<p>thanks a ton!! really helpful!!</p>
<p>Probably, this is the only inaccurate definition provided.</p>
<p>“serenity- marked with grace”
Serenity is more like calmness and peacefulness, rather than grace. Although very close, the definition remains inaccurate.</p>
<p>Great post btw.</p>
<p>thank you so much. This is so awesome!!!</p>
<p>thanks a lot! like~</p>
<p>thank you! i add this to my vocab list. very heplful!</p>
<p>actually impartial is not biased.</p>
<p>Wow, great post!</p>
<p>didactic is to moralize, in other words you’re incline to lecture or give speeches about what is right and wrong.</p>
<p>Also: Impartial is not biased. it’s to be fair</p>
<p>pessimism- negative, gloomy, not hopeful
pedantic: bookish
cynical: distrustful of motives
trite: Stale
Resigned: submissive; passively accepting the inescapable
judicious: sensible
disparaging: to belittle
Elated: high in spirits, overjoyed</p>
<p>Thanks! It will be enormously helpful!</p>
<p>Bump for December SAT. Enjoy :)</p>
<p>Having finished with the SAT, there is no way that I am reading all those word again =P But I love your idea. The understanding of the tone, mood and classification words holds many marks in the SAT and thus, it is quite clear to me that you have done the CC community a favor.</p>
<p>^Yeah, I missed quite a bit of them on October test. :(</p>
<p>Of the 8 questions in CR I missed on the October Test, 5 of them were because I didn’t know words on this list. Hopefully tomorrow goes well, and thanks for the bump.</p>
<p>Thanks so much for the list! It really organized all the seemingly ambiguous words that I was confused with.</p>
<p>But I found an error in the list… I think “impartial” means “NOT biased”, but the list says biased!</p>