Educational

inspirit
[in-spir-it]
to infuse spirit or life into; enliven

quantitative
[kwon-ti-tey-tiv]
relating to, measuring, or measured by the quantity of something rather than its quality

meander
[mee-an-der]
to proceed by or take a winding or indirect course

extant
[ek-stuhnt]
in existence; still existing; not destroyed or lost

insouciant
[in-soo-see-uhnt]
free from concern, worry, or anxiety; carefree; nonchalant

glimmer
[glim-er]
to shine faintly or unsteadily; twinkle, shimmer, or flicker

stroll
[strohl]
to walk leisurely as inclination directs; ramble; saunter; take a walk

burrow
[bur-oh]
to lodge in a burrow

gormless
[gawrm-lis]
lacking in vitality or intelligence; stupid, dull, or clumsy

irrefragable
[ih-ref-ruh-guh-buhl]
not to be disputed or contested

tocsin
[tok-sin]
a bell used to sound an alarm

demitasse
[demi-i-tas]
a small cup for serving strong black coffee after dinner

vouch
[vouch]
to support as being true, certain, reliable, etc.

sedentary
[sed-n-ter-ee]
characterized by or requiring a sitting posture

poignant
[poin-yuhnt]
affecting or moving the emotions

fracture
[frak-cher]
to become fractured; to break or crack, often used in connection to broken bones

quip
[kwip]
a clever or witty remark or comment

quisling
[kwiz-ling]
a person who betrays his or her own country by aiding an invading enemy, often serving later in a puppet government; a traitor

esoteric
[es-uh-ter-ik]
understood by or meant for only the select few who have special knowledge or interest

innocuous
[ih-nok-yoo-uhs]
not likely to irritate or offend; inoffensive

moot
[moot]
of little or no practical value, meaning, or relevance; purely academic

choleric
[kol-er-ik]
extremely irritable or easily angered; irascible

spondee
[spon-dee]
in poetry, a "foot" of two syllables, both of which are long in quantitative meter or stressed in accentual meter

theorem
[thee-er-uhm]
a mathematical or scientific rule or law expressed by a formula or equation