Sunday, April 3, 2011

CBEST vocabulary input

I will append the rest of the interesting words of hopeful fruit from the vocab section at the end of my CBEST review book at the end of my study session. But for now enjoy some of the ones I've written example sentences for last night.

Abet – to act as an accomplice; to aid. The BAU was abetted as usual by their technical analyst’s ability to conjure lists of any assortment of information and sift through it and synthesize pertinent data to yield to her team a shortlist of probably suspects, often times however right to the Unsub him/herself.

Abjure – to renounce under oath. To aver that cheating on one’s partner is to abjure one’s tacit fidelity is to seem controlling.

Abnegate – to give up, to deny to oneself. Toben abnegated quality blankets after infecting his whore-turned-wife with gangrene of the mouth.

Abrogate – annul; abolish by authoritative action. Using the new method Dector was able to abrogate all further pataphysics of the Latter-day Sophists.

Abscond – to leave quickly in secret. Absconding into witching hours of lovers is most prevalent amongst teenagers but after twenty-one, at the latest, trysts begin to decrease almost always at the terrifying and nonchalant request for moderation made by the female counterpart, sometimes behind closed doors.

Abstemious – done sparingly; consuming in moderation. Since working at the library my patron check-out record has become an expression completely opposite from abstemious.

Accede – to express approval; to agree to. Accede is something of the negative of concede, which is to agree disapprovingly.

Actuate – to motivate or influence to activity; to put into motion. The closing in of the CBEST actuated me into high-gear constipative cramtime.

-AC

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