Sadlier-Oxford Vocab Level H - Unit 13

accolade

(noun)
praise or approval; a ceremonial embrace or greeting

acerbity

(noun)
sourness or bitterness of taste; harshness or severity of manner or expression

attrition

(noun)
the process of wearing down by friction or gradual impairment

bromide

(noun)
a trite or commonplace remark; a tiresome or boring person; a sedative

chauvinist

(adjective)
extravagantly patriotic; blindly devoted to a cause
(noun)
such a person

chronic

(adjective)
continuing over a long period of time or recurring often

expound

(verb)
to explain in detail

factionalism

(noun)
party strife and intrigue

immaculate

(adjective)
spotless; without blemish or fault

imprecation

(noun)
a curse; the act of cursing

ineluctable

(adjective)
not able to be avoided, changed, or overcome

mercurial

(adjective)
charcterized by rapid and unpredictable changes of mood; fickle or inconstant

palliate

(verb)
to make less serious or severe by glossing over; to relieve without actually curing, mitigate

protocol

(noun)
customs and regulations dealing with official behavior and etiquette, as in a court or among diplomats; a type of international agreement; a memorandum, official account, or record

resplendent

(adjective)
shining or gleaming brilliantly; splendid or magnificent

stigmatize

(verb)
to brand or mark as in some way discreditable, disgraceful, or ignominious

sub rosa

(adverb)
in secret; confidentially; privately
(adjective)
secretive

vainglory

(noun)
excessive pride in and boastfulness about one's own accomplishments or qualities; a vain show or display

vestige

(noun)
a trace or visible evidence of something that once existed but now is lost or vanished

volition

(noun)
the power to choose, will, or decide; the act of choosing, willing, or deciding