GRE

GRE vocabulary list with meanings, pronunciation, and study-ready examples.

GRE needs a denser reference surface: high-frequency verbal words, crisp definitions, and enough context to make hard words stick.

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Core verbal words

High-yield words for text completion and sentence equivalence.

Meaning contrast

Definitions should separate close words instead of listing loose synonyms.

Study flow

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10 entries shown
adjective/æˈber.ənt/
Word guide
Deviation

Different from what is normal or expected.

ExampleThe scientist treated the aberrant result as a clue, not an error.

equivocal

adjective/ɪˈkwɪv.ə.kəl/
Ambiguity

Open to more than one interpretation; not clearly stated.

equivocal evidencean equivocal answer

ExampleThe evidence was equivocal, so neither explanation could be dismissed.

mitigate

verb/ˈmɪt.ə.ɡeɪt/
Reduction

To make something less severe or harmful.

ExampleThe policy was designed to mitigate the effects of inflation.

laconic

adjective/ləˈkɑː.nɪk/
Style

Using very few words.

a laconic replylaconic style

ExampleThe author's laconic style makes each sentence feel deliberate.

pragmatic

adjective/præɡˈmæt.ɪk/
Practical judgment

Focused on practical results rather than abstract ideas.

ExampleThe committee chose a pragmatic solution rather than a perfect but costly plan.

alacrity

noun/əˈlæk.rə.ti/
Attitude

Cheerful readiness or eagerness.

ExampleShe accepted the difficult assignment with surprising alacrity.

capricious

adjective/kəˈprɪʃ.əs/
Unpredictability

Changing suddenly and unpredictably.

ExampleThe ruler's capricious decisions made policy difficult to predict.

prosaic

adjective/proʊˈzeɪ.ɪk/
Style

Ordinary and lacking imagination.

prosaic explanationprosaic details

ExampleThe critic rejected the prosaic explanation and looked for a deeper cause.

intransigent

adjective/ɪnˈtræn.sə.dʒənt/
Stubbornness

Unwilling to change an opinion or agree with others.

ExampleThe leader remained intransigent even after the evidence changed.

sagacious

adjective/səˈɡeɪ.ʃəs/
Judgment

Having or showing wise judgment.

ExampleThe judge made a sagacious decision that balanced fairness and practicality.

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