Webster Essential Vocabulary

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

reconnoiter (REE kin OY tir) vt. 1. to make a reconnaisance, that is, to seek out
information about enemy installations or positions; 2. to make a preliminary survey



  • Corporal Smith was sent ahead to reconnoiterthe lay of the land and look
    for enemy troops.

  • The surveyor was sent to the prospective shopping center to reconnoiterthe
    property and the existing traffic patterns and to assess the practicality of
    the project.
    [-ed, -ing]
    recrimination(ree KRIM in AY shin) n. the answering of an accusation by
    accusing the accuser; countercharge

  • When Sue threatened to take Jim to court over his dog’s digging up her
    roses, he threatened recriminationover her cat’s destroying his vegetable
    garden.

  • Barbara threatened recriminationif Barry complained to the authorities
    about her noisy party.
    [(to) recriminate vi.]
    rectify(REK ti FY) vt. 1. to set right; correct; 2. (electricity) to convert alternat-
    ing current to direct current

  • Roberta tried to rectifythe error that she had made when she omitted Jack’s
    name from the guest list.

  • Mr. Jones rectifiedthe boundary dispute with his neighbor by moving his
    fence.
    [rectified, -ing]
    redoubtable(ree DOWT ib il) adj. 1. formidable; fearsome; 2. commanding
    respect

  • Atilla the Hun’s horsemen constituted a redoubtableforce.

  • Heavy machinery is redoubtable,and one working with it must exercise care
    at all times.
    reductive (ree DUHK tiv) adj. 1. of or characterized by making smaller or lower-
    ing in price; 2. tending to making things less complex (usually a disparaging term)

  • Certain stores price items so that they may advertise reductivepricing
    schemes.

  • Good science teachers take a reductiveapproach to the subject matter so
    that they can feed the concepts to the students in bite-sized portions.
    [-ly adv.]
    redundancy* (ree DUHN din see) n. 1. the quality of being excessive; super-
    fluity; 2. an overabundance; 3. something that says something already said or does
    something already done; 4. the part of a redundant statement that is superfluous

  • To say that the dirty laundry is not very clean is a redundancy.

  • Due to a redundancyof grain produced most years by U.S. farmers, some of
    them are paid by the government not to grow certain crops.

  • Many commercial airliners have redundanciesdeliberately built into them
    to back up the main systems.

  • “Is not very clean” is the redundancyin the first sentence.
    [redundancies pl., redundance n.]


198 Essential Vocabulary

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