Saturday, January 29, 2011

Analysis and tests of vocabulary Kaoyan clean sweep (below)

 Divide, separate
these two verbs have a things together, separated or near, the common structure responsibility, emphasizing awareness, as a countable noun refers to the task of their own work.
His duty is to see that the business runs well. His duty is to ensure the smooth functioning of business.
obligation n. refers to the contract or under the law effective education appropriate to their age.
responsibility n. responsibility, emphasizing the meaning to be responsible for the consequences.
His father is ill, and he has the responsibility of caring for him. His father was sick, he has responsibility to take care of him.
eject, inject, project
This is a form of words in recent Analogues.
eject v. out, emit, expel.
The pilot ejected from the falling airplane. the pilot ejected from the aircraft falling out.
inject v. injection.
The nurse injected some medicinesintosthe patient with a needle. nurse to the patient using a syringe injection.
project v. out, prominent; expected forecasting; projection showing.
The balcony projects out beyond the wall of the house. terrace from the house wall protruding.
The government projects that the defence budget will increase by 20%. the government defense budget is expected to growth of twenty percent.
eligible, illegible
eligible a. rights, and have qualified.
He graduated from high school with good grades, so he is eligible to enroll in the state college. He graduated with honors from high school, he studied at the State University are eligible.
illegible a. difficult to understand, and illegible.
The writing is illegible; I cannot read what it says. writing is not clearly, I could not see what is written above.
eminent, imminent
a form which is close to the Confusing Words.
eminent a. famous, excellent, contact.
He is eminent in the field of linguistics. He is very famous in the field of linguistics.
imminent a. imminent, imminent, nearby.
The wedding date is imminent, so we must send invitations. wedding approaching, So we have issued invitations out.
emotion, feeling, passion, sensation, sentiment
term in this group have a other than emotion, something that caused the excitement.
He felt mixed emotions when he thought of her. When he thought of her when they have a complex emotional.
feeling n. refers to the general mood, feeling that it generally does not reflect the nature and intensity of feelings.
passion n. passion, enthusiasm, desire, extreme hatred, referring to a passion, anger or lust.
He spoke with passion about the love of freedom. He enthusiastically talking about the love of freedom.
sensation n. refers to the human senses to external stimuli generated by sense perception.
When she watched the film, she had the sensation that she was in a moving car . she was watching a movie, I felt sitting in a moving car.
sentiment n. thoughts and feelings, emotions, feelings color, that due to some thought to arouse feelings, emphasizing the subjective role, sometimes with intellectual component.
When our grandmother died, we remembered her life with strong sentiment. When the grandmother died, we deeply miss her life.
encourage, excite, inspire, motivate, stimulate
this verbs are He encouraged his sons to prestigious universities.
excite v. instigator, and with excitement; incitement, encouragement.
The band played louder and excited the audience. more the band played loud, and make the audience excited.
inspire v. encouraged, inspired, influence, and often with an to motivate us.
motivate v. stimulate, and promote action, emphasizing the motivation to do something stirred.
A desire to go to medical school motivates her to study hard everyday. She hopes to medical school, it became her daily work motivation.
stimulate v. stimulate, stimulate, promote, emphasize the results of stimulation.
Cold air stimulates me. cold stimulation cheer me up.
equal, equivalent, identical < br> This group of adjectives have the are of equal length as long as these two tables
It is a big responsibility to take on, so I hope he 's equal to the task. to shoulder great responsibility, I hope he qualified for the task. < br> equivalent a. equal, the same. with equal base may be used interchangeably.
The two computers are equivalent in speed. This is two computers in the computing speed is the same.
identical a. same , exactly the same.
The boys are identical twins. The two boys are identical twins.
equipment, facility, instrument
equipment n. refers to the production, the Institute needs the equipment, installations, such as a variety of machines and equipment, is an uncountable noun.
a factory with modern equipment with modern equipment, factory
facility n. refers to the larger facilities, equipment, especially common for the public convenience facilities .
The facility at that club includes tennis courts and a swimming pool. the club's sports facilities include tennis courts and a swimming pool.
instrument n. instrument, apparatus, used for a purpose tools. < br> As a flexible actor, he can perform, sing, dance and play several kinds of musical instruments. as a versatile actor, he can show, will sing and dance, but also can play different types of musical instruments.
essential , indispensable, necessary
essential a. something that belongs to the elements or characteristics of a says. the core point is that we must do in accordance with the provisions of the contract.
indispensable a. stressed that the objective is essential to sustain life, or can not otherwise be impossible to do a certain thing.
Warm clothing is indispensable in cold weather. in the cold weather, warm clothes are essential.
necessary a. general terms, emphasizing the subjective point of view is necessary, inevitable.
exceed, surpass, transcend < br> This group of verbs have sales of new products than we expected.
surpass v. superior to or more than someone (something).
The runner surpassed his old record by 10 seconds. runner than his past record increased by 10 seconds.
transcend v. above or beyond, generally refers to transcend experience, common sense, general ability, emphasizing difficult for the public to understand.
The nature of God transcends of human comprehension. God's nature is difficult for people to understand.
faint, feeble, fragile, weak
faint a. weak vertigo, a person feel weak in certain situations, usually are not born but rather weak on the physical causes for some temporary situation.
The summer sun was so strong that she felt faint. summer sun is too strong, she felt dizzy.
feeble a. feeble, weak, and often used to describe a person's voice or behavior.
The elderly lady has become feeble and unable to care herself. The old lady was very weak, unable to take care of herself.
fragile a. fragile, brittle and break easily refer to objects, or people of weak constitution, easy hurt.
That dish is fragile, so be careful. the plate easily broken, so do be careful.
weak a. This group of words in one of the most extensive range of applications, both for the weak, the powerless can also be extended to the strength, power, skills, or lack of impact has weakness.
The patient is losing blood and becoming weak. patient blood loss, the body began to go weak.
feasible, practicable, practical, pragmatic
feasible a. feasible feasible, after the implementation can be successfully used to represent the
Your work plan is feasible, so we can build the bridge immediately. your work plan is feasible, so we can Now the construction of the bridge.
practicable a. can be implemented, viable, only that a possibility, but the effect is not necessarily the ideal implementation.
Their marriage was so bad that divorce seemed the only practicable solution . Their marriage was so bad that divorce seems to be the only viable solution.
practical a. practical, useful, practical, and that things are not proven, such as plans, projects and so on. < br> She felt that most of what she learned in the course was of no practical use. She was learned in class do not have much practical use of knowledge.
pragmatic a. pragmatic, practical, pragmatic, stress the importance of knowledge to solve practical problems, not the pursuit of unrealistic goals.
He would like to be a doctor, but he has a pragmatic attitude and realizes that he cannot afford medical school. He wanted to be a doctor, but he very practical, knowing not afford to go College.
gaze, gape, glance, glare, glimpse, peer, peep, stare
this group of verbs with v. looked, look, that due to curiosity, sigh, looking intently for a long time.
She gazed at her beautiful new diamond ring. She stared at the stone his beautiful new diamond ring.
gape v. (Zhang mouth open, eyes wide open) stay of view, emphasized a state of shock.
The children gaped at the big elephant in the zoo. at the zoo, the children stare at the elephants mouth fell open.
glance v. (a rough, offhand) glance, look at the.
He glanced over the letter he had just received. He had just received the letter read it again rough.
glare v. glare stressed hostile or angry mood in view; blinding to exposure.
The woman glared at the man after he shouted rudely at her. The man screamed violently lashed out at her, and she glowered.
glimpse v. with similar meaning glance, a short glance, a glance.
peer v. means narrowing his eyes look carefully, especially obscure circumstances; effort to look, stare.
Being somewhat short-sighted , she has the habit of peering at people. because the little short-sighted, she has the habit of squinting Man.
peep v. peep, peep.
The mother peepedsintosthe bedroom to see if her child was asleep. mother secretly looked to the bedroom to see whether her children slept.
stare v. gaze, staring, that due to curiosity, surprise, admiration and other reasons, eyes wide open for a long time, direct attention, often contains rude mean.
I told my son to stop staring at that fat woman; it wasn't nice. I told son not to stare at that fat woman, so Man impolite.
historical, historic
these two adjectives and the historical importance. the French Revolution of great historical significance.
historic a. historic and important.
a historic meeting between two leaders of the historic meeting between the two leaders
hospitality, hostility
This is a form close to the Confusing Words.
hospitality n. warm welcome, gracious hospitality.
We enjoyed the hospitality of friends at their country home. friends in the countryside, warm hospitality of our home so that we had a good
hostility n. and adj from hostile (unfriendly, hostile), hostility, confrontation.
You can feel the hostility coming from that man. you can feel that person's hostility.
hypercritical, hypocritical
hypercritical a. carping, criticism harsh.
He is so hypercritical that he corrects every mistake his students made. He was very harsh, the students have to correct each error. < br> hypocritical a. hypocritical, and hypocrisy.
hypocritical behaviour hypocritical behavior
ignore, neglect, omit, overlook
a group of verbs have . neglect, ignore, that consciously rejected.
She saw him coming but she ignored him. She saw him approaching, but pretended.
neglect v. ignore, ignore, neglect, refers to the unconscious ignored or forgotten.
He neglected to make repairs in his house. he forgot repair the house.
omit v. omission, neglect, forget, forget that negligence can also be said that was because of adverse or bad ignore the other.
She omitted several steps in the experiment and it failed. She missed a few steps to the experiment, the results of the experiment failed.
overlook v. neglect, omission, means a conscious omission, can also refer to unconsciously ignored.
The mother overlooked her little boy's bad behavior. The mother neglected her son's bad behavior.
imaginable, imaginary, imaginative
imaginable a. can imagine, often for the latter set attribute, often before a noun modified by adding all, every, only, or their very best.
In her painting, she has used every color imaginable. In her paintings, she used it to imagine color.
imaginary a. fictional, imaginary.
The child has an imaginary friend. the child has a supposed friend.
imaginative a. imaginative.
an imaginative writer imaginative writer
imitate, intimate, intimidate
This is a form of words in recent Analogues.
imitate v. imitate, imitate; copy, copy.
The boy imitates his father's way of talking. that boy imitating his father's way of speaking.
intimate a. intimate; warm and comfortable.
We have had an intimate friendship since we were young. We have since established since a young age a close friendship.
intimidate v. intimidation, threats.
An older boy intimidated the little children when he took their lunch money. a little older boy threatened to those children, and stole their lunch money.
imperial, imperious
imperial a. Empire, the emperor; imperial, majestic; imperial (non-metric weights and measures system, such as pounds, gallons, pints, etc.).
the imperial guards Imperial Guard
imperious a. arrogant, imperious.
The strict father showed an imperious attitude toward his children. the strict father of the child's attitude is very arbitrary.
imply, infer
imply v. (from a speech or attitude) suggests, alluding to (some things).
The Secretary of the Treasury implied that interest rates would go down. Finance Minister suggested interest rates will fall.
infer v. (based on known facts) inference, reasoning.
I infer from your smile that you are happy. From your smile I can see you very happy.
industrial, industrious
This is a form of words in recent Analogues .
industrial a. industrial, industry, and from the term industry.
Industrial production is up this year; but agriculture is weak. This year's industrial output rose, but agriculture remains weak.
industrious a. diligent, busy.
She started her own business and is now very industrious. opened her own company, so it is busy.
initial, original, primitive
initial a. started Initially, the emphasis in the initial stage of things, you can refer to at the beginning places.
My initial good opinion of him changed with time. I told him a long time a good first impression changed.
original a . first, the earliest; original, and originals. that is the first order, in the more primitive no longer had the same kind of things; also refers to the original, original, non-imitation stuff.
This is the original piano on which the composer created some of his greatest works. is on the piano, the composer to create some of his greatest works.
primitive a. original, ancient, and Early refers to human life or things in the early stages of development, can also refer to natural or simple.
Primitive tribes live in the Amazon River basin. primitive tribes living in the Amazon River basin.
interfere, intervene, interrupt, disturb
have the words ; interference > intervene v. interference, intervention, more formal, often interfere with the action; addition, there are Parents beating their children you will interfere with you?
interrupt v. disturb, interrupt, hinder. often frequently interrupted by applause.
disturb v. disturb, obstruct. often refers to the loss of the normal state or lead to difficulties in production.
Bad dreams disturbed her sleep. nightmares interfere with her sleep.
invaluable, valueless
invaluable a. priceless, invaluable, and the equivalent of priceless.
Your help in moving the big refrigerator was invaluable. your help to move the big refrigerator, your help is valuable.
valueless a . of no value, equivalent to worthless.
That bracelet is a cheap, valueless piece of jewelry. That bracelet is a cheap, worthless jewelry.
jealous, envious
jealous a. jealous , implies there is hate and bad feelings.
He gets jealous when other man talks to his girlfriend. When the other man and his girlfriend talk time], he will be very jealous.
envious a. envy , emphasizing the psychological comparisons caused by envy.
He is envious of my new car and wants one like it. He was very envious of my new car, but also want one just like ...

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