IELTS - Lesson 2 Exercise

Appearances and Attitudes


1. Acidulous: somewhat acid or sour

2. Baleful: deadly; sinister.

3. Bellicose: warlike; of a quarrelsome nature

4. Bilious: bad-tempered; bitter. It comes form the French word bilis (“bile”), the fluid secreted by the liver

5. Bumptious: arrogant; disagreeably conceited.

6. Captious: critical; quick to find fault; quibbling.

7. Churlish: boorish; surly. This adjective comes from “churl,” the old word for a peasant.

8. Complaisant: willing to please; tending to consent to others’ wishes.

9. Contrite: crushed in spirit by a feeling of guilt.

10. Convivial: festive; sociable.

11. Craven: cowardly

12. Debonair: courteous, gracious and having a sophisticated charm; suave; urbane. In Old French the words were de bon aire (“of a good race or breed”)

13. Dyspeptic: grouchy; gloomy; a person who suffers from dyspepsia or indigestion.

14. Lachrymose: sad; mournful; inclined to shed many tears.

15. Neurasthenic: having emotional conflicts that lead to weakness and depression.

Exercises:


I. Which Word Comes to Mind?

In each of the following, read the statement, then circle the word that comes to mind

  1. A defendant’s attitude that impresses the jury (debonair, contrite, acidulous)
  2. An ill-tempered waiter (complaisant, craven, churlish)
  3. Physical ailments that stem from worry (baleful, neurasthenic, bumptious)
  4. A person suffering from indigestion (dyspeptic, bellicose, captious)
  5. An angry boss insulting his workers (lachrymose, bilious, convivial)
  6. Someone with a chip on his or her shoulder (bellicose, craven, complaisant)
  7. A tearful movie (captious, lachrymose, churlish)
  8. Stealing from the blind man (bumptious, craven, dyspeptic)
  9. After the prank, the college boys apologize (contrite, convivial, bilious)
  10. Giving someone a hotfoot as a practical joke (churlish, debonair, acidulous)

II. True or False?

In the spaces provided, indicate whether each statement is true or false.

  • ____________ 1. A craven leader inspires respect in his followers.
  • ____________ 2. Citizens are pleased to see a criminal who is contrite.
  • ____________ 3. Captious people often split hairs.
  • ____________ 4. It’s difficult for a gawky 14-year-old to look debonair.
  • ____________ 5. By displaying proper etiquette, one can expect to be praised for one’s churlishness.
  • ____________ 6. The children’s lachrymose behavior at the funeral was understandable.
  • ____________ 7. Arthur’s bumptious remarks at the dinner embarrassed his roommate.
  • ____________ 8. We always maintained a bellicose relationship with our good neighbor, Canada.
  • ____________ 9. The acidulous reviews led the producers to close the play after two performances.
  • ____________ 10. The tone at most New Years parties is quite convivial.

III. Fill in the Blank

Insert one of the new words in the proper space in each sentence below.

  1. The entire audience was sobbing as the curtain came down on the __________ending.
  2. Some patriots labeled the refusal to join the army as a _________action.
  3. I hate dining with ________people who criticize everything the chef prepares.
  4. Our normally peaceful terrier turns ________whenever the letter carrier arrives.
  5. The choral singing and the beautiful decorations lent a ________flavor to our party.
  6. Mel was told that a psychiatrist might cure his _________symptoms.
  7. Benjy’s __________attitude endeared him to his teammates.
  8. At game time, the nervous coach displayed a ________ demeanor.
  9. Rocco’s _______ glare intimidated me.
  10. I like to tease __________ characters who are swollen by their imagined importance.

IV. What’s the Antonym?

Which of the new words is most nearly opposite in meaning to the one provided?

  1. peaceful ____________
  2. happy ____________
  3. congenial ____________
  4. contrary ____________
  5. polite ____________
  6. sweet-tempered ____________
  7. humble ____________
  8. well-mannered ____________
  9. heroic ____________
  10. well-adjusted ____________
Home

1

Lesson-1

Jingoist, Lothario, Maverick, Nemesis, Philanderer, Philippic, Procrustean, Protean, Pyrrhic victory, Quixotic, Saturnine, Solecism, Spoonerism, Sybarite, Tawdry

2

Lesson-2

Acidulous, Baleful, Bellicose, Bilious, Bumptious, Captious, Churlish, Complaisant, Contrite, Convivial, Craven, Debonair, Dyspeptic, Lachrymose, Neurasthenic

3

Lesson-3

cabal, camaraderie, caste, cortege, detente, echelon, ecumenical, elite, esprit de corps, freemasonry, genealogy, hierarchy, hobnob, liaison, rapprochement

4

Lesson-4

adagio, andante, arpeggio, bravura, contralto, crescendo, falsetto, fortissimo, imbroglio, intaglio, largo, libretto, salvo, staccato, vendetta

5

Lesson-5

alienist, amanuensis, beadle, cosmetologist, dermatologist, entomologist, farrier, graphologist, internist, lapidary, ophthalmologist, ornithologist, osteopath, pharyngologist, physiologist

6

Lesson-6

Adonis, Bacchanal, Cassandra, Cornucopia, Erotic, Herculean, Hermetic, Hydra, Hymeneal, Iridescent, Narcissism, Odyssey, Olympian, Palladium, Phoenix

7

Lesson-7

aberrant, anthropomorphism, archetype, authoritarian, cathedrals, demography, epidemiology, euthanasia, extrovert, psychic, psychopath, psychotherapy, schizophrenia, subliminal, traums

8

Lesson-8

aficionado, barrio, bonanza, bravado, desperado, flotilla, grandee, hacienda, lariat, machismo, manana, palmetto, renegade, siesta, torero

9

Lesson-9

anachronism, anon, antebellum, antediluvian, atavism, augury, betimes, biennial, diurnal, eon, ephemeral, epoch, generation, score, tercentenary

10

Lesson-10

bane, deign, eke, knell, mete, moot, mulct, plumb, quail, roil, ruck, shunt, svelte, thrall, tryst

11

Lesson-11

abscess, aphasia, arteriosclerosis, biopsy, cadaver, carcinogen, comatose, etiology, malingerer, mastectomy, prosthesis, simian, therapeutic, tumescence, vasectomy

12

Lesson-12

bovine, equine, feline, hircine, leonine, lupine, ophidian, ovine, piscine, porcine, saurian, taurine, ursine, vixen, vulpine

13

Lesson-13

atonement, bicameral, Decalogue, decimate, dichotomy, double-think, millennium, nihilism, penultimate, primeval, protocol, quatrain, quintessence, tessellated, untrammeled

14

Lesson-14

adjudicate, appellate, collusion, deposition, equity, exhume, incommunicado, intestate, ipso facto, lien, litigation, perjury, pettifogger, tort, tribunal

15

Lesson-15

circumspect, demure, dispassionate, dolorous, edacious, effete, feisty, flaccid, flippant, florid, glabrous, imperious, ingenious, intractable, intransigent

16

Lesson-16

alchemy, arcane, conundrum, demonology, exorcise, inscrutable, pallor, phenomenology, polygraph, purloin, ritual, shamus, soothsayer, thaumaturgy, warlock

17

Lesson-17

archaeology, elfin, infinitesimal, Lilliputian, megalopolis, minimize, minutiae, palatial, peccadillo, picayune, simulacrum, soupcon, teeming, titanic, vista

18

Lesson-18

accolade, conclave, dirge, draconian, epicurean, gossamer, immolate, juggernaut, junket, ostracism, proletariat, rigmarole, rubric, Socratic, sycophant

19

Lesson-19

acrophobia, bibliophile, claustrophobia, Francophile, hydrophobia, misanthropy, misogyny, paranoid, philately, Philistine, phylogeny, philology, Russo phobia, triskaidekaphobia, xenophobia

20

Lesson-20

archaeology, cardiology, ecology, endocrinology, gerontology, gynecology, morphology, necrology, neurology, paleontology, pathology, rhinology, seismology, speleology, toxicology

21

Lesson-21

jejune, libidinous, licentious, mercurial, meretricious, minatory, mutable, niggardly, nonchalant, noxious, obdurate, obtuse, officious, omniscient, pusillanimous

22

Lesson-22

amicus curiae, arson, barrister, embezzle, extradition, habeas corpus, immaterial, incarcerate, indeterminate, larceny, litigious, miscreant, perpetrator, plagiarism, probation

23

Lesson-23

avant-garde, bete noire, bot mot, coup de grace, cul-de-sac, dues ex machina, fait accompli, fin de siecle, gauche, junta, laissez-faire, mot juste, non compos mentis, non sequitur, sine qua non

24

Lesson-24

coiffure, demarche, denouement, éclat, élan, entrepreneur, impasse, ingénue, malaise, mélange, repartee, sangfroid, tete-a-tete, tour de force, vignette

25

Lesson-25

acrid, addle, ado, alms, amulet, aperture, askew, bauble, bevy, bilk, blithe, careen, chary, nabob, onus

26

Lesson-26

antaean, argonaut, calliope, cyclopean, gorgon, harpy, Homeric, myrmidon, oracular, paean, plutonian, Promethean, stygian, terpsichorean, thespian

27

Lesson-27

pedantic, pertinacious, pontifical, pretentious, prolix, puerile, quiescent, recalcitrant, restive, ribald, sardonic, sedulous, sleazy, supercilious, voluptuous

28

Lesson-28

a cappella, ad hoc, bon vivant, de facto, gemutlich, leitmotif, nolo contendere, per excellence, parvenu, piece de resistance, postprandlal, quid pro quo, qui vive, savoir faire, sub rosa, vis-à-vis

29

Lesson-29

ambivalent, bucolic, crotchety, dilatory, disconsolate, dudgeon, froward, genteel, jocund, loquacious, splenetic, tendentious, truculent, vacuous, venal

30

Lesson-30

amorphous, gargantuan, iota, lissome, macrocosm, magnitude, magnum opus, microcosm, micrometer, scabrous, scintilla, serpentine, sinuous, smidgen, tenuous

31

Lesson-31

bathos, malapropism, metaphor, metonymy, onomatopoeia, oxymoron, panegyric, paradigm, paralipsis, pleonasm, polyglot, semantics, simile, synecdoche, threnody

32

Lesson-32

argot, aspersion, badinage, bombast, braggadocio, censure, countermand, gainsay, gobbledegook, guttural, harangue, jargon, mellifluous, resonant, sententious

33

Lesson-33

canon, hegemony, oligarchy, peonage, pharisaical, plebiscite, plenipotentiary, proxy, recession, regicide, renascent, reprisal, subversion, surrogate, votary

34

Lesson-34

antipodal, cartography, concierge, hegira, hustings, landmark, peripatetic, portmanteau, safari, tandem, transmigrate, traverse, trek, wanderlust, wayfarer

35

Lesson-35

a la carte, assuage, comestible, condiment, cuisine, culinary, gastronomic, gourmand, manna, palatable, piquant, refection, repast, subsistence, viands

36

Lesson-36

antic, beguile, bonhomie, dalliance, divertissement, euphoria, guffaw, insouciance, japery, regale, risible, roguish, roister, squib, waggish

37

Lesson-37

anarchy, bourgeois, bureaucracy, demagogue, ethos, gerrymander, imperialism, Machiavellian,. martial, muckraker, partisan, reactionary, schism, suffrage, totalitarian

38

Lesson-38

abnegation, abscond, affidavit, altercation, battery, bequest, cause celebre, caveat emptor, codicil, contiguous, contraband, contumacious, disenfranchise, injunction, jurisprudence

39

Lesson-39

aphorism, dogma, empirical, epistemology, eschatology, fallacy, hedonism, pragmatism, predestination, ratiocination, syllogism, teleology, tenet, theosophy, utilitarian

40

Lesson-40

agnostic, apocalyptic, apocryphal, apostate, apotheosis, benediction, blasphemy, deist, infidel, mantra, ontology, pantheism, sacrilegious, syncretism, theodicy
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