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| No. | Word | Part of Speech | Meaning (simple English) | 4 Synonyms | 4 Antonyms | Example Sentence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | abrogate | verb | to officially end a law or agreement | repeal, revoke, annul, cancel | enact, approve, validate, uphold | The court abrogated the outdated statute. |
| 2 | acrimonious | adjective | full of bitter anger | hostile, rancorous, caustic, spiteful | amicable, friendly, gentle, civil | The acrimonious debate stalled the meeting. |
| 3 | ambivalent | adjective | having mixed or unsure feelings | uncertain, torn, conflicted, hesitant | decided, certain, resolute, sure | She felt ambivalent about moving abroad. |
| 4 | apocryphal | adjective | probably not true; of doubtful truth | dubious, spurious, mythical, fabricated | authentic, verified, genuine, factual | The apocryphal story spread online. |
| 5 | appease | verb | to calm someone by giving what they want | pacify, mollify, soothe, placate | provoke, enrage, anger, inflame | The manager appeased customers with refunds. |
| 6 | arbitrary | adjective | based on personal choice, not reason | capricious, random, whimsical, subjective | rational, fair, consistent, systematic | Workers disliked the arbitrary rules. |
| 7 | assuage | verb | to make less severe | alleviate, ease, mitigate, relieve | aggravate, worsen, intensify, heighten | Clear data assuaged investor fears. |
| 8 | attenuate | verb | to make weaker or thinner | reduce, weaken, lessen, dilute | strengthen, amplify, boost, intensify | Trees can attenuate city noise. |
| 9 | beleaguer | verb | to surround or trouble constantly | besiege, harass, pester, plague | aid, assist, comfort, relieve | The start-up was beleaguered by lawsuits. |
| 10 | bombastic | adjective | using big words with little meaning | pompous, grandiose, inflated, pretentious | modest, simple, plain, restrained | His bombastic speech impressed few. |
| 11 | circumspect | adjective | careful and unwilling to take risks | cautious, wary, prudent, vigilant | reckless, careless, rash, daring | Auditors are circumspect with expenses. |
| 12 | conflate | verb | to mix different things into one | merge, combine, fuse, blend | separate, distinguish, divide, split | Do not conflate opinion with fact. |
| 13 | contravene | verb | to go against a rule or law | violate, breach, defy, infringe | comply, obey, follow, observe | The ad contravened safety standards. |
| 14 | deride | verb | to mock or make fun of | ridicule, sneer, scorn, taunt | praise, applaud, respect, admire | Critics derided the low-budget film. |
| 15 | despot | noun | a ruler with cruel absolute power | tyrant, autocrat, dictator, oppressor | liberator, democrat, reformer, representative | The despot silenced all dissent. |
| 16 | dichotomy | noun | a clear split between two things | division, duality, split, contrast | unity, harmony, integration, union | The report shows a rural–urban dichotomy. |
| 17 | dissonance | noun | disagreement or harsh mix of sounds/ideas | conflict, discord, disparity, clashing | harmony, accord, agreement, unity | There is dissonance between words and actions. |
| 18 | eclectic | adjective | choosing from many styles or ideas | mixed, diverse, varied, wide-ranging | uniform, narrow, limited, exclusive | The café has an eclectic menu. |
| 19 | egregious | adjective | very bad and obvious | outrageous, flagrant, shocking, glaring | minor, trivial, slight, subtle | An egregious error cost the team the match. |
| 20 | enervate | verb | to drain energy or strength | weaken, debilitate, exhaust, sap | energize, strengthen, invigorate, fortify | The heat enervated the hikers. |
| 21 | entrench | verb | to establish firmly so it’s hard to change | embed, cement, root, secure | loosen, weaken, uproot, dislodge | Old habits are deeply entrenched here. |
| 22 | equivocate | verb | to avoid giving a clear answer | hedge, dodge, waffle, prevaricate | clarify, state, assert, affirm | The spokesperson equivocated on the issue. |
| 23 | exculpate | verb | to show someone is not guilty | absolve, acquit, clear, vindicate | blame, convict, condemn, implicate | New evidence exculpated the driver. |
| 24 | fractious | adjective | hard to control; easily annoyed | irritable, unruly, quarrelsome, testy | agreeable, calm, docile, patient | The fractious crowd shouted at officials. |
| 25 | gratuitous | adjective | unnecessary; without good reason | unwarranted, needless, unjustified, superfluous | necessary, justified, warranted, essential | The film had gratuitous violence. |
| 26 | iconoclast | noun | a person who attacks common beliefs | rebel, heretic, nonconformist, dissenter | traditionalist, conformist, loyalist, believer | The iconoclast challenged academic norms. |
| 27 | impetuous | adjective | acting quickly without thinking | rash, hasty, impulsive, reckless | cautious, deliberate, careful, measured | His impetuous tweet sparked backlash. |
| 28 | ineluctable | adjective | impossible to avoid | inevitable, inescapable, unavoidable, certain | avoidable, preventable, escapable, uncertain | Change is ineluctable in technology. |
| 29 | insidious | adjective | spreading harm slowly and secretly | stealthy, subtle, treacherous, sly | harmless, open, benign, overt | The malware posed an insidious threat. |
| 30 | intrepid | adjective | very brave and bold | fearless, daring, courageous, valiant | cowardly, timid, fearful, fainthearted | The intrepid reporter entered the war zone. |

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