: spiteful ac- 9. rectitude n.—A: mass destruc-


tions. B: ups and downs. C: posi- tion. B: anger. C: geographical
tive feelings. D: cowardly measurement. D: moral virtue.
maneuvers. 10. magnanimous adj.—A: appealing.
2. aver v.—A: to declare. B: avoid B: high-minded. C: secretive.
or prevent. C: show a dislike. D: in agreement.
D: openly oppose. 11 . felicity n.—the state of A: feeling
3. supplication n.—A: excessive happy. B: being lucky. C: helping
amount. B: important addition. others. D: earning wealth.
C: earnest request. D: forced 12. propitious adj.—A: foretelling.
ending. B: overly sarcastic. C: confident.
4. immutable adj.—A: weakened. D: favorable.
B: biased. C: unchangeable. 13. despondence n.—A: letter writ-
D: silent. ing. B: depression. C: craving.
5. predilection n.—A: introduction. D: poverty.
B: prophecy. C: harmony. 14. palliate v.—A: to relieve. B: care-
D: preference. fully examine. C: respect or re-
6. transcendent adj.—A: always vere. D: apologize.
changing. B: beyond ordinary 15. pecuniary adj.—A: referring to
limits. C: lost or displaced. money. B: acting strangely.
D: written out. C: educated or refined. D: being
7. discernment n.—A: an act of de- a talented cook.
feat. B: good judgment or under-
standing. C: distributed funds.
D: debilitating anxiety.
8. presage v.—A: to separate. B: get
older. C: make a prediction.
D: intentionally deceive.

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WORD POWER I B I G TA L K E R S

ANSWERS
1 . vicissitudes —[B] Ups and downs; 9. rectitude —[D] Moral virtue;
changing conditions; as, Washing- rightness of principle. Latin recti-
ton recognized the vicissitudes af- tudo (straightness).
fecting the evolution of America. 10. magnanimous —[B] High-minded
Latin vicissim (in turn) and cessim or noble; as, Washington felt that a
(giving away). magnanimous government would
2. aver —[A] To declare or assert in a help America prosper. Latin magnus
positive manner. Derived from (large) and animus (soul).
Latin verus (true). 11 . felicity —[A] The state of feeling
3. supplication —[C] An earnest, happy; as, The people of our new
humble request; as, He made divine nation looked forward to prosperity
supplication for the success of the and felicity. Latin felicitas (happy).
new nation. Latin supplex (submis- 12. propitious —[D] Favorable; as, The
sive). “propitious smiles of Heaven,”
4. immutable —[C] Unchangeable; Washington believed, would be
unalterable. Latin mutare (to awarded only to a righteous nation.
change). 13. despondence —[B] Depression of
5. predilection —[D] Preference; as, spirits from loss of courage; as, Our
Though he had a predilection for life first President confessed to feeling
as a private citizen, Washington an- despondence about his qualifications
swered his country’s call. Latin for office. Latin despondere (to give
praediligere (to prefer). up).
6. transcendent —[B] Beyond ordi- 14. palliate —[A] To relieve without
nary limits; surpassing. Latin tran- curing; to alleviate; as, Washington
scendere (to surmount). hoped that any error in his judg-
7. discernment —[B] Good judgment ment would be palliated by his mo-
and understanding; as, Washington tives. Latin palliatus (cloaked).
had faith in Congress’s “discernment 15. pecuniary —[A] Referring to
and pursuit of the public good.” money; as, While President, Wash-
Latin discernere (to separate). ington stated he would “renounce
8. presage —[C] To make a predic- every pecuniary compensation.”
tion; as, Washington anticipated
“the future blessings which the past
seem to presage.” Latin praesagus
(having a foreboding).

VOCABULARY RATINGS
10-11 Good 12-13 Excellent 14-15 Exceptional
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ISAAC ASIMOV WORDS


In his 72 years of life, author Isaac Asimov wrote more than 500 books, making
him one of the most prolific authors of our time. What is amazing is that the
quality of his work often matched the quantity. His explorations of robots, outer
space, and the future potential of mankind continue to spark debate more than a
decade after his passing. These words are taken from some of Asimov’s stories.

1 . verbatim adj.—A: talkative. B: un- 9. buttress v.—A: to link, as a


usual. C: exceedingly green. D: bridge. B: strengthen. C: sit up
word for word. in bed. D: increase by half.
2. chirrup n.—A: leather stirrup. 10. crystalline adj.—A: breakable.
B: cherry-flavored cough syrup. B: futuristic. C: minuscule.
C: chirp. D: warm breeze. D: sparkling.
3. pince-nez n.—A: kind of candy. 11 . subside v.—A: to sink or fall.
B: type of eyeglasses. C: princely B: exert control. C: exist on very
robe. D: crab’s claw. little. D: underestimate.
4. prosaic adj.—A: dull. B: prehis- 12. aberration n.—A: refusal to
toric. C: legal in nature. consider. B: unsoundness.
D: rhyming. C: unwavering concentration.
5. deduce v.—A: to trim. B: form D: constant nagging.
into pairs. C: infer. D: prepare 13. proficiency n.—A: offensive slang.
for cooking. B: motel room with hot plate.
6. forestall v.—A: to lie in front of. C: unusual talent. D: advance-
B: hinder. C: warn. D: abandon. ment in skill.
7. sluice n.—A: passage for water. 14. cower v.—A: to intimidate.
B: strawberry-lime soft drink. B: shrink away. C: manipulate
C: very thin slice. D: comfort. through flattery. D: call out to.
8. tremulous adj.—A: related to 15. thrum v.—A: to make a monoto-
an earthquake. B: gigantic. nous sound. B: pull toward with
C: high-pitched. D: affected one’s thumb. C: drag. D: unload.
with trembling. 16. erratic adj.—A: by design. B: in
sequence. C: characterized by
inconsistency. D: irrelevant.

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WORD POWER I B I G TA L K E R S

ANSWERS
1 . verbatim —[D] Word for word; 10. crystalline —[D] Sparkling; strik-
being in or following the exact ingly clear; resembling crystal. Gaz-
words. Don’t blame me—I’m re- ing at the crystalline lake, I decided
peating Dad’s instructions to you it was too beautiful to swim in.
verbatim. 11 . subside —[A] Sink or fall to the
2. chirrup —[C] Chirp. The morning bottom; settle; also, to become
quiet was disturbed only by the odd quiet; diminish. Once my initial
chirrup of a nearby robin. anger subsided, I began laughing at
3. pince-nez —[B] Eyeglasses clipped all those pancakes stuck to the wall.
to the nose by a spring. The librar- 12. aberration —[B] Unsoundness;
ian peered at me over the lenses of that which departs significantly
his pince-nez and said, “That book from the standard. Sleeping with
is two years overdue.” your pillow beneath your feet
4. prosaic —[A] Dull, unimaginative; would be considered something of
also, everyday, ordinary. Unfortu- an aberration.
nately, I’ll spend the weekend doing 13 . proficiency —[D] Quality or state
a bunch of prosaic chores. of being advanced; highly skilled.
5. deduce —[C] Infer from a general You show real proficiency in the art
principle. When my son said he of making the perfect pizza.
hated cereal, I deduced that I 14. cower —[B] Shrink away or
needed to fix a different breakfast. crouch, especially from something
6. forestall —[B] Exclude or hinder; that menaces or dismays. Horror
also, to obstruct; beset. I planned to movies always make me cower in
forestall his leaving by asking him my seat.
to shine my shoes. 15. thrum —[A] To sound with a mo-
7. sluice —[A] Artificial passage for notonous hum. Suddenly, a loud vi-
water fitted with a valve or gate for bration began to thrum the wall I
regulating flow. Once the sluice was leaning against.
opened, we pretty much got soaked. 16. erratic —[C] Characterized by lack
8. tremulous —[D] Characterized by of consistency, regularity or order.
or affected with trembling or His erratic behavior convinced me
tremors, such as might be caused by he wouldn’t be reliable in the job.
nervousness or shakiness. His
tremulous smile told me he wasn’t
as relaxed as he hoped to appear.
9. buttress —[B] Strengthen; support.
I think you should try to buttress
your opinion with a few small facts.

VOCABULARY RATINGS
10-12 Good 13-14 Excellent 15-16 Exceptional
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BROADWAY MUSICAL WORDS


Wouldn’t life be grand if orchestras followed us around and we could break
into song whenever we wanted? A little far-fetched, but it’s exactly what
makes Broadway musicals such a wonderful and enduring American art
form. We turned to the lyrics from some popular musicals for the words
used here. And now, it’s on with the show.

1 . heinous adj.—A: following be- 10. inquisition n.—A: harsh question-


hind. B: final. C: abominable. ing. B: excessive penalty. C: sud-
D: unusual. den acquisition. D: formal
2. accrue v.—A: to accentuate. invitation.
B: accelerate. C: acclimate. 11 . gaudy adj.—A: clumsy. B: windy.
D: accumulate. C: self-centered, egotistical.
3. iniquity n.—A: wickedness. D: flashy.
B: uneasiness. C: unhelpfulness. 12. fop n.—A: vain man. B: spectacu-
D: rudeness. lar failure. C: cleaning utensil.
4. sanitorium n.—A: sacred place. D: rare shellfish.
B: rehabilitation facility. C: hide- 13. ennui n.—A: high-heeled slipper.
out. D: trash-haulers’ garage. B: excitement. C: boredom.
5. impetuous adj.—A: impatient. D: lone exit.
B: impulsively passionate. C: un- 14. ken n.—A: member of the im-
able to be moved. D: immature. mediate family. B: range of
6. finagle v.—A: to obtain by trick- knowledge. C: geographic sur-
ery. B: adjust carefully. C: final- roundings. D: ancient percus-
ize. D: scrutinize. sion instrument.
7. beguile v.—A: to restart. B: be- 15. equipoise n.—state of A: equality.
friend. C: charm. D: leave back. B: readiness. C: equilibrium.
D: fluid movement.
8. flaunt v.—A: to whip mercilessly.
B: flatten. C: promote above all 16. virago n.—A: passenger. B: loud
others. D: show off. woman. C: sign of the zodiac.
D: mirage.
9. palazzo n.—A: open-air market.
B: large building. C: castle en-
trance. D: enclosed terrace.

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WORD POWER I B I G TA L K E R S

ANSWERS
1 . heinous —[C] Abominable; repre- 10. inquisition —[A] Harsh or severe
hensible. If she says your behavior is questioning. I’d prefer a new edition
heinous/Kick her right in the Cori- of the Spanish Inquisition—“I’m An
olanus—“Brush Up Your Shake- Ordinary Man”
speare” 11 . gaudy —[D] Flashy; marked by ex-
2. accrue —[D] To accumulate or be travagance. Naughty, bawdy, gaudy,
added periodically; to come as a re- sporty/Forty-Second Street—“42nd
sult of some state or action. The Street”
hobbies you pursue together/Savings 12. fop —[A] Vain man; silly person.
you accrue together—“Little Things” It’s fop/Finest in the shop/And we
3. iniquity —[A] Wickedness; gross have some shepherd’s pie/With ac-
injustice. In our little den of iniq- tual shepherd on top—“A Little
uity/Our arrangement is good—“Den Priest”
Of Iniquity” 13 . ennui —[C] Boredom; feeling of
4. sanitorium —[B] An institution for weariness. When I’m out on a quiet
resting, recuperating. Sir Charles spree/Fighting vainly the old ennui—
came from a sanitorium/And yelled “I Get A Kick Out Of You”
for drinks in my emporium—“To 14. ken —[B] Range of knowledge.
Keep My Love Alive” Timid and shy and scared are
5. impetuous —[B] Marked by impul- you/Of things beyond your ken—
sive passion or force. Yet there’s that “Sixteen Going On Seventeen”
upturned chin/And the grin of im- 15. equipoise —[C] State of equilib-
petuous youth—“I Believe In You” rium. And just a minute boys/I got
6. finagle —[A] To obtain by trickery, the feed box noise/It says the great-
indirect means. Throw ’em a fake grandfather was Equipoise—“Fugue
and a finagle/They’ll never know For Tinhorns”
you’re just a bagel—“Razzle Dazzle” 16. virago —[B] Loud, overbearing wo-
7. beguile —[C] To charm or divert; man; woman of strength. Where is
pass time pleasantly. I’m wild again/ Fedora, the wild virago? —“Where Is
Beguiled again/A simpering, whim- The Life That Late I Led?”
pering child again—“Bewitched”
8. flaunt —[D] To display ostenta-
tiously. Ven you got it, flaunt it—
“When You Got It, Flaunt It”
9. palazzo —[B] Large building, espe-
cially in Italy. Could still she be
drinkin’ in her stinkin’ pink palazzo?
—“Where Is The Life That Late I
Led?”

VOCABULARY RATINGS
8-10 Good 11-13 Excellent 14-16 Exceptional
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KELSEY GRAMMER WORDS


Ever since Dr. Frasier Crane’s first pompous appearance on “Cheers,” we’ve
laughed at his pretensions and foibles. Kelsey Grammer dazzled us as the
charm-challenged psychiatrist on “Frasier,” so we salute his comedic talent
and his way with words. Deliver a few bons mots of your own with vocabu-
lary from the show.

1 . empathize v.—A: to experience 8. archetype n.—A: original model.


vicariously. B: fish for sympathy. B: school of architecture. C: an-
C: testify. D: build an empire. archy. D: ancient musical instru-
2. patronizing adj.—A: mocking. ment.
B: condescending. C: deliber- 9. lout n.—A: comedian. B: noisy
ately insulting. D: neighborly. child. C: leader of the pack.
3. enigma n.—A: boredom. B: puz- D: boorish person.
zle. C: preoccupation. D: com- 10. al dente adj.—A: robust. B: firm.
mitment. C: softly, in music. D: with brio.
4. ploy n.—A: dramatic reading. 11 . prattle v.—A: to lie through your
B: elaborate illusion. C: heavy teeth. B: tell tall tales. C: shiver
farm equipment. D: strategic with cold. D: talk meaninglessly.
maneuver. 12. legerdemain n.—A: ear for lan-
5. charlatan n.—A: volunteer for a guages. B: interference. C: in-
nonprofit organization. B: con- credible courage. D: artful
niving fraud. C: delicate lace. trickery.
D: nightclub singer. *Although “Frasier” knows this word, Web-
6. hellacious* adj.—A: torrid. B: sin- ster’s doesn’t. So it won’t affect your score.
ful. C: agonizing. D: hypnotic.
7. grovel v.—A: to whine. B: behave
obsequiously. C: laugh omi-
nously. D: stumble.

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WORD POWER I B I G TA L K E R S

ANSWERS
1 . empathize —[A] Experience vicari- 7. grovel —[B] Behave obsequiously
ously or identify with the feelings of in seeking favor or forgiveness. “Re-
another person. Lilith is chatting member why you left Maris in the
with the nervous man next to her on first place?” Frasier asks his brother.
a plane, who’s turned white as a “You were tired of groveling.” “Yes,
sheet. “I can empathize,” she says. but I’m rested now,” says Niles.
“After a late night, I cover my under- 8. archetype —[A] Original model or
eye circles with Liquid Paper.” type, after which similar things are
2. patronizing —[B] Condescending; patterned. Frasier, speaking of bas-
of behavior that implies superiority. ketball: “It’s the archetypal male-
A 13-year-old calls the show to tell bonding ritual.” Niles says,
Frasier his advice was patronizing. “Couldn’t we just go into the
Frasier says: “Kids. You can’t live woods, kill something and have
with ’em, and you can’t shove ’em done with it?”
back in the womb.” 9. lout —[D] Boorish, insensitive per-
3. enigma —[B] Puzzling thing or son. Martin is trying to convince
person. As Eddie the dog stares Frasier that it’s all right to lie in
balefully at him, Frasier asks, “Is my some circumstances—in this case,
head a large piece of kibble? Am I a about Niles’s affection for Daphne.
canine enigma?” “You make me sound like some sort
4. ploy —[D] Maneuver or strategy to of lout,” says Frasier.
gain advantage. The new boss at the 10. al dente —[B] Firm to the bite, es-
station has announced a wage pecially pasta. “I specifically re-
freeze. Angry employees gather at quested my macaroni and cheese al
Frasier’s, where he tells them: “It’s dente,” complains a young Frasier.
simply a ploy of an overly ambitious 11 . prattle —[D] Talk idly or meaning-
station manager. ... Time we said no lessly; babble. Frasier remarks to
to this Princess of Darkness.” Niles, “You’re a psychiatrist; you
5. charlatan —[B] Fraud; quack; know what it’s like to listen to peo-
someone who pretends to have ple prattling on about their mun-
knowledge or skill. Frasier thinks dane lives.” Niles comes back with:
Martin underestimates his skill at “And on that subject, I heard your
“reading” people. “What troubles show today.”
are to pigs, so are the charlatans and 12. legerdemain —[D] Artful trickery;
pettifoggers to my mental acuity.” sleight of hand. “It’s better that our
6. hellacious —[C] Agonizing; miser- political legerdemain remain sub
able. Roz is telling Frasier about her rosa, hmm?” Frasier asks his father.
weekend: “I had the most hellacious Then he adds, “How would a nor-
date of my life. I pick him up from mal person say that, Dad?”
work, stop for gas—and I had to
pump it myself while he read the
sports section.” VOCABULARY RATINGS
4-6 Good 7-8 Excellent 9-11 Exceptional
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WILLIAM SAFIRE WORDS


Be there at the birth of a word! Impress friends with how hip you are to
contemporary idiom. Each Sunday, William Safire’s witty take on language
appears in The New York Times Magazine. Here are usages he loved and
hated in recent years.

1 . tipping point n.—a state of 7. embed v.—A: to set in concrete.


A: being unbalanced. B: having B: crush with a mallet. C: get
had too much to drink. C: inde- something engraved. D: place a
cision. D: no return. journalist among the troops.
2. dead-ender n., adj.—A: pointless 8. rope-a-dope adj.—relating to a
effort. B: waste of time. C: un- strategy that A: plays off some-
willingness to accept defeat. one’s lack of knowledge. B: is
D: one-way street. based on a frustrating defense.
3. diva n.—a female who is A: a C: cowboys use on cattle drives.
rock star. B: opera singer. D: is taught to car salespeople.
C: model. D: glamorous, news- 9. tank v.—A: fill up with gas. B: fail
worthy. spectacularly. C: go scuba-
4. über- adj.—a prefix indicating diving. D: frequent a pub.
A: superlative status. B: Slavic 10. props n.—A: emotional support.
origin. C: diminutive size. D: lat- B: costumes. C: proper respect.
est version. D: tentative proposals.
5. jonesing n.—A: grooving to 11 . shooz n.—A: idiom for flip-flops.
music. B: hankering for some- B: concerns. C: motorcycle
thing. C: using street slang. boots. D: rare gemstone.
D: being obsequious. 12. voguism n.—A: fashionable word
6. trash talk n., v.—A: idle boasting. or phrase. B: indirect reference.
B: impolite cursing. C: insulting C: trendy dress. D: opponent.
language. D: ranting and raving.

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WORD POWER I B I G TA L K E R S

ANSWERS
1 . tipping point —[D] A state of no 7. embed —[D] As military jargon, it
return by a movement or trend. means to place a journalist with a
Critical mass was once a popular unit of troops, where he or she lives
phrase and means much the same. with and follows the soldiers into
As, The drive to take dot-coms pub- combat. As a noun, emphasize em-.
lic had its tipping point in the late 8. rope-a-dope —[B] Relating to a de-
’90s. fensive strategy that frustrates and
2. dead-ender —[C] A foolish unwill- ultimately weakens an offense, mak-
ingness to accept defeat. The mili- ing it vulnerable. First used by
tary’s substitute for die-hard, which boxer Muhammad Ali, the term has
implied nobly fighting on for a lost now crossed over into diplomatic
cause. In sports, dead-ender sug- lingo (diplolingo).
gests a loser. 9. tank —[B] Fail spectacularly; col-
3. diva —[A, B, C, D] Originally, a diva lapse; as, Bogus accounting led
meant a leading woman singer, es- Enron to tank. In athletics, tank
pecially in opera. Today, it refers to connotes failing deliberately, or
any glamorous and successful fe- throwing a game.
male personality or performer. It’s 10. props —[C] Proper respect; honor.
also come to mean an arbiter of Usually used with give. Began life
taste, as in cultural diva and domes- on the West Coast in the music in-
tic diva. dustry, where shorthand speech is a
4. über- —[A] A prefix indicating su- way of life and giving props to your
perlative status; the ultimate. It collaborators is vital.
seems to have more oomph than the 11 . shooz —[B] Concerns or issues; can
overused super- and inadequate also be represented as shoes; as, A
hyper-; as, Much of Europe now has management consultant needs to
an übercurrency, the euro. wrap up an open shooz list.
5. jonesing —[B] A hankering or crav- 12. voguism —[A] A fashionable, hip
ing; as, Sometimes only Ben & word or phrase that is picked up by
Jerry’s will do when you’ve got a politicians, intellectuals and talking
jonesing for ice cream. heads and repeated endlessly. This
6. trash talk —[C] Insulting language term first appeared in Safire’s “On
intended to upset or intimidate a Language” column. He admits,
rival, particularly in sports; as, Ball though, to little success in getting it
players and rappers are masters of adopted.
trash talk. Also seen as talkin’ trash.

VOCABULARY RATINGS
7-8 Good 9-10 Excellent 11-12 Exceptional
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BOB DYLAN WORDS


Bob Dylan is no longer the skinny folksinger we remember from the 1960s,
but to many of us he still represents youthful rebellion. Amazingly, he con-
tinues to write and perform great music well into his 60s. His skill with
words also infuses his autobiographical work from 2004, entitled Chroni-
cles, Volume One. That’s where we got the words used in this quiz.

1 . cryptic adj.—A: close to death. 9. affirmation n.—A: military unit.


B: sarcastic. C: causing illness. B: legal statement. C: act of vali-
D: mysterious. dation. D: related item.
2. zeal n.—A: fervor. B: high point. 10. vernacular n.—A: type of recep-
C: witty remark. D: closure. tacle. B: moon phase. C: local di-
3. renounce v.—A: to criticize alect. D: wart.
sharply. B: give up. C: restate. 11 . deity n.—A: person trying to lose
D: break, as in an agreement. weight. B: supreme being.
4. bucolic adj.—A: pastoral. C: devil. D: clue.
B: marked by constant crying. 12. debauched adj.—A: corrupted.
C: hard-working. D: idle. B: unusual. C: questioned
5. firebrand n.—A: dragon. B: type closely. D: powerful.
of small handgun. C: agitator. 13. retract v.—A: to assault quickly.
D: large, heavy skillet. B: review. C: redraw, as with a
6. citadel n.—A: house of worship. map. D: take back.
B: lighthouse. C: military univer- 14. antebellum adj.—A: anti-war.
sity. D: stronghold. B: connected to the roof of a
7. gaunt adj. A: clumsy. B: very tall. house. C: pre-Civil War. D: agri-
C: very thin. D: very muscled. cultural.
8. transcend v.—A: to rise above. 15. portico n.—A: porchlike struc-
B: change forms. C: send, as ture. B: creeping vine. C: naviga-
with a signal. D: move slowly. tor’s perch on a ship.
D: backyard.

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WORD POWER I B I G TA L K E R S

ANSWERS
1 . cryptic —[D] Having or seeming to 10. vernacular —[C] Language or di-
have a hidden meaning; mysterious. alect native to a group, region or
His cryptic remarks made me think country. When writing great folk
he knew something he wasn’t re- songs, use a distinctly American
vealing. vernacular.
2. zeal —[A] Fervor. Your zeal for ex- 11 . deity —[B] A god or goddess; a
posing the truth is thrilling. person or thing considered
3. renounce —[B] To give up, refuse supremely powerful. He scoffs at
or resign, usually by formal declara- those who treat him as a deity.
tion; repudiate. If you must enforce 12. debauched —[A] To be corrupted
those ancient rules, I must renounce by intemperance or sensuality; de-
my allegiance to your cause. based. Before you criticize the be-
4. bucolic —[A] Relating to or typical havior of others, you should take a
of rural life; pastoral. Things got moment to consider your own de-
tense in the city, so he fled for more bauched past.
bucolic surroundings up north. 13. retract —[D] To draw back or in;
5. firebrand —[C] One who creates take back, withdraw. The problem
unrest or strife; agitator. The crowd with a lie is that once you’ve told it,
was eerily quiet, as though waiting it’s not so easy to retract.
for the firebrand to set it off. 14. antebellum —[C] Existing before a
6. citadel —[D] Fortress that com- war, specifically the U.S. Civil War.
mands a city; stronghold. For close Driving through Natchez, Missis-
to three years, she treated the tiny sippi, on Highway 61, you see plenty
house as their citadel. of antebellum homes.
7. gaunt —[C] Excessively thin and 15. portico —[A] A covered structure,
angular; barren, desolate. He played usually supported by columns or
up his gaunt appearance by smear- piers, often at a building’s entrance.
ing white makeup on his face. We kicked off our boots and spent
the afternoon sipping lemonade in-
8. transcend —[A] To rise above or side the mansion’s portico.
go beyond the limits of; overcome.
Whenever I hear the melody of that
song, I’m able to transcend what-
ever petty task I’m doing.
9. affirmation —[C] Act of valida-
tion, confirmation. His return to
regular performing served as affir-
mation for the fans who knew it was
inevitable.

VOCABULARY RATINGS
7-9 Good 10-12 Excellent 13-15 Exceptional
64

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