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GRE Word of the Day

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GRE Word of the Day: Wanton (adj)

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Wanton (adj)

wanton

Wanton person want to live with each and every woman on the earth. So wanton person is  immoral, unchaste or lewd person.

wanton

E.g.:
Wanton whore seducing the public.

wanton
(Source:users.globalnet.co.uk)

WANTON WITCH by Judson Grey
SHE!
The hated published, Warren Forrester, had been mysteriously murdered; and now his craving to control the entire face of the world was relegated to his beautiful and passionately perverse wife, Kathy. Her vow to carry through with her husband’s sordid scheme could not be stopped – no matter who might get in her way.
Only her carnal need for sexual satisfaction was more important than her drive for complete power. And her physical lust encompassed the most insane and insidious of desires!

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

Meaning:

Syn:
Casanova, debauchee, Don Juan, harlot, hussy, jezebel, lecher, libertine, strumpet, swinger, tart, tramp, wench, whore

wanton
(Source:trashfiction.co.uk)

Ant:
blameless, commendable, conscientious, creditable, devout, dutiful, equitable, ethical, noble, peerless, philanthropic, scrupulous

wanton

Check Your Preparation here…….

Wanton (Antonym)

A) Slut
B) Chaste
C) Trollop
D) Libidinous
E) Licentious

Written by GRE Word of The Day Team on December 25th, 2011 with 7 comments.
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The best study material for scoring 1400 in GRE.

GRE Word of the Day: Volube (Adj)

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Voluble (Adj)

Volume…..Voluble person creates a lot of volume.

Voluble

Meaning:
Marked by a ready flow of speech; fluent

E.g.:
She is an extremely voluble young woman who engages in soliloquies not conversations.

Syn: accomplished, adept, adroit, apparent, articulate, dexterous, practiced, proficient, vocal
Ant: inarticulate, tongue-tied

Check Your Preparation here��

Voluble (Antonym)

A) delighted
B) articulate
C) taciturn
D) prolix
E) belie

Written by gouthami on December 24th, 2011 with 10 comments.
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Memorise GRE words@Picture and Funny Story, Score 1400+

It is your turn…A must Read “need suggestion”

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Dear GRE Aspirant,

Currently we are posting a word a day in “GRE Word of the Day”. But many GRE aspirants asking for more GRE Words. There argument is that we are going to appear in exam very soon. One question is very less for practice. We are getting many suggestions, some of them are…

>> please post all barron’s 3200 word in one day.I dont have any other work, wanna practice them here all in one.
>> ok, when you asking then 10-15 latest GRE words will be fine.
>> just do one thing post a word each hour,Total 24 words a day.
>> Please post 4 GRE Word of the Day
>> Please post 3 GRE Word of the Day
>> Please post 2 GRE Word of the Day
>> hey !! one question is fine; I dont have time to solve more questions.

Now what???
We are looking for your suggestions, ideas. Which you wish to implement here.

Please write here your comments.

Thanking You
GREword Team

Written by GRE Word of The Day Team on December 23rd, 2011 with 21 comments.
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Word Traveler: Feed Your Word-Loving Habit #13

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Philosophers such as Aristotle and Plato and grammarians like Dionysius Thrax and Terentius Varro were among the first known to study the ways in which words were formed. Their studies were limited to Greek and Latin, but they influenced greatly the study of other languages, including English. At first, the study of word formation was part of grammar, but it later moved on to become part of morphology, or the study of the structure of words. By word formation, we mean the different devices used to build new words. Each type of word formation will result in the production of a specific type of word. So, an understanding of word formation is one way of learning about the different types of words that exist in English.

Terms used to describe the building blocks of words are important. A root or base word is the element left after all the prefixes, suffixes, and other parts have been removed from a complex word. Another way of describing a root word is that it is usually a monosyllabic word upon which another word or words are built. Others may use the terms simple word, simplex, or base word for this concept. For example, the word heart is the root or base word of hearty, heartless, hearten, heartfelt, heartland, heartstrings, heartwarming, warmhearted, and many more.

Stem is another term used to designate a part of a word that remains when inflections (i.e., grammatical parts of a word) are removed. For example, sing is the stem of sings, singing, sang, sung, and be is the stem of the regular and irregular forms am, are, being, been, is, was, were. English has relatively few inflections. In the word unmentionables, the stem is unmentionable; for smallest, the stem is small.

The creation of a new root, base, or simple word is rare compared with other types of word formation. If this does happen, the new root is usually improvised and either echoic or imitative. These are called “motivated” new roots. Zap and vroom represent real or imagined sounds. They are “echoic” or “onomatopoeic” and can either be imitative or symbolic. Splish and sploosh are variants or adaptations of splash: the consonants are retained but the vowels are changed. Other new roots are created by reversals, anagrams, or other adaptations of preexisting forms (e.g., chaise lounge from the French chaise longue, or the title of Samuel Butler’s utopian novel Erewhon by a reversal of nowhere).

There are, however, other new roots for which there is no linguistic explanation and these are termed ex nihilo (“out of nothing”). Proper nouns, such as company and brand names (e.g., Exxon, Nylon, Kodak, Kevlar) may simply be invented. Google, the Internet search engine, is another such invented word, influenced, however, by googol (one followed by a hundred zeroes), which was an invented root word. Nonproper noun forms like googol are rare, found chiefly in fictional works, especially fantasy and science fiction. Some examples are grok (“to communicate meaningfully”, coined by Robert Heinlein), hobbit (“a lovable elflike creature”, coined by J. R. R. Tolkien), and Grinch (“a spoilsport or killjoy”, coined by Theodor Seuss Geissel). These are purely arbitrary combinations of letters, not derived in whole or part from any existing word.

Then there are “complex” words and “compound” words, which are actually different things. Complex words are formed via derivation, the process by which a word like unbelievable is built up from the root or base believe, or by which expedite is built up from the base -ped- (Latin for “foot”). Other examples of derivatives are: drinkable, gardener, gentlemanly, and unaware. Compound words are formed by composition or compounding, the process by which blackboard is formed from the simple words black and board, and geography is formed from the combining forms geo- and -graphy. Words like birthday, craftsman, download, freeze-dried, grandfather, highway, newborn, peach-flavored, red-hot, and safeguard are compounds. However, as this book will show, derivation and compounding are just two of a large number of different word-formation processes. (Source: dictionary. com)

Written by GRE Word of The Day Team on December 22nd, 2011 with no comments.
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TOP 10 GRE WORDS OF THE WEEK

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WORDS. WORDS.. & WORDS… that is what you need to memorise for the best GRE score.

TOP 10 GRE WORDS OF THE WEEK
lascivious
Palliative
Caucus
Castigate
Despondent
lunatic
truculent
Sardonic
Unctuous
Savant

Choose your the best your words.

Written by GRE Word of The Day Team on December 20th, 2011 with 1 comment.
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Where can I search for those words.

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I didn’t find meanings for some words like germaid, adament, crroud , concade, cambast, lucinious etc. Where can I search  for those  words. Please suggest me any reference .

Written by GRE Word of The Day Team on December 18th, 2011 with 3 comments.
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GRE Word of the February

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1. Ephemeral
2. Countenance
3. Impugn
4. Maladroit
5. Audacious
6. Temerity
7. Chicanery
8. Erroneous
9. Esoteric
10. Feckless
11. Phantom
12. Galling

Written by GRE Word of The Day Team on December 14th, 2011 with 25 comments.
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