Webster Essential Vocabulary

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

simplistic(sim PLIS tik) adj. taking a complicated situation and making it unre-
alistically simple; oversimplified



  • It is simplisticto believe that a calculus problem can be solved while stand-
    ing on one foot.

  • Trying to fix an overheating car engine by adding cold water is taking a
    simplisticapproach—and is also likely to get you burned.
    [-ally adv.]
    simply(SIM plee) adv. 1. in a simple way; with simplicity; 2. merely; only; just;



  1. absolutely; totally



  • The dress was made simply,in a short time.

  • Faith was simplytrying to be nice by offering her help.

  • Will was simplyfurious with the way he had been treated.
    sinuate(SIN yoo it for adj., SIN yoo ayt for v.) adj. 1. s-shaped, like a sine curve;
    sinuous; 2. having an indented, wavy edge, like some leaves —vi. to bend or wind
    in and out

  • Some grand-prix automobile race tracks sport sinuatesections, unlike
    American ovals where cars only turn left.

  • Some slicing knives have sinuateedges for thinly slicing cold cuts and hard
    cheeses.

  • Some of the most dangerous drivers are ones who sinuatethrough traffic.
    [-d, sinuating, -ly, adv.]
    skeptical*(SKEP ti kl) adj. 1. not easily persuaded or convinced; inclined to
    doubt; questioning; 2. doubting religious doctrine

  • In Columbus’s day, learned people were not as skepticalabout the earth’s
    being round as elementary history books would have us believe.

  • People from Missouri have a reputation for being skeptical;they have to be
    shown.

  • Agnostics are generally skepticalabout many religious teachings.
    [-ly adv.]
    skepticism(SKEP ti si zm) n. 1. a philosophy that neither truth nor knowledge
    is attainable by human beings; 2. a doubting attitude, especially pertaining to reli-
    gious doctrine

  • Skepticismas a philosophy began in ancient Greece, where its advocates
    claimed that man did not have the tools to determine what is and what is
    not true.

  • A healthy skepticismis a good thing for those who would prefer not to be
    flimflammed by pie-in-the-sky advertising claims.
    [Syn. uncertainty]
    slumber(SLUM bir) vi. 1. to sleep; 2. to be inactive or dormant —n. 1. sleep;



  1. a state of inactivity



  • Night watchmen have a reputation—some would say undeserved—for
    slumberingwhile on the job.

  • A volcano that has been inactive for recorded history is more safely regard-
    ed as in slumberrather than dead.

  • A pair of pajamas is usually required for a slumberparty.


212 Essential Vocabulary

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