Most of those are idiomatic expressions, and their understanding is entirely different from vocabulary.
He said idioms and proverbs too.

Most of those are idiomatic expressions, and their understanding is entirely different from vocabulary.
Allow me to clarify. Please post in this thread any words you, as a native speaker of the English language, should know. I am not talking about the basic vocabulary (*car*, *door*, *food*), we will take those for granted. We will bypass intermediate vocabulary as well. I would like to focus on advanced vocabulary, not specialized. These can all be looked up in any decent dictionary, I am not talking about the most exotic words you can come up with. I would like to know some words you use every now and then that will usually draw a blank from foreigners.
Some examples:
misogynist - anti-female
adamantine - harder than steel
chagrin - worry
Thanks from the second language portion of this forum.
PS: proverbs and idioms are welcome as well, of course.
I felt this needed to be elaborated on:
cha·grin /ʃəˈgrɪn/ verb, -grined or -grinned, -grin·ing or -grin·ning.
noun
1. a feeling of vexation, marked by disappointment or humiliation.
verb (used with object)
2. to vex by disappointment or humiliation: The rejection of his proposal chagrined him deeply.
3. Obsolete. shagreen (def. 1).
n. A keen feeling of mental unease, as of annoyance or embarrassment, caused by failure, disappointment, or a disconcerting event: To her chagrin, the party ended just as she arrived.
Only ever really heard 1-2.
Most of those are idiomatic expressions, and their understanding is entirely different from vocabulary.
A good word to know in America s y'all, it's a simple contraction of you all (the pronoun "ihr" in German, Scherben).
myriad - an uncountably high number of something
example: There are myriad windows in New York City.
maxim - an objective rule
For example, there are many military maxims, such as "march divided, fight concentrated" or "no plan survives contact with the enemy."
implacable - lacking the ability to be calmed
huh... I apologize for not being precise enough.
I wanted words beyond the basic SAT level. anything with roots in either greek and/or latin will be open to anyone with any education in those languages or to anyone talking a language that has been effected by the age of humanism (as being mentioned by Mirc).
The examples I gave were bad, I blame myself.
How about we focus on truly English words (to scupper, toff, lenient, chagrined) no matter the roots. wors that are not self-explanatory given a humanistic education.
*toff* for example is something a foreigner would not get.
That's quite different to what I would expect it to be.Thanks.
Most of those are idiomatic expressions, and their understanding is entirely different from vocabulary.
A good word to know in America s y'all, it's a simple contraction of you all (the pronoun "ihr" in German, Scherben).
myriad - an uncountably high number of something
example: There are myriad windows in New York City.
maxim - an objective rule
For example, there are many military maxims, such as "march divided, fight concentrated" or "no plan survives contact with the enemy."
implacable - lacking the ability to be calmed
huh... I apologize for not being precise enough.
I wanted words beyond the basic SAT level. anything with roots in either greek and/or latin will be open to anyone with any education in those languages or to anyone talking a language that has been effected by the age of humanism (as being mentioned by Mirc).
The examples I gave were bad, I blame myself.
How about we focus on truly English words (to scupper, toff, lenient, chagrined) no matter the roots. wors that are not self-explanatory given a humanistic education.
*toff* for example is something a foreigner would not get.
To placate means to calm, so the prefix "im" or "in" denotes the antonym. Thus, implacable is the opposite of placable. Another example is indefatigable, meaning "unable to tire," with the root being defatigate, or "to tire."
Correct me if I'm wrong, English isn't my native language, but I find it far more natural to say "There is A myriad OF windows in New York City". Am I totally wrong?
IIRC myriad is an archaic number now co-opted to mean an uncountably high number. Greek historian counting x myriads of persians or sum such. Five thousand or something.
That's quite different to what I would expect it to be.Thanks.
Correct me if I'm wrong, English isn't my native language, but I find it far more natural to say "There is A myriad OF windows in New York City". Am I totally wrong?
Yet the word has a tone of meaning not present in the literal rendition.
Implacable in usage would mean fixed to your goal, where emotion will not destract you. Hence it could also connote unemotional, unstopable progress towards a goal.
"The alien machines continued their implacable progress"
It could also connote emotionally unreadable.
"The gunfighter looked implacably upon his adversary.
Inexorable is also appropriate in the alien sentence. For our English learners, inexorable means unavoidable and unpreventable.
It can be, but it's more often defined as "the number of grains of sand on a beach".
Lenient is latin derived. But are you asking for modern slang or word usage or just English words not derived from German or Romance languages?
To placate means to calm, so the prefix "im" or "in" denotes the antonym. Thus, implacable is the opposite of placable. Another example is indefatigable, meaning "unable to tire," with the root being defatigate, or "to tire."
That's interesting, because implacable has fairly obvious Latinate roots. in (used for negation) + placeo ("to please, satisfy")
curses! the latter
flabbergasted is another nice one.