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| 8th Grade Worksheets of Hyde Park, New York | 
 
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abhor  | v. fill with horror and loathing; horrify; hate  |  
 abrasive  | a. rubbing away; tending to grind down  |  
 alternative  | a. one of two or more things, ideas or courses of action that may be used; option; choice  |  
 ambiguous  | a. unclear or doubtful in meaning  |  
 amiss  | a. out of proper order; not in perfect shape; faulty  |  
 anarchy  | n. absence of governing body; state of disorder; political disorder and confusion  |  
 anonymous  | a. having no name; having unknown or unacknowledged name  |  
 anthology  | n. book of literary selections by various authors  |  
 apathy  | n. lack of caring; indifference  |  
 apprehend  | v. take into custody; arrest a criminal; grasp mentally; perceive  |  
 assimilate  | v. incorporate and absorb into mind; make similar; cause to resemble  |  
 assumption  | n. something taken for accepted as true without proof; taking over or taking possession of  |  
 audacious  | a. fearlessly, often recklessly daring; bold  |  
 authority  | n. jurisdiction; power to enforce laws  |  
 avid  | a. greedy; eager for; marked by keen interest and enthusiasm  |  
 ban  | n. official prohibition; decree that prohibits something  |  
 belligerent  | a. inclined or eager to fight; aggressive  |  
 bisect  | v. cut in half or cut in two  |  
 bizarre  | a. fantastic; very strange and unusuall in style or appearance  |  
 boycott  | v. refrain from buying or using  |  
 capable  | a. having the ability required for a specific task  |  
 cause  | n. a person or thing that gives rise to an action  |  
 characterize  | v. distinguish; be characteristic of; be a distinctive trait or mark of  |  
 chronological  | a. arranged in order of time of occurrence  |  
 commence  | v. have a beginning or origin; originate; start; begin  |  
 compels  | v. force somebody to do something  |  
 concise  | a. brief and compact; expressing much in few words  |  
 conclude  | v. enclose; reach as an end of reasoning; make final determination ; judge or decide; bring to an end  |  
 confiscate  | v. officially take private property away from someone, usually by legal authority  |  
 conjecture  | v. guess, based on the appearance of a situation and not on proof  |  
 conscientious  | a. wishing to do what is right, especially to do one's work or duty well and thoroughly; diligent; responsible; reliable  |  
 consecutive  | a. following one after another without interruption; sequential  |  
 consistent  | a. being in agreement with itself; always behaving or happening in a similar  |  
 construct  | v. form by assembling or combining parts; build; create  |  
 contrast  | n. act of distinguishing by comparing differences  |  
 corroborate  | v. establish or strengthen as with new evidence or facts; support with evidence  |  
 depict  | v. represent in a picture or sculpture; portray in words; describe  |  
 derive  | v. obtain or receive from a source; trace the origin or development of  |  
 despicable  | a. fit or deserving to be despised; contemptible; mean; vile; worthless  |  
 despondent  | a. unhappy and with no hope or enthusiasm  |  
 elapse  | v. slip or glide away; pass away silently  |  
 embark  | v. commence; go on board a boat or airplane; begin a journey  |  
 encompass  | v. surround; form a circle or ring around; enclose; envelop  |  
 endeavor  | v. attempt by employing effort; try to do something  |  
 evidence  | n. something which makes evident or manifest; any mode of proof  |  
 evoke  | v. bring out; arouse; call forth  |  
 feasible  | a. capable of being accomplished or brought about  |  
 focus  | n. most important thing; a fixed reference point; center of interest or activity  |  
 formula  | n. plan; directions for making something; a group of symbols that make a mathematical statement  |  
 generation  | n. all offspring at same stage from common ancestor; interval of time between the birth of parents and their offspring  |  
 gruesome  | a. causing horror; frightful and shocking  |  
 imminent  | a. near at hand; close in time; about to occur  |  
 impel  | v. drive or force onward; drive forward; urge to action through moral pressure  |  
 imperative  | n. having power command or control; critically importance; some duty that is essential and urgent  |  
 inspire  | v. encourage; inspirit; fire the imagination of  |  
 integrate  | v. make whole; combine; make into one unit  |  
 interrogate  | v. question closely; examine by questioning formally or officially  |  
 modify  | v. alter; make partial or minor changes to  |  
 mutiny  | n. open rebellion against constituted authority (especially by seamen or soldiers against their officers)  |  
 narrate  | v. to give an account or tell the story of  |  
 novice  | n. beginner; person new to a field or activity  |  
 obsolete  | a. no longer useful; outmoded; antiquated  |  
 opposition  | n. condition of being in conflict; act of opposing something  |  
 perish  | v. be destroyed; pass away; become nothing  |  
 perspective  | n. appearance of things; view, outlook, or vista  |  
 persuasive  | a. capable of convincing; having the power to induce action or belief  |  
 plagiarize  | v. steal another's ideas and pass them off as one's own  |  
 precise  | a. exact; clearly expressed; accurate or correct  |  
 prediction  | n. something foretold or predicted; prophecy  |  
 prevalent  | a. widespread; widely or commonly occurring, existing, accepted  |  
 procedure  | n. act or manner of moving forward; steps taken in an action  |  
 profound  | a. deep; not superficial; far-reaching  |  
 proprietor  | n. one who has legal title to something; owner  |  
 prudent  | a. cautious; careful in regard to one's own interests  |  
 pseudonym  | n. pen name; fictitious name used when someone performs a particular social role  |  
 quote  | v. name the price of; state a price for securities, goods, or services  |  
 rebel  | v. revolt; resist or defy an authority; break with established customs  |  
 rebuff  | v. offer sudden or harsh resistance; turn down or shut out; repel or drive back  |  
 rebuke  | v. scold harshly; criticize severely  |  
 recur  | v. reappear; happen or occur again  |  
 resilient  | a. elastic; having power of springing back or recover readily  |  
 response  | n. the manner in which an electrical or mechanical device responds to an input signal or a range of input signals  |  
 reverberate  | v. to throw or bend back, from a surface; ring or echo with sound; spring back; spring away from an impact  |  
 significant  | a. fairly large; important in effect or meaning  |  
 similar  | a. like or alike; of the same kind  |  
 simulate  | v. make a pretence of; reproduce someone's behavior or looks  |  
 simultaneous  | a. existing, happening, or done at the same time  |  
 source  | n. point of origin, such as spring, of stream or river; one that causes, creates, or initiates  |  
 specific  | a. stated explicitly or in detail; definite  |  
 spontaneous  | a. arising without external cause; growing without cultivation or human labor  |  
 surmise  | v. guess;  infer something without sufficiently conclusive evidence  |  
 theory  | n. doctrine or scheme of things; general or abstract principles of any science  |  
 tirade  | n. extended scolding; long angry or violent speech  |  
 universal  | a. relating to the entire world or all within the world; affecting all; present everywhere  |  
 validate  | v. confirm; ratify; declare or make legally valid  |  
 variable  | n. factor; something that is likely to vary; changeable; inconstant  |  
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