Vocabulary for IELTS – Part 2

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 2

Vocabulary for IELTS

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 2

Lured: tempt (a person or animal) to do something or to go somewhere, especially by offering some form of reward.

Sentence – The prosecution alleged that he lured the officer to his death by making an emergency call.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 2

Bang for one’s buck: worth of one’s money or exertion.

Sentence – If you get more bang for your buck(s), you get a better result for the amount of effort or money that you have put into something.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 2

Cumbersome: large or heavy and therefore difficult to carry or use; unwieldy.

Sentence – Our Intelligence Service was untrained, cumbersome, and almost wholly ineffectual.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 2

Eternal: lasting or existing forever; without end.

Sentence – Some people, need deep and eternal remember. And some people, and need to work hard to forget.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 2

Belligerence: aggressive or warlike behaviour.

Sentence – A single incident suggests a great deal about Hennepinhis prudery, his belligerence, his sensitivity.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 2

 Acclimatised to: become accustomed to a new climate or new conditions; adjust.

Sentence – Many walkers, particularly Brits, prefer to start in the south, reaching the more spectacular northern half when acclimatised.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 2

Cripple: cause (someone) to become unable to walk or move properly.

Sentence – There’s only one way you can cripple a bad scientist, and that’s to demonstrate how bad his science is.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 2

 Disentangle: free (something or someone) from something that they are entangled with.

Sentence – It’s very difficult to disentangle fact from fiction in what she’s saying.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 2

Freight: goods transported in bulk by truck, train, ship, or aircraft.

Sentence – Environmental pressures are strengthening the case for waterborne freight.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 2

Decamp: leave a place suddenly or secretly.

Sentence – Youngsters decamp as soon as they can to work in towns near and far, leaving their ageing parents to till the soil.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 2

Affluent: (especially of a group or area) having a great deal of money; wealthy.

Sentence – The affluent viewers who watch financial news are highly prized by advertisers.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 2

Congregation: a group of people assembled for religious worship.

Sentence – Most members of the congregation begin arriving a few minutes before services.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 2

Attenuate: reduce the force, effect, or value of.

Sentence – co-administration of Shuanghuanglian injection and Sanhuang capsule could attenuate the postoperative adhesion.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 2

Lingering: lasting for a long time or slow to end.

Sentence – The defeat ends any lingering hopes she might have had of winning the championship.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 2

Backlash: a strong negative reaction by a large number of people, especially to a social or political development.

Sentence – The backlash is awaited with interest by everyone, even those with only a passing interest in the music scene.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 2

Recklessly: showing a lack of care about risks or danger, and acting without thinking about the results of your actions.

Sentence – If the enemy ignites war recklessly, we shall resolutely answer it with war and completely destroy the aggressors.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 2

Doomsayer: a person who predicts disaster.

Sentence – Despite the doomsayers, the Athenians delivered the Olympic Games when they said they would.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 2

Battering: violent physical abuse that usually involves the act of striking someone repeatedly or heavily in order to cause injury.

Sentence – Sterling took a battering yesterday as worries grew about the state of Britain’s economy.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 2

Vulnerable: exposed to the possibility of being attacked or harmed, either physically or emotionally; at risk; endangered.

Sentence – Babies are weak and vulnerable in the presence of huge shapes that they can only dimly perceive.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 2

Holistic:  means encompassing the whole of a thing, and not just the part.

Sentence – The second axiom of holistic medicine is that each person is unique and each program must be individualized.

Vocabulary for IELTS - Part 2

Disavowal: the action of saying that you know nothing about something, or that you have no responsibility for or connection with something.

Sentence – Of course, Freud’s disavowal of his Jewishness may help to explain the fog surrounding the issue: Was he or was he not well versed in Jewish tradition?

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