Root Word: “grad, gress” = step aggressive (adj): hostile; pushy; stepping into someone’s space with forceful energy centigrade (adj): Celsius; temperature rating on the thermometer made up of 100 degree intervals or steps between the freezing and boiling points of water degrade (v): to reduce someone’s worth or value; to make someone step down to a lower position or rank; to move down a step in social status digress (v): to stray away from the main topi; to step away from the topic and lose clarity; to wander in thoughts or ideas gradual (adj): a slow change; a step-by-step change graduate (v): to move up a step in education (usually out of a school) progress (v): to move a step in a positive direction; to improve; to move a step closer to a goal progression (n): a step-by-step sequence within a continuous series regress (v); to go back; to move backward; to move a step back upgrade (v): to move up a step or level; to improve in quality Root Word: “pass, path, pat” = feeling, emotion, suffering apathy (n): lack of interest or concern; lack of emotion or feeling compassion (n): deep feeling or awareness of the suffering of another accompanied with the desire to relieve the suffering compatible (adj): able to get along; agreeable dispassionate (adj): unaffected by emotion or bias empathy (n): understanding of another person’s feelings or situation passionate (adj): having or showing strong emotion pathetic (adj): capable of making one feel sympathetic or compassionate pathos (n): the feeling of pity or sympathy patient (adj): able to wait; bearing pains or trials calmly and without complaint; calm sympathetic (adj): expressing feelings of sorrow or pity for someone else Root Word: “cred, fid” = believe, trust affidavit (n): a written declaration made under oath that what is stated is true; a declaration you can trust bona fide (adj): true; genuine; authentic confidant (n): a person who is trusted with secrets or private matters confide (v): to tell in trust; to disclose private matters confident (adj): self-assured; belief in oneself credence (n): trustworthiness; belief; acceptance as true or valid diffident (adj): shy and timid; reserved in manner; lacking self-confidence; not believing in oneself fidelity (n): faithfulness to obligations, duties, or observances incredulous (adj): unwilling or unable to believe something; skeptical miscreant (n): a disbeliever; an evildoer; a villain Root Word: “flu, flux” = to flow affluence (n): a plentiful supply; wealth; a great quantity that seems to keep flowing confluence (n): a gathering, meeting, or flowing together at one point; a joining effluence (n): something that flows out; outflow fluctuate (v): to rise and fall irregularly; to vary; to flow up and down unpredictably fluent (adj): able to flow smoothly; graceful fluid (n): a substance whose molecules flow freely past one another; a liquid or gas fluted (adj): a tall, narrow shape designed for a smooth flow of liquid influential (adj): having the power to make things flow their way; the flow of power influx (n): a flowing in of something in a large number or amount; a mass arrival superfluous (adj): overflow; more than enough; an overabundance; more than required Root Word: “aud, son, phon” = sound, to hear assonance (n): the repetition of similar vowel sounds in the stressed syllables of successive words audible (adj): able to be heard audio (n): the sound portion of a broadcast auditorium (n): a large room that accommodates an audience, often for meetings or performances cacophony (n): harsh sounds; noisy or disturbing sounds phonograph (n): a record player; a machine that reproduces sound resonate (v): to vibrate or repeat in sound; to correspond harmoniously sonar (n): echolocation; a system using transmitted and reflected underwater sound waves to detect and locate submerged objects sonnet (n); a poem with 14 lines that usually sounds like one of several conventional rhyme schemes unison (n): words or music produced by more than one person that sounds as if from one voice Root Word: “ono, nym, onym” = word, name acronym (n): an abbreviation formed by combining the initial letters in words or parts of a series of words anonymous (adj): not named or identified; done by someone unknown antonym (n): a word that means the opposite of another word eponym (n): a person for whom something, such as a city, building, or street, has been named heteronym (n): one of two or more words that are spelled alike but have different meanings and pronunciations, such as bass voice and bass, a fish homonym (n): one of two or more words that are pronounced alike but have different spellings and meanings, such as isle and aisle onomatopoeia (n): the formation of words that imitate sounds associated with the objects or actions to which they refer oronym (n): a string of words that sounds the same as another string of words, such as gray day and grade A pseudonym (n): false name; a fictitious name synonym (n): one of two or more words that have the same meaning