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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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advocacy
(1)
n. E.g.
No threats could dissuade Bishop Desmond Tutu from his advocacy of the human rights of black South Africans.
Select answer:
viewer who enjoys seeing sex acts or sex organs of others
support; active pleading on behalf of something
mental calmness; calm or tranquil state of mind
soft wet boggy land; complex or dangerous situation from which it is difficult to free oneself
condition of favoring or liking; tendency towards; preference
Don't select.
banal
(2)
a. E.g.
The writer made his comic sketch seem banal, only a few people liked it.
Select answer:
brief; effectively cut short; marked by use of few words
obvious and dull; commonplace; lacking originality
open to two or more interpretations and often intended to mislead
excessively or elaborately decorated; flashy, showy, or florid in style or manner
using exactly the same words; corresponding word for word
Don't select.
declivity
(3)
n. E.g.
The children loved to ski down the declivity.
Select answer:
downward slope, as of a hill
skilled public speaker; person who pronounces discourse publicly on some special occasion, as pleader or lawyer
wasting away; decrease in size; reduction in the functionality of an organ caused by disease
aggressive entrance into foreign territory; raid or invasion
boaster; one given to loud, empty boasting; very talkative person
Don't select.
edict
(4)
n. E.g.
The emperor issued an edict decreeing that everyone should come see him model his magnificent new clothes.
Select answer:
last stop of railroad; final point or end; boundary or border
tender sorrow; pity; quality in art or literature that produces these feelings
decree ,especially issued by a sovereign; official command
improper act; improper or unacceptable usage in speech or writing
purging or cleansing of any passage of body
Don't select.
exhume
(5)
v. E.g.
Could evidence of the serial killer have been buried with his victim? To answer this question, the police asked the authorities for permission to exhume the victim's body.
Select answer:
speak indistinctly; pass over carelessly or with little notice
dig out of ground; remove from grave
ease or lessen pain; satisfy or appease
proceed slowly; waste time
blow in heavy gusts; speak in a loudly arrogant or bullying manner
Don't select.
impel
(6)
v. E.g.
A strong feeling of urgency would impel her; if she failed to finish the project right then, she knew that she would never get it done.
Select answer:
become quiet or less intensive
eat away; wear away by abrasion; become worn
make an accusation against; challenge or discredit the credibility of
drive or force onward; drive forward; urge to action through moral pressure
hinder or prevent of ; frustrate
Don't select.
incendiary
(7)
n. E.g.
The fire spread in such an unusual manner that the fire department chiefs were certain that it had been set by an incendiary.
Select answer:
arsonist; bomb that is designed to start fires
systematic, usually extensive written discourse on a subject
combining parts into a coherent whole; putting of two or more things togethe
lack of caring; indifference
viewer who enjoys seeing sex acts or sex organs of others
Don't select.
mores
(8)
n. E.g.
In America, Benazir Bhutto dressed as Western women did; in Pakistan, however, she followed the mores of her people, dressing in traditional veil and robes.
Select answer:
expectation of misfortune; feeling of evil to come; unfavorable omen
lack of caring; indifference
conventions; moral standards; accepted traditional customs
surviving remnant; something left after loss or decay; object kept for its association with the past
animals of a period or region
Don't select.
progenitor
(9)
n. E.g.
The Roth family, whose progenitor emigrated from Germany early in the nineteenth century, settled in Peru, Illinois.
Select answer:
great enjoyable or amusing activity
devaluation; decrease in price or value
direct ancestor; originator of a line of descent; originator or founder
trace; remains; indication that something has been happened
remedy; compensation; act of correcting error or fault
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:
masses of leaves; a cluster of leaves, flowers, and branches
fame; quality of being widely honored and acclaimed
feeling of lack of interest or energy; depression
popular fashion; current state or style of general acceptance and use
who acts in response to particular situations rather than upon abstract ideals; one who acts in a practical or straightforward manner
Don't select.
spatial
(11)
a. E.g.
NASA is engaged in an ongoing program of spatial exploration.
Select answer:
appetizing to taste or smell; salty or Non-Sweet; pleasing, attractive, or agreeable
relating to space; existing in or connected with space
attended by favorable circumstances; marked by success; prosperous
related to spring; suggestive of youth; vigorous and fresh
morally or legally constraining; required; binding
Don't select.
unruly
(12)
a. E.g.
The only way to curb this unruly mob is to use tear gas.
Select answer:
incompatible; not able to be resolved
difficult or impossible to discipline, control, or rule; not according to rule; irregularly
brief and compact; expressing much in few words
dull and unimaginative; matter-of-fact; factual
morally or legally constraining; required; binding
Don't select.