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The words added in the list are one that is sent by me on daily basis to my collegeus.
51 words
86 learners
Learn words with Flashcards and other activities
Other learning activities
Full list of words from this list:
-
sedate
cause to be calm or quiet
They might just enjoy a weekend in more
sedate surroundings. -
acumen
shrewdness shown by keen insight
That business generates stable revenue, but running it is not usually seen on Wall Street as requiring tremendous management
acumen. -
dreadful
exceptionally bad or displeasing
This year’s
dreadful weather has cost rural Britain at least £1bn, according to an investigation by . -
ordeal
a severe or trying experience
-
subdue
put down by force or intimidation
-
detour
a roundabout road or route
As my colleague John Burns reported, several American and Australian athletes got taken on a 4-hour
detour through London when their bus driver got lost.New York Times (Jul 21, 2012) -
nimble
moving quickly and lightly
“They’re more
nimble,” said Rebecca Thomas, vice president of direct services, strategy and innovation at the Nonprofit Finance Fund.Washington Post (Jul 28, 2012) -
demeanour
the way a person behaves toward other people
Something about Johnson’s
demeanour makes the drill sergeant in Full Metal Jacket seem like Graham Norton. -
embrace
squeeze tightly in your arms, usually with fondness
With Microsoft and Sony now both
embracing it, said convincing might be achieved a little sooner.Forbes (Sep 11, 2012) -
revulsion
intense aversion
Her eyes widen–surprise, anger–and finally her lip drops in
revulsion. -
anecdote
short account of an incident
There are numerous
anecdotes of footballers’ decadent spending habits. -
austerity
self-denial, especially refraining from worldly pleasures
Teachers, doctors, lawyers, journalists – even tax collectors – have walked off the job to protest the country’s biting
austerity measures. -
prudence
discretion in practical affairs
Common
prudence and common sense were completely set aside.Various -
clamour
utter or proclaim insistently and noisily
No other country has so many newly pecunious consumers
clamouring for stuff. -
scuffle
disorderly fighting
After a
scuffle broke out, the crew, led by Roan again, failed to exert control. -
nonviolence
peaceful resistance to a government
-
congregation
group that habitually attends a particular place of worship
Half a dozen officers in camouflage fatigues mingle with the
congregation dressed up in their Sunday best. -
ambiguity
an expression whose meaning cannot be determined
-
stubborn
tenaciously unwilling to yield
Fungal infections are notoriously
stubborn and hard to treat, requiring powerful drugs that can have harsh side effects. -
hoax
something intended to deceive
Christopher Shell’s detailed travel updates may have helped a romantic rival plan an elaborate
hoax.Forbes (Sep 10, 2012) -
benevolence
an inclination to do kind or charitable acts
No one questions his good intentions, no man puts his
benevolence in doubt.Various -
feeble
pathetically lacking in force or effectiveness
But public finances are still in shreds and bank lending is still
feeble. -
harrowing
causing extreme distress
It was one of the most
harrowing moments in Wall Street history. -
impeccable
without error or flaw
-
wisdom
accumulated knowledge or erudition or enlightenment
Permission implies the
wisdom of an officially appointed elder brother. -
emancipate
free from slavery or servitude
-
rejuvenate
make younger or more youthful
Enterprises that
rejuvenate seaside assets or help emerging industries will also benefit. -
mortal
subject to death
“Those furious humans driving the cars, who yammered and glared insanely at me,” he said, “were mere
mortals.Salon (Jun 17, 2012) -
apprehend
anticipate with dread or anxiety
One raider was then
apprehended by a passer-by outside. -
frantic
marked by uncontrolled excitement or emotion
A
frantic police investigation led to a number of premises being briefly sealed off while forensic scientists tested for traces of the radioactive material. -
contentious
showing an inclination to disagree
-
repeal
cancel officially
He promised to
repeal and replace Wall Street regulations but did not give specifics. -
accede
yield to another’s wish or opinion
Many executives are deeply skeptical that Greece will
accede to the austere fiscal policies being demanded by Europe in return for financial assistance. -
rectitude
righteousness as a consequence of being honorable and honest
-
exhilarate
fill with sublime emotion
The trip was exhausting,
exhilarating and fascinating in equal measure. -
whimsical
determined by chance or impulse rather than by necessity
Semi-autobiographical novels seems to have given way to
whimsical child narrators. -
vivid
having striking color
He called the Republican state Legislature’s focus on social conservatism a »
vivid and horrifying spectacle.» -
salvage
rescuing a ship or its crew from a shipwreck or a fire
A woman
salvages her belongings after Hurricane Sandy hit Santiago de Cuba October 25, 2012. -
serenity
the absence of mental stress or anxiety
Eyes and brows are charged with potencies; with seriousness, with modesty,
serenity, elusiveness.Kenealy, Arabella -
surmise
infer from incomplete evidence
Dr. Thomas
surmised that matching donors to patients was crucial. -
meander
move or cause to move in a winding or curving course
His answers were
meandering and professorial, laden with facts but short on vision. -
beguile
attract; cause to be enamored
-
appease
make peace with
It would be bad news for investors if governments crank up spending to
appease restless populations or pressure central banks into cutting interest rates. -
amicable
characterized by friendship and good will
He advised an
amicable settlement if one could possibly be arrived at.Onions, Oliver -
abate
become less in amount or intensity
Encouragingly, this turbulence has largely
abated since central bank interventions in the summer and UK bank funding conditions are much improved. -
ramification
a consequence, especially one that causes complications
Debates like these have real
ramifications for how various creatures are treated.Salon (Sep 27, 2012) -
emulate
strive to equal or match, especially by imitating
Booth is looking for his side to
emulate their performance at Leicester next week. -
embolden
give encouragement to
Economic data released earlier Wednesday did not
embolden investors, either. -
allegiance
the act of binding yourself to a course of action
-
atone
turn away from sin or do penitence
-
pugnacity
a natural disposition to be hostile
Created on September 12, 2012
(updated May 27, 2013)
If you are learning a new language, it is essential to new words each day. Gaining a powerful vocabulary will guarantee that you will be able to express yourself effectively and sophisticatedly. Designating a “word of the day” for yourself will also ensure that you understand grammar to a greater extent and the lengths to which the language you are studying is developed. In this article, I will be discussing websites that are great for learning new English words. Each website has its benefits and disadvantages, so it is better to use several websites at a time to gain the most out of your learning process. Many of these websites have a word of the day app that you can download on your smartphone or tablet for easy usage. It is best to be connected to new words in any way you can!
1. A.Word.A.Day (AWAD)
You can see the word of the day, and yesterday’s word of the day, on the website or through an email subscription. The website is strikingly simple, but highly useful. It provides the pronunciation, meaning, etymology, and usage of the selected word. Below the entry, the owner, Anu Garg, also presents a thought of the day. The New York Times commented that this website is “The most welcomed, most enduring piece of daily mass e-mail in cyberspace.” In fact, it has over a million subscribers from over 170 countries.
2. Merriam-Webster’s Word of the Day
One of the most respected dictionaries in the world, Merriam-Webster has a sophisticated layout for its word-of-the-day page. It provides a definition (with sound of the word spoken included), a “Did you know” section, examples of its usage, a “Name that synonym” section, podcasts, and a word of the day calendar at the bottom. Those who are truly interested in words and their histories, this dictionary will be a treat. Its “Did you know” section is expansive, and allows readers to understand the nuances of each selected word. On the left of the presentation is an easy way to share the word of the day through Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus. You can even get the word of the day emailed to you through a subscription. It even has a section for learners called a learner’s dictionary. This dictionary also has a word-of-the-day category.
3. Wordnik
This website is all about words, with a word community, word of the day, and random word pages. On its word-of-the-day page, it has concise definitions of words with ample example sentences with the chosen word being used, extra notes on nuances, and also stats on its usage and even its Scrabble score. The fantastic thing about this page is that each word is accompanied with real examples from literature, not just sentences made up on the spot that sound unnatural. So, not only will you learn a new word each day, but also become knowledgeable in literature through this website. It also has an easy-to-access archive, and a convenient way of sharing words via social media.
4. Duolingo
This is perhaps the best language learning app and website out there. In turn, it is a great tool for learning new words. You can compete with your friends and family through the app, so you can gain that motivation needed to learn new words. It has a simple but pleasant layout, with many different exercises for learning: speaking, listening, writing, multiple choice questions, matching word exercises, and more. You can either strengthen what you already know, or venture into the world of new words each day. Duolingo focuses on obtaining a streak, so you know how many days in a row you have been learning a certain language (in our case, it is most likely English). There are many other language learning apps on the market, but it seems Duolingo takes the cake in terms of efficiency, user-friendliness, and motivation. It even has a cute owl mascot that cheers you on as you go through the exercises. I think that most people use the app rather than the website; however, both can be useful. It is important to download the necessary keyboards for the languages you are learning, though.
5. Dictionary.com’s Word of the Day
This is another popular option for learning new words easily. It shows the definitions in the form of a meme or picture you can conveniently share on social media (including showing the pronunciation and what kind of word it is). Below the definitions are citations of the word of the day’s usage from literature. Lastly, there is a section that discusses the origin of the word. You can sign up for an email subscription to the page, and seeing the visual archive of the word of the day for the previous day is just a scroll away.
6. Oxford Dictionary’s Word of the Day
Maybe the most trusted dictionary in the world, the Oxford Dictionary website also has a webpage that features a word of the day. For each entry, you have an audio pronunciation guide, a definition, the word’s origin, and an easy-to-share picture of the word with a pronunciation guide across social media. I like that the Oxford Dictionary focuses on archaic usages of words as well, as for wordaholics, these archaic definitions can be useful to know and interesting to understand. Like most sites of this nature, it also has an email subscription option. Another section of this website to check out if you have time is “Explore the English Language,” which has wordlists and word origin features.
7. New York Times’ Word of the Day
A standard in the news industry, it is also a fantastic tool for learning. The New York Times presents a word of the day daily, attached with a quiz. What is also useful is that it shows words in context of The New York Times itself. So, they will show how the word was used in news articles from the Times. Each entry has sections for definitions, examples of its usage in news articles, and a quiz at the bottom. After you finish the quiz, you will see a more detailed look into the chosen word, discussing its nuances. A great tool for learning more words, and more about them.
8. WordReference.com’s Word of the Day
The special thing about this website is that it offers two categories: basic word of the day, and intermediate word of the day. The basic word of the day is aimed at beginners and the intermediate word of the day is focused on people who have been learning English for some time. Though each category has entries that are filled with detail, there is a clear difference between basic and intermediate entries. In the basic section, entries have sections dedicated definitions, common uses, usage within pop culture, and a button that reads “see full definition,” which leads a user to an elaborated entry. For the intermediate entries, there are sections devoted to expanded definitions, example sentences, words most often used with the chosen entry, usage within pop culture, “did you know,” origins, and once again a “see full definition” button. This seems like the most comprehensive website for learning words and their background stories, so to say. You can get these definitions sent to you by email, and can also share them easily via Facebook and Twitter. You can scroll through entries as if you were on a common blogging site.
9. Vocabulary.com
This website tries its best to make learning new words enjoyable. It has word games to play, you can look up words, and it has word lists. They say if you start playing with language, you will learn it quickly. This website seems to take this approach. When learning is fun and flexible, words will be retained at a better rate. A great thing about its quizzes is that when you answer a question, it will describe the word in detail. The search option has examples sentences written by humans, not computers (it happens often it seems), examples sentences that are in touch with the real world of how English is being used, and claims to be the fastest-working dictionary. Its layout is user-friendly and intuitive. In the lists section, there are myriad lists focused on different subjects, ranging from baseball to movies. It is a highly enjoyable and engaging website for learning new words, and for studying English in general.
10. Word of the Day! App
For people who are crazy about checking other dictionaries for varying definitions, this is the app for them. This app features the following sources:
- Merriam-Webster
- Dictionary.com
- Oxford English Dictionary
- The Free Dictionary
- The Learning Network
- WordSpy
- Latin Word of the Day
- MedTerms
- Yahoo! Education
You can conveniently compare definitions, and discover the nuances of words you want to delve into. In addition, you can “star” and “favorite” certain definitions and words. These starred and favorited words can be shared with friends, and the app will also alert you when new words have been entered into its system. It’s a free app, so it is a catch for those who don’t want to spend to learn. The entries for the words have audio recordings of pronunciation, root meanings, examples sentences, and connotations of chosen words.
This list features our Word of the Day selections from the past year that have received the most Facebook «Likes.»
Definition:
common sense, horse sense; enterprise, initiative
Example:
«Plans for the relocation and expansion of Vacaville’s homeless shelter have hit a snag, but it looks like a little gumption and the city’s support could keep the project from derailing.» — Kimberly K. Fu, Contra Costa (California) Times, July 10, 2011
About the Word:
English speakers have had gumption (the word, that is) since the early 1700s. The term’s exact origins aren’t known, but its earliest known uses are found in British and especially Scottish dialects (which also include the forms rumblegumption and rumgumption).
In its earliest uses, gumption referred to intelligence or common sense, especially when those qualities were combined with high levels of energy. By the 1860s, American English speakers were also using gumption to imply ambition or tenacity, but it wasn’t until the early 1900s that gumption began to appear in English texts as a direct synonym of courage or get-up-and-go.
American showman P.T. Barnum also claimed that gumption named a particular kind of hard cider, but that sense is far from common today.
Definition:
to confuse
Example:
«Several traffic signals around the county seem to be less intuitive than others, judging by some of the mail the Doc receives. One that regularly flummoxes drivers is on northbound Seminole Boulevard at the intersection of Ulmerton Road.» — Lorrie Lykins, St. Petersburg Times (Florida), November 14, 2010
About the Word:
No one is completely sure where the word flummox comes from, but we do know that its first known use is found in Charles Dickens’ 1837 novel The Pickwick Papers and that it had become quite common in both British and American English by the end of the 19th century.
One theory expressed by some etymologists is that it was influenced by flummock, a word of English dialectical origin used to refer to a clumsy person. This flummock may also be the source of the word lummox, which also means «a clumsy person.»
Definition:
to engage in amorous embracing, caressing, and kissing
Example:
«The honeymooners are ubiquitous. They cuddle on the beaches, and they maneuver kayaks across the clear, turquoise waterways. They hold hands and canoodle at dinner in dimly lit restaurants.» — Ron Donoho, San Diego Magazine, January 2009
About the Word:
The origins of canoodle are obscure. Our best guess is that it may come from an English dialect noun of the same spelling meaning «donkey, fool, or foolish lover,» which itself may be an alteration of the word noodle, meaning «a foolish person.»
That noodle in turn may come from noddle, a word for the head. The guess seems reasonable given that, since its appearance in the language around the mid-19th century, canoodle has been most often used jocularly for playful public displays of affection by couples who are head over heels in love.
Definition:
of keen and farsighted penetration and judgment; discerning
Example:
«However, the new learning from Arab and ancient Greek sources recovered in the twelfth century showed that even the most sagacious ancient authors, including the likes of Ptolemy himself, believed in astrology.» — James Hannam, The Genesis of Science, 2011
About the Word:
You might expect the root of sagacious to be sage, which means «wise» or «wise man,» but actually the two words are not all that closely related. Sagacious traces back to sagire, a Latin verb meaning «to perceive keenly.»
It’s also related to the Latin adjective sagus («prophetic»), which is the ancestor of our verb seek. Etymologists believe that sage comes from a different Latin verb, sapere, which means «to taste,» «to have good taste,» or «to be wise.»
Definition:
having a mysterious, holy, or spiritual quality
Example:
«The Flinders [Australia] is an astonishingly evocative, numinous place: a landscape where the centuries, the millennia, the aeons all whisper to you.» — Matthew Engel, Financial Times, September 2, 2011
About the Word:
Numinous is from the Latin word numen, meaning «divine will» or «nod» (it suggests a figurative nodding, of assent or of command, of the divine head).
English speakers have been using numen for centuries with the meaning «a spiritual force or influence.» We began using numinous in the mid-1600s, subsequently endowing it with several senses: «supernatural» or «mysterious» (as in «possessed of a numinous energy force»), «holy» (as in «the numinous atmosphere of the catacombs»), and «appealing to the aesthetic sense» (as in «the numinous nuances of her art»). We also created the nouns numinousness and numinosity, although these are rare.
Definition:
marked by intemperance especially in eating or drinking; sick from excessive indulgence in liquor
Example:
«They were crapulous and carrying blue cans of beer, one of them with a can in each hand.» — Paul Theroux, Ghost Train to the Eastern Star, 2008
About the Word:
Crapulous may sound like a word that you shouldn’t use in polite company, but it actually has a long and perfectly respectable history (although it’s not a particularly kind way to describe someone).
It is derived from the Late Latin adjective crapulosus, which in turn traces back to the Latin word crapula, meaning «intoxication.» Crapula itself comes from a much older Greek word for the headache one gets from drinking.
Crapulous first appeared in print in 1536. Approximately 200 years later, its close cousin crapulence arrived on the scene as a word for sickness caused by drinking. Crapulence later acquired the meaning «great intemperance especially in drinking,» but it is not an especially common word.
Definition:
characterized by triteness or sentimentalism
Example:
«Ironically this bloated historical drama about Hungary’s failed democratic revolution of 1956 evokes nothing less than a Stalinist pageant: everyone on the right side of history is depicted as a morally enlightened superhuman, and a wash of bathetic music every few minutes is supposed to remind you how monumental the situation is.» — Ben Sachs, ChicagoReader.com, September 8, 2011
About the Word:
When English speakers turned apathy into apathetic in the 1700s, using the suffix -etic to turn the noun into the adjective, they were inspired by pathetic, the adjectival form of pathos, from Greek pathētikos.
People also applied that bit of linguistic transformation to coin bathetic. In the 19th century, English speakers added the suffix -etic to bathos, the Greek word for «depth,» which in English has come to mean «triteness» or «excessive sentimentalism.» The result: the ideal adjective for the incredibly commonplace or the overly sentimental.
Definition:
fate
Example:
«Call it kismet or chemistry, but when hip-hop entrepreneur Russell Simmons met yoga instructor Porschla Coleman 10 months ago at a party in Atlanta, they instantly hit it off.» — Lynette Holloway, Ebony, February 2008
About the Word:
Is it your fate to tie macrame while drinking coffee and eating sherbet in a minaret? That would be an unusual destiny, but if it turns out to be your kismet, you will owe much to Turkish and Arabic.
We borrowed kismet from Turkish in the 1800s, but it ultimately derives from the Arabic qisma, meaning «portion» or «lot.»
Several other terms in our bizarre opening question (namely, macrame, coffee, sherbet, and minaret) have roots in those languages too. In the case of macrame and minaret, there is a little French influence as well. Coffee and macrame also have Italian relations, and sherbet has an ancestor in a Persian name for a type of cold drink.
Definition:
an unexpected change or fluctuation; a difficulty or hardship usually beyond one’s control
Example:
«Ten years is a lifetime in the art world, where the vicissitudes of trends and tastes can befuddle the most experienced.» — Scarlet Cheng, Los Angeles Times, January 9, 2011
About the Word:
«Change is not made without inconvenience, even from worse to better,» wrote British theologian Richard Hooker in the 16th century.
That observation may shed some light on vicissitude, a word that can refer simply to the fact of change, or to an instance of it, but that often refers specifically to hardship or difficulty brought about by change. To survive «the vicissitudes of life» is thus to survive life’s ups and downs, with special emphasis on the downs.
Vicissitude is a descendant of the Latin noun vicis, meaning «change» or «alternation,» and it has been a part of the English language since the 16th century. In contemporary usage, it most often occurs in the plural.
Definition:
to depart quickly
Example:
«He raised his handgun and tried to line Reilly down its sight, but there was too much commotion around the agent and Zahed couldn’t get a clean shot. Time to vamoose. With his weapon still in his grip, he leapt behind the wheel of the van, slammed it into drive, and floored it.» — Raymond Khoury, The Templar Salvation, 2010
About the Word:
In the 1820s and ’30s, the American Southwest was rough-and-tumble territory — the true Wild West. English-speaking cowboys, Texas Rangers, and gold prospectors regularly rubbed elbows with Spanish-speaking vaqueros in the local saloons, and a certain amount of linguistic intermixing was inevitable.
One Spanish term that caught on with English speakers was vamos, which means «let’s go.»
Cowpokes and dudes alike adopted the word, at first using a range of spellings and pronunciations that varied considerably in their proximity to the original Spanish form. But when the dust settled, the version most American English speakers were using was vamoose.
Today’s word: wealwil
This page provides all possible meanings and translations of the word weal
Princeton’s WordNet
-
wale, welt, weal, wheal(noun)
a raised mark on the skin (as produced by the blow of a whip); characteristic of many allergic reactions
Samuel Johnson’s Dictionary
-
Weal(n.s.)
1. Happiness; prosperity; flourishing state.
Our weal on you depending,
Counts it your weal, that he have liberty.
William Shakespeare.As we love the weal of our souls and bodies, let us so behave ourselves as we may be at peace with God.
Francis Bacon.Thine, and of all thy sons,
The weal or woe in thee is plac’d; beware!
John Milton.Ireland ought to be considered, not only in its own interest, but likewise in relation to England, upon whose weal in the main, that of this kingdom depends.
William Temple.2. Republick; state; publick interest.
Blood hath been shed
Ere human statute purg’d the gen’ral weal.
William Shakespeare.How shall the muse, from such a monarch steal
An hour, and not defraud the publick weal.
Alexander Pope. -
Weal(n.s.)
The mark of a stripe.
Like warts or weals it hangs upon her skin.
John Donne.
Origin: welan , Saxon; wealust, Dutch.
Wikipedia
-
WEAL
WEAL («Big WEAL») is a gospel radio station in Greensboro, North Carolina targeting African Americans. It is at 1510 and broadcasts only during daylight hours allowing «clear channel» station WLAC in Nashville, Tennessee to cover the southern portion of the Atlantic coast. Owned by Stuart Epperson’s Truth Broadcasting Corporation, the station’s studios are near Piedmont Triad International Airport in Greensboro, and a transmitter site is downtown.
Webster Dictionary
-
Weal(noun)
the mark of a stripe. See Wale
-
Weal(verb)
to mark with stripes. See Wale
-
Weal(adverb)
a sound, healthy, or prosperous state of a person or thing; prosperity; happiness; welfare
-
Weal(adverb)
the body politic; the state; common wealth
-
Weal(verb)
to promote the weal of; to cause to be prosperous
Origin: [OE. wele, AS. wela, weola, wealth, from wel well. See Well, adv., and cf. Wealth.]
Freebase
-
WEAL
WEAL is a gospel radio station in Greensboro, North Carolina targeting African Americans. It is located at 1510 and broadcasts only during daylight hours allowing «clear channel» station WLAC in Nashville, Tennessee to cover the southern portion of the Atlantic coast.
Chambers 20th Century Dictionary
-
Weal
wēl, n. state of being well: a sound or prosperous state: welfare.—adj. Weal′-bal′anced (Shak.), explained by Schmidt as kept in a state of just proportion by reasons of state.—n. Weals′man (Shak.), a statesman.—The public, general, or common weal, the well-being, interest, and prosperity of the country. [A.S. wela, wealth, bliss; Ger. wohl.]
-
Weal
wēl, n. a form of wale.
Dictionary of Nautical Terms
-
weal
A wicker basket used for catching eels.
Suggested Resources
-
WEAL
What does WEAL stand for? — Explore the various meanings for the WEAL acronym on the Abbreviations.com website.
Surnames Frequency by Census Records
-
WEAL
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Weal is ranked #83226 in terms of the most common surnames in America.
The Weal surname appeared 226 times in the 2010 census and if you were to sample 100,000 people in the United States, approximately 0 would have the surname Weal.
52.2% or 118 total occurrences were Black.
41.5% or 94 total occurrences were White.
3.5% or 8 total occurrences were of Hispanic origin.
How to pronounce weal?
How to say weal in sign language?
Numerology
-
Chaldean Numerology
The numerical value of weal in Chaldean Numerology is: 6
-
Pythagorean Numerology
The numerical value of weal in Pythagorean Numerology is: 5
Examples of weal in a Sentence
-
Elizabeth Cady Stanton:
Love is the vital essence that pervades and permeates, from the center to the circumference, the graduating circles of all thought and action. Love is the talisman of human weal and woe—the open sesame to every soul.
-
Clifford Villalon:
There is no prestige in writing if the purpose of writing is not for the weal of the people.
-
Sanskrit Proverb:
He only does not live in vain Who all the means within his reach Employs?his wealth, his thought, his speech? T?advance the weal of other men.