![IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220 1 IELTS Vocabulary](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/download-13-4.jpg)
IELTS Vocabulary
![IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220 2 IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/download-7-8.jpg)
Inexorable – continuing without any possibility of being stopped.
Sentence – The directive signals an inexorable process towards liberalization, but with many details left open and implications poorly understood
![IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220 3 IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/download-22.jpg)
Ingenuous – honest, sincere, and trusting, sometimes in a way that seems silly.
Sentence – I wrote to him an ingenuous letter of acknowledgment , craving his forbearance a little longer.
![IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220 4 IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/download-1-9.jpg)
Inimical – harmful or limiting.
Sentence – This separation creates inevitable tensions between the team and the consultant, which are inimical to good multidisciplinary work.
![IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220 5 IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/images-4.png)
Iniquity – a very wrong and unfair action or situation.
Sentence – Well we’ve got them here now and they’re after building a den of iniquity on top of your Imperial Roman artefacts.
![IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220 6 IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/download-2-9.jpg)
Insidious – (of something unpleasant or dangerous) gradually and secretly causing harm.
Sentence – Employee advocates argue that the policies are an insidious way for companies to take away statutory rights that Congress granted workers.
![IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220 7 IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/download-3-9.jpg)
Inure – If you become inured to something unpleasant, you become familiar with it and able to accept and bear it.
Sentence – As the application of the transgenic technology, oil content of rapeseed is increasing more and inure.
![IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220 8 IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/download-4-9.jpg)
Invective – criticism that is very forceful, unkind, and often rude.
Sentence – Most countries would prefer to do without the smut and the anti-government invective, but none wants to risk being left out.
![IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220 9 IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/download-5-9.jpg)
Inveterate – someone who does something very often and cannot stop doing it.
Sentence – For inveterate cattle-lifters it all added up to a convenient no-man’s-land across which to launch thieving raids.
![IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220 10 IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/download-6-9.jpg)
Jubilant – feeling or expressing great happiness, especially because of a success.
Sentence – His advice went unheeded by the jubilant Khatami supporters who went into the streets to celebrate after the election last week.
![IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220 11 IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/download-8-8.jpg)
Juxtaposition – to put things that are not similar next to each other.
Sentence – The traditional museum disciplines of juxtaposition, analysis and interpretation were reduced to the minimum; experience was paramount.
![IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220 12 IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/download-9-5.jpg)
Laconic – using very few words to express what you mean.
Sentence – But there was nothing laconic about his mind, which was known to tick over like a well-oiled clock.
![IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220 13 IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/download-10-5.jpg)
Languid – moving or speaking slowly with little energy, often in an attractive way.
Sentence – His attitude to those languid undergraduates at Bridget’s party, and to writers, was not a conventionally masculine one.
![IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220 14 IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/download-11-4.jpg)
Largess – willingness to give money, or money given to poor people by rich people.
Sentence – But he said there was unlikely to be much strategy for use of the sports stadiums beyond putting on a good show and demonstrating wealth and largess to the outside world.
![IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220 15 IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/download-12-4.jpg)
Latent – present but needing particular conditions to become active, obvious, or completely developed.
Sentence – Everyone has that latent power within him, although most of us never make use of it throughout our lives.
![IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220 16 IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/download-12.png)
Legerdemain – skilful hiding of the truth in order to trick people.
Sentence – And vital to rapid deployment, most applications can be completely oblivious to this background legerdemain.
![IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220 17 IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/download-1-9.png)
Licentious – (especially of a person or their behaviour) sexual in an uncontrolled and socially unacceptable way.
Sentence – The lips were more sensuous than the original, almost licentious.
![IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220 18 IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/download-13-4.jpg)
Limpid – clear and transparent.
Sentence – Limpid dew on them, trumpet-shaped petals with purple and white glowed with the freshness and grace.
![IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220 19 IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/download-14-4.jpg)
Maelstrom – a situation in which there is great confusion, violence, and destruction.
Sentence – Into the Maelstrom For decades the rapids of Niagara were overshadowed by the presence of the thundering cataract.
![IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220 20 IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/download-15-2.jpg)
Magnanimous – very kind and generous towards an enemy or someone you have defeated.
Sentence – When they were feeling more magnanimous, the new managers defined administration as a secondary, yet essential, managerial function.
IELTS Vocabulary
![IELTS Vocabulary Part - 220 21 20th February, IELTS Daily Task](https://ieltscareerzone.in/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/dsfsd-1024x366.jpg)
IELTS Vocabulary