Sadlier-Oxford Vocab Level H - Unit 1

adjunct

(noun)
something added to something else as helpful or useful but not essential; an assistant or helper; a valuable quality or characteristic
(adjective)
added or connected in a subordinate capacity; attached to a faculty or staff in an auxiliary capacity

bellwether

(noun)
the male sheep that leads the flock to the slaughterhouse; a leader, as in a desperate or violent undertaking; an indicator of trends

caterwaul

(verb)
to howl or screech like a cat; to quarrel
(noun)
a harsh or noisy cry; a racket

chimerical

(adjective)
absurd; wildly fantastic; impossible

effete

(adjective)
lacking in wholesome vigor or energy; worn-out or exhausted; sterile or unable to produce; out-of-date

fait accompli

(noun)
an accomplished and presumably irreversible deed, fact, or action

hidebound

(adjective)
narrow-minded and rigid, especially in opinions or prejudices; stubbornly and unthinkingly conservative

hierarchy

(noun)
any system of things or people arranged or graded one above another in order of rank, wealth, class, etc.

liturgy

(noun)
a religious service or rite; the form of a ritual or other act of public worship

mirage

(noun)
something illusory, without substance or without a basis in reality; an illusion

morass

(noun)
a patch of low, soft, wet ground; a swamp; a confusing situation in which one is entrapped, as in quicksand

noisome

(adjective)
offensive or disgusting; foul-smelling; harmful or injurious

oblivious

(adjective)
forgetful; unaware

poltroon

(noun)
a base coward

proselyte

(noun)
a convert; a disciple

quasi

(adjective)
resembling but not actually being; seemingly but not actually or completely

raillery

(noun)
good-humored ridicule; teasing

ribald

(adjective)
irreverently mocking; coarse, vulgar, or indecent in language

supine

(adjective)
lyng flat on one's back; listless or lethargic; apathetic or passive

vignette

(noun)
a short description or sketch; a picture or illustration with edges that gradually shade off; a decorative design on the title page of a book or at the beginning or end of a chapter