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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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appellation
(1)
n. E.g.
Macbeth was startled when the witches greeted him with an incorrect appellation. Why did they call him Thane of Cawdor, he wondered, when the holder of that title still lived?.
Select answer:
excessive zeal; extreme devotion to a belief or cause
intensity of feeling; warmth of feeling; intense, heated emotion
ban on commerce or other activity
name; title; act of naming; act of appealing for aid, sympathy
feeling of being bored by something tedious
Don't select.
buxom
(2)
a. E.g.
A generation ago, fat babies were considered healthy and buxom actresses were popular, but society has since come to worship thinness.
Select answer:
relating to, or contributing to sense of smell
healthily plump and ample of figure; full-bosomed; vigorous; jolly
being the first of its kind in a region; primitive; native
lacking energy or vitality; weak; sluggish; lacking spirit or liveliness
having no equal; incomparable
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:
tender affection; love; act of showing affection
disloyal person; traitor or rebel
rapid growth; spread; increase in size by reproduction
process, condition, or period of deterioration or decline; falling off or away; decay
reservoir or water tank; vessel to hold water for household uses
Don't select.
delude
(4)
v. E.g.
His mistress may delude herself into believing that he would leave his wife and marry her.
Select answer:
turn into vapor, steam, gas, or fog; decrease rapidly and disappear
deceive mind or judgment of; lead from truth or into error; frustrate or disappoint
annoy; disturb, especially by minor irritations; be a mystery or bewildering to
guess; infer something without sufficiently conclusive evidence
cut off part of body, especially by surgery; prune
Don't select.
extricate
(5)
v. E.g.
Icebreakers were needed to extricate the trapped whales from the icy floes that closed them in.
Select answer:
ease or lessen pain; satisfy or appease
free, as from difficulties or perplexities; cause to be emitted or evolved
expel; eject from a position or place; force out
fill or make complete again; add a new stock or supply to
declare to be true; affirm
Don't select.
impudence
(6)
n. E.g.
Kissed on the cheek by a perfect stranger, the lady exclaimed, "Young man, I should have you horse-whipped for your impudence."
Select answer:
entire range; all notes in musical scale
stubborn intolerance; excessive zeal or warmth in favor of a party, sect, or opinion
leave of absence; vacation granted a soldier or civil servant
offensively bold behavior; trait of being rude
shack; small, wretched house
Don't select.
indisputable
(7)
a. E.g.
In the face of these indisputable statements, I withdraw my complaint.
Select answer:
feasible; capable of being effected, done, or put into practice
not open to question; obviously true; beyond dispute or doubt
obedient; ready and willing to be taught; easily managed or handled
exceeding reasonable limits; excessive; not regulated; disorderly
lacking variety or excitement; monotonous
Don't select.
misnomer
(8)
n. E.g.
The essay did make the point that the name “greenhouse effect” is a misnomer, which is correct.
Select answer:
withdrawal; retreat; time of low economic activity
fortress; projecting part of fortification; well-fortified position
loud flourish of brass instruments, especially trumpets; spectacular public display
error in naming person or place; name wrongly or unsuitably applied to a person or an object
great flood; heavy downpour; any overflowing of water
Don't select.
piety
(9)
n. E.g.
The nuns in the convent were noted for their piety; they spent their days in worship and prayer.
Select answer:
remedy; compensation; act of correcting error or fault
yielding to another; ceding or surrendering
standstill resulting from opposition of two forces or factions; stalemate
religious devotion and reverence to God; devout act, thought, or statement; godliness
tendency to keep together
Don't select.
rigorous
(10)
a. E.g.
Disliked by his superiors, the officer candidate endured an extremely rigorous training program.
Select answer:
hardened in wrongdoing or wickedness; not giving in to persuasion
incapable of being pacified; not to be relieved;
suggesting puzzlement; mocking; curious
being or existing everywhere; omnipresent
full of rigors; harsh; rigidly accurate; precise
Don't select.
stodgy
(11)
a. E.g.
For a young person, Winston seems remarkably stodgy: you'd expect someone his age to show a little more life.
Select answer:
state of being held in high esteem and honor
clear, transparent or bright; calm, untroubled, and without worry
separated at joints; out of joint; lacking order or coherence
dull, unimaginative, and commonplace; old-fashioned; stuffy
unwilling or with reluctance; stingy
Don't select.
whinny
(12)
v. E.g.
When you laugh through nose, it sounded as if you whinny.
Select answer:
plunge into water; wet thoroughly; extinguish
destroy or kill a large part of; select by lot and kill one in every ten of
neigh, as a horse, especially in gentle tone; cry of horse
surround an enemy; enclose or entrap; beat by cleverness and wit
force to leave; remove from office
Don't select.