Page 134 - WEBSTER Essential vocabulary
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11_571656 ch07.qxd  11/10/04  12:35 PM  Page 125
                                                                     G – H: SAT Words
                        hindrance (HIN drins) n. 1. the act of preventing; 2. obstacle; impediment; 125
                      obstruction
                          • Hindrance of the bill’s coming to a vote was the intended purpose of the
                             senator’s filibuster.
                          • A Jersey Barrier is a deliberate hindrance to keep traffic moving in opposite
                             directions from crashing into one another.
                          • Being a woman was a considerable hindrance to Jennifer’s attempt to join
                             the men’s baseball team.
                             [Syn. obstacle]
                        hostility (hahs TIL i tee) n. 1. a feeling of antagonism, ill will, unfriendliness,
                      etc.; enmity; 2. hostile acts; an expression of enmity or ill will
                          • A general feeling of hostility toward Japan permeated America after the
                             attack on Pearl Harbor.
                          • Hostility between members of rival gangs has made it difficult to live in
                             some parts of certain U.S. cities.
                          • Hostility of the people toward the regime was the ultimate cause of the
                             storming of the Bastille that began the French Revolution.
                             [Syn. enmity]
                        humanity (yoo MAN i tee) n. 1. human nature; the act or quality of being of
                      the species Homo sapien; 2. (pl.) human qualities, especially the desirable ones; 3.
                      kindness, caring, mercy, sympathy, etc.; 4. mankind; people; 5. (pl.) the branches of
                      learning dealing with social sciences
                          • All humanity is confined to the surface of the earth.
                          • Studying the humanities usually results in a Bachelor of Arts degree.
                          • In times of stress or hardship, it falls on all of us to display our humanity to
                             one another.
                          • A natural disaster on any part of this planet impacts all humanity.
                             [humanities pl.]
                        humorous (YOO mer uhs) adj. funny; amusing; comical; showing humor
                          • If one did not take a humorous view of life’s happenings, he or she would
                             be doomed to constant tears.
                          • Being humorous for a living is a difficult task that very few people manage
                             to accomplish.
                          • Sebastian, who is two years old, thinks that rolling the sleeping dog off the
                             sofa is humorous.
                             [Syn. witty, droll, funny]
                        hypocrite (HIP uh krit) n. someone who pretends to be pious, virtuous, etc.
                      without really being so; one who feigns being what he or she is not; a fake; pre-
                      tender; sham
                          • Although Lloyd makes a big show of his piety at church on Sundays, he is
                             really a hypocrite because he drinks, cusses, and chases loose women the
                             rest of the week.
                          • Used-car salespersons have a well-deserved reputation for being hypocrites,
                             guaranteeing you the world until you’ve signed the contract, then not tak-
                             ing your phone calls.
                             [hypocritical adj., hypocritically adv.]
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