Units 1 & 2
Units 3 & 4
Units 5 & 6
Units 7 & 8
Wild
100

(n.) scattered fragments, wreckage

debris

100

An employee who _______________ from the petty cash box will get caught sooner or later.

pilfers

100

(v.) to give way to superior force, yield

succumb

100

A limited attention span is his biggest ______________________________.

liability

100

synonym:  promising, encouraging

antonym: sinister, ominous 

auspicious 

(unit 4)

200

(v.) to make a mess of; to get by

(n.) a hopeless mess

muddle

200

(adj.) favorable; fortunate

auspicious

200

Do you have a _____________________ explanation for not completing your assignment on time?

credible

200

(v.) to absorb fully; to adopt as one's own;

assimilate

200

synonyms: argumentative, combative, belligerent

pugnacious

300

(v.) to reproduce, increase, or spread rapidly

proliferate

300

The thieves who _____________________ with several of the museum's most valuable paintings have never been found.

absconded

300

(adj.) shameless, impudent; made of brass

brazen

300

(adj.) thoughtful, melancholy  

pensive

300
antonyms: rigid, stiff, inflexible

pliant

400

(v.) to wipe out; to keep oneself from being noticed

efface

400

(v.) to seize and hold a position by force or without right.

usurp

400

Athletes must be _____________________ in the pursuit of excellence if they hope to become Olympic champions.

tenacious 

400

antonyms: sensible, reasonable, realistic, plausible

preposterous

400
synonyms: wild, uncontrolled, riotous


antonyms: quiet, well behaved, docile

obstreperous  

500

(v.) to strengthen, build up

fortify

500

The enraged King Lear ________________ the daughters who have cast him out into the fierce storm.

reviles

500

synonyms: twaddle, gibberish, piffle

prattle

500

Is there anything more unpleasant than to go to a store and find yourself in the hands of a(n) _____________________________ salesperson?

surly

500

antonyms: flowing, running, fresh, sweet

stagnant

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