Webster Essential Vocabulary

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

G – H


gargantuan(gahr GAN tyoo uhn) adj.huge; gigantic (from Rabelais’s 1552 satire,
Gargantua and Pantagruel)



  • There was a gargantuantraffic jam at the in-bound George Washington
    Bridge.
    garish(GAI rish) adj.1. very showy; very bright and gaudy; 2. showily dressed,
    written, or decorated

  • The outfit she chose, with the hot pink top and the chartreuse bottom, can
    only be described as garish.

  • The decorations were a garishblend of Peter Max, Andy Warhol, and
    Dollywood, with a liberal sprinkling of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.
    [-ly adv.]
    genealogy(JEE nee AH li jee) n.1. a chart showing the ancestry of a person or
    family; 2. the study of family descent

  • Gloria’s genealogywas spread out on the dining room table.

  • Rick could trace his genealogyback to late-nineteenth-century Russia, but
    no farther back than that.
    [geneological adj., genealogically adv.]
    generalize(JEN er il YZ) vt.to put into nonspecific terms; to infer from —vi.1.
    to talk in generalities; 2. to create principles from known events; 3. to spread

  • It is easy to generalizeabout the benefits of voting for one over the other,
    but a lot harder to get down to specifics.

  • Most politicians find it easier to generalizethan to take a fast stand for
    which they might later be called to task.

  • Newton generalizedfrom the things he observed every day to ultimately
    develop his laws of motion.

  • The local custom of buttering one’s plate and then rubbing bread on it is
    unlikely to generalizeto the nation at large.
    [-d, generalizing, generalization n.]
    generation (JEN er AY shun) n.1. the act of producing something; 2. the spe-
    cific act of producing offspring; procreation; 3. a single stage in the life cycle of a
    species; time between birth and procreation (in humans about 25 years); 4. a group
    of people born around the same time period

  • The generationof electricity is a high priority for western states, which are
    growing in population density.

  • Henry VIII’s desire for the generationof a male heir was the main reason
    the Church of England separated from Rome.

  • Fruit flies are much better subjects for studying genetics than humans
    because there can be a new generationevery few days.

  • If you were born after 1970, you are part of the computer generation.


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