Page 58 - WEBSTER Essential vocabulary
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                                                                          C: SAT Words
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                        circumstance (SIR kuhm STAENS) n. 1. a fact or event that goes with another,
                      as an essential factor or incidentally; 2. any situation; event; 3. conditions affecting
                      a person
                          • When there is thunder, the presence of lightning is an inescapable
                             circumstance.
                          •A circumstance for buying cotton candy is a circus visit.
                          • Charles was in difficult financial circumstances.
                        cite (SYT) vt. 1. to demand an appearance before a court; 2. to quote (a passage,
                      book, writer, speech, etc.); 3. to refer to or bring up (as precedent)
                          • Henry was cited to appear in traffic court next Wednesday.
                          • Mary always cites some classical composer as the inspiration for her musi-
                             cal compositions.
                          • Brown v. Board of Education is a case lawyers often cite when arguing for
                             equal educational opportunities in court.
                             [-d, citing, citation n.]
                        civil (SI vil) adj. 1. of a citizen or citizens; 2. of a community of citizens or their
                      interactions; 3. cultured; 4. courteous or polite
                          • All citizens are entitled to certain civil rights.
                          • Civil war is an oxymoron, like military intelligence.
                          • Civil people should develop an appreciation for the arts.
                          • It is important to be civil, rather than rude, to one another.
                        clarifiy (KLA ri fy) vi., vt. 1. to make or become clear (especially liquids); 2. to
                      make or become easier to comprehend
                          • The chef passed the chicken soup through a strainer to clarify the broth.
                          • Jane clarified the point she was trying to get across.
                          • Often a map will serve to clarify the directions to a place.
                             [clarifies, clarified, -ing, clarification* n.]
                        classical (KLAS i kl) adj. 1. of the highest class; excellent; 2. having a balanced
                      and simple style; restrained; the name of an era bestowed by historians, such as the
                      Classical Era in music history, which preceded the Romantic Era; 3. typical of or
                      based on the literary works of ancient Greece and Rome; 4. well versed in Greek
                      and Roman literature and culture; 5. music in the European style, as distinct from
                      folk, popular, or jazz
                          • The Rolex watch is classical and worth every thousand.
                          • The Jaguar XJ6 has absolutely classical (or classic) lines.
                          • Shakespeare’s tragedies followed those of Sophocles and Euripides as being
                             both classical and timeless.
                          • Until the 1950s, the college graduates of modern Europe and those from
                             Ivy League colleges were given classical educations, with a knowledge of
                             Latin being essential.
                          • Mozart, Haydn, and Beethoven are generally considered the greatest classi-
                             cal composers, although Beethoven bridges the Classical and Romantic eras.
                             [-ly adv., -ity n.]
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