Asked by Alex

· Pretension: His pretension to expertise was exposed when he could not answer basic questions.

· Censure: The senator faced public censure after evidence of misconduct emerged.

· Injudicious: It was injudicious to invest all their savings in a single risky venture.

· Extirpate: They worked to extirpate the invasive weeds from the nature reserve.

· Confound: The sudden shutdown of the server served to confound even the most experienced engineers.

· Remiss: She was remiss in returning the library books and was charged a fine.

· Propriety: He questioned the propriety of discussing such private matters

· Formidable: The dragon was a formidable opponent.

· Equivocal: His answer was equivocal, leaving us unsure of his true feelings.

· Posterity: We hope to leave a better word for posterity.

We have sentences that include the definition but lets actually say what each definition means in simple words.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
Sure — here are simple, plain‑word meanings for each word, with a short restatement of the sentence idea:

- Pretension — a claim to be better or more skilled than you really are.
(He acted like an expert but couldn’t answer basic questions.)

- Censure — official or public criticism or blame.
(The senator was publicly criticized after misconduct was found.)

- Injudicious — not wise or sensible; showing poor judgment.
(It was unwise to put all their savings into one risky bet.)

- Extirpate — to completely remove or wipe out.
(They tried to get rid of the invasive weeds entirely.)

- Confound — to confuse or surprise someone so they can’t understand or react.
(The server suddenly shutting down confused even expert engineers.)

- Remiss — careless about doing something you should do.
(She didn’t return the library books on time and had to pay a fine.)

- Propriety — proper behavior; what is considered socially acceptable.
(He questioned whether it was appropriate to talk about such private matters.)

- Formidable — very strong, powerful, or difficult to deal with.
(The dragon was a very tough, intimidating enemy.)

- Equivocal — unclear or allowing more than one possible meaning; noncommittal.
(His answer was vague, so we couldn’t tell how he really felt.)

- Posterity — future generations; people who will live after us.
(We hope to leave a better world for people who come after us.)