Webster Essential Vocabulary

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

aggrandize(uh GRAN dyz) vt. 1. to make greater, richer, more powerful; 2. to
make seem richer



  • By certifying the landfill as a suitable building site, the county helped to
    further aggrandizeits owner.

  • Although not earning a dollar from the transaction, its very happening
    aggrandizedOtto’s reputation.
    [-d, aggrandizing] [Syn. enrich]
    agronomy(uh GRAHN uh mee) n. management of farmland; the science of
    producing crops

  • For a farmer to get the most from his land, he needs to have some under-
    standing of agronomy.

  • Agronomyteaches that rotating crops allows the land to replenish its essen-
    tial nutrients after they’ve been used.
    allegory(AL ig AWR ee) n. a story in which people, things, and ideas have hid-
    den meanings, often used as a way of teaching values

  • Aesop’s fables are probably the best-known allegoriesin all literature.

  • An allegoryalways has a message apart from its obvious one, which in
    Aesop’s case is provided in the moral at the end.
    [allegories pl.]
    alleviate(uh LEEV ee AYT) vt. 1. to lighten; make less hard to bear; 2. to reduce
    or lessen pain

  • Lloyd took one of the boxes of books from Arlene to alleviatethe load that
    she was carrying.

  • Tears often alleviatethe burden of emotional stress.
    [-d, alleviating] [Syn. reduce]
    allocate(AL uh KAYT) vt. 1. to earmark or set aside for a specific purpose; 2. to
    distribute; mete out

  • The city allocated$200 million to improve mass-transit facilities.

  • Having collected hundreds of donated winter coats, it was now up to the
    lodge to allocatethem among the less fortunate.
    [-d, allocating] [Syn. allot]
    alloy(uh LOY for vt., A loy for n.) vt.1. to fuse two or more metals to form one
    that possesses new properties; 2. to reduce the pureness of a rare metal by fusing it
    with a less precious one —n. a metallic substance derived from the chemical fusion
    of two or more metals

  • Wrapping a strip of copper arround tin does not make an alloy;the tin and
    copper must be smelted at high heat to form the new metal, bronze.

  • Iron is alloyedwith carbon and several other metals to produce steel.

  • Fourteen-karat gold is produced by alloying24-karat pure gold with other
    metals.
    [-ed, -ing]


246 Essential Vocabulary

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