和谐英语

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SAT最常见的1000个词汇(F-1)

2012-03-03来源:互联网

  该词表中的词汇主要是针对美国学生挑选出来的,这1000个词汇是属于SAT考试中常出现但美国学生却不熟悉的词汇,因此该词表中的词汇难度较大。如果你是刚刚接触SAT的考生,最好不要立即使用该词表,推荐留在备考的最后阶段再使用。 

fabricate (v.) to make up, invent (When I arrived an hour late to class, I fabricated some excuse about my car breaking down on the way to school.)
fa?ade 1. (n.) the wall of a building (Meet me in front of the museum’s main fa?ade.) 2. (n.) a deceptive appearance or attitude (Despite my smiling fa?ade, I am feeling melancholy.)
facile 1. (adj.) easy, requiring little effort (This game is so facile that even a four-yearold can master it.) 2. (adj.) superficial, achieved with minimal thought or care, insincere (The business was in such shambles that any solution seemed facile at best; nothing could really helpit in the long-run.)

fallacious (adj.) incorrect, misleading (Emily offered me cigarettes on the fallacious assumption that I smoked.)
fastidious (adj.) meticulous, demanding, having high and often unattainable standards (Mark is so fastidious that he is never able to finish a project because it always seems imperfect to him.)
fathom (v.) to understand, comprehend (I cannot fathom why you like that crabby and mean-spirited neighbor of ours.)

fatuous (adj.) silly, foolish (He considers himself a serious poet, but in truth, he only writes fatuous limericks.)
fecund (adj.) fruitful, fertile (The fecund tree bore enough apples to last us through the entire season.)
felicitous 1. (adj.) well suited, apt (While his comments were idiotic and rambling, mine were felicitous and helpful.) 2. (adj.) delightful, pleasing (I spent a felicitous afternoon visiting old friends.)
feral (adj.) wild, savage (That beast looks so feral that I would fear being alone with it.)
fervent (adj.) ardent, passionate (The fervent protestors chained themselves to the building and shouted all night long.)
fetid (adj.) having a foul odor (I can tell from the fetid smell in your refrigerator that your milk has spoiled.)
fetter (v.) to chain, restrain (The dog was fettered to the parking meter.)

fickle (adj.) shifting in character, inconstant (In Greek dramas, the fickle gods help Achilles one day, and then harm him the next.)
fidelity (n.) loyalty, devotion (Guard dogs are known for the great fidelity they show toward their masters.)
figurative (adj.) symbolic (Using figurative language, Jane likened the storm to anangry bull.)
flabbergasted (adj.) astounded (Whenever I read an Agatha Christie mystery novel, I am always flabbergasted when I learn the identity of the murderer.)
flaccid (adj.) limp, not firm or strong (If a plant is not watered enough, its leaves become droopy and flaccid.)
flagrant (adj.) offensive, egregious (The judge’s decision to set the man free simply because that man was his brother was a flagrant abuse of power.)
florid (adj.) flowery, ornate (The writer’s florid prose belongs on a sentimental Hallmark card.)
flout (v.) to disregard or disobey openly (I flouted the school’s dress code by wearing a tie-dyed tank top and a pair of cut-off jeans.)
foil (v.) to thwart, frustrate, defeat (Inspector Wilkens foiled the thieves by locking them in the bank along with their stolen money.)