Webster Essential Vocabulary

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

M – N


machination(MAK in AY shin) n.a secret or artful plot, usually one having
evil intention (usually plural)



  • The machinationsof the KGB have made for some pretty exciting spy novels.

  • The Odessa Filetells of the machinationsof an organization designed to fur-
    ther the cause of the Nazis after the war.
    [Syn. plot]
    malediction(MAL I DIK shin) n.1. a curse or the calling down of an evil spell
    on someone; 2. evil talk about someone; slander

  • Giving one the evil eye is one form of maledictionpopular among some
    European cultures.

  • Certain Caribbean cultures carry out their maledictionsthrough the use of
    effigies called voodoo dolls.

  • The newspaper story about Henry’s drug misuse was a maledictionworthy
    of a healthy sized lawsuit.
    malinger*(muh LING oer) vt.to feign illness or injury to avoid work; to shirk

  • They have a name for malingeringin the army; it’s goldbricking.

  • One who malingersand gets a reputation for so doing is not likely to
    remain employed for very long, unless, of course, his/her employer is
    his/her parent.
    [-ed, -ing, -er n.]
    mallet(MAL it) n.1. a kind of hammer usually with a head of wood (used to
    drive a chisel) or of hard rubber (used to bang out dents in sheet metal); 2. a long-
    handled hammer with a cylinder-shaped head used for playing croquet or one with
    an even longer handle used for playing polo; 3. a small, wooden hammer with a
    round head used to play xylophone, marimba, glockenspiel, bells, etc.

  • The body-shop worker uses a rubber malletto hammer out small dents.

  • A polo mallethas a very long handle because each player must strike the
    ball while seated on a horse.

  • Wooden malletswith ball-shaped heads are used to strike the keys on a
    xylophone.
    mandate*(MAN dayt) n.1. an authoritative order, usually in writing; 2. the
    overwhelming wishes of an elected official’s constituents, regarded as an order
    —vt.to require, as by law

  • As a result of World War I, mandatesto rule certain areas that used to be
    parts of the Ottoman Empire were issued by the League of Nations.

  • The shop foreman has a mandatefrom ownership to require each worker to
    put in 16 hours of overtime.

  • Senator Strong’s overwhelming victory is a mandatefor him to pursue
    equal rights for women.

  • The new law mandatesa $300 fine for overtime parking.
    [-d,* mandating]


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