Webster Essential Vocabulary

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

suppress (suh PRES) vt. 1. to subdue; put down; quell; crush; 2. to keep from
appearing; 3. to check or stop; keep back; restrain



  • The Chinese government’s tanks suppressedthe protest in Tiananmen
    Square.

  • The plan of the rock group to appear onstage was suppressedby the theater’s
    owners who feared a riot.

  • When Diane saw the kindergartener take a melted ice-cream bar from her
    pocket after getting off the school bus, she suppressedher urge to laugh.
    [-ed, -ing]
    surfeit (SOER fit) n. 1. excess; too great a supply; 2. pigging out; 3. nausea or
    discomfort resulting from overindulgence —vt.to feed or supply to fullness or
    excess; to satiate

  • Each year, American farmers produce a surfeitof wheat.

  • Brad had to loosen his belt, having eaten a surfeitof shrimp from the
    appetizer platters at Rose’s wedding.

  • Ian felt surfeitfrom having drunk too many beers on an otherwise empty
    stomach.

  • The wedding feast surfeitedevery one of the 103 guests.
    [-ed, -ing] [Syn. satiate]
    surreptitious (SOER ep TISH is) adj. 1. clandestine; done in a secret or stealthy
    way; 2. acting in a secret or stealthy way

  • The guests to Joanne’s birthday celebration all received surreptitiousinvita-
    tions so as not to spoil the surprise.

  • The concealment of the Greek soldiers inside the Trojan horse had to be
    surreptitiousso the Trojans would not suspect anything.

  • For those of you planning a prison break, it is a good idea to keep your
    planssurreptitious(wink, wink!).
    [-ly adv.] [Syn. secret, clandestine]
    susceptible (suh SEP ti bl) adj. easily affected or emotionally moved; sensitive
    in nature; easily influenced

  • Some children are very susceptibleto ear infections.

  • Most men are susceptibleto the appeal of a teary-eyed woman.

  • Some people who might not give you the time of day are still susceptibleto
    an appeal to their better natures.
    [susceptibly adv., susceptibility* n.]
    sustain(sus TAYN) vt. 1. to keep up; maintain; prolong; 2. to provide food and
    sustenance to; 3. to carry the weight and/or burden of; 4. to encourage

  • The right pedal on a piano is used to sustaina note long after the key has
    been released.

  • It takes a lot of puppy chow to sustaina growing St. Bernard puppy.


220 Essential Vocabulary

Free download pdf