Click "Next" to see a card. Now, say the answer out loud *before* you click "Next" again to see if you are right. Hit "delete" to remove a card from the study pile once you know it.
| Brash | heedless of the consequences : audacious |
| Congress | the act or action of coming together and meeting |
| Digress | to turn aside especially from the main subject |
| Egress | Verb meaning the action of going out or a noun meaning exit |
| Regress | movement backward to a previous and especially worse or more primitive state |
| Transgress | to violate a command or law: to go beyond a limit |
| Intrepid | characterized by resolute fearlessness, fortitude, and endurance |
| Paucity | smallness of number |
| Rue | To feel remorse |
| Veracity | truthfulness |
| Invoke | To call forth |
| Unequivocal | Leaving no doubt |
| Vocal | Outspoken, uttered by voice |
| Vocation | a divine call to a particular life OR an occupation |
| Vociderous | Marked by insistant outcry |
| Aberration | being atypical especially from a moral standard or normal state |
| Abject | cast down in spirit |
| Conciliatory | to make compatible |
| Irreconcilable | impossible to fit together or coexist |
| Reconciliation | the action of restoring to friendship or harmony |
| Defile | to make unclean |
| Duress | forcible restraint |
| Endure | to survive without giving in |
| Obdurate | Stubborn in wrongdoing |
| Perdurable | Very durable |
| Heinous | Hatefully or shockingly evil |
| Loath | reluctant or unwilling |
| Loathe | to hate or detest |
| Mores | Fixed customs or beliefs of a group or culture |
| Obtrusive | Forward or undesirably prominent |
| Unobtrusive | inconspicuous, unassertive, or reticent |
| Subdue | To vanquish or bring under control |
| Disparage | speaking in a way that lowers the reputation of, to lower in rank |
| Exacerbate | to make worse! |
| Goad | To urge into action |
| Impeccable | Incapable of sin or flaw |
| Onerous | Constituting a burden |
| Implacable | not capable of being appeased or pleased |
| Complacent | marked by self-satisfaction especially when accompanied by unawareness of actual dangers |
| Placate | to soothe or mollify especially by concessions |
| Placid | serenely free of interruption or disturbance |
| Despot | a ruler with absolute power and authority : a person exercising power tyrannically |
| Impotent | lacking in power, strength, or vigor; helpless |
| Omnipotent | having virtually unlimited authority or influence |
| Potent | Powerful or effective |
| Potentate | ruler, sovereign; OR more broadly, one who wields great power or sway |
| Querulous | habitually complaining : whining |
| Retaliate | to repay (as an injury) in kind: to return like for like |