Page 91 - WEBSTER Essential vocabulary
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                        Essential Vocabulary
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                      dingy (DIN gee) adj. 1. yucky; dull; not clean; grimy; 2. ragged; gloomy
                        • If you don’t use chlorine bleach on your cotton whites, you’re likely to
                          have them come out a dingy yellow.
                        • Jane’s attempt to wangle an invitation to the party was rather dingy.
                          [dingily adv., dinginess n.]
                      discern (dis OERN) vt. 1. to clearly distinguish one thing from another or others;
                   to recognize as distinct or separate; 2. to clearly make out
                        • It was not hard to discern the difference between the hearts and the spades
                          in the deck of cards.
                        • Terry discerned a feeling of approval rising from her captive audience.
                          [-ed, -ing, -able adj., -ably adv.] [Syn. perceive, distinguish]
                      discordant* (dis KAWR dint) adj. 1. not in agreement; conflicting; 2. out of
                   harmony; clashing; dissonant
                        • The unhappy incoming news was discordant with the recipient’s more
                          uplifting expectations.
                        •A discordant note was struck by the politician addressing the labor union
                          leadership.
                          [discordance or discordancy n., -ly adv.]
                      discount (DIS cownt for n., dis COWNT for v.) n. 1. money off the usual price;
                   2. a deduction from a debt allowed for paying it early or in cash; 3. the interest rate
                   charged —vt. 1. to pay or get the present value of a note less the interest; 2. to sub-
                   tract an amount or percent from (a bill, price, etc.); 3. to sell at less than the usual
                   price; 4. to take a story, statement, opinion, etc. at less than face value, or to totally
                   disregard it as exaggeration
                        • Everything in the store was discounted 15%.
                        • Many Treasury bonds are sold at a discounted rate to allow for the interest
                          that will accrue between purchase and maturity.
                        • Corporate bonds are often sold at a discount rate so that the purchaser pays
                          less than the face value.
                        • In certain furniture stores, the pieces are marked so that the customer can
                          discount 50% to get the selling price.
                        • The police officer discounted most of Denise’s story, which made her role
                          look better than it actually was.
                          [-ed, -ing] [Syn. reduction]
                      discourse* (DIS kawrs) n. 1. exchange of ideas, information, etc. usually
                   through talking; conversation; 2. a long, formal speech or essay on a subject; lec-
                   ture; treatise; dissertation —vi. 1. to carry on a talk; confer; 2. to speak or write for-
                   mally and at some length
                        • The secretary of state gave a discourse on foreign policy.
                        • The doctoral candidate’s dissertation was a discourse on the number of seeds
                          that one might expect to find on various breeds of strawberries and why.
                        • The two musicians discoursed with each other about the meaning of
                          Beethoven’s notations in the margins of his pieces.
                        • The president discoursed at some length about not knowing how the terri-
                          ble economy could be fixed and about how it wasn’t his fault anyway.
                          [-d, discoursing] [Syn. speak]
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