Thursday, April 2, 2015

Book Test and Reminders...

Book Test:

Select a chapter from your book that you believe best exemplifies one of the main themes in the book.  A theme should be more than just, "Love;" it should be something that describes some aspect of love.  Use many, many contextualized quotes from that chapter to prove that your theme exists in the book.

Essays due at the end of class.

If you finish early, draft, revise, or chat with me about ongoing projects.


New vocab below, and vocab Tests on  April 9, 16, 23.

Next Reading Book Test?

Final Project work begins on  April 7.

Prob/Sol essay due April 16.

Last day to submit work for grading April 23.

Portfolio Meetings

April 30


May 5


May  7



rescind
v.
to repeal or annul
sagacious
adj.
having a sharp or powerful intellect or discernment. (n: sagacity).
sanguine
adj.
cheerful; confident: "Her sanguine attitude put everyone at ease."(Sangfroid (noun) is a related French word meaning unflappibility. Literally, it means cold blood)
sate
v.
to satisfy fully or to excess
saturnine
adj.
having a gloomy or morose temperament
savant
n.
a very knowledgable person; a genious
sedulous
adj.
diligent; persevering; persistent: "Her sedulous devotion to overcoming her background impressed many." (n: sedulity; sedulousness; adv. sedulously)
specious
adj.
seemingly true but really false; deceptively convincing or attractive: "Her argument, though specious, was readily accepted by many."
superficial
adj.
only covering the surface: "A superficial treatment of the topic was all they wanted."
tacit
adj.
unspoken: "Katie and carmella had a tacit agreement that they would not mention the dented fender to their parents."
taciturn
adj.
habitually untalkative or silent (n: taciturnity)
temperate
adj.
exercising moderation and self-denial; calm or mild (n: temperance)
tirade (diatribe)
n.
an angry speech: "His tirade had gone on long enough."
tortuous
adj.
twisted; excessively complicated: "Despite public complaints, tax laws and forms have become increasingly tortuous." Note: Don't confuse this with torturous.
tractable
adj.
ability to be easily managed or controlled: "Her mother wished she were more tractable." (n: tractibility)
turpitude
n.
depravity; baseness: "Mr. Castor was fired for moral turpitude."
tyro
n.
beginner; person lacking experience in a specific endeavor: "They easily took advantage of the tyro."
vacuous
adj.
empty; without contents; without ideas or intelligence:: "She flashed a vacuous smile."
venerate
v.
great respect or reverence: "The Chinese traditionally venerated their ancestors; ancestor worship is merely a popular misnomer for this tradition." (n: veneration, adj: venerable)
verbose
adj.
wordy: "The instructor asked her verbose student make her paper more concise." (n: verbosity)
vex
v.
to annoy; to bother; to perplex; to puzzle; to debate at length: "Franklin vexed his brother with his controversial writings."
viscous
adj.
slow moving; highly resistant to flow: "Heintz commercials imply that their catsup is more viscous than others'." (n: viscosity)
volatile
adj.
explosive; fickle (n: volatility).
voracious
adj.
craving or devouring large quantities of food, drink, or other things. She is a voracious reader.
waver
v.
to hesitate or to tremble
wretched
adj.
extremely pitiful or unfortunate (n: wretch)
zeal
n.
enthusiastic devotion to a cause, ideal, or goal (n: zealot; zealoutry. adj: zealous)

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