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
1.
2.
You will be able to:
Match word to definition
Use the word in a sentence
 Binder
with Paper
 Remember to use Cornell Note-taking
method.
 Write
down the words and definitions in
your notebooks.
 Word in column in left and definition in
column on right.
 Write down word used in a phrase or
sentence.
 Write down roots.
SANCT
 Latin SANCTUS, "holy"
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n. A place of protection
Because hunting was prohibited on the five-mile
stretch of land, the forest became a sanctuary for all
kinds of threatened wildlife.
syn: refuge
http://youtu.be/KZ4kMdy-MKM
Church Sanctuary: A sacred place, such as a church,
in which fugitives formerly were immune to arrest
(recognized by English law from the fourth to the
seventeenth century).*
*http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanctuary

n. A private place
 To
be invited into the holy man's sanctum
was considered the highest honor among
his disciples.
 V. To
make holy
 The
fifth of every month was sanctified
as a day of remembrance and
meditation.
 syn: bless
 n. Something
that forces obedience with
a law or rule
 The
National Association of Methodist
Priests imposed sanctions upon
Duttonville United Church when the
pastor refused to follow official policy.
 DEI
 Latin
DEUS, "god"
 n. A
 The
god; a divine being
priests warned that using the name
of the deity lightly might bring disaster
on the community.
 v.
To make into a god; to treat like a god
 History
has shown that while we should
not condemn the President, neither
should we deify him.
 THE
 Greek
THEOS, "god"
 N. a
group of gods; a group of people so
accomplished in a skill or field that they
seem like gods
• G. pan, "all," + theos = all gods
 The
new book on dance has an extensive
section about the whole pantheon of
French ballet greats.
The Pantheon ( /ˈpænθiːən/ or US /ˈpænθiːɒn/;[1] Latin: Pantheon,[nb 1] from Greek: Πάνθειον, an adjective meaning "to every god") is a building in Rome, Italy, commissioned
by Marcus Agrippa as a temple to all the gods of Ancient Rome, and rebuilt by Emperor Hadrian in about 126 AD.[2] The nearly-contemporary writer (2nd–3rd centuries
AD), Cassius Dio, speculated that the name comes either from the statues of so many gods placed around this building, or else from the resemblance of the dome to the
heavens.[3]

adj. Having several gods or deities
• G. poly, "many," + theos = many gods
 Some
of the greatest artworks of the
fundamentally polytheistic culture show
the various gods feasting together.

n. Worship of or belief in only one god
• G. monos, "one,'I + theos, "gods,' = onegod
 Judaism, Islam, and
Christianity are all
based upon monotheism because they
have a single, all-powerful deity at their
centers.
 CAST,
CHAST
 Latin CASTUS, "pure"
 v. To
criticize; to condemn
 Sports
fans around the world castigated
the batter for his involvement in the
scandal.
 adj. Made
less proud; humbled
 Chastened
by the failure of the plan
she had spent months developing,
Kathy took some time off to rethink her
strategy.
 http://youtu.be/x3dXCL34aEA
 v. To
 No
punish verbally; to scold
matter how many times I chastised
Dominic for leaving his shoes in the
kitchen, he could not seem to break the
habit.
 3X
EACH + DEFINITIONS AND
ORIGINAL SENTENCES
• OR
 FLASHCARDS WITH
SENTENCES
ORIGINAL
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Castigate
Chastened
Chastise
Deify
Deity
Monotheism
7.
8.
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10.
11.
12.
pantheon
Polytheistic
sanctify
Sanctions
Sanctuary
sanctum
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