pleased
/ˈpɫizd/
adjective
feeling happy and satisfied with something that has happened or with someone's actions
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Examples

1Are the gods pleased?
2The king was pleased.
3The king was pleased.
4Generally, the defendant is pleased.
5The unhealthy child inside of me is super pleased.
clever
/ˈkɫɛvɝ/
adjective
able to think quickly and find solutions to problems
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Examples

1You guys are clever.
2Rats are clever.
3Rats are pretty clever.
4This book is really clever.
5You clever little goose.
intelligent
/ˌɪnˈtɛɫədʒənt/
adjective
having or showing a high level of intelligence; good at learning things, understanding ideas, and thinking clearly
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Examples

1Her daughter is intelligent.
2The creature was intelligent.
3The creature was intelligent.
4Today's word is intelligent.
5Virgo is highly intelligent.
good-looking
/ˈɡʊdˌɫʊkɪŋ/
adjective
someone who has an attractive and pleasing appearance
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Examples

1Joe Biden also had a role model: Irish, Catholic, good-looking.
2Just because I'm good-looking doesn't mean I can't act.
3He's the one that almost looks as good-looking as dad.
4good-looking, good-looking.
5And, of course, joyful riding and good-looking goes hand in hand.
crazy
/ˈkɹeɪzi/
adjective
behaving in a very strange or unusual way
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Examples

1Ooo baby, baby The people went crazy.
2Human beings are crazy.
3That guy, that crystal is crazy.
4Chef that butter sauce is crazy.
5These people are crazy.
glad
/ˈɡɫæd/
adjective
feeling happy or pleased
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Examples

1- Glad I don't have to answer it.
2Glad we established that.
3- Glad we're going to do the Ritz cracker pie.
4Glad those days are over.
5Afterwards, people are extremely glad.
large
/ˈɫɑɹdʒ/
adjective
big or above average in amount or size
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Examples

1Supermarkets and other large stores quickly installed machines to scan these bar codes.
2The decline in trading jobs and revenue hurt the big banks and large investment firms.
3This is in large part, due to home equity being bequeathed from one generation to the next.
4In the larger scheme of things, those things don't change your narrative.
5This one was larger.
awful
/ˈɑfəɫ/, /ˈɔfəɫ/
adjective
extremely unpleasant, bad, or disagreeable
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Examples

1Some NTDs cause blindness as the result of awful eye infections.
2Professionalism is awful.
3That film sounds awful!
4This acting is awful.
5People are awful.
well-known
/ˈwɛɫˈnoʊn/
adjective
having gained great fame or recognition
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Examples

1California congresswoman karen bass is also a PROGRESSIVE but less well-known.
2He has been out in the PAST, sort of well-known.
3Eleanor: AND IT'S WELL-KNOWN.
normal
/ˈnɔɹməɫ/
adjective
usual, ordinary, and in the same way we expect
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Examples

1In the viewer's mind, the product registers as the normal thing to use.
2Unlike normal red cells which are pliant, sickle cells are rigid and also sticky.
3The first one looks normal.
4Pregnancy Frequent urination during pregnancy is normal.
5Everyone else's pee sounds normal.
boring
/ˈbɔɹɪŋ/
adjective
making us feel tired and unsatisfied because of not being interesting
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Examples

1They were boring, there was a shaky camera.
2Lectures are boring.
3Is your intro boring?
4Taxi driving was boring.
5School is boring.
noisy
/ˈnɔɪzi/
adjective
making or having of a lot of unwanted sounds
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Examples

1The world is getting noisier.
2The data is very noisy.
3My shoes are noisy.
4The brain itself can be noisy.
5Airplanes can be really noisy
rude
/ˈɹud/
adjective
having no respect for other people
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Examples

1Trump is rude.
2That shop assistant was rude.
3Her zingers were rude.
4The people are rude.
5This question was rude.
stupid
/ˈstupəd/, /ˈstupɪd/
adjective
not having common sense or the ability to understand or learn quickly
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Examples

1Ajo in Japanese is stupid. -
2Men are stupid.
3Envy is stupid.
4Cards are stupid.
5Those shows are stupid.
dirty
/ˈdɝti/
adjective
having stains, bacteria, marks, or dirt
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Examples

1The French capital was dirty.
2"Get your hands dirty."
3If the carpet isn’t too dirty, the safer play is probably to just vacuum.
4My fingernails are dirty.
5Today's word is dirty.
miserable
/ˈmɪzɝəbəɫ/, /ˈmɪzɹəbəɫ/
adjective
feeling very unhappy or uncomfortable
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Examples

1You are as lonely and miserable as the devil!
2Their reality was miserable.
3This packet is miserable.
4The older face is miserable.
5Mom is miserable.
slow
/ˈsɫoʊ/
adjective
moving, happening, or being done at a speed that is low
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Examples

1It's slow, and it needs a lot of information.
2Slow your roll.
3Slow the breath.
4Your reaction time slows.
5Slow your roll, not exactly.
cold
/ˈkoʊɫd/
adjective
having a temperature lower than the human body's average temperature
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Examples

1The water in the lochs is cold and dark.
2Some places get cold.
3My hands are cold.
4Your hands are cold?
5I hate colds.
synonym
/ˈsɪnəˌnɪm/
noun
a word or phrase that has the same or nearly the same meaning as another word or phrase in the same language
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Examples

1- Called synonyms, Rhett. -
2Learn synonyms for those words.
3Those are synonyms.
4Alright, our next word is synonym.
5Another synonym is latently, latently or intuitively.
antonym
/ˈæntənˌɪm/
noun
a word or phrase that has an opposite or contrasting meaning to another word or phrase
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Examples

1So what are the antonyms of those things?
2The dictionary usually has antonyms and synonym.
3We also look for antonyms.
4Those are antonyms.
5But what's an antonym?
scared
/ˈskɛɹd/
adjective
afraid of something or someone
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Examples

1Don´t be scared.
2Don´t be scared.
3People are scared.
4You guys are scared.
5The fat man is scared.
frightened
/ˈfɹaɪtənd/
adjective
feeling afraid or anxious
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Examples

1First, these countries are frightened.
2The shepherds were extremely frightened.
3The poor girl was very frightened.
4One set of people look frightened.
5Nonetheless, people were frightened.
right
/ˈɹaɪt/
adjective
based on facts or the truth
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Examples

1The fast food industry grew because it was born at the right time.
2I have no idea what's going on with Michelle right now.
3You know, they have the right to terminate channels as they see fit, to suspend channels as they see fit.
4Can you imagine if I put a big loudspeaker hooked up to your brain, and I could hear all your thoughts right now?
5When a new drug comes to market, the FDA gives the drug company exclusive rights to produce and market the drug until their patent runs out.
correct
/kɝˈɛkt/
adjective
based on the truth and without mistakes
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Examples

1Oftentimes the recruits just correct themselves, though.
2Reality corrects my preconceptions.
3Now part of typing is correcting mistakes.
4The Nebula projector automatically corrects the vertical keystone.
5Do the parents correct the baby’s pronunciation?
strange
/ˈstɹeɪndʒ/
adjective
having unusual, unexpected, or confusing qualities
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Examples

1Modern media are likely to make things even stranger.
2- That butter smells strange.
3The hybrid flowers were strange.
4The food looks strange.
5My daughters are strange.
unusual
/ənˈjuˌʒuəɫ/, /ənˈjuʒwəɫ/
adjective
not commonly happening or done
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Examples

1this thing is unusual.
2This countertop is kind of unusual.
3Marcus Atilliusbattles with Hilarus and Lucius were unusual.
4Today's attempt is unusual.
5Full sentences felt unusual.
hard
/ˈhɑɹd/
adjective
needing a lot of skill or effort to do
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Examples

1I learned a hard lesson today about the judgment and discrimination and retaliation against people who are deaf or hard of hearing.
2Hard, holding this camera.
3This one looks hard.
4- Babies are - Hard.
5- You coulda played that baby hard.
difficult
/ˈdɪfəkəɫt/
adjective
needing a lot of work or skill to do, understand, or deal with
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Examples

1Today's word is difficult.
2Life remained difficult.
3Travel is difficult!
4Life is difficult.
5Life becomes difficult.
happy
/ˈhæpi/
adjective
emotionally feeling good
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Examples

1They were quite happy until Annie suddenly began to cry and ran into the kitchen to her mother.
2She wears white because she's happy.'
3Lost in the world of imagination, I forgot my sad, lonely existence for a while, and was happy.
4They smiled at the camera and they looked very happy.
5Kids are happy.
to adore
/əˈdɔɹ/
verb
to love and respect someone very much
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Examples

1She adores her little alligator pouch.
2I adore this blue chair and that golden sunburst mirror.
3My wife and I adore our children.
4People adore the company.
5We adore celebrities.
lovely
/ˈɫəvɫi/
adjective
very beautiful or attractive
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Examples

1The lighting was lovely.
2This audience was lovely.
3VELVET: Sounds lovely.
4The fish is lovely.
5You guys did lovely.
great
/ˈɡɹeɪt/
adjective
worthy of being approved or admired
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Examples

1Actually, last year when the pandemic was greater than ever, we have the highest revenue here for the shops.
2In the past, they were a major stabilizing force during downturns, but during the Great Recession, they became a big drag because of this.
3Errol Morris wrote a really great book.
4Cherry and apple go great together.
5Blanket snuggles, blanket snuggling is great.
terrified
/ˈtɛɹəˌfaɪd/
adjective
feeling extremely scared and afraid
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Examples

1Terrified people streamed from homes and offices.
2It's actually, most of the time, pretty terrified.
3I was so terrified.
4But people are terrified of it.
5She looks terrified.
wonderful
/ˈwəndɝfəɫ/
adjective
very great and pleasant
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Examples

1Some people thought Dr. Gall's ideas were wonderful.
2People enjoy visiting museums to see displays of wonderful paintings and sculptures.
3It's a wonderful, big, green garden.
4The chicken fat with butter is wonderful.
5My children are wonderful.
afraid
/əˈfɹeɪd/
adjective
getting a bad and anxious feeling from a person or thing because we think something bad or dangerous will happen
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Examples

1Suddenly, he felt lonely and afraid.
2I was not at all afraid, because I knew I still had the power to calm him.
3Olivia’s face was afraid.
4This little girl was afraid.
5Vashti was afraid.
amazing
/əˈmeɪzɪŋ/
adjective
extremely surprising, particularly in a good way
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Examples

1It's an amazing monologue.
2A large room-sized computer, but now, this artificial intelligence stuff is amazing.
3The views-- the views are amazing.
4The power a complement unlocks is amazing.
5The effects were amazing!
to love
/ˈɫəv/
verb
to have very strong feelings for someone or something that is important to us and we like a lot and want to take care of
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Examples

1Americans love cheese.
2It speaks to the power of love.
3I love that laugh.
4He loves hugging strangers.
5And I love John Smith as a character because he was a braggart.
beautiful
/ˈbjutəfəɫ/
adjective
extremely pleasing to the mind or senses
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Examples

1They had a different language, a beautiful language called Gaelic.
2You can see some of the beautiful buildings from that time in George Square.
3There are beautiful flowers in it, and twelve tall trees.
4Now she is sitting under the most beautiful Christmas tree.
5'I'm going to be your faithful and beautiful wife.'
fascinating
/ˈfæsəˌneɪtɪŋ/
adjective
extremely interesting or captivating
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Examples

1Academic life was fascinating.
2The science behind empathy is fascinating.
3Secret number five is fascinating.
4This little stepper motor is fascinating.
5The book is fascinating.
to enjoy
/ˌɛnˈdʒɔɪ/, /ɪnˈdʒɔɪ/
verb
to take pleasure or find happiness in something or someone
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Examples

1People enjoy visiting museums to see displays of wonderful paintings and sculptures.
2Enjoying that view?
3Enjoy your show guys.
4Enjoy the dish.
5- Enjoy your evening.
out of focus
/ˌaʊɾəv fˈoʊkəs/
phrase
used to say that an image or visual representation lacks clarity and sharpness, appearing blurry or indistinct due to improper focus or distortion of the optical elements

Examples

bright
/ˈbɹaɪt/
adjective
(of weather) sunny and without many clouds
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Examples

1After all, this is a 2 mm long, bright green ciliate slithering through a field of smaller organisms and debris.
2The gills are bright.
3Which word is brighter?
4My eyes were bright.
5The future is bright.
light
/ˈɫaɪt/
adjective
having less amount of color; not dark
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Examples

1When the lights went on, the young man saw that his neighbor was the doctor who had examined him earlier.
2I have a brand new light that I bought, but I'm waiting for all the other equipment to come in so I can actually set it up.
3I ran that red light?
4And over the course of a century, our Galaxy is likely to have dozens of new studs of light.
5So many lights, lights, lights everywhere.
dark
/ˈdɑɹk/
adjective
not light in color
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Examples

1The water in the lochs is cold and dark.
2Snow is falling, and the sky is darker.
3It looked dark and lonely, surrounded by trees.
4Look for the City men with their dark suits and umbrellas!
5Our house was dark.
nice
/ˈnaɪs/, /ˈnis/
adjective
providing pleasure and enjoyment
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Examples

1When he saw that the restaurant had some nice fresh rolls, he asked the waitress for one, and she brought it.
2Where is that nice young woman?
3He has a very nice voice - and he doesn't shout at people.'
4Ciabatta's good, a hard roll is nice.
5That crust, that crunch, is nice too.
horrible
/ˈhɔɹəbəɫ/
adjective
extremely unpleasant, bad, or disagreeable
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Examples

1The fries themselves are horrible.
2Addiction sounds horrible.
3The whole unit smelled horrible.
4My life is horrible.
5My feet were horrible.

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