abortive  | a. unsuccessful; failing to accomplish an intended objective; fruitless  |  
 aerostatics  | n. a branch of statics that deals with the equilibrium of gaseous fluids and of solid bodies immersed in them  |  
 animadvert  | v. express blame or censure or make a harshly critical remark  |  
 argot  | n. a characteristic language of a particular group, as among thieves  |  
 baroque  | a. complex or bizarre, especially in ornamentation; irregular in shape  |  
 biennium  | n. a period of two years  |  
 brogue  | n. a thick and heavy shoe; a strong outdoor shoe with ornamental patterns  |  
 cacophonous  | a. discordant; inharmonious; sounding harshly; ill-sounding  |  
 cantata  | n. story or poem set to music that can be sung by chorus  |  
 cathode  | n. a negatively charged electrode that is the source of electrons entering an electrical device  |  
 clangor  | n. loud, resounding noise; sharp, metallic, ringing sound; resonant, clanging sound  |  
 cogency  | n. power of proving or of producing belief; quality of being highly probable or convincing; force; credibility  |  
 comity  | n. a state or atmosphere of harmony or mutual civility and respect  |  
 concomitant  | a. in conjunction with; accompanying; associated with  |  
 consanguineous  | a. of the same lineage or origin; having common ancestor  |  
 contemn  | v. look down on with disdain; treat or regard with contempt  |  
 contuse  | v. injure the underlying soft tissue or bone of  |  
 corporeal  | a. bodily; of a material nature; tangible  |  
 coxswain  | n. the helmsman of a ship's boat or a racing crew  |  
 declension  | n.  the variation of the form of a noun, pronoun, or adjective, by which its grammatical case, number, and gender are identified; process of changing to an inferior state  |  
 demagnetize  | v. make nonmagnetic; take away the magnetic properties; erase  |  
 deponent  | n. a person who testifies or gives a deposition  |  
 desiccant  | n. a substance that promotes drying, e.g., calcium oxide absorbs water and is used to remove moisture  |  
 diacritical  | a. capable of distinguishing; showing up a distinction  |  
 diminution  | n. the act of decreasing or reducing something; change toward something smaller or lower  |  
 discountenance  | v. look with disfavor on; show disapproval by discouraging  |  
 dissentient  | a. disagreeing, especially with a majority  |  
 distaff  | n. the sphere of work by women; a stick or spindle onto which wool or flax is wound for spinning  |  
 dowdy  | a. lacking stylishness or neatness; shabby; old-fashioned  |  
 duteous  | a. willingly obedient out of a sense of duty and respect  |  
 effervescent  | a. marked by high spirits or excitement  |  
 effuse  | v. give out or emit; flow or spill forth; pour out  |  
 embolism  | n. an insertion into a calendar; obstruction of an artery, typically by a clot of blood or an air bubble  |  
 empirical  | a. derived from experiment and observation rather than theory  |  
 ennoble  | v. confer dignity or honor upon; give a title to someone; make someone a member of the nobility  |  
 esquire  | n. a title of respect for someone, whose rank just below a knight; an attendant and shield bearer to a knight; a candidate for knighthood  |  
 eureka  | n. an alloy of copper and nickel with high electrical resistance and a low temperature coefficient; used as resistance wire  |  
 exigent  | a. requiring precise accuracy; demanding attention  |  
 expostulation  | n. the act of expressing earnest opposition or protest; an exclamation of protest or remonstrance or reproof  |  
 farrier  | n. a person who shoes horses; a blacksmith  |  
 feudalism  | n. the social system that developed in Europe in the 8th century; vassals were protected by lords who they had to serve in war  |  
 forecastle  | n. living quarters consisting of a superstructure in the bow of a merchant ship where the crew is housed  |  
 fusible  | a. capable of being melted and fused  |  
 grebe  | n. small compact-bodied almost completely aquatic bird that builds floating nests; similar to loons but smaller and with lobate rather than webbed feet  |  
 heterogeneous  | a. consisting of dissimilar elements or parts; completely different  |  
 incunabula  | n. any book printed before 1501; the infancy or earliest stages of something  |  
 inquisition  | n. a severe interrogation, often violating the rights or privacy of individuals  |  
 interposition  | n. the act or fact of interjecting or interposing one thing between or among others  |  
 inure  | v. apply in use; use or accustom till no pain or inconvenience; harden; habituate  |  
 iridescence  | n. the visual property of something having a milky brightness and a play of colors from the surface  |  
 isobar  | n. an isogram connecting points having equal barometric pressure at a given time, for meteorology  |  
 lackadaisical  | a. lacking purpose or zest; halfhearted; lacking spirit or liveliness  |  
 laxative  | a. having a tendency to loosen or relax.  |  
 libertine  | n. free thinker, usually used disparagingly; one without moral restraint  |  
 lingual  | a. relating to, near, or on the side toward the tongue; relating to speech or language  |  
 littoral  | a. of or relating to a coastal or shore region  |  
 macadamize  | v. pave by laying and compacting successive layers of broken stone, often with asphalt or hot tar  |  
 marmot  | n. stocky coarse-furred burrowing rodent with a short bushy tail found throughout the northern hemisphere; hibernates in winter  |  
 metonymy  | n. substituting the name of an attribute or feature for the name of the thing itself  |  
 ministration  | n. assistance in time of difficulty  |  
 modish  | a. in the current fashion or style  |  
 mordacious  | a. capable of wounding; biting or given to biting  |  
 muleteer  | n. a worker who drives mules  |  
 necromancer  | n. one who practices magic or sorcery; one who practices divination by conjuring up the dead  |  
 neurology  | n. the branch of medicine that deals with the nervous system and its disorders  |  
 obsolescence  | n. the process of becoming obsolete; falling into disuse or becoming out of date  |  
 occlude  | v. block passage through; close, shut, or stop up a passage  |  
 orthogonal  | a. statistically unrelated; having a set of mutually perpendicular axes; meeting at right angles  |  
 pamphleteer  | n. a writer of pamphlets, usually taking a partisan stand on public issues  |  
 patronymic  | a. of or derived from a personal or family name  |  
 peevish  | a. easily irritated or annoyed  |  
 penury  | n. extreme poverty; lack of something; barrenness; insufficiency  |  
 perspicuous  | a. transparently clear of language; easily understandable  |  
 phonograph  | n. machine in which rotating records cause a stylus to vibrate and the vibrations are amplified acoustically or electronically  |  
 pogrom  | n. organized persecution of an ethnic group, especially Jews  |  
 precipitant  | a. done with very great haste and without due deliberation  |  
 propitiate  | v. make peace with; appease and render favorable  |  
 ramify  | v. divide into branches or subdivisions; subordinate branchlike parts  |  
 renunciation  | n. sacrificing; giving up; state of having rejected your religious beliefs  |  
 reversion  | n. returning to a former state; turning in the opposite direction; a failure to maintain a higher state  |  
 salacious  | a. lustful; suggestive of or tending to moral looseness  |  
 secede  | v. withdraw from an organization or communion  |  
 solder  | v. repair or unite by using fusible metal alloy, usually tin and lead  |  
 threnody  | n. a song or hymn of mourning composed or performed as a memorial to a dead person  |  
 venereal  | a. of or relating to the external sex organs  |  
 wittingly  | ad. with full knowledge and deliberation  |  
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