Webster Essential Vocabulary

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

amortize(uh MAWR tyz) vt. 1. to put money aside at intervals to pay off a
debt either prior to or at maturity; 2. to prorate an expense over an interval (for tax
purposes)



  • A mortgage is usually amortizedover a period of 5 to 30 years, with 30
    being the most common term.

  • An automobile purchased for business use must be amortizedover 5 to 7
    years rather than taken as a single deduction all at once.
    [-d, -zing]
    animosity(an i MAH sit ee) n. hostility; a feeling of strong ill will; dislike

  • There is a great deal of animositybetween Boston Red Sox fans and New
    York Yankee fans.

  • Veterans from Germany and America have met each other in the cemeter-
    ies of France to show that they have no animosityfor each other left over
    from World War II.
    [Syn. enmity]
    annul(uh NUHL) vt. to nullify; void; cancel; put an end to; invalidate under
    the law

  • Only one amendment to the U.S. Constitution stands out as unique in
    that it annulsanother.

  • Most contracts contain a paragraph listing the conditions under which it
    may be annulled.
    [annulled, annulling] [Syn. abolish]
    anomalous(uh NAM uh lis) adj. 1. deviating from the regular rule; strange;
    abnormal; 2. being or seeming irregular; contradictory

  • It was the anomalousbehavior of the planets Neptune and Uranus that led
    to astronomers discovering Pluto in 1930.

  • Observations of anomalousbehavior of certain objects in the sky have led
    to reportings of UFO sightings.
    [-ly adv.] [Syn. irregular]
    antibody(AN ti BAH dee) n. a special protein produced by certain white blood
    cells to form immunity to certain antigens

  • Before the Salk vaccine stimulated the production of antibodiesagainst it,
    polio was the most dreaded disease in the United States.

  • Each antibodyproduced by white blood cells is specific to a particular
    disease.
    [antibodies pl.]
    antipathy(an TIP ith ee) n. 1. a strong or deeply felt dislike; 2. the object of
    that dislike

  • It is rumored that dogs have a great antipathyfor cats, yet Lois’s two dogs
    and three cats get along famously.

  • Jan’s new hairdo was the object of Kaj’s antipathy.
    [Syn. aversion]


248 Essential Vocabulary

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