Homework 2
Homework 2
Homework 2
Collegiality (n.):
Ex: I've never experienced such immediate collegiality and interest in helping me learn the
ropes.
When you work together with another person or group to achieve something, especially in
science or art
Ex: The company is building the centre in collaboration with the Institute of Offshore
Engineering.
Collaboration between
Collaboration with
Ex: The project has involved collaboration with the geography department.
The ability to continue doing something difficult or painful over a long period of time
Physical/mental endurance
The ability to continue waiting or doing something for a long time without becoming angry or
anxious
Willingness to allow people to do, say, or believe what they want without criticizing or
punishing them
Tolerance of/towards/for
The degree to which someone can suffer pain, difficulty etc without being harmed or damaged
Tolerance to
Ex: After its opening weekend, a movie's final box office gross can be estimated with
considerable exactitude.
With precision
Ex: The work was carried out with military precision (=the work was done in a carefully planned
and exact way).
Your/His Eminence a title used when talking to or about a cardinal (=priest of high rank in the
Roman Catholic Church)
Prominence (n.): /"prmnns $ "pr:-/
Prominence of
Determined to do something and unwilling to stop trying even when the situation becomes
difficult
Tenacious beliefs, ideas etc continue to have a lot of influence for a long time
Ex: It's amazing how often you see drivers using mobile phones.
Contemptuous of
To make remarks or jokes that show you think someone or something is silly or useless
Ex: Amnesty International denounced the failure by the authorities to take action.
Boast that
Boast about
Boast of
To talk too proudly about what you have done, what you own etc - used to show disapproval
Brag about
Brag that
Ex: Julia used to brag that her family had a villa in Spain.
Ex: White House officials attempted to downplay the President's role in the affair.
Consciously (adv.):
Being aware
Ex: She was probably not consciously aware of her true feelings
The feeling of not being interested in something, and not willing to make any effort to change or
improve things
Ex: They chose to die nobly rather than to betray their king.
A particular type of character which makes someone likely to behave or react in a certain way
Disposition towards
Disposition of
Disposition of
To look at something carefully and thoroughly because you want to find out more about it
To successfully control a feeling or problem that prevents you from achieving something
The act of deliberately making someone believe something that is not true
The crime of deceiving people in order to gain something such as money or goods
Ex: After much deliberation, first prize was awarded to Derek Murray.
Deliberation of
Ex: The jury deliberated for four days before acquitting him.
Deliberate on/about/over
Intended or planned
Exhaust yourself
Exhaust a subject/topic etc to talk about something so much that you have nothing more to say
about it
Ex: Once we'd exhausted the subject of Jill's wedding, I didn't know what to say.
Extreme tiredness
With exhaustion
Exhaustion of
Account of
Ex: The victim received head injuries from which she died a week later.
Ex: Clare was haunted by the fear that her husband was having an affair.
Ex: An error that would come back to haunt them for years to come
If something or someone obsesses you, you think or worry about them all the time and you
cannot think about anything else
Deserving blame
Feeling very ashamed and sad because you know that you have done something wrong
Guilty about/at
Guilty of
Ex: Some journalists are guilty of reporting scandal in order to sell papers.
Desire to do something
Desire for
Ex: It was Harold's desire that he should be buried next to his wife.
Express/show a desire
Have no desire to do something (=used to emphasize that you do not want to do something)
A quality that is inherent in something is a natural part of it and cannot be separated from it
Inherent in
Ex: I'm afraid the problems you mention are inherent in the system.
Ex: I cannot explain- my brain is on fire, I think -but try to judge with lenience
Not strict in the way you punish someone or in the standard you expect:
Ex: School examiners say that marking has become more lenient in recent years.
To give someone something or allow them to have something that they have asked for
Ex: The council has granted him permission to build on the site.
To admit that something is true although it does not make much difference to your opinion
Ex: He's got talent, I grant you, but he doesn't work hard enough.
Very strange and unpleasant and connected with death or with people being seriously hurt
One of a group of people who spend a lot of time with each other - used to show disapproval
Somebody's cronies
Someone who is debauched behaves in a bad or immoral way, for example by drinking too much
alcohol, taking drugs, or having sex with many people
Behavior that shows you refuse to do what someone tells you to do, especially because you do
not respect them
Act/gesture of defiance
Ex: Many people were drinking in the streets, in flagrant defiance of the ban.
Disparity in/between
Ex: A disparity between the rates of pay for men and women
Incongruence (n.): /n"kgrus $ -"k:-/
Including all the necessary facts, details, or problems that need to be dealt with
Continuing to talk for too long or using too many words in a way that is boring
Ex: For once, his usually verbose wife was content to listen.
Lengthy (adj.): /"lei/ comparative lengthier, superlative lengthiest [usually before noun]
A speech, piece of writing etc that is lengthy is long and often contains too many details
Rambling speech or writing is very long and does not seem to have any clear organization or
purpose
Always trying to control other people without considering their wishes or feelings
Someone who is domineering tries to control other people without considering their feelings or
ideas - used to show disapproval
Not having the ability to see a difference between two people or things, and therefore unable to
make judgments about them
Ex: The novels considered are those read by the undiscriminating crowd.
Comply with
Pass/adopt/approve a resolution
Resolution of
Resolution to do something
If a situation, fact etc inclines you to do or think something, it influences you towards a
particular action or opinion
Incline to do something
Incline to/towards
Ex: I incline to the opinion that this principle extends to cases of religious discrimination.
A speech or piece of writing that is added to the end of a book, film, or play and discusses or
explains the ending or something that happens at the end of a series of events
Prologue to
When someone gives money or gifts to people who have less than they do, or the money or gifts
Ex: Presumably public money is not dispensed with such largesse to anyone else.
Generosity (n.): /;den"rsti $ -"r:-/
Generosity to/towards
Lack of exactitude
Something that is ambiguous is unclear, confusing, or not certain, especially because it can be
understood in more than one way
If you are equivocal, you are deliberately unclear in the way that you give information or your
opinion
A way of describing something by saying it is much bigger, smaller, worse etc than it actually is
Ex: It was not hyperbole to call it the worst storm in twenty years.