Webster Essential Vocabulary

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

infirm(in FOERM) adj. 1. not strong physically; weak; 2. not strong in one’s
position; vacillating; shaky



  • Certain physically fit senior citizens resent the fact that the elderly and the
    infirmare often referred to in the same sentence.

  • Some congresspersons are infirmin their voting records on civil rights.
    [-ly adv.] [Syn. weak]
    inimitable(in IM it uh bl) adj. incapable of being imitated; too good to be
    copied

  • Certain products, which we will not name here, have proven to be
    inimitable,although many companies have tried.

  • The late Jack Benny was a comedian who influenced many of the comics
    of today, but as a total package, he remains inimitable.
    [inimitably adv.] [Syn. unequaled]
    insectivore(in SEKT iv AWR) n. any of a number of plants or animals (such as
    shrews, moles, aardvarks, Venus flytraps, and so on) that feed primarily on insects

  • It is believed that the human appendix is a vestige left over from an earlier
    time when humans were insectivores.

  • One of the best controllers of insect populations is an insectivore,which has
    taken an unfair beating in literature, the vampire bat.
    insensible(in SEN si bl) adj. 1. lacking in sensation or feeling; unconscious;
    numb; 2. not recognizing or realizing; unaware

  • Perry’s five minutes in the freezing water rendered him insensibleto the
    temperature of the air.

  • Congresswoman Lorraine’s self-centeredness caused her to be insensibleto
    the wishes of her constituents.
    [insensibly adv.]
    insincerity(IN sin SER it ee) n. the quality of being hypocritical; not to be
    trusted; not meaning what one says

  • Howard’s insinceritybecame evident when Diane accidentally scratched the
    diamond he had given her with her car key.

  • When the spider invited the fly to come in and join him for dinner, very
    few knowledgeable insects would have doubted its insincerity.
    insinuate(in SIN yoo ayt) vt. 1. to gradually and artfully work one’s way into;



  1. to suggest or imply; to hint



  • Joanne wanted the part in the play so much that she continuously insinu-
    atedher way into the tryouts until she managed to wangle the role.

  • Tom’s appearing on the platform at the rally for the senator insinuateshis
    support for her positions.
    [-d, insinuating] [Syn. imply, suggest]


298 Essential Vocabulary

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