Definition
Definition
Definition
Definition
Definition
100

Serendipity

The occurrence of happy or beneficial events by chance.

Example: Finding my old friend at the café was pure serendipity.

100

Ineffable

Too great to be expressed in words.

Example: The beauty of the mountains was ineffable.

100

Ubiquitous

Present or found everywhere.

Example: Smartphones are ubiquitous these days.

100

Recondite

Difficult to understand; obscure.

Example: His research deals with recondite scientific theories.

100

Obsequious

Excessively eager to please.

Example: His obsequious manner annoyed his coworkers.

200

Ephemeral

Lasting for a very short time.

Example: The beauty of a sunset is always ephemeral.

200

Ebullient

Cheerful and full of energy.

Example: Her ebullient personality lights up every room.

200

Recalcitrant

Stubbornly refusing to obey rules.

Example: The recalcitrant employee ignored company policies.

200

Perfidy

Betrayal or deceitfulness.

Example: Her perfidy caused the downfall of the alliance.

200

Pulchritude

Physical beauty.

Example: The statue’s pulchritude captivated everyone.

300

Quintessential 

Representing the most perfect example of something.

Example: She is the quintessential artist, passionate and creative.

300

Inscrutable

Impossible to understand or interpret.

Example: His expression was inscrutable, hiding his true feelings.

300

Munificent

Extremely generous.

Example: She gave a munificent gift to the charity.

300

Sanguine

Optimistic, especially in difficult times.

Example: He remained sanguine despite the bad news.

300

Intransigent

Unwilling to compromise.

Example: Both parties were intransigent in negotiations.

400

Pernicious

Having a harmful effect, especially gradually.

Example: The pernicious spread of misinformation can damage societies.

400

Lugubrious

Looking or sounding sad and gloomy.

Example: The movie had a lugubrious tone throughout.

400

Sycophant

A person who flatters others for personal gain.

Example: The CEO was surrounded by sycophants.

400

Tantamount

Equivalent in seriousness.

Example: Refusing to answer was tantamount to admitting guilt.

400

Lethargic

Lacking energy; sluggish.

Example: She felt lethargic after the long illness.

500

Obfuscate

To deliberately make something unclear or confusing.

Example: The politician tried to obfuscate the issue with vague answers.

500

Disparate

Fundamentally different or distinct.

Example: Their opinions were disparate, making compromise difficult.

500

Vicissitude

A change of circumstances, typically negative.

Example: The company endured many vicissitudes during the recession.

500

Nefarious

Wicked or criminal.

Example: The villain’s nefarious deeds shocked the town.

500

Sagacious

Wise and perceptive.

Example: The sagacious judge made a fair decision.

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