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All Words (83 Words)
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Advanced Words (25 Words)
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Word List
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Word | Meaning | Advanced |
---|---|---|
throb | v: to beat with a strong, regular rhythm, as a pulse or a heart | |
pound | n: the standard unit of money in the UK; the standard unit of weight equal to 16 ounces | |
headache | n: pain in the head; someone or something that causes anxiety or trouble | |
zigzag | adj: having short sharp turns or angles | |
vision | n: the ability to think about or see the future with imagination and intelligence; the faculty of being able to see | |
sensitivity | n: the ability to perceive or respond to subtle differences or changes; the ability to understand and respond to the needs and feelings of others | |
lingering | adj: continuing for a long time; persistent; remaining in a place or situation for longer than is usual or necessary; unwilling to leave | |
fatigue | n: a feeling of tiredness or weariness, especially as a result of physical or mental exertion; the reduction in the strength or efficiency of a material or structure due to repeated use or stress | |
disrupt | v: to prevent or stop something, especially an event, activity, or process, from continuing in the usual way by causing a problem or disturbance | |
migraine | n: a severe headache typically felt as a throbbing pain on one side of the head | |
symptom | n: any sensation or change in body or mind that is experienced by a patient and is associated with a particular disease | |
incapacitate | v: to disable or render someone or something unable to function or operate normally, either temporarily or permanently, often as a result of injury, illness, or damage | |
capture | v: to catch a person or an animal and confine them in an area which they cannot escape | |
array | n: a large group or collection of things or people, especially one that is impressive or attractive | |
entail | v: to involve or require something as necessary, particularly as a consequence of a particular situation or action; to impose a burden or restriction on something | |
alike | adv: similar or identical in nature or appearance | |
involve | v: to include or affect someone or something as a necessary part of something else | |
brain | n: the organ inside the head that is responsible for one’s movement, thought, memory, and feeling | |
trace | v: to find or discover someone or something that was lost | |
anatomy | n: the scientific study that deals with the physical structure of humans, animals, or plants | |
identify | v: to recognize someone or something and say or prove who or what they are | |
warn | v: to make someone aware of potential danger or difficulty, particularly one that may occur in the future | |
mood | n: the way you feel at a particular time; an angry or impatient state of mind | |
yawn | v: to involuntarily open one’s mouth wide and exhale due to tiredness, boredom, or a lack of oxygen; (noun) an involuntary reflex act of opening one’s mouth wide and inhaling deeply due to tiredness, boredom, or a lack of oxygen | |
nausea | n: a feeling of sickness or discomfort in the stomach that is often accompanied by an urge to vomit; a sensation of loathing or disgust | |
thirst | n: a feeling of needing something to drink; a strong desire for something | |
hypothalamus | n: a basal part of the brain that autonomically controls body temperature, hunger, and the release of hormones | |
normally | adv: usually; under normal conditions | |
internal | adj: of or relating to the inside of something | |
hormone | n: a chemical substance made by organs that encourages or influences the development, growth, sex, etc., of an animal and is carried around the body in the blood | |
balance | n: a condition in which everything has the same weight or force; something left after other parts have been taken away | |
circadian | adj: relating to a physiological cycle that lasts approximately 24 hours, impacting physical and behavioral changes that occur over the course of a day, such as sleep-wake cycles or fluctuations in hormones | |
rhythm | n: a strong regular repeated pattern of sounds, words, or musical notes that are used in music, poetry, and dancing | |
regulation | n: an official rule made and maintained by a government or some other authority; the act of controlling or directing something according to a rule | |
aura | n: a distinctive feeling or quality that seems to surround a person or place; a low-level electromagnetic field surrounding a living organism or object | |
transient | adj: lasting only for a short time; not permanent or enduring | |
visual | adj: relating to seeing or sight | |
tingle | v: to cause a stinging or prickling sensation; (noun) a feeling of slight numbness or a slight prickling or stinging sensation, typically as a result of cold or excitement | |
sensation | n: a feeling associated with stimulation of a sense organ or with a specific body condition; a general feeling of interest and excitement | |
membrane | n: a soft, thin layer that forms animal or vegetable tissue | |
trigger | v: to make something happen suddenly; to cause something such as a device, machine, etc. to function | |
cortex | n: the outermost layer of an organ, especially the brain | |
blind | adj: unable to see; unable or unwilling to perceive or understand the true nature of something | |
spot | n: a particular location or place; a small round or roundish area, differing in color or feels from the surface around it | |
phase | n: any stage in a series of events, change, or development | |
trigeminal | adj: relating to the nerve responsible for sensation in the face, including the jaw, lips, and tongue | |
nervous | adj: worried and anxious about something; relating to the nerves | |
transmit | v: to send or forward an electronic signal; to pass something from one person or thing to another | |
temperature | n: the degree of hotness or coldness of a thing or place | |
scalp | n: the skin that covers the top of a person’s head, together with the hair growing on it; also, the part of the body that is most vulnerable to an attack | |
vessel | n: a ship or large boat | |
cerebral | adj: relating to the brain or intellect; intellectual or studious rather than emotional or physical | |
pathway | n: a track that constitutes or serves as a path; an approach or a way of doing something | |
sensitize | v: to make someone or something more responsive to a particular stimulus or condition; to increase awareness or understanding of an issue, problem, or situation | |
threshold | n: the floor or ground that forms the bottom of a doorway and offers support when passing through a doorway; the smallest detectable sensation | |
provoke | v: to stimulate or give rise to a particular reaction or have a particular effect | |
cough | v: to expel air from the lungs suddenly and noisily, often as a reaction to irritation, illness, or some other physical condition; (noun) a sudden, forceful expulsion of air from the lungs, often accompanied by a distinctive sound | |
diverse | adj: including numerous categories of individuals or entities; various | |
lifetime | n: the duration of someone’s life or something’s existence; | |
neurological | adj: of or relating to the science of neurology or the nervous system | |
disorder | n: an untidy state or a lack of organization; a physical condition or illness that causes problems with how a section of the body or brain functions | |
brainstem | n: the part of the vertebrate central nervous system that is continuous with the spinal cord and is composed of the medulla oblongata, pons, and midbrain, which controls many automatic functions of the body, such as heartbeat, breathing, and consciousness | |
hemisphere | n: half of the terrestrial globe; half of a sphere | |
fluctuation | n: a change, or the process of changing, that frequently happens, especially from one extreme to another; the quality of being unsteady and subject to changes | |
reduction | n: a decrease in size, amount, or degree | |
frequency | n: an ordered array of colors into which a light beam can be split | |
menopause | n: the natural cessation of menstruation and fertility in women, typically occurring between the ages of 45 and 55 | |
worsen | v: to become or make something worse | |
suffer | v: to experience pain, distress, or hardship; to undergo or endure something painful or unpleasant | |
depression | n: a mental condition in which a person feels very unhappy and without hope for the future; a severe recession in an economy or market | |
panic | n: a sudden strong feeling of fear that cannot be controlled and prevents reasonable thought and action | |
stroke | n: a medical condition in which poor blood flow to the brain causes cell death; the act of swinging or striking at a ball with a club, racket, etc. | |
relation | n: the way two persons or groups of people feel and act toward one another | |
disease | n: a disorder or illness that affects the body or mind, often characterized by specific symptoms or abnormal functioning of organs or systems | |
complexity | n: the state or quality of being complicated or intricate and difficult to understand | |
vice | n: wrongdoing or wicked behavior; (in the form of vice versa) with the order reversed; (as a prefix) someone with a job immediately below a particular person | |
genetic | adj: of or relating to genes (= parts of the DNA in cells) or the science of genes | |
basis | n: the most important facts, ideas, or events from which something is developed; the way how things are organized or arranged | |
genetics | n: the branch of biology that studies genes, genetic variation, and heredity in organisms | |
neuron | n: a cell that is specialized to carry information within the brain and between the brain and other parts of the body | |
excite | v: to make someone feel suddenly enthusiastic or eager | |
environment | n: the natural world such as air, water, and land in which humans, animals, and plants live | |
stimulus | n: something that causes growth or arouses action |