associate (uh SOH shee ayt for vt.,uh soh SHEE itfor n. and adj.) vt.1. to con-
nect; combine; join together; 2. to bring a person into a relationship (friendship,
partnership, etc.); 3. to connect mentally —n.1. somebody with whom one is con-
nected, such as a partner, friend, fellow worker, etc.; 2. a member of some group,
firm, society, etc. with less than full status; 3. anything joined to some other thing
—adj.1. joined with others in some kind of work; 2. of less than full status; 3. con-
nected; accompanying
- Barry and Bob have chosen to associateand form The Killer Bees—a com-
 pany that will make buzzers.
- For their advertising needs, The Killer Bees have decided to associatewith
 Bell Star and Associates.
- I often associatepeanut butter with jelly; don’t you?
- The non–chief justices of the U.S. Supreme Court are associatejustices.
- Betty and Veronica are associatesin a certain comic book.
- Jim earned an associatedegree from County College.
- Barry is a sales associateat a major appliance store.
 [-d, -ciating]
 assume (uh SOOM oruh SYOOM) vt.1. to put on or take on the appearance, job,
 form, etc. of; 2. to grab; usurp; 3. to personally undertake; 4. to take for granted; 5.
 to feign; pretend to have
- When Jodi put on the costume, she assumedthe appearance of a human-
 sized mouse.
- After a coup, Napoleon assumedthe power to rule France.
- Marty will assume the task of providing refreshments.
 •I assumedthat Geri had bought tickets, and I was wrong.
- You may assumethe role of the nuclear scientist, even though you failed to
 pass arithmetic.
 [-d, assuming]
 assumption(uh SUHMP shn) n.1. (religious) the taking up of a person into
 heaven; a Roman Catholic holiday celebrating the Virgin Mary’s being taken up; 2.
 a taking upon one’s self, taking over, or taking up; an assuming; 3. anything taken
 for granted; a supposing
- The Feast of the Assumptionis a Roman Catholic holiday.
- The First Bank just completed the assumptionof Harry and Peter’s mortgage
 loan, so from now on, the monthly checks should be made out to First Bank.
- Napoleon’s assumptionof the title of emperor gave the rest of Europe some-
 thing to be concerned about.
- The assumptionthat you were going to get a B or better in chemistry does
 not appear to have been well founded.
 astute (ast OOT, ast YOOT) adj.being clever or shrewd of mind; cunning;
 crafty; wily
- Getting out of the dot.com stocks just before they crashed was an astute
 move on Jerry’s part.
- A fox is a very astuteanimal, often referred to as cunning.
- If Hal were astute,he’d pick up on Lynn’s hint to call her.
 [-ly adv., -ness n.] [Syn. shrewd]
32 Essential Vocabulary
