Webster Essential Vocabulary

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

D


damage(DAM ij) n.1. injury or harm, resulting in a loss of soundness or value;


  1. (pl.) (law) money claimed by or ordered paid to a person to compensate for
    injury or loss —vt.to do harm to —vi.to incur harm

    • Marla received damageto her neck when she skied off the main slope and
      into a nearby compost heap.

    • Claiming that the compost heap should not have been so close to the
      slope, Marla sued the ski lodge for damages.

    • When he hit the lamppost, Jakob damagedhis tricycle.

    • Freddy’s ear was damagedwhen the newspaper carrier hit it with the
      Sunday paper.
      [-d, damaging] [Syn. injure]
      daze(DAYZ) vt.1. to stun, stupefy, or bewilder as by a shock or blow to the
      head; 2. to dazzle —n.a stunned condition

    • The bright headlamps dazedthe deer as she momentarily froze in her
      tracks.

    • Bumping his head dazedIan just long enough to permit his prisoner to slip
      away unnoticed.

    • After having survived frightful conditions while marooned on the island,
      the newly rescued sailor wandered around in a daze.
      [-dly adv.]
      debacle(di BAK il) n.1. a torrent of debris-filled waters; 2. an overwhelming
      defeat or route; 3. a total, often ludicrous, collapse or failure

    • After the dam burst, a debacledescended on the farms and villages below.

    • Napoleon never recovered from his Battle of Waterloo debacle.

    • The Bible tells of the debaclethat resulted from man’s attempt to build the
      Tower of Babel.
      debatable (di BAYT i bl) adj.1. arguable, having pros and cons on both sides;



  2. something that can be questioned or disputed; 3. in dispute, as land claimed by
    two countries

    • Whether the country’s economy does better under Republicans or
      Democrats is highly debatable.

    • Whether the next Oscar really will go to the best picture of this year is
      debatable.

    • The ownership of Kashmir is debatablebecause it is claimed by both India
      and Pakistan.
      debunk(di BUHNK) vt.to expose the false or exaggerated claims, pretensions,
      glamour, etc. of con artists and charlatans

    • Some people take it as their life’s work to debunkthe schemes of con artists.

    • The self-proclaimed Great Randi has debunkedmany so-called mentalists by
      revealing their deceptions.
      [-ed, -ing, -er n.]




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