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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 ACT Vocabulary Test
accede
 
 
(1)
v.  E.g. The idea that one of the two chief executives should eventually accede to the role, as has happened in the past, would raise fresh doubts about the board's independence.
Select answer:
be placed in or take the room of; replace; make obsolete; make void or useless by superior power
surround with armed forces; harass with requests
postpone or delay needlessly; put off doing something, especially out of habitual carelessness or laziness
hinder or prevent of ; frustrate
agree; give consent, often at insistence of another; concede
Don't select.
bandy
 
 
(2)
v.  E.g. While the president was happy to bandy patriotic generalizations with anyone who would listen to him, he refused to exchange words with unfriendly reporters at the press conference.
Select answer:
discuss lightly or glibly; exchange words heatedly
put down by force or intimidation ; restrain; crush; oppress; conceal or hide
fill with horror and loathing; horrify; hate
stockpile; accumulate for future use
twist out of proper or natural relation of parts; misshape; misrepresent
Don't select.
clique
 
 
(3)
n.  E.g. Fitzgerald wished that he belonged to the clique of popular athletes and big men on campus.
Select answer:
supplement or appendix, especially to a will
small exclusive group of friends or associates
short, simple story teaching moral or religious lesson
bravery; force; power to attack or to resist attack
state of alarm or dread; nervous apprehension; involuntary trembling or quivering
Don't select.
denounce
 
 
(4)
v.  E.g. The reform candidate kept to denounce the corrupt city officers for having betrayed the public's trust.
Select answer:
gather into a mass, sum, or whole; amount to
condemn openly; criticize; make known in formal manner
drive or force onward; drive forward; urge to action through moral pressure
be unsteady in purpose or action, as from loss of courage or confidence
stop short and refuse to go on; refuse obstinately or abruptly
Don't select.
fodder
 
 
(5)
n.  E.g. One of Nancy's chores at the ranch was to put fresh supplies of fodder in the horses' stalls.
Select answer:
rate of occurrence; particular occurrence
arrangement by rank or standing; series in which each element is graded or ranked
reparation; getting something back again; restoring something to its original state
coarse food for cattle or horses
willingness to carry out the wishes of others; great respect
Don't select.
impassive
 
 
(6)
a.  E.g. Refusing to let the enemy see how deeply shaken he was by his capture, the prisoner kept his face impassive.
Select answer:
wholly absorbing one's attention
coiled around; highly involved; intricate
wildly disordered; excessive enthusiasm or excitement; insane
familiar, as by study or experience; able to converse knowledgeably
without feeling; revealing little emotion or sensibility; not easily aroused or excited
Don't select.
languor
 
 
(7)
n.  E.g. His friends tried to overcome the languor into which he had fallen by taking him to parties and to the theater.
Select answer:
science of sound; quality that makes a room easy or hard to hear in
faithless lover; fickle lover; flirt, usually applies only to men
feeling of lack of interest or energy; depression
mutual relationship; interdependence or interconnection relationship
person with prejudiced belief in superiority of own kind
Don't select.
maul
 
 
(8)
v.  E.g. What can he do for this country besides serenade us with poetry and not maul the English language like Bush?
Select answer:
rid or deprive of inhabitants; lay waste; devastate
close tightly; grasp or grip tightly; fasten with a clinch
handle someone or something in a rough way; cause serious physical wounds
neigh, as a horse, especially in gentle tone; cry of horse
move in twisting or contorted motion; contort in pain
Don't select.
predecessor
 
 
(9)
n.  E.g. I hope I can live up to the fine example set by my late predecessor in this office.
Select answer:
period of greatest popularity, success, or power; golden age
analysis; cutting apart in order to examine
vain man; one who want to get admiration by dress; man excessively concerned with his clothes and appearance
former occupant of post; ancestor or forefather
effort; expenditure of much physical work
Don't select.
scruple
 
 
(10)
v.  E.g. Fearing that her husband had become involved in an affair, she did not scruple to read his diary.
Select answer:
draw back or shrink involuntarily, as in pain or from blow
plunge into water; wet thoroughly; extinguish
hesitate as a result of conscience or principle
condemn openly; criticize; make known in formal manner
cause to sink or become stuck in; hinder, entrap, or entangle
Don't select.
temperate
 
 
(11)
a.  E.g. Try to be temperate in your eating this holiday season; if you control your appetite, you won't gain too much weight.
Select answer:
impressively great in size, force, or extent; enormous
inclined or eager to fight; aggressive
twisted; knotty; made rough by age or hard work
existing only in imagination; feigned; not true or real
restrained; self-controlled; moderate in degree or quality
Don't select.
turbid
 
 
(12)
a.  E.g. The water was turbid after the children had waded through it.
Select answer:
incapable of being pacified; not to be relieved;
lacking in spirit or energy to exert effort
muddy; having sediment disturbed; heavy, dark, or dense, as smoke or fog
insignificant; lacking importance; not following from premises or evidence; illogical
full of initiative; marked by aggressive ambition and energy and initiative
Don't select.