26. WPME p 174
-ion
Noun suffix added to verbs
unconscionability
lack of conscience
omniscience
infinite knowledge
glibness
suspiciously smooth fluency
egregiousness
outstanding badness or viciousness
gregariousness
friendliness; enjoyment of mixing with
people
congregation
religious group; a massing together
segregation
exclusion from the herd; a setting apart
aggregate (n.)
total; mass; whole
Is unconscionability one of the signs of the psychopath?
Yes
Can anyone be truly omniscient?
no
Does a prescient fear indicate some knowledge of the future?
Yes
Is nescience a result of learning?
no
Does glibness make someone sound sincere and trustworthy?
no
Is egregiousness an admirable quality?
No
Do gregarious people enjoy parties?
Yes
Do spectators congregate at sports events?
Yes
Do we often segregate hardened criminals from the rest of society?
Yes
Is an aggregation of problems a whole mass of problems?
Yes
enjoying groups and companionship
gregarious
state of not being held back from antisocial behavior by one’s conscience
unconscionability
state of not being held back from antisocial behavior by one’s conscience
unconscionableness
having knowledge of an event before it occurs (adj.)
prescient
a religious “flock”
congregation
a total, whole, or mass
aggregate, aggregation
to separate from the rest
segregate
suspiciously smooth fluency
glibness
all-knowing (adj.)
omniscient
to come together into a group or mass
congregate
Highly skilled:
consummate
Beyond reform:
incorrigible
Dating from birth:
congenital
Outstandingly bad:
egregious,
Science of heredity:
genetics
Study of disease:
pathology
Fond of company, friends, group activities, etc.:
) gregarious
Long accustomed in habit:
inveterate
Study of family ancestry:
genealogy,
To complete, finish, top off:
consummate,
Accurate timepiece:
) chronometer
Identification with the feelings of another:
empathy
Thought transference; extrasensory perception
telepathy
To gather into a group:
congregate,
corrigo, to correct
incorrigible
logos, science, study
genealogy
pathos, disease, suffering, feeling
pathology, pathetic, empathy
grex, gregis, herd, flock
gregarious
scio, to know
unconscionable
sciens, knowing
prescience