Tuesday, March 17, 2020
100 Exquisite Adjectives
100 Exquisite Adjectives  100 Exquisite Adjectives  100 Exquisite Adjectives                                      By Mark Nichol                                            	  Adjectives  descriptive words that modify nouns  often come under fire for their cluttering quality, but often itââ¬â¢s quality, not quantity, that is the issue. Plenty of tired adjectives are available to spoil a good sentence, but when you find just the right word for the job, enrichment ensues. Practice precision when you select words. Hereââ¬â¢s a list of adjectives:  Adamant: unyielding; a very hard substance  Adroit: clever, resourceful  Amatory: sexual  Animistic: quality of recurrence or reversion to earlier form  Antic: clownish, frolicsome  Arcadian: serene  Baleful: deadly, foreboding  Bellicose: quarrelsome (its synonym belligerent can also be a noun)  Bilious: unpleasant, peevish  Boorish: crude, insensitive  Calamitous: disastrous  Caustic: corrosive, sarcastic; a corrosive substance  Cerulean: sky blue  Comely: attractive  Concomitant: accompanying  Contumacious: rebellious  Corpulent: obese  Crapulous: immoderate in appetite  Defamatory: maliciously misrepresenting  Didactic: conveying information or moral instruction  Dilatory: causing delay, tardy  Dowdy: shabby, old-fashioned; an unkempt woman  Efficacious: producing a desired effect  Effulgent: brilliantly radiant  Egregious: conspicuous, flagrant  Endemic: prevalent, native, peculiar to an area  Equanimous: even, balanced  Execrable: wretched, detestable  Fastidious: meticulous, overly delicate  Feckless: weak, irresponsible  Fecund: prolific, inventive  Friable: brittle  Fulsome: abundant, overdone, effusive  Garrulous: wordy, talkative  Guileless: naive  Gustatory: having to do with taste or eating  Heuristic: learning through trial-and-error or problem solving  Histrionic: affected, theatrical  Hubristic: proud, excessively self-confident  Incendiary: inflammatory, spontaneously combustible, hot  Insidious: subtle, seductive, treacherous  Insolent: impudent, contemptuous  Intransigent: uncompromising  Inveterate: habitual, persistent  Invidious: resentful, envious, obnoxious  Irksome: annoying  Jejune: dull, puerile  Jocular: jesting, playful  Judicious: discreet  Lachrymose: tearful  Limpid: simple, transparent, serene  Loquacious: talkative  Luminous: clear, shining  Mannered: artificial, stilted  Mendacious: deceptive  Meretricious: whorish, superficially appealing, pretentious  Minatory: menacing  Mordant: biting, incisive, pungent  Munificent: lavish, generous  Nefarious: wicked  Noxious: harmful, corrupting  Obtuse: blunt, stupid  Parsimonious: frugal, restrained  Pendulous: suspended, indecisive  Pernicious: injurious, deadly  Pervasive: widespread  Petulant: rude, ill humored  Platitudinous: resembling or full of dull or banal comments  Precipitate: steep, speedy  Propitious: auspicious, advantageous, benevolent  Puckish: impish  Querulous: cranky, whining  Quiescent: inactive, untroublesome  Rebarbative: irritating, repellent  Recalcitrant: resistant, obstinate  Redolent: aromatic, evocative  Rhadamanthine: harshly strict  Risible: laughable  Ruminative: contemplative  Sagacious: wise, discerning  Salubrious: healthful  Sartorial: relating to attire, especially tailored fashions  Sclerotic: hardening  Serpentine: snake-like, winding, tempting or wily  Spasmodic: having to do with or resembling a spasm, excitable, intermittent  Strident: harsh, discordant; obtrusively loud  Taciturn: closemouthed, reticent  Tenacious: persistent, cohesive,  Tremulous: nervous, trembling, timid, sensitive  Trenchant: sharp, penetrating, distinct  Turbulent: restless, tempestuous  Turgid: swollen, pompous  Ubiquitous: pervasive, widespread  Uxorious: inordinately affectionate or compliant with a wife  Verdant: green, unripe  Voluble: glib, given to speaking  Voracious: ravenous, insatiable  Wheedling: flattering  Withering: devastating  Zealous: eager, devoted                                          Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily!                Keep learning! Browse the General category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:How to Punctuate References to Dates and Times"Confused With" and "Confused About"Quiet or Quite?    
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