Webster Essential Vocabulary

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

precocious(pri KOH shis) adj. 1. matured to a level beyond that which is nor-
mal for one of that age (a precocious child); 2. of or demonstrating premature
development



  • Geoffrey was so precociousthat he was walking at 8 months of age.

  • Mathew was precociousenough to be taking college-level math courses
    while still in junior high school.

  • Mozart’s precociousmusical skill is well documented.
    [-ly adv.]
    predators*(PRED uh TAWRZ) n. 1. ones who live by exploiting and robbing
    others; 2. ones who capture and feed on other animals; 3. birds or creatures of prey

  • Predatorsoften take advantage of older or disadvantaged people.

  • Lions, like most predators,are at the top of their food chain.

  • Predatorsof the bird family are known as raptors.
    predecessor (PRE di CES oer) n. 1. a person who held the same office before the
    one currently occupying it; 2. an ancestor; 3. something that was used before it was
    replaced by a newer thing

  • Lyndon Johnson’s predecessoras president was John F. Kennedy.

  • Cro-Magnon man is believed to have been a predecessorof Homo sapiens.

  • The ice box, which contained a block of ice, was the predecessorof the
    refrigerator.
    predict (pri DIKT) vt. foretell; to know and state what a future event will be

  • If fortune tellers can predictthe future, why aren’t they all rich?

  • It is easy to predictthat the next word you look at after predictwill be
    prehensile.
    [-able* adj., -ably adv.]
    prehensile(pree HEN sil) adj. adapted for grabbing, such as the tails of many
    monkeys; grasping

  • If you’ve ever gone to the monkey house, then you’ve seen monkeys
    swinging by their prehensiletails.

  • Unlike most humans, monkeys and lemurs have prehensilefeet and can use
    them to pick things up.
    premise*(PREM is) n. a prior statement or condition that serves as the basis for
    an argument or procedure; the underlying assumption

  • The premiseof your asking whether I enjoyed the movie Gladiatoris in
    error because I never saw the film.

  • When Dawn asked Cathy how she’d enjoyed college chemistry, her premise
    was that Cathy had taken the course, and she was correct.
    [Syn. presumption]


P – Q: SAT Words 189

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