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Collection 2: "Thomas Jefferson: The Best of Enemies" by Ron Chernow

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  1. adulation
    exaggerated flattery or praise
    Tall and lanky, with a freckled complexion and auburn hair, Jefferson, 46, was taken aback by the adulation being heaped upon the new Treasury Secretary, Alexander Hamilton, who had streaked to prominence in his absence.
  2. tepid
    feeling or showing little interest or enthusiasm
    Jefferson's enthusiasm for the new political order was tepid at best, and when Washington crafted the first government in 1789, Jefferson didn't grasp the levers of power with quite the same glee as Hamilton, who had no ideological inhibitions about shoring up federal power.
  3. inhibition
    the action of forbidding
    Jefferson's enthusiasm for the new political order was tepid at best, and when Washington crafted the first government in 1789, Jefferson didn't grasp the levers of power with quite the same glee as Hamilton, who had no ideological inhibitions about shoring up federal power.
  4. extemporaneous
    with little or no preparation or forethought
    As an orator, Hamilton could speak extemporaneously for hours on end.
  5. copious
    large in number or quantity
    As a writer, he could crank out 5,000- or 10,000-word memos overnight. Jefferson never underrated his foe’s copious talents. At one point, a worried Jefferson confided to his comrade James Madison that Hamilton was a one-man army, “a host within himself.”
  6. promiscuous
    not selective of a single class or person
    Whether in person or on paper, Hamilton served up his opinions promiscuously. He had a true zest for debate and never left anyone guessing where he stood.
  7. diffident
    showing modest reserve
    Jefferson, a diffident speaker, mumbled his way through his rare speeches in a soft, almost inaudible voice and reserved his most scathing strictures for private correspondence.
  8. stricture
    a principle that restricts the extent of something
    Jefferson, a diffident speaker, mumbled his way through his rare speeches in a soft, almost inaudible voice and reserved his most scathing strictures for private correspondence.
  9. cardinal
    serving as an essential component
    With an eye on future U.S. capital markets, he wanted to enshrine the cardinal principle that current owners of securities incurred all profits and losses, even if that meant windfall gains for rapacious speculators who had only recently bought the securities.
  10. rapacious
    excessively greedy and grasping
    With an eye on future U.S. capital markets, he wanted to enshrine the cardinal principle that current owners of securities incurred all profits and losses, even if that meant windfall gains for rapacious speculators who had only recently bought the securities.
  11. idyllic
    charmingly simple and serene
    Jefferson was fond of summoning up idyllic scenes of an agrarian America peopled by sturdy yeoman farmers.
  12. agrarian
    relating to rural matters
    Jefferson was fond of summoning up idyllic scenes of an agrarian America peopled by sturdy yeoman farmers.
  13. deride
    treat or speak of with contempt
    Hamilton—derided as a pseudo aristocrat, an elitist, a crypto-monarchist—was a passionate abolitionist with a far more expansive economic vision.
  14. elitist
    one who is biased in favor of those with high status
    Hamilton—derided as a pseudo aristocrat, an elitist, a crypto-monarchist—was a passionate abolitionist with a far more expansive economic vision.
  15. rudiments
    a statement of fundamental facts or principles
    He conceded that agriculture would persist for decades as an essential component of the economy. But at the same time he wanted to foster the rudiments of a modern economy—trade, commerce, banks, stock exchanges, factories and corporations—to enlarge economic opportunity.
  16. meritocracy
    a social system in which power goes to superior intellects
    Hamilton dreamed of a meritocracy, not an aristocracy, while Jefferson retained the landed gentry's disdain for the vulgar realities of trade, commerce and finance.
  17. juggernaut
    a massive inexorable force
    And he was determined to undermine Hamilton's juggernaut.
  18. consummate
    having or revealing supreme mastery or skill
    Because we celebrate Jefferson for his sonorous words in the Declaration of Independence—Hamilton never matched Jefferson's gift for writing ringing passages that were at once poetic and inspirational—we sometimes overlook Jefferson's consummate skills as a practicing politician.
  19. construe
    make sense of; assign a meaning to
    After Hamilton persuaded President Washington to create the Bank of the United States, the country's first central bank, Jefferson was aghast at what he construed as a breach of the Constitution and a perilous expansion of federal power.
  20. acrimonious
    marked by strong resentment or cynicism
    The backbiting between Hamilton and Jefferson grew so acrimonious that Washington had to exhort both men to desist. Instead, the feud worsened.
  21. exhort
    urge or force in an indicated direction
    The backbiting between Hamilton and Jefferson grew so acrimonious that Washington had to exhort both men to desist. Instead, the feud worsened.
  22. harry
    annoy continually or chronically
    In early 1793, a Virginia Congressman named William Branch Giles began to harry Hamilton with resolutions ordering him to produce, on short deadlines, stupendous amounts of Treasury data.
  23. credulous
    showing a lack of judgment or experience
    Jefferson thought Hamilton was "bewitched" by the British model of governance, while Hamilton considered Jefferson a credulous apologist for the gory excesses of the French Revolution.
  24. apologist
    a person who argues to defend some policy or institution
    Jefferson thought Hamilton was "bewitched" by the British model of governance, while Hamilton considered Jefferson a credulous apologist for the gory excesses of the French Revolution.
  25. liaison
    a means of communication between groups
    Descended from French Huguenots on his mother's side, Hamilton was fluent in French and had served as Washington's liaison with the Marquis de Lafayette and other French aristocrats who had rallied to the Continental Army.
  26. diadem
    an ornamental jeweled headdress signifying sovereignty
    In one essay he likened Jefferson to "Caesar coyly refusing the proffered diadem" and rejecting the trappings, but "tenaciously grasping the substance of imperial domination."
  27. hedonism
    the pursuit of pleasure as a matter of ethical principle
    Similarly, both men hid a potent hedonism behind an intellectual façade.
  28. facade
    a showy misrepresentation to conceal something unpleasant
    Similarly, both men hid a potent hedonism behind an intellectual façade.
  29. pretension
    the advancing of a claim
    Forever after, the Jeffersonians tagged Hamilton as "the amorous Treasury Secretary" and mocked his pretensions to superior morality.
  30. anomalous
    deviating from the general or common order or type
    Under constitutional rules then in force, the candidate with the majority of electoral votes became President; the runner-up became Vice President. That created an anomalous situation in which Jefferson, his party's presumed presidential nominee, tied with Aaron Burr, its presumed vice presidential nominee.
Created on Fri Jun 19 13:05:19 EDT 2020 (updated Tue Jul 07 15:52:15 EDT 2020)

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