Term
|
Definition
- a= not or without (amoral)
- an= not or without (anaerobic) (anarchy: without rule or government)
- eu= good (eulogy: good speech) (euphemism: polite expression)
- ben-/bon-= good (benefit) (benevolent: good or kind)
- caco-= bad
- de= down from, away from (to put down) (descend or depart: to go down or away from)
- ex= out of, away from
- ne-/mal-= bad (negarious & malicious: full of bad or wicked and harmful)
- im- = not (something impossible) (implacable: isn't able to be calmed down, because placate means ease one's anger.)
- in-=not (something inappropriate, isn't apropriate)
- ante-= before (antebellum: before the war)
- post-= after
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- -ette= little (dinette: little dining table)
- -illo= little: (armadillo: a little armored animal)
- -ous= full of (very): someone joyous is full of joy
- -ist= a person: (pacifist: a person wo believes in peace) (pac means peace or calm)
- -ify (-efy)= to make: beautify; to make beautiful. ossify; to make bone.
- -ize= to make. immunize; to make imune. ostracize; to make separate from the group, or to shun.
- -ate= to make: to duplicate is to make double. (nov means new)(plac means peace or calm)
- -ity= a noun suffix that doesn't actually mean anything; it just turns a word into a noun.
|
|
|
Term
Roots
(a core part of a word that gives the word its basic meaning) |
|
Definition
- ambu= walk, move; in a hospital patients are either bedridden (they can't move) or ambulatory (they can walk and move about). A somnambulist is a sleepwalker.
- andro= man: an android is a robot shaped like a man
- anthro= human or mankind: Anthropology is the study of humans. A misanthrope hates humans.)
- bellu, beli= war, fight: If youre belligerent, you're ready to fight.
- cred= trust or belief: something incredible is unbelievable (be careful not to confuse the words credible and credulous. Something credible is trustable or believable. A credible excuse can get you out of trouble if ou turn a paper in late. Credulous on the other hand means full of trust naive or fullible)
- gnos= knowledge: a doctor shos his or her knowledge by making a diagnosis.
- grep= group, herd: a congregation is a group or herd of people. A pregarious person likes to be part of a group. (se- means apart or away from, as in separate, sever, sequester, and seclusion)
- gyn= woman: a gynecologist is a physician who treats women. A misogynist is a person who hates women.
- loq, log, loc, lix= speech or talk: someone loquacious talks alot
- luc, lum, lus= light, clear:something luminous is shiny and full of light
- meta= beyond, after: a metamorphosis is a change of shape beyond the present shape
- morph= shape: someting amorphous is without shape.
- mut= change: dont confuse this with mute
- pac= peace, calm: why do you give a baby a pacifier
- path= feeling: something pathetic arouses feeling or pity
- phon=sound: phonics helps you to sound out words
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- plac= peace, calm: to placate someone is to calm him or her down or to make peace with that person
- pro= big, much: profuse apologies are big, or much.
- pug= war, fight: someone pugnacious is ready to fight
- scien= knowledge: prescient has forethought or knowledge ahead of time
- som= sleep
- son= sound: a sonic boom. a sonorous voice has a good sound
- sop= sleep: a glass of warm milk is a soporific.
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- aberrant: abnormal; different from the accepted norm
- abeyance: state of suspension; temporary inaction
- abstemious: characterized by state of self-denial, particularly in the area of food or drink
- acquiescent: agreeing without protest
- acrid: bitter;harsh
- acrimonious: bitter in temper, manner and speech
- acumen: keenness; quickness of intellectual insight
- admonition: a gentle reproof
- affront: to offend, as with a gesture
- aggrandize: to widen in scope or make bigger
- aggregate: amounting to a whole
- allay: to reduce the intensity of
- amalgamate: to mix or blend together in a homogenous body
- ameliorate: to make better or improve
- anecdote: a short account of an interesting incident
- archipelago: a large group of islands
- artifice: cleverness or skill
- ascetic: given to severe self-denial; practiving excessive abstinence
- assiduous: persistent, uneasing
- astute: keen; wise
- audacious: fearless
- austere: unadorned; severely simple
- aver: to avouch, justify or prove
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- Banal: trite; commonplace
- base: the underlying concept of a system or theory
- beset: to surround, as in an attack
- blatant: offensivel loud
- bolster: to support; reinforce
- bombastic: using inflated language; pompous
- boon: a timely benefit
- brevity: briefness or conciseness
- browbeat: to intimidate in an overbearing manner
- bumptious: offensively self assertive; pushy
- bungle: to perform clumsily or inadequately; botch
- burgeon: to grow forth; to send out buds
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- cacophony: a disagreeable, harsh, or discordant sound or tone
- callous: insensitive; indifferent
- calumniate: to make false and malicious statements about
- candor: to be open and sincere
- chicanery: use of trickery to deceive
- churl: a rude, boorish, or surly person
- coda: concluding section of a musical or literary piece; something that summarizes
- cognizant: aware; taking notice
- colloquial: pertaining to common speech
- complacency: a feeling of quiet security
- confidante: one to whom secrets are confided
- congruous: appropriate or fitting
- consternation: panic
- contentious: quarrelsome
- contrite: penitent
- contumacious: rebellious
- corroborate: to make more certain; confirm
- countenance: appearance, especially the look or expression of the face
- counterpart: a person or thing resembling or complementing another
- craven: cowardly
- credulity: willingness to behave or trust too readily
- cronyism: the practice of favoring one's friends, especially in political appointments
- cursory: hasty, superficial, as of a review of something
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- dearth: an inadequate supply; scarcity; lack
- decorum: orderliness and good taste in manners
- deleterious: hurtful, morally or physically
- delineate: to represent by sketch or diagram
- depracity: the state of being morally bad or evil
- deride: to ridicule; to make fun of
- derision: ridicule
- derivative: something obtained from a source
- desultory: aimless; haphazard
- diatribe: bitter or malicious criticism
- didactic: pertainin to teaching
- dilatory: causing delay
- disconcert: to disturb the composure of
- discretion: the power to act according to one's own judgment
- disquiet: lack of calm, peace or ease
- dissemble: to disguise or pretend
- dissolution: breaking up of a union or of persons
- divest: to strip; to deprive
- divulge: to tell or make known, generally of something secret or private
- doldrums: a state of inactivity or low spirits
- dubious: doubtful
- dupe: someone easily fooled
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- ebullient: showing great enthusiasm or exhilaration
- efficacy: power to produce an intended effect
- effrontery: shameless boldness
- egress: exit
- elegy: a poem lamenting the dead
- elicit: to extract without violence; to learn through discussion
- elitism: consciousness or pride in belonging to a select group
|
|
|