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Sadlier- Oxford Vocabulary Level E Unit #12
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Sadlier -Oxford

Feb 23, 2016

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Sadlier -Oxford. Vocabulary Level E Unit #12. To Abjure (verb). The woman made it clear that she would abjure (reject) his proposal because they were on their first date. . Acrid smell (adj.). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Sadlier -Oxford

Sadlier-OxfordVocabulary Level E

Unit #12

Page 2: Sadlier -Oxford

To Abjure (verb)The woman made it clear that she would abjure (reject) his proposal because they were on their first date.

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Acrid smell (adj.)The acrid (pungent) smell of rotten eggs made everyone in the dining hall gag as they walked in the door.

The acid smells acrid too!

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August leader (adj.)Gandalf is the august (majestic) leader of the fellowship of the ring.

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Callous fingers (adj.)The manager’s callous (coldhearted) approach to his employees made him disliked by everyone.

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Clandestine meeting (adj.)The F.B.I. informant requested a clandestine (secret) meeting with the agents.

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Pg. 153 #1-5 5, 6, 8, 10, 15

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Deserved Compunction (n.)A person usually expresses compunction (regret) by hanging his head and covering his face.

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Large Conflagration (n.)Many conflagrations (fires) in forested areas make the land more fertile for new growth to take the place of older, dying trees.

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Elated child (adj.)I’m so elated (excited)

that I can’t put my arms down! I can’t stop

smiling! I can’t stop yelling! I’m elated!

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Indelible marker (adj.)Indelible (permanent) markers will not come off of most materials. That’s why you use them to write your name on your clothing labels.

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Indulgent parent (adj.)Most people believe that it is the indulgent (overly-generous) portions that are served today that are causing people to be less healthy than they were 20 years ago.

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#6-10 1, 4, 12, 14, 19

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Inveterate habits (adj.)Cigarette smoking becomes an inveterate (ingrained) habit for many people; they know that it’s not good for them, but they have trouble being able to stop.

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Irrelevant information (adj.)

The interviewer’s questions were completely irrelevant (unrelated) to the job tasks themselves.

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Nocturnal animals (adj.)Most nocturnal (night-time) animals have large eyes or pupils to enable them to see better at night.

The tarsier, pictured above, sleeps during the day with their eyes open.

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Worn Out Platitude (n.)

It takes one to know one.

Easy come, easy go.

Life is like a box of chocolates.

The grass is greener on the other side.

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Quell the uprising (v.)When you injure yourself, it is smart to apply ice immediately in order to quell (stop) the swell-ing.

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Pg. 153-154 #3, 11, 13, 16, 18

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Quiescent volcano (adj.)The volcano that lay quiescent (dormant) for years looked like a mountain until it began to erupt.

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Ruminate about yesterday (v.)

I was so frustrated by the events yesterday that I spent hours ruminating (running them through my mind) in order to figure out what went wrong.

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Tacit agreement (adj.)Most people make a tacit (silent) agreement with others; you treat me with respect, and I will do the same.

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Tangible evidence (adj.)

The letter moved ¼ of an inch, there is a sip missing from the milk and one of the chips is missing from a cookie; these facts provide tangible evidence of Santa Claus’ existence!

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Trenchant point (adj.)In many situations there is a trenchant (deep) division between right and wrong.

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Pg. 153-154 #2, 7, 9, 17, 20