Webster Essential Vocabulary

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

heighten(HY tin) vt.1. to take to a higher position; raise; rise; 2. to make
better, greater, stronger, etc.; increase; intensify



  • Alexis hoped that by taking evening classes, she would heightenher value
    to the firm.

  • Regular periods of exercise can only heightenone’s fitness.

  • Having been picked on as a child served to heightenPaul’s awareness of the
    sensitivities of others.
    [-ed, -ing] [Syn. intensify]
    heinous(HAY nuhs) adj.terribly evil; wicked; abominable; totally awful

  • The treatment of Iraqi Kurds by Saddam Hussein’s government can only be
    described as heinous.

  • It is heinousof anyone to attempt to deny that the Holocaust of World War II
    actually took place.
    [-ly adv.] [Syn. outrageous]
    heritage(HER i tij) n.1. any property that has been or will be inherited;



  1. the rights, status, or duties attached to having been born of a certain status
    or at a specific time or place; birthright



  • Aunt Dora’s lamp with the reverse-painted shade is Karen and Bob’s
    heritage(along with a load of crackle glass).

  • Freedoms of speech, press, and religion are the heritageof every American
    citizen.

  • It is also every American citizen’s heritageto defend those freedoms.
    [Syn. inheritance, birthright]
    hierarchy(HY ir AHR kee) n.1. a group of officials, persons, or things arranged
    by rank, class, grade, etc.; a group of church officials so arranged; 2. the highest
    officials in such a group

  • The heirarchyof commissioned officers in the army is easy to see because
    the ranks are arranged from the low rank of lieutenant to the top rank of
    general.

  • The hierarchyof the Roman Catholic Church begins with the pastor, travels
    up through the bishops, archbishops, and cardinals, and ends with the
    pope.

  • From municipality to county to state to federal is the hierarchyof
    U.S. government.
    [hierarchical adj., hierarchically adv.]
    hinder(HIN doer) vt.1. to restrain; hold back; prevent; 2. to impede; make dif-
    ficult for —vi. to get in the way of

  • Police barriers are used at parades to hinderthe public’s physical access to
    the marchers.

  • Jaamal’s sore ankle hinderedhis ability to play basketball.

  • A lightning storm would definitely hinderany action taking place at the
    golf tournament.
    [-ed, -ing] [Syn. obstruct, impede]


124 Essential Vocabulary

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