| Question | Answer | 
        
        |  start learning wysoce, nadzwyczaj, wyjątkowo  |  |  to a high degree   That could prove in all too many ways to be eminently counterproductive. an eminently sensible plan. That use has since slipped into obsolescence, as has the word's use to mean "conspicuously" |  |  | 
|  start learning zmierzchowy, aktywny o zmierzchu  |  |  of, relating to, or resembling twilight   These may have been similar to crepuscular rays on Earth. crepuscular activities in the city that never fall asleep. crepuscular insects adjusted they style of foraging for preventing the attacks of predators during daylight. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  incarceration. of, relating to, or suggesting a jail or prison."   Coordinate care inside and outside carceral settings. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  characterized by procrastination. tending or intended to cause delay   dilatory, tardy in paying bills. He can’t be blamed for the agency’s dilatory response to problems at the plant. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  not capable of or susceptible to change   immutability. Lincoln vigorously disagreed, affirming the existence of universal truths, that all men are created equal and that certain moral principles are immutable. |  |  | 
|  do pracystart learning |  |  to give in exchange for another: EXCHANGE   commuting foreign currency to domestic. The periodic payments may be commuted into a lump sum. commute a death sentence to life in prison |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  to abolish by authoritative action: ANNUL. to treat as nonexistent: to fail to do what is required by (something, such as a responsibility)   abrogate a treaty. The company's directors are accused of abrogating their responsibilities. |  |  | 
|  start learning przypisać sobie zasługi bez prawa, prawo  |  |  to take something without having the right to do so:(“to claim or seize without justification   They arrogate to themselves the power to punish people. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  to cause to seem inferior. detract from   don't derogate your achievements. few instances of inaccuracy or mediocrity can never derogate from the superlative merit of Homer. The title of the book derogates the people it is about. |  |  | 
|  start learning oświadczenie pod przysięgą  |  |  a sworn statement in writing made especially under oath or on affirmation (see AFFIRMATION sense 2) before an authorized magistrate or officer   The witness's affidavit was presented to the court as evidence. and an affidavit is always a sworn written document. |  |  | 
|  start learning przenieść na kogoś(obowiązek), potoczyć się w dół, stracić na jakości, stać się czymś gorszym  |  |  to pass on (something, such as responsibility, rights, or powers) from one person or entity to another. to come by or as if by flowing down. to degenerate through a gradual change or evolution   The scene devolved into chaos. streams devolving from the mountains. the estate devolved on a distant cousin |  |  | 
|   blask (w stylu gracji i przepychu)   radiant splandorstart learning |  |  the ability to shine brightly. the state of looking very beautiful or being full of goodness:   The fire died down, marked only by a brief effulgence of a glowing ember. Dawn was near and the stars had lost their effulgence. |  |  | 
|  bombastart learning |  |  buzz   Bombinate sounds like it should be the province of bombastic blowhards who bound up and bombard you with droning blather at parties—and it is |  |  | 
|  start learning przemienić (za pomocą czarów; w zabawny, groteskowy sposób)  |  |  to change or alter greatly and often with grotesque or humorous effect   For most basketball fans, that joy will transmogrify into disappointment, sadness or even fleeting anger once their favorite team is eliminated. |  |  | 
|  start learning zrobiony na zamówienie, uszyty na miarę  |  |  skreddersydd. is used to describe anything made to an individual’s desired specifications.   custom -made. While factory-made furniture is almost always less expensive, nothing beats the charm of a bespoke, hand-carved chair or table. |  |  | 
|  start learning tolerować, znosić; przestrzegać  |  |  Abide is often used in negative constructions, such as “can't abide,” to say that someone cannot tolerate or accept something. Abide can also mean “to accept without objection” and “to remain or continue.”   Residents of the dorm agree to abide by the dorm's rules. I just can't abide such blatant dishonesty |  |  | 
|  voluntarilystart learning |  |  power of chosing and determing   Left the company of one's volition. Do something voluntarily means that you do it of your own volition. |  |  | 
|   ukośnie, diagonalnie; ukośny   Middle French noun quatre, meaning “four,”start learning |  |  diagonal, oblique   the house stood kitty-corner across the square. applied to the four-dotted side of a die—a side important in several winning combinations in dice games. |  |  | 
|  it does add a figuratively spicy kick to one’s speechstart learning |  |  a person who causes trouble: RASCAL,   the city's run-down waterfront was occupied mostly by disreputable places frequented by drunkards and rapscallions. that little rapscallion kept hiding my shoes and making me go look for them |  |  | 
|  start learning nietaktowny, lewy po francusku  |  |  lacking social experience or grace. crudely made or done. Although it doesn’t mean anything sinister, gauche is one of several words (including sinister) with ties to old suspicions and negative associations relating to the left side   a gauche turn of phrase. it would be gauche to mention the subject |  |  | 
|  start learning żółciowy, nieznośny, zrzędliwy  |  |  of or relating to a yellow or greenish fluid that is secreted by the liver and that aids especially in the emulsification and absorption of fats. of or indicative of a peevish ill-natured disposition. sickeningly unpleasant   bilious commentary her bilious humor. the bilious weather with clapboards painted red and bilious yellow |  |  | 
|  start learning przepowiadać, wróżyć (z Rzymu)  |  |  an official diviner of ancient Rome, to foretell especially from omens, to give promise of   the good news augurs well prosperity for all our neighbors. It augured well for the future. the fortune-teller augured nothing but a series of calamities for me |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  invalid (having no legal or binding force); minor (lacking importance). nugatory suggests triviality or insignificance.   the congressional resolution has symbolic value only, as it relates to a matter governed by the states and is thus nugatory. the book is entertaining, but its contributions to Shakespearean scholarship are nugatory. a monarch with nugatory powers |  |  | 
|  start learning farsa, farsa (humorystyczne dzieło teatralne lub filmowe)  |  |  humorous entertainment. a poor, insincere, or insulting imitation of something. By the 15th century, a similar practice of inserting unscripted buffoonery into religious plays had arisen.   the rubber-faced, loose-jointed comedian is a master of knockabout farce. the recall of a duly elected official for a frivolous reason is not democracy in action but a farce |  |  | 
|  start learning wymiana piłek, hałaśliwy (przyjęcie)  |  |  suitable for rough use. boisterous   He lived a knockabout life in the city. a knockabout game of football in the mud. The knockabout during the tennis match is fast. This party was so knockabout that they called the police. |  |  | 
|  trunkstart learning |  |  uproot, to destroy completely: WIPE OUT, to pull up by the root. cut out by surgery   Then, in the ISIS years, the US chose to ally with the Iraqi/Syrian Kurds to extirpate ISIS. endangered species that have been almost entirely extirpated, shows signs of reoccurrence on the western coast of the island. |  |  | 
|  start learning vamos, zmywać się, spadać,  |  |   We've got to vamoose until they get over that dining- room. |  |  | 
|  start learning onomatopeja, wyraz dźwiękonaśladowczy,  |  |   it's not a sole impetus for human language development, however it is certainly something that has left a mark, which is nothing to sneeze at |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  someone who thinks of himself as a devoted, religious and pious person but in fact his behavior contradicts his statement |  |  | 
|  start learning namawiać, ująć kogoś pochlebstwem wdzięczyć się, przymilać się  |  |  to influence or entice by soft words or flattery. to gain by wheedling   wheedle one's way into favor. In the final scenes, when Lucia and Mia wheedle their way into his suite for a threesome, Dom can’t hold onto his guilty conscience. |  |  | 
|  start learning esencja, natura (czegoś), czyjeś dziwaczne ekstrawaganckie wybryki  |  |  for all of her quiddities, she is a very wise and generous lady. a trifling point. whatever makes something the type that it is: Rembrandt's genius was his unparalleled ability to render a person's quiddity in a single portrait.   Consider quintessence, a synonym of the “essence of a thing” meaning of quiddity, and quibble, a synonym of the “trifling point” use. And let’s not forget about quirk: like quiddity, quirk can refer to a person’s eccentricities |  |  | 
|  start learning pozorować działania dla własnych korzyści, traktować niesprawiedliwe, przymuszać ale również worek z piaskiem  |  |  to treat unfairly or harshly c: to coerce by crude means   are raiding the Treasury and sandbagging the government. He claimed he was playing badly because of an injury, but I think he was sandbagging. |  |  | 
|   płaczliwy (o człowieku), wzbudzający ludzi do płaczu (poruszający pod pewnym względem)   latin: lacrymastart learning |  |  given to tears or weeping: TEARFUL. tending to cause tears: MOURNFUL   her newest screenplay is a lachrymose drama exploring the effects of loss late in life. tended to become lachrymose when he was drunk |  |  | 
|   skwapliwość, prędkość, szybkość   acceleration. seler co przyspieszastart learning |  |  rapidity of motion or action   celerity of movement is vital in war |  |  | 
|   sprawny, pospieszny, szybki   ekspedycjastart learning |  |  marked by or acting with prompt efficiency, swift. efficient promptness   It's about time we made Congress act efficiently and expeditiously. We will work with them to resolve these issues in an appropriate and expeditious manner." |  |  | 
|  start learning wpajać, przepajać moczyć, nasycać, nasączać  |  |  to permeate or influence as if by dyeing. implies the introduction of a quality that fills and permeates the whole being.   the spirit that imbues the new constitution. imbue students with intellectual curiosity |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  a close friend: BUDDY   How are you doing, compadre? they're longtime compadres who have been through a lot together |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  lacking proper respect or seriousness. satiric   He has a delightfully irreverent sense of humor. irreverent behavior during church services |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  of, relating to, or involving a confidence or trust: such as. one that holds a fiduciary relation or acts in a fiduciary capacity   a fiduciary relationship a bank's fiduciary obligations |  |  | 
|   bagno, sticky situation, predicament   marshstart learning |  |  an overwhelming or confusing mass or mixture. a situation that traps, confuses, or impedes. marsh   a morass of traffic jams. a legal morass. the distracted driver had driven his car off the road and into a morass |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  commonly accepted or supposed   The putative cause of a death, for example, is the one widely believed to have caused it, even when it hasn't been proven or made certain. However, one does not say "the cause was putative. |  |  | 
|  fait, conclusion followed. wrestlerstart learning |  |  inevitable, not to be avoided   an ineluctable fate. a word often used to describe fates that one cannot squirm free from, whether due to something as cosmic as the Fates themselves or as corporeal as a headlock |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  the process or circumstances of being born: BIRTH   my father and grandparents were proud observers of my nativity |  |  | 
|  start learning ciąża, dojrzewanie (o projekcie, pomyśle)  |  |  the carrying of young in the uterus (see UTERUS sense 1): PREGNANCY. conception (see CONCEPTION sense 3) and development especially in the mind   gestational the gestation of new ideas The book has been in gestation for a long time. |  |  | 
|  start learning kręty (np. korytarz), wijący się (o ścieżce) KRĘTA (DZIAŁANOŚĆ)  |  |  marked by repeated twists, bends, or turns: WINDING. marked by devious or indirect tactics: CROOKED, TRICKY   a tortuous conspiracy. a tortuous path. Be careful not to confuse tortuous with torturous. These two words are relatives but tortuous means "winding" or "crooked," whereas torturous means "painfully unpleasant |  |  | 
|  start learning przedwcześnie dojrzały (o dziecku), wcześnie rozwinięty (np. umiejętność  |  |  exceptionally early in development or occurance, exhibiting mature qualities at unusually early age.   precocious puberty. precocious child. Robert was almost eight now, and precocious for his age. |  |  | 
|  start learning osoba, której zdolności ujawniają się stosunkowo późno  |  |  someone who becomes successful, attractive, etc., at a later time in life than other people   She was a late bloomer as a writer. |  |  | 
|   delegat. delegować coś komuś, zlecać coś komuś (do wykonania)   ˈde-li-gət ˈde-li-ˌgātstart learning |  |  to entrust to another. to assign responsibility or authority   delegate authority delegated the task to her assistant. She goes to the summit as a delegate. I delegated my duties and I have a night off. |  |  | 
|  start learning przypadkowy (korzystny), szczęśliwy (np. przypadek  |  |  coming or happening by a lucky chance. fortunate   from a cost standpoint, the company's timing is fortuitous. The “lucky” use has been disparaged by critics, but it is now well established. Irregardless (cough), employing this sense in sterner company may be considered chancy. |  |  | 
|  start learning deprecjonować, dyskredytować  |  |  degrade, depreciate   religious beliefs disparaged as superstition. depreciate |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  riddle, mistery, puzzle. an intricate and difficult problem   Another conundrum is why women have less body hair than men. He is faced with the conundrum of trying to find a job without having experience. Why didn't the lost hikers starve in the desert? Because of the sand which is there.") |  |  | 
|   zbierać, gromadzić (np. wiedzę, informacje, fakty) zgarniać (np. medal, nagrodę   grainarystart learning |  |  to deposit as if in a granary. to acquire by effort   volumes in which he has garnered the fruits of his lifetime labors |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  one making usually showy pretenses to knowledge or ability (faker, fraud)   a charlatan willing to do and day virtually anything to remain in the spotlight. Impostors may try to put themselves over, but these quacks will not last. |  |  | 
|  start learning bałkanizować, podzielić prowadzić to osłabienia (np. więzi)  |  |  to break up (a region, a group, etc.) into smaller and often hostile units. DIVIDE, COMPARTMENTALIZE   opposes the partition of Germany, and holds that the economic consequences of Balkanizing the country would. now pop culture has been balkanized; it is full of niches, with different groups watching and playing their own things |  |  | 
| start learning |  |   The city's financial crisis came to a head in 1975. |  |  | 
|  start learning zachodzić na coś, wychłeptać (np. wodę, mleko). chlupotac, owinąć, owijać (np. kolano  |  |   My stay in Warsaw laps with yours, we can meet. The cat lapped up the milk very fast. The waves lapped against the side of the boat. Your elbow is bleeding, you should lap it! |  |  | 
|  start learning endemiczny, rozpowszechniony  |  |  restricted or peculiar to a locality or region   problems endemic to translation. the self-indulgence endemic in the film industry |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  depleted in strength, energy, or freshness. dead-tires. exhausted   I'm absolutely knackered, so no pub-crawling for me tonight. I'm absolutely knackered, so no pub-crawling for me tonight |  |  | 
|  start learning wykombinować, wyszachrować  |  |  to plan out usually with subtle skill or care. (as during the negotiations.)   wangled a way to get free tickets to the show. We wish we could wangle conclusive evidence to support this theory, but alas! |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  stubbornly or excessively devoted to a doctrine or theory without regard to practical considerations   Doctrinaire, however, describes someone who is rigidly and impractically devoted to a doctrine |  |  | 
|  start learning dobro, pomyślność, dobrobyt  |  |  Weal is usually ascribed to large groups of people, rather than individuals, as in the phrases “common weal” or “public weal.”   At one time, weal and wealth were synonyms; both meant “riches” (as in “all their worldly weal”) and “well-being. Before presenting the bill to the legislature, the senator spoke of her devotion to the common weal. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  causing or having a lot of emotional stress or worry.” When fraught is used in the phrase “fraught with,” it means “full of something bad or unwanted.” anxious   The paper was poorly researched and fraught with errors. Today, campus life is much more stressful, fraught, time-stressed and anxiety-ridden. originally, something that was fraught was laden with freight |  |  | 
|  start learning zgadzać się (na coś), przystawać (na coś), zamilczawszy  |  |  ACQUIESCE implies tacit acceptance or forbearance of opposition   If you’re looking to give your speech a gentle, formal flair, don't give acquiesce the silent treatment |  |  | 
|  start learning powstrzymywać się (od zrobienia czegoś)  |  |   Why did he not forbear when this end was accomplished? |  |  | 
|  start learning nudny, brakujący tego czegoś  |  |  lacking flavor, zest, interest, animation, or spirit: FLAT, DULL. flat-tasting. synonyms insipid, flat, and inane, describe people and things that are dull and boring, empty and insubstantial, or lacking spirit and character.   a gossipy, vapid woman, obsessed by her own elegance. Then away goes the brisk and pleasant Spirits and leave a vapid or sour Drink |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  speaking in or characterized by a high-flown often bombastic style or manner   magniloquent boasts. Euripides: The famous tragic poet, whose mythical heroes often appear on stage in shabby dress, he is a frequent target in later plays and he appears here as a magniloquent hoarder of disreputable costumes. |  |  | 
|   pozbawić kogoś(mocy, prawa), sprzedać, zbyć (udziały), rozdziewać kogoś z czegoś (np. z ubrań)   kamizelkastart learning |  |  to deprive or dispossess especially of property, authority, or title. to undress or strip. dispossess expropriate oust   was divested of his rights divesting herself of all her worldly possessions encouraged the university to divest itself from fossil fuels. Christmas trees divested of their ornaments. We may have to divest assets to raise capital. |  |  | 
|  start learning zabraniać, lub nakazać (2 różne przyimki)  |  |  prohibit   signs enjoin attendees from photographing the event. they enjoined us to secrecy. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  domineering. admitting of no contradiction. haughty   how insolent of late he is become, how proud, how peremptory. a peremptory call. peremptory disregard for objection. a peremptory call |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  involving, imposing, or constituting a burden: TROUBLES   an onerous task onerous regulations an onerous mortgage. the onerous task of cleaning up the mess. Environmentalism poses stark issues of survival, for humankind and for all those other tribes of creatures over which we have exercised our onerous dominion |  |  | 
|  to amount to as much”start learning |  |  equivalent in value, significance, or effect   a relationship tantamount to marriage. His statement was tantamount to an admission of guilt. They see any criticism of the President as tantamount to treason. |  |  | 
|  start learning luka, przerwa; okres w którym jest przerwa jakiejś aktywności  |  |  hiatus usually refers to a period of time when something, such as an activity is suspended. In biology, hiatus refers to a gap or passage in an anatomical part or organ, and in linguistics, it denotes the occurrence of two vowel sounds without pause   With the release of The Mandalorian season 3 just over six weeks away, after a two-year hiatus, Lucasfilm dropped a new trailer on Monday, giving us a glimpse of what’s next in the adventures of Din Djarin and Grogu. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  being a usually artificial and inferior substitute or imitation   Another German word for "Ersatz-" is Surrogat (surrogate). By the time World War II came around, bringing with it a resurgence of ersatz products, ersatz was wholly entrenched in the language. |  |  | 
|   niezręczna sytuacja, scysja, spięcie   counter timestart learning |  |  an inopportune or embarrassing occurrence or situation "if you step on someone’s toes, literally or figuratively, a scuffle might ensue"   When contretemps first appeared in English in the 1600s, it did so in the context of fencing: a contretemps was a thrust or pass made at the wrong time, whether the wrongness of the time had to do with one’s lack of skill or an opponent’s proficiency |  |  | 
|  start learning najbliższy, bezpośredni, bliski  |  |  is a formal word that is usually used to describe something that comes or happens immediately before or after something in a way that shows a very close and direct relationship. It can also mean "very near" or "happening soon." immediate.   The existence of horror is inevitably proximate to the existence of wondrous possibility."The proximate cause of the student protests was the firing of a popular professor, but there had been murmurings of unrest all year. |  |  | 
|  start learning chwalebny, zasługujący pochwały  |  |  worthy of praise   The president lauded the work of the association. There is much to load when it comes to our doctor's engagement during classes. Thank you for your laudable work teaching all of us about security over the years. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |   Now and then they said appropriately laudatory things to her. |  |  | 
|  start learning namacalny, odnoszący się do zmysłu dotyku, dotykowy  |  |  perceptible by touch. relating to the sense of touch. TANGIBLE   Since the advent of film, television, and, touchscreens, a new sense also appears to be developing, as tactile is increasingly used to suggest that something visual is particularly evocative or suggestive of a certain texture. tactile, sensory enrichment |  |  | 
|  start learning płaszczyć się, nadskakiwać komuś, JELONEK  |  |  to court favor by a cringing or flattering manner   courtiers fawning on the king. fawns over the etymology |  |  | 
|  start learning odmienny, różny (formalnie)  |  |  Disparate things are noticeably distinct in quality or character. Disparate can also describe something that contains or is made up of fundamentally different and often incongruous elements.   The season finale of Andor does a brilliant job of tying together all the disparate plot threads, but there is still more story left to tell." I have collected the data from a wide variety of disparate sources. |  |  | 
|  start learning kawalkada, pochód, defilada, kondukt  |  |  a dramatic sequence or procession. a procession of riders or carriages. a wink and a wave from the cavalcade”. series of related things, whether or not they happen to be marching (or trotting) down the road   a cavalcade of natural disasters. The cavalcade arrived at the hotel. a cavalcade of antique cars. was used specifically to refer to a procession of horseback riders or carriages, especially as part of a special occasion, whether joyous or funereal. |  |  | 
|  start learning wycofać się z udziału w podejmowaniu decyzji z powodu uprzedzenia lub zaangażowania osobistego  |  |  to disqualify (oneself) as judge in a particular case. to remove (oneself) from participation to avoid a conflict of interest   Google had asked that the Justice Department recuse Mr. Kanter from cases against the company, citing federal rules and an executive order by the Biden administration around possible conflicts |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  late, tardy, delayed. coming later than expected   a belated apology They did make a belated attempt to reduce the noise. Belated birthday greetings! |  |  | 
|   słabostka, słaba część klingi   feble, that gave us feeblestart learning |  |  : a minor flaw or shortcoming in character or behavior: WEAKNESS. the part of a sword or foil blade between the middle and point   the pen is mightier than the sword. admired their teacher despite his foibles ... talent is always balanced by foible |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  showing little enthusiasm and effort:   The food was nice enough but the service was somewhat lackadaisical. half-hearted |  |  | 
|  start learning sierść pióra na grzbiecie. również czasownik: do WKURWIANIA  |  |  one of the long narrow feathers on the neck or saddle of a bird. erectile hairs along the neck and back especially of a dog. to temper   make somebody's hackles rise. Stop playing the drums. you are mercilessly raising my hackles. the issue raised some hackles |  |  | 
|  start learning wynalazek, ustrojstwo, sprzęcior  |  |  mechanical or electronic device or gadget   They made a contraption that one professor put on his head. I'd have no idea how a contraption like this could be put together. |  |  | 
|  start learning stać się podstawą dla, "podwiązać", wzmocnić,  |  |  lay the basis for sth. strengthen, to make secure underneath. to form the basis or foundation of: STRENGTHEN, SUPPORT   took measures to undergird the ship. facts and statistics subtly undergird his commentary. Both sides are girding for battle. Morality had to undergird those laws. |  |  | 
|  start learning smętny, bolesny, boleściwy, pełen żalu  |  |  causing, marked by, or expressing misery or grief. sorrowful   He told us his dolorous story. |  |  | 
|   naganny, karygodny, zdrożny (o zachowaniu   apprehend, comprehend, prehensile the same rootstart learning |  |  The word comes from the Latin reprehendere (literally “to hold back”), a combination of re- and prehendere, meaning “to grasp.”. worthy of or deserving blame or very strong criticism.”   That behavior was reprehensible, Meyer said, and potentially devastating to the flowers everyone was clamoring to see.” commit a reprehensible act |  |  | 
|  onymastart learning |  |  Eponymous is used to describe something named for a person or group, or a person or group whose name is used for something (as in “the company's eponymous founders”).   The band's eponymous debut album received critical acclaim. Most of the time, though, we see eponymous describing a thing named for a person—for example, an eponymous brand named for a designer, or a band’s eponymous album titled with the band’s name. |  |  | 
|   dokuczać, naprzykrzać, molestować   Are we there yet?start learning |  |  To importune someone is to annoy or pester them with repeated questions or requests. to ask for sex with someone in return for payment   Several students importuned the professor to extend the deadline of the lengthy essay assignment until she finally relented. As a tourist, you are importuned for money the moment you step outside your hotel. |  |  | 
|   punkt podparcia (też metaforycznie)   the point on which a lever or similar device (such as the oar of a boat) is supported.start learning |  |  : PROP specifically: the support about which a lever turns. one that supplies capability for action   the camera moves on a fixed fulcrum, either horizontally (panning) or vertically (tilting). he is ... the reader's eyes and ears and the fulcrum of his judgment |  |  | 
|  start learning pochlebczy, fałszywy, nieszczery (o osobie), tłusty, zatłuszczony, śliski (od tłuszczu  |  |  greasy, fatty, oily; sycophantic   An unctuous individual may mean well, but the person’s insincere effusiveness can leave an unwelcome residue—much like that of some ointments. But when you are dealing with a narcissist ... you can never be unctuous enough.” |  |  | 
|  start learning być źródłem czegoś, zrodzić, wydawać na świat, prokreowac  |  |  beget, procreate, produce, generate   Her latest book has engendered a lot of controversy. policies that have engendered controversy. It’s a step toward fostering engagement and engendering responsibility. If we say we are listening, students are more likely to speak. |  |  | 
|   ckliwy, sentymentalny(jak ten po wypiciu alkoholu)   Mary Magdalenestart learning |  |  sticky, mawkish, hokey. drunk enough to be emotionally silly   a mob of maudlin rummies ... sing hymns. would crack open another beer and become maudlin. He became maudlin and started crying like a child. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  full of excessive talk: WORDY   a loquacious spokesperson. Such loquacity doesn’t come cheap, not just in terms of paying your writers and cast but also in capturing actors’ performances. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |  relationships or connection between people or things. an important connection between the parts of a system or a group of things   Times Square is the nexus of the New York subway. Another example is the nexus between poverty, population growth, and the environment. center, hub, an additional, modern meaning |  |  | 
|  start learning na kawałki, na strzępy; na rozścierz (nogi)  |  |  into forcefully separated pieces(apart)   that tore the house Targaryen asunder. Something inside him suddenly felt as if it had been sundered. In time, this man will sunder the woman's previous relationship. Their lives were torn asunder by the tragedy. |  |  | 
|  start learning nudny jak, flaki z olejem, nijaki, bez wyrazu, bez życia, przygasły  |  |  sth mediocre or dull. without energy and effort   sheen has been removed. Britain's number-one tennis player gave a disappointingly lacklustre performance. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |   The paintings, filled with fantastical imagery conjured by the artist's imagination, have a compellingly oneiric quality. oneiric, enchanted, with language that surprises and clauses that seem to magnetically adhere." |  |  | 
|  overdostart learning |  |  an amount or supply that is too much than you need. an excess   The organization ended up with a surfeit of volunteers who simply got in each other's way. Pet owners can have a tougher time finding apartments because of the surfeit of landlords who don't allow dogs, cats or other animals in their buildings |  |  | 
|   spowodować zmieszanie, zawstydzić. krzyżować plany   to defeat in battlestart learning |  |  To discomfit someone is to make them confused or upset. Discomfit is a formal synonym of the also formal (but slightly less so) disconcert. thwart   Jacob was discomfited by the new employee’s forward, probing questions. Their strategy was to discomfit the competition. |  |  | 
| start learning |  |   We live in the light of Churchill's pugnacious performance under fire. |  |  | 
|  start learning nerwowy, niecierpliwy, NAROWISTY 🐎  |  |  unwilling to be controlled or be patient restless   The audience was becoming restive as they waited for the performance to begin |  |  |