Helpful Good Kind Innocuous Safe Innocent Sheltered
(v.) to shrink back in fear, lose heart in a difficult of dangerous situation
The soldiers had been in battle for months and began to quail when their leader was captured.
Cringe Falter Flinch Recoil Wince Have Cold Feet Quake Shudder
Face Meet Endure Take On Withstand Challenge Confront Stand
(adj.) leaping, jumping, or springing forth; prominent, standing out, conspicuous
(n.) a projection or bulge, a land form that projects upward or outward
The boy stood on the salient cliff and looked out at the acres on land below.
The salient at the end of the road was so high that no one had ever been to the top.
Extend Hang Out Prolong Jut Stick Out Protrude
Cave In Collapse Crumble Deflate Flat
(v.) to satisfy completely, to fill to excess(adj.) full, satisfied
After eating at the buffet, Toby was satiated so much that he felt sick.
Fill Gorge Indulge Stuff Saturate Cloy Glut
Deprive Dissatisfy Leave Wanting Hold Back Bereave
(v.) to make or become dry and withered, to char or scorch the surface of; to harden or
make unfeeling
The marshmallow was seared after being held over the campfire.
Scorch Cook Wilt Shrivel Wither Brown Dehydrate
Freeze Chill Cool Hydrate
(adj.) deceptive, apparently good or valid but lacking real merit
The specious man only did his good deeds for the money he would get in return and not out of the kindness of his heart
Vain Untrue Deceptive Empty Delusive False Seeming
Honest True Valid Real Kind-Hearted Credible Bona Fide
Choosing the right word
Her (perceptive, florid) writing style, abounding in adjectives and fancy metaphors, is far from suitable for factual newspaper stories.
In a series of (searing, contingent) attacks now known as the Philippics Cicero launched his entire battery of political invective against the hapless Mark Antony.
We are most likely to fall victim to (discursive, specious) reasoning when we have an emotional desire to believe what we are being told.
Some English queens were strikingly elegant and imposing figures; others were somewhat (florid, dowdy) and unprepossessing.
Let’s not allow them to (foist, accentuate) on us ideas and programs that have been proved failures in other countries!
The idea that we can solve our problems by borrowing money to meet the payments on our debts is (palpably, perceptively) absurd.
Perhaps he did not originate that vicious rumor, but he certainly shares the responsibility for having (seared, disseminated) it.
Children are often remarkably (discursive, perceptive) in understanding how adults feel about them.
Out of all the endless flow of dull verbiage in that long lecture, we could recognize only two or three (gauche, salient) points.
The leaden sky of that bleak November day only served to (accentuate, inculcate) the gloom I felt at the sudden death of my best friend.
I (quailed, seared) so much at the prospect of undergoing major surgery that my hands literally trembled as I entered the hospital.
The most tragic aspect of a forest fire is its destructive effects on the innumerable plant and animal (denizens, heresies) of that environment.
Although the essays are highly (discursive, dowdy), covering a wide range of topics, they are written In such clarity and grace that they are easy to follow.
No doubt his efforts to advance his own interests were (censurable, florid), but let’s try to keep a sense of proportion and not condemn him too much.
She was so (palpable, abstemious) that she extended her self-control even to her beloved music, and listened to records no more than an hour each day.
All the available evidence (corroborates, foists) my theory that the theft was planned by someone familiar with the layout of the house.
As the Scottish poet Robert Burns aptly suggests, even the best laid plans are often easily (palpable, contingent) on events over which we have no earthly control.
The study of history teaches us that many ideas regarded as (heresies, disseminations) by one generation are accepted as sound and orthodox by the next.
Before we start out to (inculcate, foist) certain principles in our young people, let’s be very sure that these principles are truly desirable for them and their society.
He thought he was being witty and charming, but I regarded his conduct at the part as altogether (abstemious, gauche).
The more we studied the drug problem, the more we became aware of its (florid, pernicious) influence on American people today.
I rather like the better TV game shows, but I find that after a certain point, I’m (satiated, foisted) and ready for more substantial fare.
Modern nutritionists emphasize that there is a(n) (palpable, abstemious) difference between “eating to live” and “living to eat”.
Although the Declaration of Independence was framed only to justify a revolution in the British colonies in North America, its ideas and ideals have been (disseminated, accentuated) throughout the world.
Her (florid, pernicious) personality was in sharp contrast to the quiet, restrained demeanor of her younger sister.
The silence in their home when we made the condolence call was so (perceptive, palpable) that we could almost reach out and touch it.