Answers And Answers 2024
abase - correct answers✅(v.) to humiliate, degrade
(After being overthrown and abased, the deposed leader
offered to bow down to his conqueror.)
abate - correct answers✅(v.) to reduce, lessen (The
rain poured down for a while, then abated.)
abdicate - correct answers✅(v.) to give up a position,
usually one of leadership (When he realized that the
revolutionaries would surely win, the king abdicated his
throne.)
abduct - correct answers✅(v.) to kidnap, take by force
(The evildoers abducted the fairy princess from her happy
home.)
aberration - correct answers✅(n.) something that
differs from the norm (In 1918, the Boston Red Sox won
the World Series, but the success turned out to be an
aberration, and the Red Sox have not won a World Series
since.)
abet - correct answers✅(v.) to aid, help, encourage
(The spy succeeded only because he had a friend on the
inside to abet him.)
,SAT Vocabulary Exam Question And
Answers And Answers 2024
abhor - correct answers✅(v.) to hate, detest (Because
he always wound up kicking himself in the head when he
tried to play soccer, Oswald began to abhor the sport.)
abide - correct answers✅1. (v.) to put up with (Though
he did not agree with the decision, Chuck decided to
abide by it.) 2. (v.) to remain (Despite the beating they've
taken from the weather throughout the millennia, the
mountains abide.)
abject - correct answers✅(adj.) wretched, pitiful (After
losing all her money, falling into a puddle, and breaking
her ankle, Eloise was abject.)
abjure - correct answers✅(v.) to reject, renounce (To
prove his honesty, the President abjured the evil policies
of his wicked predecessor.)
abnegation - correct answers✅(n.) denial of comfort to
oneself (The holy man slept on the floor, took only cold
showers, and generally followed other practices of
abnegation.)
abort - correct answers✅(v.) to give up on a half-
finished project or effort (After they ran out of food, the
,SAT Vocabulary Exam Question And
Answers And Answers 2024
men, attempting to jump rope around the world, had to
abort and go home.)
abridge - correct answers✅1. (v.) to cut down, shorten
(The publisher thought the dictionary was too long and
abridged it.) 2. (adj.) shortened (Moby-Dick is such a long
book that even the abridged version is longer than most
normal books.)
abrogate - correct answers✅(v.) to abolish, usually by
authority (The Bill of Rights assures that the government
cannot abrogate our right to a free press.)
abscond - correct answers✅(v.) to sneak away and
hide (In the confusion, the super-spy absconded into the
night with the secret plans.)
absolution - correct answers✅(n.) freedom from blame,
guilt, sin (Once all the facts were known, the jury gave
Angela absolution by giving a verdict of not guilty.)
abstain - correct answers✅(v.) to freely choose not to
commit an action (Everyone demanded that Angus put on
the kilt, but he did not want to do it and abstained.)
, SAT Vocabulary Exam Question And
Answers And Answers 2024
abstruse - correct answers✅(adj.) hard to comprehend
(Everyone else in the class understood geometry easily,
but John found the subject abstruse.)
accede - correct answers✅(v.) to agree (When the
class asked the teacher whether they could play baseball
instead of learn grammar they expected him to refuse,
but instead he acceded to their request.)
accentuate - correct answers✅(v.) to stress, highlight
(Psychologists agree that those people who are happiest
accentuate the positive in life.)
accessible - correct answers✅(adj.) obtainable,
reachable (After studying with SparkNotes and getting a
great score on the SAT, Marlena happily realized that her
goal of getting into an Ivy-League college was
accessible.)
acclaim - correct answers✅(n.) high praise (Greg's
excellent poem won the acclaim of his friends.) accolade
(n.) high praise, special distinction (Everyone offered
accolades to Sam after he won the Noble Prize.)