Skip to content
fitfully (adj) – irregular intervals
- The wind howled fitfully.
- The sporadic raindrops fell fitfully.
- The drunk driver swerved along the road fitfully.
guesswork (noun) – process of guessing
- The way we learn english in China is pure guesswork.
- We use guesswork to find our candidates.
- America has been using guesswork to find its spies.
distaste (noun) – mild dislike
- I regard my mother with distaste.
- They eye me up and down with distaste.
- There is a certain amount of distaste in her voice
succumb (verb) – failed to resist pressure; to accept defeat.
- The soldiers succumbed to their injuries.
- After so many deaths, we succumbed.
- The Titanic succumbed to the freezing ocean.
procure (verb) – obtain something carefully and with much effort.
- I managed to procure the secret from her.
- We managed to procure some edible food from the dumpster.
- Have you procured the documents?
actuate (verb) – cause to take action; motivate; put into motion.
- My dislike for America was actuated by political zealots.
- A high performing athlete is actuated by good warmups.
- The sudden heavy rain actuates the crowd to disperse.
shirk (verb) – neglect a duty.
- The massage therapist shirked when she saw her client.
- I shirked the cleanup because the environment was too dangerous.
- She shirks her agreement because he was just too creepy.
incongruous (adj) – out of harmony with its surrounding; out of place
- I felt incongruous on my first day in an American school.
- The bottles of soda looked incongruous sitting there on the gym floor.
- My black girlfriend and I were incongruous in American’s dating scene.
convolute (verb) – make something difficult to follow.
- The US government convolutes her people’s wishes.
- The remnants of the crash convolutes the investigation.
- Their selfish ways convolute our team work.
innumerable (adj) – too many to count
- They are indifferent to the innumerable sufferings of children.
- The amount of problems that Andy has is innumerable.
- The innumerable army surges forward.
pugnacious (adj) – eager to argue/fight
- Those brats are pugancious.
- The most pugnacious countries in the world has the most insecure citizens.
- When I’m hungry, I become pugancious.
sordid (adj) – involving immoral actions and motives
- I ignore their sordid explanations.
- The overcrowded slums are sordid.
- The sordid affairs of Israel’s president should be investigated.
eccentric (adj) – odd; unconventional
- You have very eccentric behavior.
- The girl behind the tree is eccentric.
- The eccentric teacher takes a nap.
sanguine (adj) – optimistic in the face of a bad situation.
- I am sanguine about my test scores.
- I have a sanguine view on the Palestine-Israel conflict.
- Young people always have sanguine opinions on love.