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Book Four UNIT 1 VOCABULARY
31

Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

Dec 16, 2015

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Cameron Nash
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Page 1: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

Book Four

UNIT 1 VOCABULARY

Page 2: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• rapport and goodwill

camaraderie

Page 3: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• There is great camaraderie among the teammates.• They have developed a real camaraderie after

working together for so long.• It is about the camaraderie of troops bound for

Vietnam who as their leader warns, have one another and nothing but one another when they fall into hell. —Stanley Kauffmann, New Republic, 25 Mar. 2002

• The coach attributed the team’s success to the camaraderie among the players.

Page 4: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• fragile; easy to break

frangible

Page 5: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• Frangible china teacups that were totally inappropriate for a child's birthday party were placed on the tables.

• Mom seldom used the frangible, antique dishes in the china cabinet.

Page 6: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• any long, repetitive, or dull recital

litany

Page 7: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• He has a litany of grievances against his former employer.

• The team blamed its losses on a litany of injuries.

• The dissatisfied customer read a litany of complaints to the company representative.

Page 8: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• a suspension of activity; an authorized delay

moratorium

Page 9: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• The treaty calls for a nuclear testing moratorium.• The director of the blood bank called for

a moratorium in donations until the surplus could be used up.

• In 2000, Illinois declared a moratorium on executions after 13 death-row inmates were exonerated. —Evan Thomas et al., Newsweek, 19 Nov. 2007

• The warring factions declared a moratorium on combat during the peace talks.

Page 10: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• fervent (enthusiastic); fanatical

zealous

Page 11: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• The detective was zealous in her pursuit of the kidnappers.

• I was zealous in my demands on my sisters for promptness in rehearsals. I was passionate, intolerant of small talk, hungry for knowledge, grabby, bossy, precocious. —Lynn Margulis, Curious Minds, (2004) 2005

• The zealous gardener planted so many flowers that a number of them did not have the necessary space in which to grow.

Page 12: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• To dry out; to remove moisture

desiccate

Page 13: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• That historian's recount of the event desiccates what is actually an exciting period in European history.

• Add a cup of desiccated coconut to the cookie dough batter.

• Janet desiccates flowers and then uses them to make wreaths.

Page 14: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• causing mental or physical pain

wrenching

Page 15: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• I felt a wrenching pain in my back as I tried to move the large desk by myself.

• The wrenching photographs of the starving children prompted Mike to send a donation.

Page 16: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• full; abundant

replete

Page 17: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• The book is replete with photographs.• The country's history is replete with stories of

people who became successful by working hard.

• The anglers were happy to find their stream replete with trout.

Page 18: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• Tiresome and long; seemingly endless

interminable

Page 19: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• The baby’s cry seemed interminable as we waited for her mother to get home.

• The last few hours of school before the holiday vacation seemed interminable.

Page 20: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• suitable for cultivation of land

arable

Page 21: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• The family is selling several acres of arable land.

• Death Valley and the Badlands are both characterized by their lack of arable soil.

Page 22: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• mournful; gloomy

lugubrious

Page 23: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• There are several comedic actors known for their lugubrious manners.

• The diner's dim lighting makes eating there a particularly lugubrious experience.

• The lugubrious funeral scene temporarily interrupted the comic tone of the play.

Page 24: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• to shorten

truncate

Page 25: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• A truncated version of the 11 o'clock newscast followed the awards show, which ran over its time slot—as it always does.

• The candidate truncated his campaign because of a family illness.

Page 26: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• Occurring or seeming to occur everywhere; omnipresent

ubiquitous

Page 27: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• The company's advertisements are ubiquitous.• By that time cell phones had

become ubiquitous, and people had long ceased to be impressed by the sight of one.

• Hot dogs are the ideal road trip food—inexpensive, portable, ubiquitous. —Paul Lucas, Saveur, June/July 2008

• The camping trip was horrible; the mosquitoes were ubiquitous and hungry.

Page 28: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• everyday language

vernacular

Page 29: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• My uncle writes essays in a very easy-to-read, vernacular style.

• He spoke in the vernacular of an urban teenager.

• But ask baseball people about [Michael] Young, and they'll admiringly tell you that he is a “grinder,” vernacular for a player who works his butt off. —Chris Ballard, Sports Illustrated, 8 May 2006

Page 30: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• composure; calmness

equanimity

Page 31: Book Four. rapport and goodwill There is great camaraderie among the teammates. They have developed a real camaraderie after working together for so.

• She was an Olympic diver who always displays remarkable equanimity on the platform.

• Those who are doomed to become artists are seldom blessed with equanimity. They are tossed to drunken heights, only to be brought down into a sludge of headachy despair; their arrogance gives way to humiliation at the next curve of the switchback. —Patrick White, Flaws in the Glass, (1981) 1983

• Oddly enough, the plaintiff recounted the story of her attack with perfect equanimity.