![]() ![]() Many of the definitions were questionable as well and only loosly matched the Websters definition.barely. A male and female take turns with each portion and often pronounce the word differently from each other, or use the word in terrible sentence which gives zero hint of the meaning. ![]() The word is read, defined, given synonyms and antonyms, then used in a sentence. One other issue with the audio book is that the two readers would contradict each other. I'm definitely no brainiac just an average guy but there were very few words in the easy category that weren't commonly used in grade school. Start off on medium or even the hard words, as the easy ones should really be common knowledge for anyone with more than an 8th grade education. If you've at least graduated high school, go ahead and save yourself some time by skipping the first 1/3 of the book. The definition does state the word means 'to clean especially medically' but that is still lacking. Its etymology includes the more basic definition of simply washing, but you're at a disadvantage if all you remember for the test is 'to wash'. Lavage means to medically wash a hollow organ. lazy sentence that does not help define or teach the word and instead focuses on an old definition. Here are some examples:-missionary and enlist are considered hard words-"synonym: accept, antonym: reject".wow thanks-"Lavage Sentence: He lavaged his clothes". The sentences are often just a rehash of the definition, and again, are often very lazy. The synonyms and antonyms are lazy, unhelpful, and often barely correct. Of the 'hard' words maybe 1/3rd of them are good review for the test. ![]() If you dont know the easy and moderate words you didn't pass elementary school. What disappointed you about GRE Vocabulary 3000: Official Test Prep?įirst, its nowhere near 3000 words of Prep. ![]()
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