IELTS Vocabulary
Abhorrence – tohate a way of behaving or thinking, often because you think it is not moral.
Sentence – He leaves office with near-record-high approval ratings despite widespread abhorrence at his personal behavior, pollsters say.
Accelerate – When a vehicle or its driver accelerates, the speed of the vehicle increases.
Sentence – Scrapping activity, however, might accelerate in coming years.
Accumulate – to collect a large number of things over a long period of time.
Sentence – In that situation failure to accumulate in the face of rapidly rising real wage costs spells disaster.
Accuracy – the fact of being exact or correct.
Sentence – At first he insisted on the accuracy of his account, however, he agreed with what I said.
Acquiesce – to accept or agree to something, often unwillingly.
Sentence – There are no plans to do acquiesce to comply with the president’s request on the authorized package.
Advent – thefact of an event happening, an invention being made, or a person arriving.
Sentence – The advent of motorized transportation further improved communications.
Adversity – a difficult or unlucky situation or event.
Sentence – Learning is an ornament in prosperity, a refuge in adversity, and a provision in old age.
Advocate – to publicly support or suggest an idea, development, or way of doing something.
Sentence – Become an advocate for your child.
Alumnus – someone who has left a school, college, or university after finishing their studies there.
Sentence – The alumni don’t want to hear it, but the previous coaching regime vastly oversold the goods.
Ambiguous – having or expressing more than one possible meaning, sometimes intentionally.
Sentence – These ambiguous and contradictory percentages lead to no clear.
Ambivalent – having two opposing feelings at the same time, or being uncertain about how you feel.
Sentence – The party’s position on nuclear weapons is deeply ambivalent.
Analogy – a comparison between things that have similar features, often used to help explain a principle or idea.
Sentence – Let’s use a stock market analogy to answer this question.
Antique – something made in an earlier period that is collected and considered to have value because it is beautiful, rare, old, or of high quality.
Sentence – You can’t give away Granny’s old bookcase – it’s a valuable antique.
Appetite – the feeling that you want to eat food.
Sentence – Having little or no appetite in the morning.
Appease – to prevent further disagreement in arguments or war by giving to the opposing side an advantage that they have demanded.
Sentence – Your families should be proud… for your sacrifice will appease the gods, and protect all that live in our great city.
Apprehensive – feeling worried about something that you are going to do or that is going to happen.
Sentence – Understandably, she was apprehensive, being the only woman among so many men.
Arbitrary – based on chance rather than being planned or based on reason.
Sentence – The boundaries of this house have been drawn arbitrary so that the neighbours do not suffer from our actions.
Archaeology – the study of the buildings, graves, tools, and other objects that belonged to people who lived in the past, in order to learn about their culture and society.
Sentence – Her book is still a standard text in archaeology, even though it was written more than twenty years ago.
Ascribe – toconsider something to be caused, created, or owned by someone or something.
Sentence – This effort to ascribe blame makes no sense, because the dip was too small to matter.
IELTS Vocabulary
IELTS Vocabulary