concise and to the point. thank you. I've been avoiding the videos that talk to much and looking for one that just goes through the words quickly. your video is perfect for that. thanks
This is great. I got a 340 and did indeed know/revise all these words. Maybe I should do something similar on my channel. Edit: I just did! Check out my latest vocabulary playlist!
Very useful words, your voice is soothing and easy to understand, I laud your efforts. Thank you for helping the rest of us out and keep up the good work!
This video was very exquisite. I love the way you talk your voice has such a positive tone that it would draw in any listener. Thank you for helping us with this intellectual video I feel very informed.
These were great, I love how you guys didn't try to sew your own agenda into this like some vocabulary teachers do; you just taught the word and gave a clear example.
Grockit your hive-minded vocal fry voice distracts the entire content. Be an adult. Quit with the stupid trend following & think critically & independently of mob think
She is very presice, unlike other video tutorials with a heavy accent. I don't mind accent, but it could be confusing when studying for GRE vocabularies.
Hi, I don't know i remember these words are not.your voice is angelic!!I am remembering your voice rather than remembering words!!Can you please post some more words!!My brain get used to your voice!!
Chaitanya Chaitanya Thanks for your feedback! We are planning to have more videos available in the New Year. Please be sure to subscribe for the latest updates!
+Nicole A you're right! "Unequivocal" can absolutely be considered an antonym for "equivocal" and means leaving no doubt, unambiguous. Lucid just happens to be another of the antonyms for "equivocal".
engender malleable ; 온순한: pliable, ductile, plastic, pliant, soft, workable,easily influenced; pliable.Latin malleus ‘a hammer’. enervate[ =weaken; from e- (variant of ex-) ‘out of’ + nervus ‘sinew’.] sin·ew /ˈsinyo͞o/a piece of tough fibrous tissue uniting muscle to bone or bone to bone; a tendon or ligament. v. ;strengthen with or as if with sinews. venerate erudite
Since the word apathy means lack of interest, on minute 8.30 should not it say NOT PRONE instead of PRONE TO APATHY? Because why would political parties try to engage smb who is less enthusiastic than old people? 🧐
Isaac C Great question. While there's no guarantee which words will or won't appear on the GRE, surveys and data collected to date indicate that these have appeared more frequently than other words tested on the exam. -- Chad