Vocabulary Study Online By Level (VSOBL) is a Fast, Reliable, and Handy tool to prepare English exam vocabulary. (Available for all VIP accounts: US$2/Month). It has built-in word lists: 6000 IELTS words, 6000 TOEFL words, 5000 GRE words, and 3000 SAT words. You can load them by level with one click.
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3000 Common SAT Vocabulary | Introduction |
3000 Level 1 - 1 - Manage Words by Panel - Page 9 |
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bleak |
a. [阴冷的,寒冷的,没有指 望的] cold or cheerless; unlikely to be favorable The frigid, inhospitable Aleutian Islands are bleak military outposts. |
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bloated |
a. [浮肿] swollen or puffed as with water or air Her bloated stomach came from drinking so much water. |
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bluff |
n. [假装强壮,欺骗] the pretense of strength; mislead or deceive If only, I thought, he had called our bluff from the start and told us firmly that he knew the figures but wouldn't say. |
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blunt |
a. [钝的,直率的,不客气的,使变钝] having a dull edge or end; not sharp; lacking in feeling; insensitive Public employee unions are demanding in blunt terms that Democrats make the tax code more progressive. |
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blurt |
v. [脱口而出] utter suddenly and impulsively Before she can stop you, you should blurt out the news. |
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bode |
v. [预兆] foreshadow; indicate by signs; be an omen of; predict The gloomy skies and the odors from the mineral springs seemed to bode evil to those who settled in the area. |
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bogus |
a. [赝品] counterfeit or fake; not authentic; not genuine The police quickly found the distributors of the bogus twenty-dollar bills. |
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bolt |
v. [冲刺,快速移动] dash or dart off; move or jump suddenly Jack was set to bolt out the front door. |
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booming |
a. [快速增长的,欣欣向荣] deep and resonant; flourishing; thriving 'Who needs a microphone?' cried the mayor in his booming voice. |
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boundless |
a. [无限的] being without boundaries or limits; infinite; vast Mike's energy was boundless: the greater the challenge, the more vigorously he tackled the job. |
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bourgeois |
a. [中产阶级,平庸的] middle class; selfishly materialistic; dully conventional Technically, anyone who belongs to the middle class is bourgeois, but most people resent it if you call them that. |
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boycott |
v. [抵制] refrain from buying or using Cesar Chavez called for consumers to boycott grapes to put pressure on grape growers to stop using pesticides that harmed the farm workers' health. |
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bravado |
n. [虚张声势] defiant or swaggering behavior; the pretense of courage; false show of bravery The bravado of the young criminal disappeared when the victims of his brutal attack confronted him. |
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brazen |
a. [厚颜无耻,傲慢] having loud, usually harsh, resonant sound; shameless His entire premiership has become an exercise in brazen dishonesty. |
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breach |
n. [违约,突破,打破] breaking of contract or duty; breaking of waves or surf; fissure or gap Jill sued Jack for breach of promise, claiming he had broken his promise to marry her. |
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brittle |
a. [易碎的] easily broken; having little elasticity My employer's self-control was as brittle as an egg-shell. |
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brochure |
n. [小册子] pamphlet; small book usually having a paper cover The Department of Agriculture issued this brochure on farming. |
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brooch |
n. [胸针] ornamental clasp; decorative pin worn by women The brooch was a gift from Burton, and she wore it when she wed him. |