Vocabulary for IELTS – Part 90

Vocabulary for IELTS
Vocabulary for IELTS

Vocabulary for IELTS

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 90

Abet  – to help or encourage someone to do something wrong or illegal.

Sentence – Both were accused of aiding and abetting the transfer abroad of £2.6m of St Piran assets in breach of the undertaking.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 90

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.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 90

Agitate – to make someone feel worried or angry

Sentence – The itinerant returned with new resolves to agitate at the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting in 1758.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 90

Alert – quick to see, understand, and act in a particular situation

Sentence – Every police car and foot patrol in the area is on full alert.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 90

Alluring – the quality of being attractive, interesting, or exciting

Sentence – In defiant frustration, Nicole dabbles in the underground Seattle rock scene, where the older guys are equally alluring and dangerous.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 90

Ample – more than enough

Sentence – The equivalent of two tablespoons of polyunsaturated oils is ample each day.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 90

Baffle – tocause someone to be completely unable to understand or explain something

Sentence – The side baffle is equipped with pneumatic trimming facilities.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 90

Bicker – to argue about things that are not important

Sentence – In the morning Bicker was ill-tempered when he was told of the latest addition to the company, but Ratagan was pleased.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 90

Blame – to say or think that someone or something did something wrong or is responsible for something bad happening

Sentence – It’s natural to recriminate against someone who has tried to put the blame on you.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 90

Blend – a mixture of different things or styles

Sentence – I tried to blend into the crowd, but I was obviously not dressed for the occasion.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 90

Audible – able to be heard

Sentence – The lecturer spoke so quietly that he was scarcely audible at the back of the hall.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 90

Coerce – to persuade someone forcefully to do something that they are unwilling to do

Sentence – International law possesses the attributes of norm and coerce, which are the common natures of law.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 90

Morale – the amount of confidence felt by a person or group of people, especially when in a dangerous or difficult situation

Sentence – The bonus helped maintain morale among the staff.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 90

Prevail – to get control or influence

Sentence – If my wretched brother should somehow prevail.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 90

Prudent – careful and avoiding risks

Sentence – When your overtures are misconstrued, the prudent course is sometimes to apologise and withdraw.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 90

Retort – to answer someone quickly in an angry or funny way

Sentence – The teacher’s demonstration might be countered by the retort that other things besides chalk leave white traces on a blackboard.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 90

Scapegoat – a person who is blamed for something that someone else has done

Sentence – Alternatively the committee could have served as a scapegoat if Pomgol activities had failed completely.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 90

Sedate – avoiding excitement or great activity and usually calm and relaxed

Sentence – Doctors have been told not to sedate children with an anaesthetic that may be linked to five deaths.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 90

Superstition – belief that is not based on human reason or scientific knowledge, but is connected with old ideas about magic, etc.

Sentence – There’s an old superstition that young girls going to bed on this night dream of their future husbands.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 90

Supplement – somethingthat is added to something else in order to improve it or complete it; something extra

Sentence – The money I get from teaching the piano is a useful supplement to my ordinary income.

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20th February, IELTS Daily Task
https://www.instamojo.com/CZMOGA
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