LeadU presents Glossary Values

Leadership University

Glossary-Values

  • – – – A – – –
Abject
  • Sunk to or existing in a low state or condition : very bad or severe
Acquiesce
  • To accept, comply, or submit tacitly or passively —often used with in or to
Acquisition
  • The act of acquiring something
Agility
  • The quality or state of being agile : NIMBLENESS, DEXTERITY
Amazon
  • A member of a race of female warriors of Greek mythology
Ambiguously
  • Doubtful or uncertain especially from obscurity or indistinctness
Anchored
  • A device usually of metal attached to a ship or boat by a cable and cast overboard to hold it in a particular place by means of a fluke that digs into the bottom
Anecdote
  • Usually short narrative of an interesting, amusing, or biographical incident
Anointment
  • To smear or rub with oil or an oily substance
Anticipatory
  • Characterized by anticipation : ANTICIPATING
Apropos
  • Being both relevant and opportune
Arbitrariness
  • Existing or coming about seemingly at random or by chance
Arbitrary
  • Existing or coming about seemingly at random or by chance or as a capricious and unreasonable act of will
  • Based on or determined by individual preference or convenience rather than by necessity or the intrinsic nature of something
Archduke
  • A sovereign prince
Arduous
  • Hard to accomplish or achieve : DIFFICULT
Assailed
  • To attack violently : ASSAULT
Assuaged
  • To lessen the intensity of
Assemblage
  • A collection of persons or things
Assertiveness
  • Disposed to or characterized by bold or confident statements and behavioran
  • Having a strong or distinctive flavor or aroma
Asymmetry
  • Lack or absence of symmetry
Attaboy
  • Used to express encouragement, approval, or admiration
  • – – -B – – –
Bastardization
  • To reduce from a higher to a lower state or condition
  • DEBASE
Beckoning
  • Attractive or inviting
Begets
  • To produce especially as an effect or outgrowth
Bigotry
  • Obstinate or intolerant devotion to one’s own opinions and prejudices
Bolstering
  • A structural part designed to eliminate friction or provide support or bearing
Boon
  • A timely benefit
Bouts
  • An athletic match (as of boxing)
Brutish
  • Resembling, befitting, or typical of a brute or beast
  • Strongly and grossly sensual
  • Showing little intelligence or sensibility
Bureaucracy
  • A body of nonelected government officials
Buster
  • Someone or something extraordinary

– – – C – – –

Catalyst
  • A substance that enables a chemical reaction to proceed at a usually faster rate or under different conditions (as at a lower temperature) than otherwise possible
Causation
  • The act or process of causing
Ceding
  • To yield or grant typically by treaty
Censure
  • A judgment involving condemnation
Cetaceans
  • Any of an order (Cetacea) of aquatic mostly marine mammals that includes the whales, dolphins, porpoises, and related forms and that have a torpedo-shaped nearly hairless body, paddle-shaped forelimbs but no hind limbs, one or two nares opening externally at the top of the head, and a horizontally flattened tail used for locomotion
Cheery
  • Marked by cheerfulness or good spirits
Circa
  • At approximately, in approximately, or of approximately —used especially with dates
Coalesces
  • To grow together, to unite into a whole, to unite for a common end , join forces,  to arise from the combination of distinct elements
Coercive
  • Serving or intended to coerce
Coherent
  • Logically or aesthetically ordered or integrated
Collectivization
  • To organize by collectivism
Communal
  • Of or relating to one or more communes
Complexity
  • Something complex
  • The quality or state of being complex
Congregation
  • An assembly of persons : GATHERING
Consensus
  • The judgment arrived at by most of those concerned
Contemplation
  • Concentration on spiritual things as a form of private devotion
Continuum
  • A coherent whole characterized as a collection, sequence, or progression of values or elements varying by minute degrees
Contrived
  • Having an unnatural or false appearance or quality
Conundrum
  • An intricate and difficult problem
Convergence
  • The act of converging and especially moving toward union or uniformity
Coopted
  • To choose or elect as a member
Coquettes
  • A man who indulges in coquetry
Conundrum
  • An intricate and difficult problem
Correlation
  • The state or relation of being correlated
Convene
  • To come together in a body
Cowering
  • To shrink away or crouch especially for shelter from something that menaces, domineers, or dismays
Creep
  • To move along with the body prone and close to the ground
Cripple Something flawed or imperfect Cul de Sac
  • A blind diverticulum or pouch
  • A street or passage closed at one end
Cursory
  • Rapidly and often superficially performed or produced
Cybernetics
  • The science of communication and control theory that is concerned especially with the comparative study of automatic control systems (such as the nervous system and brain and mechanical-electrical communication systems)

– – – D – – –

Dastardly
  • Characterized by underhandedness or treachery
Dearth
  • Scarcity that makes dear
Delusional
  • Something that is falsely or delusively believed or propagated
Demagogues
  • A leader who makes use of popular prejudices and false claims and promises in order to gain power
Depiction
  • A representation in words or images of someone or something
Dervishes
  • A member of a Muslim religious order noted for devotional exercises (such as bodily movements leading to a trance)
Deviance
  • Deviant quality, state, or behavior
Discern
  • To detect with the eyes
Discernment
  • The quality of being able to grasp and comprehend what is obscure
  • skill in discerning
Disentangle
  • To free from entanglement
Disingenuously
  • Lacking in candor
Disintegration
  • The act or process of disintegrating or the state of being disintegrated
Dissing
  • To treat with disrespect or contempt
Dissipating
  • To break up and drive off
Dissipative
  • Relating to dissipation especially of heat
Dogmas
  • Something held as an established opinion
Drudgery
  • Dull, irksome, and fatiguing work : uninspiring or menial labor
Duress
  • Forcible restraint or restriction
Dysfunction
  • Impaired or abnormal functioning
  • – – – E – – –
Ebbs
  • The reflux of the tide toward the sea
Egalitarianism
  • A belief in human equality especially with respect to social, political, and economic affairs
  •  A social philosophy advocating the removal of inequalities among people
Ego-centric
  • Concerned with the individual rather than society
Egregious
  • CONSPICUOUS
Elixir
  • A substance held capable of changing base metals into gold
  • A substance held capable of prolonging life indefinitely
  • CURE-ALL
  • A medicinal concoction
  • A sweetened liquid usually containing alcohol that is used in medication either for its medicinal ingredients or as a flavoring
  • The essential principle
Emergent
  • Arising unexpectedly
Encompass
  • To form a circle about : ENCLOSE
  • To go completely around
Enrage
  • To fill with rage : ANGER
Envisaging
  • To view or regard in a certain way
Epigenetic
  • Of, relating to, or produced by the chain of developmental processes in epigenesis that lead from genotype to phenotype after the initial action of the genes
Epistemology
  • The study or a theory of the nature and grounds of knowledge especially with reference to its limits and validity
Equilibrium
  • A state of intellectual or emotional balance
Eritrea
  • Country of northeastern Africa bordering on the Red Sea across from Yemen and Saudi Arabia; capital Asmara; became part of Ethiopia in 1962 and then became independent in 1993; area 45,406 square miles (117,600 square kilometers), population 5,971,000
Esoteric
  • Designed for or understood by the specially initiated alone
Espoused
  • To take up and support as a cause : become attached to
Eudaemonic
  • Producing happiness : based on the idea of happiness as the proper end of conduct
Existential
  • Of, relating to, or affirming existence
Expedient
  • Suitable for achieving a particular end in a given circumstance
Expounding
  • To explain by setting forth in careful and often elaborate detail

– – – F – – –

Facets
  • Any of the definable aspects that make up a subject
Fallacy
  • A false or mistaken idea
Faltering
  • To walk unsteadily : STUMBLE
Faux
  • Made to look like something else that is usually more valuable : IMITATION, FAKE
Fiascos
  • A complete failure
Fiat
  • A command or act of will that creates something without or as if without further effort
Fiduciary
  • Held or founded in trust or confidence
Finetune
  • To adjust precisely so as to bring to the highest level of performance or effectiveness
Fodder
  • Something fed to domestic animals
Folks
  • Folk or folks plural : people generally
Fomented
  • To promote the growth or development of : ROUSE, INCITE
Fortuitous
  • Occurring by chance
  • Coming or happening by a lucky chance
Fracking
  • The injection of fluid into shale beds at high pressure in order to free up petroleum resources
Fraught
  • Full of or accompanied by something specified —used with with
Frenzy
  • A temporary madness
  • A violent mental or emotional agitation

– – – G – – –

Gambit
  • A chess opening in which a player risks one or more pawns or a minor piece to gain an advantage in position
Gamma
  • The degree of contrast of a developed photographic image or of a video image
Gerrymandering
  • The practice of dividing or arranging a territorial unit into election districts in a way that gives one political party an unfair advantage in elections
Gestate
  • To be in the process of gestation
Gratification
  • A source of satisfaction or pleasure
Gridlock
  • A situation resembling gridlock (as in congestion or lack of movement)
Gushes
  • To issue copiously or violently

– – – H – – –

Harbinger
  • Something that foreshadows a future event : something that gives an anticipatory sign of what is to come
Hardwired
  • Implemented in the form of permanent electronic circuits
Hedonic
  • Of, relating to, or characterized by pleasure
  • Of, relating to, or characterized by hedonism
Herd
  • A typically large group of animals of one kind kept together under human control
Hierarchy
  • A ruling body of clergy organized into orders or ranks each subordinate to the one above it
Homeostasis
  • A relatively stable state of equilibrium or a tendency toward such a state between the different but interdependent elements or groups of elements of an organism, population, or group
Homophobe
  • A person characterized by homophobia
Hung
  • Unable to reach a decision or verdict
Hybridization
  • To cause to produce hybrids
Hypothesize
  • To adopt as a hypothesis

– – – I – – –

Iatrogenesis
  • Induced inadvertently by a physician or surgeon or by medical treatment or diagnostic procedures
Ideology-
  • A manner or the content of thinking characteristic of an individual, group, or culture
  • The integrated assertions, theories and aims that constitute a sociopolitical program
  • A systematic body of concepts especially about human life or culture
  • Visionary theorizing
Incarceration
  • Confinement in a jail or prison : the act of imprisoning someone or the state of being imprisoned
Incredulity
  • The quality or state of being incredulous
Inculcating
  • To teach and impress by frequent repetitions or admonitions
Ineaquality
  • The quality of being unequal or uneven: such as a: social disparity b: disparity of distribution or opportunity c: lack of evenness d: the condition of being variable : CHANGEABLENESS
  • An instance of being unequal
  • A formal statement of inequality between two quantities usually separated by a sign of inequality (such as , or ≠ signifying respectively is less than, is greater than, or is not equal to)
Interdependence
  • The state of being dependent upon one another
Intervene
  • To occur, fall, or come between points of time or events
Intricate
  • Having many complexly interrelating parts or elements.
Intuitionist
  • A doctrine that objects of perception are intuitively known to be real
Irreverence
  • Lack of reverence

– – – J – – –

Juggernaut
  • A massive inexorable force, campaign, movement, or object that crushes whatever is in its path
Jungian
  • Of, relating to, or characteristic of C. G. Jung or his psychological doctrines

– – – K – – –

– – – L – – –

Labyrinth
  • A place constructed of or full of intricate passageways and blind alleys
Lament
  • To mourn aloud : WAIL
Legalese
  • The specialized language of the legal profession
Ludicrous
  • Amusing or laughable through obvious absurdity, incongruity, exaggeration, or eccentricity

– – – M – – –

Malfeasance
  • Wrongdoing or misconduct especially by a public official
Marvel
  • One that causes wonder or astonishment
Menacing
  • Presenting, suggesting, or constituting a menace or threat
Metaphor
  • A figure of speech in which a word or phrase literally denoting one kind of object or idea is used in place of another to suggest a likeness or analogy between them
Metaphoric
  • An object, activity, or idea treated as a metaphor
Minaret
  • A tall slender tower of a mosque having one or more balconies from which the summons to prayer is cried by the muezzin
Mitigate
  • To cause to become less harsh or hostile : MOLLIFY
Mongering
  • A person who attempts to stir up or spread something that is usually petty or discreditable —usually used in combination
Monks
  • A man who is a member of a religious order and lives in a monastery
Moot
  • Open to question : DEBATABLE
  • Subjected to discussion : DISPUTED
Mowed
  • A piled-up stack (as of hay or fodder)
Muck
  • Soft moist farmyard manure
Muster
  • An act of assembling
Myriad
  • Having innumerable aspects or elements

– – – N – – –

Narcissist
  • An extremely self-centered person who has an exaggerated sense of self-importance
Narcissus
  • A beautiful youth in Greek mythology who pines away for love of his own reflection and is then turned into the narcissus flower
Nascent
  • Coming or having recently come into existence
Nefarious
  • Flagrantly wicked or impious : EVIL
Neofascists
  • One who advocates or supports neofascism
Nodal
  • Being, relating to, or located at or near a node
Novocaine
  • Procaine in the form of its hydrochloride
Nuanced
  • Having nuances : having or characterized by subtle and often appealingly complex qualities, aspects, or distinctions

– – – O – – –

Oblique
  • Neither perpendicular nor parallel
Obliterate
  • To remove utterly from recognition or memory
Ominous
  • Being or exhibiting an omen : PORTENTOUS
Onerous
  • Involving, imposing, or constituting a burden : TROUBLESOME
Ontology
  • A branch of metaphysics concerned with the nature and relations of being
Oppressed
  • Burdened by abuse of power or authority
Orthodoxy
  • The quality or state of being orthodox
  • An orthodox belief or practice
Overarching
  • Forming an arch overhead

– – – P – – –

Paradox
  • A tenet contrary to received opinion
  • A statement that is seemingly contradictory or opposed to common sense and yet is perhaps true
  • Self-contradictory statement that at first seems true
  • An argument that apparently derives self-contradictory conclusions by valid deduction from acceptable premises
Paradoxical
  • Of the nature of a paradox
Parroted
  • A person who sedulously echoes another’s words
Partake
  • To take part in or experience something along with others
Pathology
  • The study of the essential nature of diseases and especially of the structural and functional changes produced by them
Pavlovian
  • Of or relating to Ivan Pavlov or to his work and theories
Peeves
  • To make peevish or resentful
Pejorative
  • A word or phrase that has negative connotations
Penchant
  • A strong and continued inclination
Pendulum
  • A body suspended from a fixed point so as to swing freely to and fro under the action of gravity and commonly used to regulate movements
Peril
  • Exposure to the risk of being injured, destroyed, or lost
Perplexing
  • Difficult to understand : causing confusion
Perturbing
  • Causing worry, upset, or concern : UNSETTLING
Pervasive
  • Existing in or spreading through every part of something
Pivot
  • A shaft or pin on which something turns
Potus
  • The president of the United States —often used like a nickname
Precariously
  • In a precarious manner
Preclude
  • To make impossible by necessary consequence
Preconception
  • A preconceived idea
  • PREJUDICE
Primal
  • ORIGINAL, PRIMITIVE
Prognostication
  • An indication in advance : FORETOKEN
Proliferation
  • To grow by rapid production of new parts, cells, buds, or offspring
Progression
  • A sequence of numbers in which each term is related to its predecessor by a uniform law
Provocation
  • The act of provoking INCITEMENT
  • Something that provokes, arouses, or stimulates
Pugnacities
  • Having a quarrelsome or combative nature : TRUCULENT

– – – Q – – –

Quagmire
  • Soft miry land that shakes or yields under the foot
Quantum
  • Any of the very small increments or parcels into which many forms of energy are subdivided
  • Any of the small subdivisions of a quantized physical magnitude (such as magnetic moment)

– – – R – – –

Rampant
  • Rearing upon the hind legs with forelegs extended
Ransack
  • To look through thoroughly in often a rough way
Reckoning
  • The act or an instance of reckoning: such as
  • ACCOUNT, BILL
  • COMPUTATION
  • Calculation of a ship’s position
Recursion
  • The determination of a succession of elements
Recursive
  • Of, relating to, or involving
Reflexivity
  • Directed or turned back on itself
Regress
  • An act or the privilege of going or coming back
  • Movement backward to a previous and especially worse or more primitive state or condition
  • The act of reasoning backward
Regression
  • A trend or shift toward a lower or less perfect state
Renminbi
  • The official currency of the People’s Republic of China consisting of yuan
Replete
  • Fully or abundantly provided or filled
Repository
  • A place, room, or container where something is deposited or stored
Resonance
  • The quality or state of being resonant
Resurgent
  • Undergoing or tending to produce resurgence
Retinue
  • A group of retainers or attendants
Retribution
  • The dispensing or receiving of reward or punishment especially in the hereafter
Revered
  • Regarded with reverence : regarded as worthy of great honor and respect
Reverence
  • Honor or respect felt or shown
Rhetoric
  • The art of speaking or writing effectively
Rhetorical
  • Of, relating to, or concerned with rhetoric
Rich
  • Having abundant possessions and especially material wealth
  • Having high value or quality b: well supplied or endowed a city rich in traditions
  • Magnificently impressive : SUMPTUOUS a: vivid and deep in color
Rig
  • To fit out with rigging
Rudimentary
  • Consisting in first principles : FUNDAMENTAL

– – – S – – –

Satire
  • A literary work holding up human vices and follies to ridicule or scorn
Satirizes
  • To utter or write satire
  • To censure or ridicule by means of satire
Schizophrenic
  • Contradictory or antagonistic qualities or attitudes
Scrutiny
  • A searching study, inquiry, or inspection
  • EXAMINATION
Secularization
  • The act or process of making something secular or of becoming secular : removal from ecclesiastical or clerical use or influence
Self-Perpetuating
  • Capable of continuing or renewing oneself indefinitely : capable of perpetuating oneself or itself
Semantically
  • Of or relating to meaning in language
Serendipity
  • The faculty or phenomenon of finding valuable or agreeable things not sought for
Sexist
  • Behavior, conditions, or attitudes that foster stereotypes of social roles based on sex
Sheen
  • To be bright : show a sheen
Sociopath
  • A sociopathic individual : PSYCHOPATH
Spectrum
  • A continuum of color formed when a beam of white light is dispersed (as by passage through a prism) so that its component wavelengths are arranged in order
Spicules
  • A slender pointed usually hard body
Spiraling
  • Winding around a center or pole and gradually receding from or approaching it
Staunch
  • Steadfast in loyalty or principle
Strapping
  • Having a vigorously sturdy constitution
Stratification
  • The act or process of stratifying
Strife
  • Bitter sometimes violent conflict or dissension
Substantiated
  • To give substance or form to : EMBODY
Superbugs
  • A pathogenic microorganism and especially a bacterium that has developed resistance to the medications normally used against it
Supersedes
  • To cause to be set aside
  • To take the place or position of
  • To displace in favor of another
Surreptitiously
  • Done, made, or acquired by stealth : CLANDESTINE
Survivalism
  • An attitude, policy, or practice based on the primacy of survival as a value
Symbiosis
  • The living together in more or less intimate association or close union of two dissimilar organisms
Synthetically
  • Attributing to a subject something determined by observation rather than analysis of the nature of the subject and not resulting in self-contradiction if negated

– – – T – – –

Tacit
  • Expressed or carried on without words or speech
Thwart
  • To oppose successfully
  • Defeat the hopes or aspirations of
Thwarted
  • To oppose successfully : defeat the hopes or aspirations of
Tidbits
  • A choice morsel of food
Timor
  • Island of southeastern Asia in the Lesser Sunda Islands area 13,094 square miles (34,044 square kilometers), population 3,000,000
Trainwreck
  • A violent and destructive crash involving a train
Trajectory
  • A path, progression, or line of development resembling a physical trajectory
Tranquility
  • The quality or state of being tranquil
Transcendence
  • Transcendence is related to dedication and commitment to something or somebody else but oneself.
Translocation
  • The conduction of soluble material (such as metabolic products) from on?
  • To change or alter in form, appearance, or nature and especially to a higher form
Tremendous
  • Notable by reason of extreme size, power, greatness, or excellence
Truism
  • An undoubted or self-evident truth
Togo
  • Republic in western Africa on the Bight of Benin; capital Lomé area 21,925 square miles (56,785 square kilometers), population 8,176,000
Tumultuous
  • Tending or disposed to cause or incite a tumult

– – – U – – –

Ubiquitous
  • Existing or being everywhere at the same time
Unassailable 
  • Not assailable : not liable to doubt, attack, or question
Undebatable
  • Not subject to debate
Unfathomable
  • Not capable of being fathomed
Unfettered
  • Not controlled or restricted
Unflappable
  • Marked by assurance and self-control
Unhinging
  • To make unstable
Unraveling
  • To disengage or separate the threads of : DISENTANGLE
Upended
  • To set or stand on end
  • To affect to the point of being upset or flurried
Utopian
  • Of, relating to, or having the characteristics of a utopia

– – – V – – –

Vagrancy
  • The state or action of being vagrant
Vast
  • Very great in size, amount, degree, intensity, or especially in extent or range
Vastly
  • To a very great or vast degree or extent
Veiled
  • Having or wearing a veil or a concealing cover
Vendetta
  • An often prolonged series of retaliatory, vengeful, or hostile acts or exchange of such acts
Vetted
  • Having been subjected to evaluation or appraisal
  • critically reviewed and evaluated for official approval or acceptance
Virulent
  • Marked by a rapid, severe, and destructive course
Visceral
  • Felt in or as if in the internal organs of the body : DEEP
Volatility
  • A tendency to change quickly and unpredictably

– – – W – – –

Wane
  • To fall gradually from power, prosperity, or influence
Wealth
  • Abundance of valuable material possessions or resources
  • Abundant supply : PROFUSION
  • All property that has a money value or an exchangeable value b: all material objects that have economic utility especially : the stock of useful goods having economic value in existence at any one time

– – – X – – –

– – – Y – – –

– – – Z – – –



If you have any comments, questions, suggestions, or need some additional help, please visit https://www.leadu.com/comment/ to submit them.  Someone will get back to you within 48 hours. 



We hope you pick up valuable insights, ideas, and tools during this process, which you can use for your own development as well as your work and leadership with others.

You, Me, and We @F-L-O-W

Mike R. Jay is a developmentalist utilizing consulting, coaching, mentoring, and trusted advice emergent from dynamic inquiry as a means to cue, scaffold, support, lift, and protect; offering inspiration to aspiring leaders who are interested in humaning where being, doing, having, becoming, contributing, protecting, and letting go help people have generative lives.

Mike R. Jay
Leadership University


© Generati

Learn how you may become a member of our Inner Circle and receive the cutting edge on the most current thinking in Leader Development.  Visit https://leadu.com/inner-circle-membership/

Disclaimer |  Terms Of Service |  Earnings Disclaimer |  Privacy Notice |  Contact Support |  Buy the Book |  Media Disclaimer