Up Your Score (18 page)

Read Up Your Score Online

Authors: Larry Berger & Michael Colton,Michael Colton,Manek Mistry,Paul Rossi,Workman Publishing

BOOK: Up Your Score
11.68Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

If you believed the above sentence, you sure are
gullible
.

Lesser-Known Adventures of the Three Billy Goats Gruff

The three Billy Goats
Gruff
met in the
gloaming
near the bridge.

“I’m really scared of that
gruesome
troll,” Billy Goat 1 said,
gesticulating
toward the bridge. “Despite her
gossamer
gown, she doesn’t seem too
gregarious
.”

“I won’t
gainsay
that, and I heard her
gourmet
appetite includes a
grisly
taste for goat’s hooves!” BG 2 added nervously. “I really don’t like
gratuitous
violence.”

“Cowards!” BG 3
gibed
. “I don’t listen to non
germane
garbled
gibberish
that only
gullible
fools like you would believe. I bet that troll is really a cool gal. Watch me cross that bridge!”

“You have a
grandiose
opinion of yourself, but you’re really pretty dumb. So long, bud,” Goat 1 replied with a
grimace
, anticipating the
graphic
goat-mutilation horror that soon followed.

H
hackneyed

overused; trite

The plot of the movie
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre
was
hackneyed
. It was just another horror movie about an axe murderer who
hacked knees
off.

haggard

unruly; wild; wasted; worn

After a long voyage with the Vikings,
Hagar
the Horrible looked
haggard
.

hallowed

holy; sacred

I was hanging out in the cemetery, but I didn’t know I was on hollowed
hallowed
ground until I fell into a grave.

harangue

mean, nasty, angry speech (think: a speech that is so loud it impairs your
hearing
)

The zookeeper gave us a lengthy
harangue
about feeding the
orang
utan.

harbinger

forerunner; something that signals the approach of something; omen

Some words have only one sentence in which they are ever used. The sentence for
harbinger
is: “The robin is the
harbinger
of spring.”

haughty

proud; vain; arrogant

He thinks he’s
hot. He
shouldn’t be so
haughty
.

hedonism

the philosophy of trying to be happy all the time; a funky state of being in which you do your own thing and don’t worry about morality

hedonist

one who follows the philosophy of hedonism

Note:
Compare these words to STOICISM and STOIC, which are their respective opposites.

You are being a stoic by studying for the SAT so that you can get into college and spend four years being a
hedonist
.

heinous

grossly wicked; vile; odious

The scarecrows said, “Because we have
hay in us
, it is a
heinous
crime to invite us to a bonfire.”

hierarchy

social pecking order

As Heather moved
higher
up the
high
school
hierarchy
, she realized that popularity was not all it’s cracked up to be. (This sentence was based on an after-school special.)

hirsute

hairy (pronounced “her-suit”)

He was
hirsute
in his ape costume, which was really just a
hair
suit
. He borrowed it from his girlfriend Rapunzel; it was
her
suit
.

hoary

gray or white from age; old

When someone who is hirsute gets old, he is hairy and
hoary
.

homily

sermonlike speech

The
homely
preacher delivered a
homily
.

homonym

a word that sounds like another word but has a different meaning

The German word
sechs,
meaning “six,” is a
homonym
of the English word
sex,
meaning “sex.”

The Homily

The
hirsute
young priest was preparing his
homily
, and he needed advice from the
hoary
haggard
pastor.

“I gotta give a good talk so I can move up in the church
hierarchy
,” he explained. “Can you help me?”

“You speak on
hallowed
ground,” the pastor began, “so don’t
harangue
and be not
haughty
. Don’t forget to condemn
heinous
hedonism
, though. A good public response to your sermon will be a
harbinger
of your advancement.” The priest worked all night, searching for
hackneyed
expressions and hip
homonyms
. But when dawn came he just said, “Oh, the heck with it.”

I
iconoclast

destroyer of tradition

When the pope decided that celibacy should no longer be required of the clergy, protesters outside his window yelled “down with the
iconoclast
” while the pope screamed, “
I cannot last
.”

ignoble

not noble

In Orwell’s
Animal Farm,
the
ignoble
pig nobles
ruin the barnyard utopia.

ignominious

characterized by
ignominy

ignominy

dishonor; disgrace

They suffered an
ignominious
defeat.

He couldn’t bear the
ignominy
of getting a 600 on the SAT.

Two similar words:

imbibe

to drink in; absorb

imbue

to make wet; to saturate; to inspire

If you
imbibe
the meanings of all these words you will be
imbued
with wisdom.

imminent

about to occur; impending

Note:
Don’t confuse imminent with
eminent,
which means “famous.”

I’m in ent
ertainment and my curtain call is
imminent
.

immutable

Note:
The best way to learn this word is to learn the root
mut
, which means “change.” Then you can decode
immutable
to mean “not changeable.” You will also realize that
mutable
= “changeable,”
mutation
= “a change,” and trans
mute
= “to change from one form to another.”

“A fat person uses more soap than a skinny person” is one of the
immutable
laws of physics.

impale

to pierce with a sharp stake or point

The
imp paled
when we took a spike and
impaled
the mushroom he was sitting on.

impasse

dead end (think: impassable)

If you are trying to pick someone up, and none of your
passes
is working, you have reached an
impasse
.

impassive

without emotion; expressionless

“It looks as if I’ve reached an
impasse
,” Bart muttered
impassively
as he slammed into the brick wall on his skateboard.

impeccable

flawless and faultless; not capable of sin

Woody is not an
impeccable
woodpecker; he is always making mistakes.

impending

about to take place (see
IMMINENT
)

The dwarf cowered behind Snow White, sensing
imp-ending
doom.

imperious

domineering

The
emper
or was
imperious
.

impropriety

not
prop
er; not displaying
propriety

Howard Stern was fined by the FCC for his
impropriety
.

Here are two words that are sure to confuse you:

impugn

to attack as false; criticize

impunity

immunity
from
pun
ishment

“You will not have
impunity
if you
impugn
my character with such impudence,” shouted Michael at Manek when Manek suggested that he was speaking oddly.

incessant

nonstop; ceaseless

Her
incessant
chatter forced me to throw her
in
to a
cess
pool.

inchoate

incomplete; only partly in existence or operation

His plan to trek to Saudi Arabia was
inchoate
; he was still only
in Kuwait
.

incite

to arouse; instigate

As soon as the Jonas Brothers came back
in sight
, their groupies’ cheering
incited
the crowd to
ignite
their lighters and demand an encore.

incognito

in disguise so as not to be recognized

Note:
Remember the root word “cog”? Well, this is another example of it:

Other books

Haunting Secrets by Marie Higgins
Baseball Flyhawk by Matt Christopher
cat stories by Herriot, James
Last Chance Harbor by Vickie McKeehan
Starkissed by Gabrielson , Brynna
Paul Bacon by Bad Cop: New York's Least Likely Police Officer Tells All
Riding Rockets by Mike Mullane
Fall From Grace by Zolendz, Christine