Webster Essential Vocabulary

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

optimism(AHP ti mi zm) n.1. the belief that good triumphs over evil; 2. the
tendency to take the most cheerful point of view or hope for the best possible
outcome



  • If you believe that bad will be vanquished and good will win in the end,
    then you are a practitioner of optimism.

  • Optimismpermits one to look at a half empty container of chocolate milk
    and see it as half full.
    [optimistic adj., optimistically adv.]
    orator (AW ruh tir) n.1. a person who delivers a formal public speech;



  1. an eloquent public speaker



  • An oratorwas a person who impressed and swayed his listeners before the
    days of telecommunication.

  • Cicero was perhaps the oratorof greatest fame to emerge from the senate of
    ancient Rome.
    [oration n.] [Syn. declaimer]
    orchard(AWR chird) n.1. an area of land set aside for the raising of fruit-
    bearing trees; 2. such a stand of trees; a grove of fruit trees

  • Peach orchardsdot the countryside in certain parts of Georgia.

  • In New York’s southern Catskill Mountains, it is common to find roads
    lined by apple orchards.
    orchestra(AWR kes truh) n.1. the main floor of a theater; 2. a large musical
    ensemble, specifically a symphony orchestra; 3. the instruments of definition 2

  • As a general rule, the most expensive seats in the theater are the front and
    center orchestraseats.

  • The United States is fortunate to have at least five world-class symphony
    orchestras.

  • The instruments of the orchestraare divided into strings, brass, woodwinds,
    and percussion.
    ordain(awr DAYN) vt.1. to order; establish; decree; 2. to predestine; predeter-
    mine; 3. to invest with the office of a rabbi, minister, or priest

  • In 1789, the framers ordainedthe U.S. Constitution to be the law of the
    country.

  • Some people believe that the future is ordained,and no matter what we do,
    we can’t change it.

  • New clergypersons are ordained,usually from among the ranks of the
    seminarians.
    [-ed, -ing, -ment, ordination n.]
    origin(AWR i jin) n.1. a beginning; a coming into existence; 2. the birth;
    lineage; parenthood; 3. that in which something has its root, source, cause, etc.

  • The Nile River’s originis in Lake Victoria.

  • The originof the practical home computer can be traced to Steve Wozniak’s
    garage.

  • Musical drama with fixed songs and story lines had its originwith the
    operas of Giuseppi Verdi.
    [Syn. source, inception]


170 Essential Vocabulary

Free download pdf