![Advance Vocabulary - Part 2 1 Advance Vocabulary - Part 2](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/dfDSDSDdsasds-copy.jpg)
Advance Vocabulary
![Advance Vocabulary - Part 2 2 Advance Vocabulary - Part 2](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/images-5.jpg)
Grievous: very seriously harmful.
Sentence – He will appear in court today charged with grievous bodily harm and intimidation.
![Advance Vocabulary - Part 2 3 Advance Vocabulary - Part 2](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/download-17.png)
Hinge: to depend on; have as a necessary condition.
Sentence – The hinge connecting the front and rear pieces sits under the instep and lessens the chance of failure due to the metal flexing.
![Advance Vocabulary - Part 2 4 Advance Vocabulary - Part 2](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/download-29.jpg)
Circumscribe: to keep within narrow limits
Sentence – The grounds for such a review are circumscribed by the tribunal’s rules of procedure.
![Advance Vocabulary - Part 2 5 Advance Vocabulary - Part 2](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/images-1-1.jpg)
Lax: careless.
Sentence – Unhindered by the country’s lax competition rules, they built up complex webs of cross-shareholdings across an astonishing array of businesses.
![Advance Vocabulary - Part 2 6 Advance Vocabulary - Part 2](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/download-1-12.jpg)
Brazen: without shame; immodest.
Sentence – The shrill blast of their brazen trumpets echoed triumphantly through the heart of the land.
![Advance Vocabulary - Part 2 7 Advance Vocabulary - Part 2](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/download-1-11.png)
Obtuse: annoyingly slow in understanding.
Sentence – Maybe I’m being obtuse, but I don’t understand what you’re so upset about.
![Advance Vocabulary - Part 2 8 Advance Vocabulary - Part 2](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/download-2-9.png)
Nemesis: punishment or defeat that is deserved and cannot be avoided.
Sentence – To follow the proposed course of action is to invite nemesis.
![Advance Vocabulary - Part 2 9 Advance Vocabulary - Part 2](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/download-2-12.jpg)
Meticulous: fastidious; thorough.
Sentence – Some persons objected that announcers’ articulation was too meticulous to be natural.
![Advance Vocabulary - Part 2 10 Advance Vocabulary - Part 2](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/download-3-12.jpg)
Ignominious: bringing or deserving strong (especially public) disapproval damaging to one’s pride.
Sentence – The majority of people do some ignominious matters, Carroll Saunders have not been exceptional.
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Psychosis: Psychosis: (n) a serious mental illness that affects the whole personality.
Sentence – The symptoms of psychosis as we know them today appear in all literatures from the earliest times.
![Advance Vocabulary - Part 2 12 Advance Vocabulary - Part 2](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/download-5-13.jpg)
Legion: very many.
Sentence – A legion of policemen and border officials are required to preserve this happy feature of a benevolent nature.
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Malice: the wish, desire or intention to harm someone.
Sentence – I searched my soul for any malice that could have provoked his words, but found none.
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Detonate: to (cause to) explode using special apparatus.
Sentence – The warhead is set to detonate just above the target to maximise the damage.
![Advance Vocabulary - Part 2 15 Advance Vocabulary - Part 2](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/download-8-11.jpg)
futile: useless; unsuccessful.
Sentence – The idea was sound, but events of 14 July made it futile, for Bismarck’s telegram had the desired effect.
![Advance Vocabulary - Part 2 16 Advance Vocabulary - Part 2](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/download-9-12.jpg)
Neurosis: anxiety.
Sentence – She got a neurosis about chemicals and imagined them everywhere doing her harm.
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Largesse: [something given in] generosity to people who do not have enough.
Sentence – As it is, the industry’s fortunes rise and fall with the level of official largesse.
![Advance Vocabulary - Part 2 18 Advance Vocabulary - Part 2](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/download-4-6.png)
Proliferation: a rapid increase or spreading.
Sentence – The proliferation of these diminutive shows will soon be in inverse proportion to the theatres still open to receive them.
![Advance Vocabulary - Part 2 19 Advance Vocabulary - Part 2](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/download-10-12.jpg)
Euphoria: a feeling of extreme happiness usually last on a short time.
Sentence – Indeed, a euphoria seems to reign among those directly involved in the organisation of Expo.
![Advance Vocabulary - Part 2 20 Advance Vocabulary - Part 2](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/download-5-3.png)
Execrable: very bad or unpleasant.
Sentence – To Western ears, the wind playing in the slow movement will probably sound execrable.
![Advance Vocabulary - Part 2 21 Advance Vocabulary - Part 2](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/download-11-12.jpg)
Levity: lack of seriousness.
Sentence – It also reintroduces much-needed levity to an act that can be overbearingly self-serious
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Dynamics: the way in which people or things behave and react to each other in a particular situation.
Sentence – If the dynamics of the whole ecosystem fail in this respect, changes will inevitably occur, until finally self-consistency is achieved.
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Antithesis: the direct opposite.
Sentence – Joe was the antithesis of Leslie – big and blond, with considerable colonial machismo.
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Latitude: freedom to do, say, etc. what one likes.
Sentence – She was given considerable latitude in how she spent the money.
![Advance Vocabulary - Part 2 25 Advance Vocabulary - Part 2](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/download-15-9.jpg)
Morose: not willing to talk.
Sentence – He became a bit morose for a while a bit inside himself which is fairly natural under the circumstances I suppose.
![Advance Vocabulary - Part 2 26 Advance Vocabulary - Part 2](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/download-16-7.jpg)
Muster: to gather or collect.
Sentence – I mustered (up) my courage and walked onto the stage.
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