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ACT Vocabulary Test Online
This is a pure web app that evaluates your ACT vocabulary skills. The app has a built-in basic level ACT vocabulary of 1200 words, which can help you devise a vocabulary-building plan to prepare for the test.
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Free Online Vocabulary Test
K12, SAT, GRE, IELTS, TOEFL
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abut
(1)
v. E.g.
Where our estates abut, we must build a fence.
Select answer:
throw overboard; eject from boat, submarine, aircraft, or spaceship
free, as from difficulties or perplexities; cause to be emitted or evolved
handle someone or something in a rough way; cause serious physical wounds
enrage; make furious or mad with anger
border upon; adjoin; touch or end at one end or side; lie adjacent
Don't select.
bicker
(2)
v. E.g.
The children bicker morning, noon, and night, exasperating their parents.
Select answer:
interrupt or cut off voice; keep in or hold back; suppress; conceal or hide
kindle; cause to start burning; set fire to
emphasize; stress; pronounce with a stress or accent; mark with an accent
approach; tend to meet; come together
engage in a petty, bad-tempered quarrel
Don't select.
cistern
(3)
n. E.g.
The farmers were able to withstand the dry season by using rainwater they had stored in an underground cistern.
Select answer:
feeling of deep regret; strong uneasiness caused by a sense of guilt
lack of self-confidence or courage
viewer who enjoys seeing sex acts or sex organs of others
bearing of fruit; fulfillment; realization
reservoir or water tank; vessel to hold water for household uses
Don't select.
descry
(4)
v. E.g.
In the distance, we could barely descry the enemy vessels.
Select answer:
make something last; preserve from extinction
voice or convey disapproval of; rebuke; find fault with
urge on or encourage, especially by shouts; make urgent appeal
catch sight of; discover by careful observation or scrutiny
fill or make complete again; add a new stock or supply to
Don't select.
fabricate
(5)
v. E.g.
If we fabricate the buildings in this project out of standardized sections, we can reduce construction costs considerably.
Select answer:
pass gradually or leak through, as if through small openings
rob; strip of money or other property unjustly, especially by trickery or fraud; ask unreasonable price
pollute; make dirty or spotty
build; put together out of components or parts
spend or expend wastefully; vanish by dispersion; drive away; disperse
Don't select.
hypochondriac
(6)
n. E.g.
The doctor prescribed chocolate pills for his patient who was a hypochondriac.
Select answer:
payment or expense; output
process, condition, or period of deterioration or decline; falling off or away; decay
ideally perfect place, especially in its social, political, and moral aspects
patient with imaginary symptoms and ailments; one who is morbidly anxious about his health, and generally depressed
disloyal person; traitor or rebel
Don't select.
intrinsic
(7)
a. E.g.
Although my grandmother's china has little intrinsic value, I shall always cherish it for the memories it evokes.
Select answer:
difficult to use or handle because of size or weight or shape; lacking grace in movement or posture
wildly disordered; excessive enthusiasm or excitement; insane
having weight of authority; peremptory and dictatorial
fit or deserving to be despised; contemptible; worthless; mean; shabby
relating to essential nature of a thing; inherent; built-in
Don't select.
obstetrician
(8)
n. E.g.
In modern times, the delivery of children has passed from the midwife to the more scientifically trained obstetrician.
Select answer:
major city, especially chief city of country or region
physician specializing in delivery of babies
place where one can live in seclusion; home of one isolated from society for religious reasons
popular fashion; current state or style of general acceptance and use
purging or cleansing of any passage of body
Don't select.
prolific
(9)
a. E.g.
My editors must assume I'm a prolific writer: they expect me to revise six books this year!.
Select answer:
existing or lasting only a short time; short-lived or temporary
lacking stylishness or neatness; shabby; old-fashioned
appetizing to taste or smell; salty or Non-Sweet; pleasing, attractive, or agreeable
producing offspring or fruit in great abundance; fertile
flexible; moving and bending with ease
Don't select.
renown
(10)
n. E.g.
For many years an unheralded researcher, Barbara McClintock gained international renown when she won the Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine.
Select answer:
fame; quality of being widely honored and acclaimed
cheat; one who defrauds or makes practice of defrauding others
grievous loss; particularly, the loss of a relative or friend by death
indirect reference; symbolical reference or comparison; metaphor
convenient features; courtesies
Don't select.
terminus
(11)
n. E.g.
After we reached the railroad terminus, we continued our journey into the wilderness on saddle horses.
Select answer:
act of sustaining; something, especially food, that sustains life or health
last stop of railroad; final point or end; boundary or border
earthwork or other strong defense; person who defends
particular period of history, especially one considered remarkable
form of literature in which irony and ridicule are used to attack human vice and folly
Don't select.
unanimity
(12)
n. E.g.
We were surprised by the unanimity with which members of both parties accepted our proposals.
Select answer:
complete agreement in opinion or resolution of all persons concerned
feeling of being bored by something tedious
direct, quick route; direct, straight course
practice of ending life of hopelessly ill individuals; assisted suicide
agitation; chemical phenomenon in which an organic molecule splits into simpler substances
Don't select.