DEATH BE NOT PROUD - Marshall Fundamental High School

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May 2009
Here is the required summer reading and vocabulary list for all students who will be entering
either Senior AP Literature or who may be placed in Senior AP English Language in the
fall. In September, you will be given tests on vocabulary and literary terms, as well as assessment
work on your summer reading. If you have not done the required work, your grades will be
profoundly and detrimentally influenced. These works are RELATIVELY SHORT, beautiful,
interesting, and very important. They are not trite, they are not boring, they are not to be read
with a superficial, unappreciative eye. Excellence makes no excuses! There are no appropriate
reasons to dismiss your obligations, so motivate yourself to assume responsibility for your fine
minds and get to work!
How to Read Literature Like a Professor
Their Eyes Were Watching God
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings
“King Lear”
Foster, Thomas C. (nonfiction)
Hurston
Angelou
Shakespeare
If you do not have a strong memory, take notes for each chapter. Do the work carefully (do not
wait until the last minute, or read without thought and perception). In the fall, I will test you with
both an objective test and an AP style essay on EACH literary work.
OBVIOUSLY, you will be tested on ALL vocabulary words and I expect that you will
know them all COLD. Similarly, you must master the enclosed list of LITERARY
TERMS. Mastery means (1) knowing the meaning of each term; (2) being able to
recognize and analyze examples of each literary characteristic or technique in novels,
stories, poems, essays, and dramas; and (3) knowingly and capably using many of these
literary techniques in your own writing. Not only will you be tested on these terms in the
fall, you will encounter them throughout the school year and repeatedly be required to
demonstrate your mastery of them.
Additionally, you will memorize some poems throughout the school year (see attached).
Please memorize Poe’s “To Helen” by the first day of class.
We ask that you and your parents sign this letter and then return it to your English teacher.
PLEASE RETAIN THE SECOND COPY FOR YOUR RECORDS.
Most Cordially,
Ms. LeSomptier Kavanagh
Student Name (printed)
Parent Signature
Student Signature
Parent Signature
TO DO LIST:
Vocabulary (SAT/AP)
Student initials
Parent initials
Literary Terms
Student initials
Parent initials
Student initials
Parent initials
Student initials
Parent initials
Careful reading of each assigned book
Memorize “To Helen”
I understand that if I have done poorly on the vocabulary tests, earn a “1” on the
AP Language test and/or earn a low grade in English AP Language, I may be placed
in Senior AP Language or regular English. I am STILL responsible for all the
required reading listed on this letter.
Student initials
Parent initials
TIPS ON FINDING YOUR BOOKS:
RENT A COPY FOR $1 FROM OUR LIBRARY!!!! Ask Ms. Kavanagh!!!!!
1. Go to the LIBRARY. We have contacted the library and it will order extra copies of the
books we have assigned. If you need more than three weeks with a work, DO NOT
FORGET TO RENEW!
2. Go to www.bookmarc.com. Enter the name of the book you wish to find. When the
info comes up, there will be a blue box on the upper right hand side of the page which
reads, “click here for best price search.” Info will then pull up on the cheapest copies.
For example, Tooth and Nail can be bought for $6 (instead of $14) and this price includes
postage, handling, and tax.
3. Go to the information desk at your local bookstore and make certain you find the
cheapest copy of a book. Many publishing houses have versions of the classics; one
may cost $7 and another $4. If the cheaper edition is not available, order it. Ask if there
is a DOVER THRIFT EDITION…
4. Buy secondhand. There are two secondhand stores across from Vromann’s
5. Share with a dependable friend.
TONE
TONE (Tone color):
Tone is the attitude(s) toward the subject and audience implied in a literary work.
Tone may be Solemn, Condescending, Intimate, Formal, Informal, Serious,
Emotional, Playful, Ironic, Somber (remember the expression “sci fi’s pies), or
many another possible attitudes. Tone or Tone Color sometimes designates a
musical quality in language, which asserts that the sounds of words have qualities
equivalent to timbre in music. Also think of Tone as Mood.
Tone is defined as a writer’s or speaker’s attitude toward the subject and the
audience. Very young children can sense a speaker’s attitude in tone of voice.
For that matter, even a dog understands the tone of its master’s voice: “You lazy
old cur, how are you today? Did anyone ever tell you that you are absolutely
useless? Wish I could be as useless as you.” The dog wags his tail, enjoying the
attention and kindness of his master’s voice despite the literal meaning of the
words. But understanding tone in prose or poetry is an entirely different matter.
The reader does not have voice inflection to obscure or to carry meaning. Thus,
your appreciation (knowledge) of word choice, details, imagery, and language all
contribute to the understanding of tone. TO MISINTERPRET TONE IS TO
MISINTERPRET MEANING. If you miss irony or sarcasm, you may find
something serious in veiled humor.
Make certain you recognize the subtle difference between tone words. For
example, note the variance in the words emotional, sentimental, and lugubrious,
so that you can accurately comment on a work that appeals to emotions,
emphasizes emotion over reason, or becomes emotional to the point of being
laughable.
TONE WORDS
Angry
Cold
Complimentary
Condescending
Contemptuous
Sarcastic
Restrained
Somber
Mocking
Pitiful
Shocking
Ominous
Sad
Fanciful
Silly
Boring
Hollow
Nostalgic
Benevolent
Giddy
Sarcastic
Candid
Peaceful
Circumspect
Sentimental
Sharp
Upset
Urgent
Joking
Poignant
Sympathetic Detached
Vibrant
Didactic
Seductive
Vexed
Mocking
Frivolous
Dreamy
Dramatic
Irreverent
Audacious
Horrific
Joyful
Afraid
Lugubrious
Idolatrous
Obsequious
DICTION
Diction means word choice, or the use of words in oral or written discourse.
This is divided into VOCABULARY (words and other small units
considered one by one in terms of plain or fancy, current or archaic,
Germanic or Latinate, native or foreign, and so forth) and SYNTAX (the
order or arrangement of words considered as formal patterns construable as
simple or complex, ordinary or extraordinary, loose or periodic,
complete or fragmentary, and so forth).
Some analysts speak of “level” of vocabulary and “texture” of syntax. The
two constituents of Diction permit independent classification, so that many
of Robert Frost’s lines (such as “Something there is that does not love a
wall” and “Whose woods these are I think I know”) display simultaneously a
marked simplicity of vocabulary but a marked oddness of syntax.
Certain sorts of Diction can become an author’s typical habit and distinctive
stylistic signature, as in the combination of question and elliptical absolute
found in many of W.B. Yeats’s celebrated passages (such as “And what
rough beast, its hour come round at last…” and “What youthful mother, a
shape upon her lap…”)
SYNTAX:
DICTION consists of vocabulary (words one at a time)
and SYNTAX (patterns of arrangement). SYNTAX is the rule-governed
arrangement of words in sentences. In Frost’s lines “Something there is that
doesn’t love a wall” and “Whose woods these are I think I know,” the
vocabulary is quite common, but the syntax is unusual. SYNTAX seems to
be that level of language that most distinguishes poetry from prose. It is
unlikely that any prose-writer or speaker would say, “I will arise and go
now, and go to Innisfree, and a small cabin build there, of clay and wattles
made.”
Ad hominem: An argument attacking an individual’s character rather than
his or her position on an issue. Example: Statement 1- Mary believes the
war is unjustified. Statement 2 - Mary is an alcoholic. Statement 3 Therefore, Mary’s views are incorrect. The reason why an ad hominem
argument is a fallacy is that the character, circumstances, or actions of a
person do not (in most cases) have a bearing on the truth or falsity of the
claim being made (or the quality of the argument being made).
Allegory: A literary work in which characters, objects, or actions represent
abstractions. A form of extended METAPHOR in which objects, persons, and actions
in a NARRATIVE are equated with meanings that lie outside the narrative itself. Thus,
it represents one thing in the guise of another – an abstraction in that of a CONCRETE
IMAGE. By a process of double signification, the order of words represents actions and
characters, and they, in turn, represent ideas.
Alliteration: The repetition of initial sounds in successive neighboring
words. The repetition of initial identical consonant sounds or any vowel sounds in
successive or closely associated syllables.
The Churlish Chiding of the winter winds (Shakespeare)
The fair breeze blew, the white foam flew,
The furrow followed free. (Coleridge)
Allusion: A reference to something literary, mythological, or historical.
Example: “A Daniel come to judgement” In “Merchant of Venice.” It seeks, by tapping
the knowledge and memory of the reader, to secure a resonant emotional effect from the
associations already existing in the reader’s mind.
Anecdote: A brief personal narrative which focuses on a particular incident
or event.
Analogy: A comparison between two different things which are similar in
some way. A simile is an expressed analogy; a metaphor an implied one.
Anaphora: The repetition of words or phrases at the beginning of
consecutive lines or sentences. One of the devices of REPETITION, in which the
same expression (word or words) is repeated at the beginning of two or more lines,
clauses, or sentences. It is one of the most obvious of the devices used in the poetry of
Walt Whitman, as the opening lines from one of his poems show:
As I ebb’d with the ocean of life,
As I wended the shores I know,
As I walk’d where the ripples…
The Old Testament is clearly one source and example of this practice.
Antithesis: A statement in which two opposing ideas are balanced.
Aphorism; A concise statement which expresses succinctly a general truth
or idea, often using rhyme or balance. A concise statement of a principle or
precept given in pointed words. The opening sentence of Hippocrates’s Aphorisms is
famous “Life is short, art is long, opportunity fleeting, experimenting dangerous,
reasoning difficult.” “Aphorism” usually implies specific authorship and compact, telling
expression.
Apostrophe: The act of speaking directly to an absent or imaginary person,
or to some abstraction. And Chiefly thou, O Spirit, that dost prefer
Before all temples the upright geart and pure,
Instruct me, for Thou know’st
Or
Papa Above
Regard a mouse (Emily Dickinson addressing God)
Chiasmus: A statement consisting of two parallel parts in which the second
part is structurally reversed. “Flowers are lovely, love is flowerlike.” (Coleridge);
“Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country.”
(Kennedy)
Colloquialism: Informal words or expressions not usually acceptable in
formal writing. Slang, contractions, and lively conversational rhythms.
Conceit: A fanciful, particularly clever extended metaphor. The term
designates fanciful notions and may be a brief metaphor or the framework of
an entire poem.
Connotation: The implied or associative meaning of a word. It must be
shared to be intelligible to others and depends on usage and a particular
linguistic community and climate.
Denotation: The literal meaning of a word, independent of its emotional
coloration or associations.
Dependent Clause: needs the rest of the sentence (the independent, or main, clause)
for the full impact of its meaning to be felt. Yes, it has both subject and verb, but it’s
gone too far to remain alone.
I fondled his lapel before I caressed his socks.
If she capitulates, we will reward her with a lollipop.
The debutante took to the great outdoors as if she had been raised by wolves.
After the podiatrist pounced upon her, he buffed her heels and tweaked her toes.
If this is love, I’ve made a terrible mistake.
If you’ll let out the cat, I’ll let out the last word
Diction: having to do with the words choices made by a writer: plain or
fancy; archaic or current.
Didactic: Something which has as its primary purpose to teach or instruct.
Ellipsis: The omission of a word or phrase which is grammatically
necessary but can be deduced from the text.
Epiphany: A moment of sudden revelation or insight.
Ethos. An appeal or persuasive argument based on the reputation,
credentials, or qualifications of the writer or speaker. (Compare to logos and
pathos.)
Euphemism: An indirect, less offensive way of saying something that is
considered unpleasant. “At liberty” instead of ‘out of work”; “senior citizen’ instead
of “old person”; “anti-Semite” instead of “jew-hater”; “in the family way” instead of
“pregnant”; “pass away” instead of “die.”
Foil: Literally a “leaf” of bright metal placed under a jewel to increase its brilliance. In
literature, the term is applied to any person who, through contrast, underscores the
distinctive characteristics of another. Thus, Laertes, Fortinbras, and even the players – all
of whom are willing and able to take action with less reason than Hamlet has – serve as
foils to Hamlet.
Genre: A major category or type of literature: western, mystery, romance.
Hyperbole: Intentional exaggeration to create an effect.
No; this my hand will rather
The multitudinous seas incarnadine
Making the green one red… (Shakespeare’s “Macbeth”)
Imagery: Concrete, sensory details which contribute to the themes or ideas
of a work
Independent Clause: makes sense by itself and could make it as a separate sentence.
It’s more likely to be called an independent clause when it’s part of a longer sentence.
Two grammatically equivalent independent clauses may be linked by a coordinating
conjunction like and, or but, or or.
I fondled his lapel.
I fondled his lapel, and I caressed his socks.
Invective: An intensely vehement, highly emotional verbal attack.
Irony: A situation or statement where the truth is the opposite of
appearances. Example: Swift’s “Modest Proposal” suggests that the Irish
sell their babies to the English landlords to be eaten and is the most savagely
sustained ironic writing in literature. Dramatic irony is a situation in which
the audience or reader knows something the characters do not.
Logos: An appeal or persuasive argument based on logic or reason.
(Compare to ethos and pathos.)
Litotes: A type of understatement in which something affirmative is
expressed by negating its opposite. Litotes: A form of understatement in which
a thing is affirmed by stating the negative of its opposite. Effect created is stoic restraint
or subtlety.
She was not unmindful = She gave careful attention
Little profits = It profits not at all.
Not least = great
Not to fail = succeed splendidly
Not unbecoming = Thoroughly appropriate
Not bad = Good
Metaphor: A direct comparison of two different things which suggests they
are somehow the same. That time of year thou mayst in me behold
When yellow leaves, or none, or few, do hang
Upon those boughs which shake against the cold
Bare ruined choirs where late the sweet birds sang
is a metaphor for old age.
Metonymy: Substituting the name of one object for another closely
associated with it. Metonymy: The substitution of the name of an object closely
associated with a word for the word itself. We commonly speak of the monarch as “the
crown,” an object closely associated with royalty thus being made to stand for it. So, too,
in the book of Genesis we read “In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread,” in which
sweat represents that which it is closely associated, hard labor. CLOSELY
ASSOCIATED TO (i.e. “The pen is mightier than the sword) See SYNECDOCHE
Motif: A standard theme or dramatic situation which recurs in various
works. The carrying off of a mortal queen by a fairy lover is a motif around which full
stories were built in Medieval Romance.
Non Sequitur: An inference that does not logically follow from the
premise(s).
Onomatopoeia: A word formed by the imitation of natural sounds. Hiss,
Buzz, Whirr, Sizzle.
The moan of doves in immemorial elms
And murmuring of innumerable bees (Tennyson)
Oxymoron: An expression in which two words that contradict each other
are joined. I will complain, yet praise;
I will bewail, approve;
And all my sour-sweet days
I will lament and love. (Herbert’s “Bitter-Sweet”)
Paradox: An apparently contradictory statement which actually contains
some truth. St. Paul’s “for when I am weak, then I am strong.)
Parody: A humorous imitation of a serious work.
The Soul selects her own Society –
Then – shuts the Door –
Dickinson’s worlds have been parodied as
The Soul selects her own Sorority –
Then – shuts the Dorm -
Pathos: The quality in a work that prompts the reader to feel pity or sorrow.
In common usage it describes an acquiescent or relatively helpless suffering
or the sorrow occasioned by unmerited grief, as opposed to the stoic
grandeur and awful justice of the tragic hero. Hamlet is a tragic hero and
Ophelia a pathetic one. Lear’s fate is tragic, Cordelia’s pathetic.
Pedantic: Describing an excessive display of learning or scholarship.
Holofernes in Shakespeare’s “Love’s Labour’s Lost” can hardly open his
lips without giving expression to pedantry:
Most barbarous imitation! Yet a kind of insinuation, as it were, in via, in way,
Of explication; facere, as it were, replication, or, rather, ostentare, to show,
As it were, his inclination, - and after his undressed, unpolished, uneducated,
Unpruned, untrained, or rather, unlettered, or, ratherest, unconfirmed fashion –
To insert again my haud credo for a deer.
Periodic Sentence: One that is not grammatically complete before its end; effective
because it holds an idea in suspense before its final revelation. Accomplished by:
clauses at the opening; dependent clauses before independent; use of correlatives like
either…or, not only…but also, both…and; beginning with a succession of adverbial
phrases and not grammatically complete until the very last word.
Out of the bosom of the Air
Out of the cloud-folds of her garments shaken,
Over the woodlands brown and bare,
Over the harvest-fields forsaken,
Silent, and soft, and slow,
Descends the snow. (Longfellow)
Periphrasis: A roundabout way or writing or speaking (also known as
circumlocution) in which many or very long words are used where a few,
simple, well-chosen words will do. Example: “Her olfactory system from
suffering from a temporary obstruction” instead of “her sinuses were
blocked.”
Personification: Endowing non-human objects or creatures with human
qualities or characteristics. Note Keats’s personification of the Grecian urn
as: Sylvan historian, who canst thus express
A flowery tale more sweetly than our rhyme…
Keats also references the urn as an “unravished bride of quietness” and as a “foster child
of silence and slow time.”
Pun: A play on words based on the similarity of sound between two words with
different meanings. An example is Thomas Hood’s “They went and told the sexton and
the sexton rang the bell.” The pun is a humble thing, and many find it trifling or irritating.
Even so, puns are found in the most sublime scriptures (as in the Aramaic qalma, “gnat,”
and gamla, “camel,” in Matthew 23.24) and throughout Shakespeare’s works (drawing
the contempt of critics as diverse as Samuel Johnson and Thomas Wolfe). From its
earliest or marginal status, the pun has steadily risen in dignity, to the point of being a
main structural principal of Joyce’s ULYSSES and FINNEGAN’S WAKE. Most puns
are exotic, parochial, and shirt-lived; some, however, such as those involving “son” and
“sun” and “I” and “eye,” are important staples of English literature.
Rhetoric. The art of using language for persuasion in speaking or in writing.
Rhetorical Question: A question proposed for its persuasive effect and not requiring
a reply or intended to induce a reply. Because its answer is obvious and usually the only
one possible, a deeper impression will be made by raising the question than by the
speaker making a direct comment.
Hath not a Jew eyes?…Does he not bleed? Is he not warmed and
cooled by the same winter and summer as a Christian?
If you prick us, do we not bleed? (Shakespeare)
Sarcasm: Harsh, cutting language/tone designed to ridicule. A form of
verbal irony.
Satire: The use of humor to emphasize human weaknesses or imperfections
in social institutions. Satire: A work or manner that blends a censorious attitude
with humor and wit for improving human institutions or humanity. Satirists attempt
through laughter not so much to tear down as to inspire remodeling. If attackers simply
abuse, they are writing invective; if they are personal and splenetic, they are writing
SARCASM; of they are sad and morose over the state of society, they are writing IRONY
or a JEREMIAD. As a rule, modern satire spares the individual and follows Addison’s
self-imposed rule: to “pass over a single foe to charge whole armies.” Most often, satire
deals less with great sinners and criminals than with the general run of fools, knaves,
ninnies, oafs, codgers, and frauds.
Syllepsis: The linking of one word with two other words in two strikingly
different ways. Syllepsis: A grammatically correct construction in which one word
is placed in the same grammatical relationship to two words but in quite different senses,
as stain is linked in different senses to honor and brocade in Pope’s line “Or stain her
honor, or her new brocade.”
Syllogism: A logical argument in which a conclusion is based on a major
premise and a minor premise. Syllogism: A formula for presenting an argument
logically. The syllogism affords a method of demonstrating logic through analysis. In its
simplest form, it consists of three divisions: a major premise; a minor premise, and a
conclusion (if a =b, and b=c, then a=c).
Major premise: All public libraries should serve the people
Minor premise: This is a public library
Conclusion:
Therefore, this library should serve the people
Symbol: An object which is something in itself yet is used to represent
something else. The very title, The Scarlet Letter, points to a double symbol: a colorcoded letter of the alphabet; the work eventually develops into a testing and critique of
symbols, and the meanings of “A” multiplies. In Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms, rain,
which is a mildly annoying meteorological phenomenon in the opening chapter, is
converted into a symbol of death through the uses to which it is put in the book.
Synecdoche: Using one part of an object to represent the entire object. A
TROPE (figure of speech) in which a part signifies the whole, or the whole
signifies the part. A good synecdoche ought to be based on an important
part of the whole and, usually, the part standing for the whole ought to be
directly associated with the subject under discussion. Thus, under the first
restriction we say “threads” and “wheels” for “clothes” and “car,” and under
the second we speak of infantry on the march as foot rather than hands, just
as we use hands rather than foot for people who work at manual labor. AN
ACTUAL PART (i.e. “a brain” for an intelligent person) See
METONYMY
Style: The overall manner in which an individual writer expresses idea.
Examples include: journalistic, scientific, or literary; manners of writers can be described
as abstract or concrete, rhythmic or pedestrian, sincere or artificial, dignified or comic,
original or imitative, dull or vivid, low or plain or high.
Syntax: The manner in which words are arranged by a writer into
sentences. In Frost’s “Something there is that doesn’t love a wall” and “Whose woods
these are I think I know” the vocabulary is quite common, but the syntax is unusual.
Syntax seems to be that level of language that most distinguishes poetry from prose. It is
unlikely that any prose writer or speaker would say “I will arise and go now, and go to
Innisfree, and a small cabin build there, of clay and wattles made.”
Tautology: Needless repetition which adds no meaning or understanding.
The use of repetitious words. Tautology repeats an idea without adding
force or clarity. “Devoid,” say, means “completely empty,” so that “wholly
devoid” is a tautology. Also, in logic, tautology refers to an empty or
vacuous statement often composed of simpler statements that may be
factually true or false. Examples: “Either we’ll discover the truth, or we
won’t.” “Whatever will be, will be.”
Tone: The attitude of a writer, usually implied, toward the subject or
audience. Tone may be formal, informal, intimate, solemn, somber, playful,
serious, ironic, condescending, etc…
Understatement: The deliberate representation of something as less in
magnitude than it really is. SEE LITOTES (example: “pretty fair” means
“splendid”)
VOCABULARY WORDS (9-12 honors/AP)
1. ABORIGINE
2. ABSTRACT
ACCENTUATE
4. ACQUIESCE
5. ACUITY
6. ADJOURN
7. ADMONISH
8. ADULATION
9. ADVERSARY
10. ADVOCATE
11. AESTHETIC
12. AFFABLE
13. AFFIRMATION
14. ALLITERATION
15. ALTERCATION
16. ALTRUISTIC
17. AMALGAM
18. AMBIGUOUS
19. AMBIVALENCE
20. AMBROSIAL
21. AMBULATORY
22. AMELIORATE
23. AMPHIBIOUS
24. ANALOGY
25. ANARCHIST
26. ANARCHY
27. ANDROGYNOUS
28. ANECDOTE
29. ANIMOSITY
30. ANTIBODY
31. ANTITHESIS
32. APATHY
33. APERTURE
34. APEX
35. APPARITION
36. APPENDAGE
37. APPREHENSIVE
38. ARBITRARY
39. ARCANE
40. ARCHETYPE
41. ARTICULATE
42. ASCENDANCY
43. ASCETIC
44. ASPIRE
45. ASSUAGE
3.
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an original inhabitant
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(v)
theoretical; not concrete; non-representational
to give prominence to; to emphasize or intensify
assent; agree passively; give in to; agree
sharpness of perception or mind
to break up; to recess
warn; reprove
adoration; excessive praise
opponent; enemy
urge or plead for
concerning art or beauty
friendly; agreeable
positive statement; confirmation
repetition of same sounds (often consonants)
a noisy dispute
Unselfishly generous; concerned for others
a mixture of different elements
unclear; Doubtful; undecided
state of contradictory or opposing emotions
delicious, fragrant, divine
walking or moving; alterable
to improve; make better
able to function both on land & on water
some similarities between things that are unlike
person who rebels against the established order
lack of government; chaos
unisex; having both male & female traits
a brief, humorous story
active hatred
protein in blood that provides some immunity
contrast; direct opposite
lack of caring, emotion, or interest
an opening; a hole
highest point; summit
an unusual or unexpected sight
something attached to a larger item
fearful; worried
unreasonable or capricious
secret mysterious
the original pattern or model
effective; distinct
controlling influence; domination
without indulgence or luxury
to desire strongly; to have a great ambition
to reduce pain
46. ASTUTE
47. ATROPHY
48. AUGMENT
49. AUSTERITY
50. AUTONOMY
51. AVARICE
52. BALLYHOO
53. BAMBOOZLE
54. BANAL
55. BASTION
56. BEDLAM
57. BELLICOSE
58. BENEVOLENT
59. BENIGN
60. BEQUEATH
61. BILLET-DOUX
62. BIZARRE
63. BLASPHEMY
64. BOISTEROUS
65. BOGUS
66. BOMBAST
67. BONA FIDE
68. BOUDOIR
69. BOYCOTT
70. BREVITY
71. BROUHAHA
72. BUFFOON
73. BUTTRESS
74. CACOPHONOUS
75. CADENCE
76. CAJOLE
77. CAMEO
78. CAMOUFLAGE
79. CANDOR
80. CAPRICIOUS
81. CARCINOGEN
82. CARNIVORE
83. CAUCUS
84. CELESTIAL
85. CENSORIOUS
86. CENSURE
87. CERTITUDE
88. CHRONOLOGY
89. CIRCUMSPECT
90. CIRCUMVENT
91. CITADEL
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(adj.)
(n)
(v)
(n)
(n)
(n)
(v.)
(adj.)
(n)
(v)
(n)
(n)
(n)
(adj.)
(n)
(n)
(n)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(v)
(n)
(n)
(adj)
(v)
(n)
wise; shrewd; clever; ready witted
to waste away from lack of use
to add to; to increase
sternness; severity
self-rule; independence
greed; cupidity
noisy attention-getting demonstration/talk
to deceive by elaborate trickery; to hoodwink
hackneyed; commonplace; trite; dull; ordinary
a stronghold; a fort
uproar; confusion
warlike; quarrelsome
generous; charitable; kindly; well-wishing
kindly; favorable; good-natured; not malignant
to leave to someone in a will; hand down
a love letter
out of the ordinary; freakish; eccentric; odd
cursing; irreverence, sacrilege
rough; stormy; loud; violent; lacking restraint
make-believe; fake
pretentious, inflated speech or writing
made in good faith; genuine
a woman’s dressing room, bedroom
to protest by refusing to buy/deal with
conciseness; right to the point
hubbub; uproar; furor
a clown; comedian or laughable person
to support or prop
harsh sounding; unharmonious
rhythm
coax; wheedle
raised image on precious stone; a small roll
concealment by appearing part of natural environment
frankness; honesty
fickle; incalculable; whimsical; unpredictable
a substance that causes cancer
a flesh-eating animal
closed meeting of a political party/faction
heavenly
critical
severely criticize; blame
certainty; complete assurance
the order or sequence of events
cautious; prudent; vigilant; judicious
to avoid by going around; to encircle/outwit
a fortress
92. CLEMENCY
(n)
93. COERCION
(n)
94. COGITATE
(v)
95. COMATOSE
(adj.)
96. COMMEMORATE
(v)
97. COMPLACENT
(adj.)
98. COMPLIANCE
(n)
99. CONCILIATORY
(adj.)
100.
CONCISE
101.
CONDONE
(v)
102.
CONFLAGRATION (n)
103.
CONTRETEMPS (n)
104.
CONTRITE
(adj.)
105.
CONTROVERSIAL (adj)
106.
CONVERGE
(v)
107.
CONVEYANCE
(n)
108.
CONVICTION
(n)
109.
CORONA
(n)
110.
CORROBORATE (v)
111.
COWER
(v)
112.
CREDULOUS
(adj.)
113.
CREDULITY
(n)
114.
CRITERION
(n)
115.
CRYPTIC
(adj.)
116.
CUISINE
(n)
117.
CURSORY
(adj.)
118.
DAUNT
(v)
119.
DEBILITATE
(v)
120.
DEBONAIR
(adj.)
121.
DEBRIS
(n)
122.
DECANTER
(n)
123.
DECIDUOUS
(adj.)
124.
DECORUM
(n)
125.
DEDUCTION
(n)
126.
DEFERENCE
(n)
127.
DEIGN
(v)
128.
DELECTABLE
(adj)
129.
DELINEATE
(v)
130.
DELUDED
(adj)
131.
DEMAGOGUE
(n)
132.
DENOUNCE
(v)
133.
DEPRAVITY
(n)
134.
DEPRECATE
(v)
135.
DERISION
(n)
136.
DESECRATE
(v)
137.
DESPONDENT
(adj.)
leniency; mildness (as of weather)
use of force to get someone’s compliance
to ponder or think deeply
unconscious; inactive
to honor the memory of someone/something
smug; self-satisfied
conformity (to request or demand); yielding nature
reconciling; soothing
(adj.) brief; compact
overlook; forgive
a large, destructive fire
an embarrassing incident
thoroughly sorry
debatable; disputable
approach; tend to meet
a means of transporting; a vehicle
firm belief; state of being sure
a halo of light around the sun or moon
to support or to confirm
to crouch or draw back; cringe
gullible; ready to believe w/o proof
believability
standard of judgement
secret; mysterious
food; style of cooking
rapid; hasty; not detailed
frighten (esp. into giving up purpose)
weaken; enfeeble
suave, charming, lighthearted
ruins; trash
a vessel to receive liquid poured from another
shedding at a certain stage
propriety; proper behavior or conduct
the process of reaching a conclusion by reasoning
a show of respect
to condescend
delicious; appetizing
to portray
deceived; misled; fooled; duped; hoodwinked
a leader who promises things to gain power
to speak against publicly
wickedness; corruption
express disapproval; protest; belittle
contempt; ridicule
to show disrespect; to deface the sacred
depressed; gloomy
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DESPOT
DETERRENT
DEXTROUS
DIALOGUE
DIDACTIC
DIFFIDENT
DIGRESSION
DIMINUTION
DISCERN
DISCERNING
DISCORDANT
DISDAIN
DISHEVELED
DISINCLINATION
DISPARAGE
DISPARITY
DISPERSE
DISSEMINATE
DISSENT
DISSONANCE
DISTAFF
DISTEND
DIVERGENT
DIVULGE
DOGGEREL
DOGMATIC
DORMANT
DRONE
DUBIOUS
DULCET
DUPLICITY
ECCENTRIC
ECLECTIC
EFFERVESCENT
EGREGIOUS
ELABORATION
ELEGIAC
ELOQUENCE
ELUCIDATE
ELUSIVE
EMACIATED
EMBARGO
EMBELLISH
EMULATE
ENCOUNTER
ENERVATE
(n)
(n)
(adj.)
(n)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(n)
(n)
(v)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(v)
(adj.)
(n)
(v)
(n)
(v)
(v)
(n)
(n)
(adj.)
(v)
(adj.)
(v)
(n)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(v)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(n)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(n)
(adj)
(n)
(v)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(n)
(v)
(v)
(v)
(v)
tyrant; harsh tyrannical ruler
hindrance; something that discourages
skillful; adroit
a conversation between 2 or more people
intending to teach (pushy, perhaps); instructional
shy; lacking confidence
straying from a topic
lessening; reduction in size
to distinguish one thing from another
mentally quick, observant; insightful
inharmonious; conflicting
to treat with scorn or contempt
untidy
unwillingness
to speak poorly of; belittle
difference; inequality
scatter
scatter (like seeds)
disagreement
harsh sounds
pertaining to females
expand; swell out
differing; deviant
to reveal; to make known
loose irregular verse; inferior poetry
stubbornly opinionated; arbitrary
sleeping; inactive
to talk on and on in a dull way
doubtful
sweet; melodious; soothing
double-dealing; conniving; lying
out-of-the-ordinary; quirky
selective in choosing from varied choices
exuberant; bubbly & excited
flagrant; out of the ordinary
addition of details; intricacy
mournful; plaintive; lamenting; melancholic
expressiveness; persuasive speech
to explain; make clear
evasive; baffling; hard-to-grasp
thin and wasted
govt. prohibition on trade w/another nation
to adorn
to imitate or rival
to come across; to meet
to weaken
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ENGENDER
ENIGMA
ENTHUSIASTIC
EPHEMERAL
EQUESTRIAN
EQULIBRIUM
EQUIVOCAL
ESCALATE
ESOTERIC
EULOGY
EUPHEMISM
EUPHONIOUS
EXACERBATE
EXEMPLARY
EXHAUSTIVE
EXODUS
EXONERATE
EXPEDIENT
EXPEDITE
EXPLETIVE
EXPLICIT
EXPONENT
EXPUNGE
EXTOL
EXULT
EXTRICATE
FALLACIOUS
FANATICISM
FASTIDIOUS
FECUND
FERVOR
FESTOON
FIASCO
FLAMBOYANT
FLAGRANT
FLOURISH
FLOTILLA
FORMIDABLE
FRIVOLITY
FUTILE
GALA
GARBLED
GARGOYLE
GAUNTLET
GERMINATE
GLOB ULE
(v)
(n)
(adj)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(n)
(adj.)
(v)
(adj.)
(n)
(n)
(adj.)
(v)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(n)
(v)
to cause; produce
something puzzling, a riddle
showing great interest or excitement
short-lived; fleeting
related to horseback riding
a state of balance
doubtful; ambiguous
to enlarge; to increase
known only to a chosen few
praise (often at a funeral)
(adj.)
advantageous; convenient; suitable; practical;
to quicken; hurry something through a process
(v)
(n)
(adj.)
(n)
(v)
(v)
(v)
(v)
(adj.)
(n)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(n)
(n)
(n)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(v)
(n)
(adj.)
(n)
(adj.)
(n)
(adj.)
(n)
(n)
(v)
(n)
mild expression in place of an unpleasant one
melodious; pleasant sounding
to make worse; embitter
serving as a model of excellence
thorough; comprehensive
a mass departure
acquit; exculpate; prove innocent
an exclamatory word or phrase, often obscene
definite; open; specific
one who speaks for, represents, advocates
to strike out, to erase, to remove
to praise; glorify
to rejoice greatly; be jubilant, triumphant
to free; disentangle
misleading; false
excessive zeal
difficult to please; squeamish; finicky
fruitful; productive
glowing ardor; burning intensity of feeling
a decorative chain or strip hung in a curve
a failure
ornate, showy
conspicuously wicked; glaringly wrong
to thrive; grow or develop luxuriantly
a fleet of small ships
frightening; dreadful; awe-inspiring
lack of seriousness
hopeless; without effect
festival; celebration
mixed up (as in a message)
a rain spout in shape of grotesque figure
a thick, heavy glove (from a suit of armor)
to begin to grow, sprout
a tiny drop; a small ball
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GOOGOL
(n)
GOSSAMER
(adj.)
GRAVITY
(n)
GREGARIOUS
(adj.)
GUERILLA
(n)
GUILE
(n)
GURU
(n)
GYRATE
(v)
HACKNEYED
(adj.)
HALCYON
(adj.)
HAPHAZARD
(adj.)
HARBINGER
(n)
HAUGHTINESS
(n)
HEDONISM
(n)
HERESY
(n)
HERITAGE
(n)
HIEROGLYPHIC (n)
HIRSUTE
(adj.)
HOLOCAUST
(n)
HOLOGRAM
(n)
HOMOGENEOUS (adj.)
HYPOCRITICAL (adj.)
HYPOTHETICAL (adj.)
IDOLATROUS
(adj)
IMMUNE
(adj)
IMMUTABLE
(adj.)
IMPERTINENT
(adj)
IMPLICATION
(n)
IMPLICIT
(adj.)
IMPROPRIETY
(n)
INADVERTANTLY (adv.)
INAUGURATE
(v)
INCARCERATE
(v)
INCESSANT
(adj.)
INCIDENTAL
(adj.)
INCITE
(v)
INCLEMENT
(adj.)
INCONGRUOUS (adj.)
INCONTROVERTIBLE
INCORRIGIBLE (adj.)
INDICT
(v)
INDIFFERENCE (n)
INDIFFERENT
(adj.)
INDOLENT
(adj.)
INDULGENT
(adj.)
INEPT
(adj)
1 followed by 100 zeroes (10 to 100th power)
light, tenuous, delicate
seriousness
sociable
member of military force not part of army
deceit; duplicity; cunning
1 who is followed as leader, teacher, spiritual leader
to revolve around a point or axis
commonplace; trite
calm, peaceful
random; by chance
forerunner; herald
pride; arrogance
belief that pleasure is the sole aim in life
opinion contrary to popular belief
something (tradition) passed down generations
Egyptian system of writing
very hairy
widespread destruction, especially by fire
3 dimensional photographic record
of the same kind
pretending to be virtuous; deceiving
based on assumptions
worshipful; reverential; excessively admiring
protected from disease naturally or by vaccine
unchangeable; permanent
offensively bold; rude
that which is hinted at or suggested
understood but not stated
improper conduct; bad manners
carelessly; unintentionally
to start; initiate; install into office
to put in prison
uninterrupted; unending; non-stop
not essential; minor
to arouse to action
stormy, harsh
not fitting; absurd
(adj.) indisputable
uncorrectable
charge; accuse of
disinterest; unconcern
having no preference
lazy
humoring; yielding; lenient
incompetent; inexpert; clumsy; ham-fisted; bungling
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321.
INEVITABLE
INFAMOUS
INFERENCE
INFILTRATE
INGENUOUS
INHERENT
INNATE
INNOCUOUS
INNOVATE
INSIPID
INSTIGATE
INTERMITTENT
INTRACTABLE
INTREPID
INTROSPECTION
IRASCIBLE
IRONIC
IRREPARABLE
IRRESOLUTE
IRREVERENCE
ITINERARY
JAUNTY
JETTISON
JOVIAL
JUXTAPOSE
KILOMETER
KINDLE
KOWTOW
LABYRINTHINE
LACONIC
LAMBENT
LANGUID
LAUD
LEGACY
LETHARGIC
LEVITY
LIBATION
LICHEN
LIGHT-YEAR
LINEAGE
LOQUACIOUS
LISTLESS
LUDICROUS
LUCID
LUGU BRIOUS
LUMINARY
(adj.)
(adj.)
(n)
(v)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(v)
(adj.)
(v)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(n)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(n)
(n)
(adj)
(v)
(adj)
(v)
(n)
(v)
(v)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(v)
(n)
(adj.)
(n)
(n)
(n)
(n)
(n)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(adj.)
(n)
unavoidable; bound to happen
notoriously bad
act of deciding/concluding by reasoning evidence
pass into; penetrate (organization) sneakily
naïve; young; unsophisticated
firmly established by nature or habit
inborn
harmless; insignificant
to make changes; modernize
tasteless; dull; bland; boring
urge; start; provoke
periodic; off and on
unruly; refuses to do something
fearless; bold
exam of one’s thought’s and feelings
easily angered; bad-tempered
results in an unexpected & contrary manner
cannot be repaired
uncertain how to act; weak
lack of proper respect
the route of a journey
showing carefree self-confident air
to discard, to cast off as an encumbrance
jolly; full of fun and good cheer
to place side by side
unit of length = 1000 meters (0.62 mile)
to start a fire; inspire
to be overly polite and flattering; to fawn
complicated; perplexing; mazelike
brief; to the point
softly bright; flickering
slow & listless
to praise
a gift made in a will
drowsy; dull
lightness; humor
a beverage (sometimes religious offering)
organism w/fungus & algae together
distance light travels in one year (5.88 trillion miles)
descent in a direct line from an ancestor
given to excessive talking
without energy or enthusiasm
laughable b/c of obvious absurdity
easily understood
exaggeratedly or affectedly mournful
one who is notable in a particular field
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MAELSTROM
(n)
MAGNANIMOUS (adj.)
MANACLE
(n)
MANEUVER
(n)
MARSUPIAL
(n)
MASTICATE
(v)
MAUSOLEUM
(n)
MELLIFLUOUS
(adj.)
MENDACITY
(n)
METAMORPHOSIS(n)
METICULOUS
(adj.)
MISERLY
(adj.)
MITIGATE
(v)
MONOLITH
(n)
MONOLOGUE
(n)
MOROSE
(adj.)
MOSAIC
(n)
MUNDANE
(adj.)
MUTATION
(n)
NADIR
(n)
NEBULA
(n)
NOCTURNAL
(adj.)
NODULE
(n)
NOTORIETY
(n)
NOVEL
(adj.)
NUISANCE
(n)
NULLIFY
(v)
NURTURE
(v)
OBDURATE
(adj.)
OBLIVION
(n)
OBSEQUIOUS
(adj.)
OBSCURE
(adj.)
OMINOUS
(adj)
OMNIVORE
(n)
OPAQUE
(adj.)
OPULENCE
(n)
OSCILLATE
(v)
OSTENTATIOUS (adj.)
OSTRACIZE
(v)
OUTRAGEOUS
(adj)
OVATION
(n)
OZONE
(n)
PACIFIST
(n)
PANORAMA
(n)
PARAPHERNALIA (n)
PARIAH
(n)
a powerful whirlpool; turmoil
especially generous
a handcuff; a restraint
planned movement/procedure involving skill/cunning
mammals w/pouch outside female body for baby
to chew; to soften by crushing
a large, elaborate tomb
smoothly flowing; sweet
dishonesty; deceit; falsehood; fabrication
a transformation; a marked alteration
excessively careful
stingy; mean
to appease
a single large stone (often column/monument)
long uninterrupted speech by one person
ill-humored
a design/picture made of small colored pieces
worldly as opposed to spiritual
change, as in form
the lowest point
thinly spread bright cloud of gas/dust in night sky
pertaining to the night; active at night
a small lump
disrepute; ill fame
new; interesting
a bother; source of inconvenience
to make invalid
to bring up; feed; educate
hard; unmoved by persuasion
forgetfulness
fawning; servile
unclear; clouded; partly hidden
portentous; menacing; ill-omened; threatening
one that eats both plants and animals
dark; not transparent
wealth
to swing back and forth
showy; pretentious
to exclude from a group; to banish
exceeding all bounds of what is right/proper
enthusiastic display of approval; applause
poisonous, unstable form of oxygen
one opposed to force; believer in peace
a wide, unbroken view
personal belongings; equipment
an outcast
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PAROCHIAL
(adj.) limited in scope; relating to a church parish
PARSIMONY
(n)
stinginess
PARTISAN
(adj.) one-sided; prejudiced; committed to a party
PAUCITY
(n)
scarcity
PEDESTRIAN
(adj.) commonplace; trite
PENURIOUS
(adj.) stingy; extremely poor
PERFUNCTORY (adj.) superficial; not thorough
PERIPHERAL
(adj.) marginal; outer
PERVASIVE
(adj.) spread throughout; permeating
PHILANTHROPIST (n) lover of mankind; doer of good
PHLOEM
(n)
plant tissue that conducts food from leaves to other parts
PIETY
(n)
religious devotion; godliness
PILFER
(v)
to steal insignificant items
PINION
(v)
to restrain by binding the arms; to hold fast
PINNACLE
(n)
the highest point; a spire
PLACATE
(v)
pacify; conciliate
PLATEAU
(n)
elevated relatively level land
PLUMMET
(v)
to fall or plunge straight downward
POGROM
(n)
an organized persecution or massacre
POLYGLOT
(adj.) using several languages
POLYGON
(n)
geometric figure bounded by at least 3 lines
PONDEROUS
(adj.) weighty; heavy; unwieldy
POSH
(adj.) elegant; fashionable
POTABLE
(adj.) fit to drink
PRAGMATIC
(adj.) practical; concerned w/practical matters
PRECARIOUS
(adj.) dangerous, risky; dependent on chance
PRECLUDE
(v)
to make impossible; eliminate
PRECOCIOUS
(adj.) advanced in development
PREDILECTION (n)
partiality; preference
PREVALENT
(adj.) widespread; generally accepted
PRODIGAL
(adj.) extravagant; wasteful
PROFANE
(v)
to violate; desecrate
PROFOUND
(adj.) deep; not superficial
PROFUSION
(n)
lavish amount
PROGENY
(n)
offspring; descendants
PROJECTILE
(n)
a missile; something thrown
PROLIFIC
(adj.) abundantly fruitful
PROMONTORY
(n) a high point of land or rock projecting into water
PROSAIC
(adj.) commonplace; uninspired; dull
PROSTRATE
(adj.) lying flat; face down
PROTAGONIST
(n)
main character in drama/literary work
PROTRACTED
(adj.) drawn-out; lengthy
PROVINCIAL
(adj.) narrow-minded; unsophisticated
PROXIMITY
(n)
nearness
PUGILIST
(n)
fighter; boxer
PULCHRITUDE
(n)
physical beauty
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PULVERIZE
QUANDARY
QUARANTINE
QUEUE
QUOTA
RAINFOREST
RANDOM
RAVENOUS
REBUFF
RECALCITRANT
RECEDE
RECLUSE
RECTIFY
REDUNDANT
REFUTE
RELEGATE
REMORSE
REMUNERATION
RENAISSANCE
RENDEZVOUS
RENEGADE
RENOUNCE
REPLICATE
REPOSE
REPREHENSIBLE
RESPITE
RETICENT
RETRACT
REVERBERATE
REVERE
REVERIE
RIBALD
ROSTER
RUMINATE
SACRIFICE
SAGACIOUS
SALUTARY
SANCTION
SANGFROID
SATIATED
SATIRICAL
SATURNINE
SAVORY
SCINTILLATE
SCRUPULOUS
SEDIMENT
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to pound, crush, grind to dust or powder
dilemma
confinement or isolation to prevent spread of disease
a waiting line, esp. of persons/vehicles
amount of something assigned to be made/sold
dense evergreen forest w/annual rain 160”
having no specific order
hungry; very eager
to snub; beat back
stubbornly resistant to authority/restraint
to move back or away from a limit, point, mark
a hermit
to correct
superfluous; saying the same thing over
to disprove; deny
to banish; consign to inferior position
regret for having done wrong
reward, payment
rebirth, revival (Euro 14th-16th cent)
an appointment; a meeting place
1 who rejects a cause, allegiance, religion, etc.
to abandon
to duplicate; to repeat
act of resting
deserving blame
a break; a rest
restrained; uncommunicative; reserved
withdraw; take back
to echo; to resound
to worship; to honor
daydream; being lost in thought
vulgar; rude; coarse; bawdy; lewd
a list of names
to ponder; to think over
act of giving up what is highly valued for something/someone
mentally keen; shrewd; insightful
promoting health; beneficial
to approve; ratify
poise, calmness, especially under strain
fully fed; fully satisfied
mocking
gloomy; surly
tasty; pleasing; attractive; agreeable
to sparkle; to flash
conscientious; extremely thorough; concerned; proper
matter that settles to the bottom of a liquid
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SERAPH
SERVILE
SIBILANT
SILHOUETTE
SINEWY
SLOUGH
SOLEMNITY
SOLILOQUY
SOLSTICE
SOMBER
SOMNAMBULIST
SOPORIFIC
SPECTRUM
SPENDTHRIFT
SQUANDER
STAGNANT
STATIC
STEREOTYPE
STOIC
STRATEGY
STRUT
STUPEFY
SUCCINCT
SUFFRAGE
SUPERCILIOUS
SUPERFLUOUS
SURREPTITIOUS
SYCOPHANT
SYMPOSIUM
TACITURN
TARIFF
TANTALIZE
TECHNIQUE
TEMPO
TENDRIL
TENTATIVE
TERSE
TIMOROUS
TITANIC
TORPID
TORTUOUS
TOXIN
TRANQUILITY
TREPIDATION
TRIBUTARY
TRUCULENT
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(adj.)
an angel
slavish; cringing; overly submissive
making a hissing sound
a dark outline against a light background
strong and firm; tough
to cast off (like a snake & its skin)
seriousness; gravity
speaking when alone (esp. in a play)
when the sun is farthest north or south of equator
gloomy; depressing
sleepwalker
causing sleep
a wide range or sequence
someone who wastes money
to waste
motionless; stale
unchanging; not moving
conventional or oversimplified idea or image
a person indifferent to pleasure or pain
a plan of action based on meeting a goal
a self-important walk
to make numb; stun; amaze
brief; terse; compact
the right to vote in political elections
arrogant; condescending; haughty; disdainful
excessive; overabundant; unnecessary
secret
servile flatterer
a meeting to discuss a particular topic
quiet; uncommunicative; silent
a tax or duty on imported or exported goods
to tease by keeping something out of reach
a procedure or method for accomplishing a task
the speed at which music is played
a coiling part
not final; uncertain
concise; abrupt; pithy
easily frightened; timid
huge; powerful
dormant; dull; lethargic
winding or twisting; devious
a poisonous substance produced by a living organism
calmness; serenity
fear; trembling agitation
a stream or river flowing into a larger stream/river
savage; fierce
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TRUNCATED
TUMULT
TUNDRA
TURBULENCE
UNANIMOUS
UNDULATE
UNKEMPT
UNOBTRUSIVE
VACILLATION
VACCINE
VALOR
VENERATE
VERTEBRATE
VERVE
VIABLE
VIE
VILIFY
VINTAGE
VIRTUOSO
VIRULENT
VORACIOUS
VOTARY
WANDERLUST
WHET
WRETCHED
WRY
XENOPHOBIA
XYLEM
YACHT
ZEAL
ZEALOT
ZOOLOGY
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cut off; shortened
noisy, disorderly activity; emotional agitation
a cold, treeless, lowland northern area
state of violent agitation
sharing the same opinion; in full agreement
to move in waves or w/a wavy motion
messy; disheveled; w/uncared for appearance
inconspicuous; not obvious
fluctuation; wavering
substance that stimulated cells in immune system
courage; bravery
to revere
any of a group of animals w/a backbone
energy; liveliness
capable of maintaining life
to strive; compete; contend
to slander
classic; outstanding; odd
highly skilled artist
extremely poisonous; harmful; deleterious
ravenous; very hungry
a person/thing devoted to something
strong impulse to travel
to sharpen; to stimulate
miserable; very unhappy or unfortunate
sardonic; dryly humorous; ironic; cynical
fear or hatred of strangers or foreigners
plant tissue that carries water from roots to leaves
pleasure boat, often for racing
enthusiasm
fanatic; person who shows excessive zeal
branch of biology that deals w/animals
Sonnet 73
That time of year thou mayst in me behold
When yellow leaves, or none, or few, do hang
Upon those boughs which shake against the cold,
Bare ruin’d choirs, where late the sweet birds sang.
In me thou see’st the twilight of such day
As after sunset fadeth in the west,
Which by and by, black night doth take away,
Death’s second self, that seals up all in rest.
In me thou see’st the glowing of such fire
That on the ashes of his youth doth lie,
As the deathbed whereon it must expire,
Consumed with that which it was nourished by.
This thou perceivest, which makes thy love more strong,
To love that well which thou must leave ere long.
-
William Shakespeare (1564 – 1616)
Ozymandias
I met a traveler from an antique land
Who said: Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert… Near them, on the sand,
Half sunk, a shattered visage lies, whose frown,
And wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command,
Tell that its sculptor well those passions read
Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things,
The hand that mocked them and the heart that fed:
And on the pedestal these words appear:
“My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!”
Nothing besides remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare
The lone and level sands stretch far away.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
I, Too
I, too, sing America.
I am the darker brother
They send me to eat in the kitchen
When company comes,
But I laugh,
And eat well,
And grow strong.
Tomorrow,
I’ll be at the table
When company comes.
Nobody’ll dare
Say to me,
“Eat in the kitchen,”
Then.
Besides,
They’ll see how beautiful I am
And be ashamedI, too, am America
Langston Hughes
How Do I Love Thee?
How do I love thee? Let me count the ways.
I love thee to the depth and breadth and height
My soul can reach, when feeling out of sight
For the ends of Being and ideal Grace.
I love thee to the level of everyday’s
Most quiet need, by sun and candlelight.
I love thee freely, as men strive for Right;
I love thee purely, as they turn from Praise.
I love thee with the passion put to use
In my old griefs, and with my childhood’s faith.
I love thee with a love I seemed to lose
With my lost saints – I love thee with the breath,
Smiles, tears, of all my life! – and, if God choose,
I shall but love thee better after death.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1806-1861)
To Helen
Helen, thy beauty is to me
Like those Nicean barks of yore,
That gently, o'er a perfumed sea,
The weary, wayworn wanderer bore
To his own native shore.
On desperate seas long wont to roam,
Thy hyacinth hair, thy classic face,
Thy Naiad airs have brought me home
To the glory that was Greece
And the grandeur that was Rome.
Lo! in yon brilliant window-niche
How statue-like I see thee stand,
The agate lamp within thy hand!
Ah, Psyche, from the regions which
Are Holy Land!
E.A Poe
Frequently Misspelled Words
A lot
Extraordinary
Omission
Truly
Accessory
Extreme
Original
Twelfth
Accommodate
Fascinate
Outrageous
Unfortunately
Address
Fluorescent
Parliament
Until
Aggression
Friend
Perceive
Vegetarian
Alcohol
Gauge
Possess
Vehicle
Allege
Grateful
Potato
Vicious
Amend
Guarantee
Practice
Weird
Apologize
Harass
Presence
Withhold
Apparent
Humorous
Privilege
Argument
Immediate
Questionnaire
Average
Independent
Really
Beautiful
Itinerary
Receive
Belief
Liaise
Recommend
Burglar
Maintenance
Restaurant
Business
Maneuver
Rhythm
Cemetery
Millennium
Secretary
Changeable
Miniature
Seize
Committee
Miniscule
Separate
Consensus
Mischievous
Similar
Controversy
Misspell
Success
Deceive
Naïve
Sufficient
Definite
Necessary
Suppress
Desperate
Negligible
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Disappoint
Niece
Threshold
Eighth
Occasion
Tomato
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Tomorrow
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