A | B |
abdicate (def.) | (v.) to give up or renounce |
abdicate (sent.) | The king did ___ the throne. |
abnormal (def.) | (adj.) Not typical, usual, or regular; not normal; deviant |
abnormal (sent.) | The girl’s temper tantrum was ___ behavior or her. |
abduct (def.) | (v.) to carry off or lead away |
abduct (sent.) | She tried to ___ the horse from its stall while the owner was on vacation. |
aberrant (def.) | (adj.) departing from the right, normal, or usual |
aberrant (sent.) | He was an ___ person and went against the group. |
abominate (def.) | (v.) to regard with intense aversion or loathing |
abominate (sent.) | He did ___ the taste of liver. |
abrupt (def.) | (adj.) sudden or unexpected |
abrupt (sent.) | Her ___ change in attitude was noticed. |
abhor (def.) | (v.) to regard with extreme repugnance; detest |
abhor (sent.) | He ___ gossip because it hurts others. |
abstract (def.) | (adj.) apart from concrete realities |
abstract (sent.) | He was an ___ thinker. |
abstruse (def.) | (adj.) hard to understand; esoteric |
abstruse (sent.) | Her ___ theories were never proven. |
abundant (def.) | (adj.) present in great quantity |
abundant (sent.) | He had an ___ amount of energy. |