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When I Was Puerto Rican: List 4

In this memoir, Santiago details her childhood in Puerto Rico and her family's emigration to the United States.

This list covers "El Mangle"–"Casi Señorita."

Here are links to our lists for the memoir: List 1, List 2, List 3, List 4, List 5
40 words 12 learners

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Full list of words from this list:

  1. flourish
    a showy gesture
    She finished the equation with a great flourish of taps and scratches on the blackboard and looked at me, a triumphant look on her face.
  2. cartographer
    a person who makes maps
    When he lived with us, Papi sometimes helped me with homework, and when he saw how good I was with maps, he said I would grow up to be a cartographer.
  3. incandescent
    emitting light as a result of being heated
    I sat down to write the stupid composition using her ten stupid words. I would use all of them, just because she thought I couldn’t. Incandescent and Caramelize must go together somehow.
  4. leer
    look suggestively or obliquely
    I walked to and from school alone, unable to befriend the sassy girls with budding figures or the boys who leaned against fences and lampposts to hiss and leer.
  5. din
    a loud, harsh, or strident noise
    Over the din, we heard men laughing, yelling obscenities.
  6. fetid
    offensively malodorous
    Mornings, on our way to school, we hopped over curdled puddles of vomit and fetid urine stains on the dirt.
  7. gangly
    tall, thin, and awkward
    She scooped Raymond onto her lap, with effort because he was already five years old, tall and gangly.
  8. charlatan
    a flamboyant deceiver
    “I’ll find a specialist...someone who knows what he’s doing...not like those charlatans in white coats that call themselves doctors.”
  9. piquant
    having an agreeably pungent taste
    She handed me a bowl into which the pig’s guts spilled like syrup, quivering pink, blue, and yellow, warm and musky, alive, hard to imagine as solid, piquant, brown sausages.
  10. gaunt
    very thin, especially from disease or hunger or cold
    She was tall and gaunt, with huge black watery eyes and a timid manner that told me she would remain jamona the rest of her life.
  11. diminutive
    a word that is formed with a suffix to indicate smallness
    “Mamita and Papito spoil her just because she’s the youngest.” It seemed strange that Gladys should call her parents by the diminutive, which was usually reserved for small children.
  12. inhibited
    held back or restrained or prevented
    From what I could see, they lived dull, inhibited lives.
  13. fervor
    feelings of great warmth and intensity
    But they lived them with a fervor that was frightening.
  14. infallible
    incapable of failure or error
    Our family never went to church, and I worried that people who did were infallible and we were wrong in our willful resistance to religious guidance.
  15. dappled
    having spots or patches of color
    On either side of the narrow center aisle there were more refrigerated cases for ice cream and sodas, and the walls of the store were dappled with candy in shiny cellophane wrappers clipped to metal skeletons.
  16. impertinent
    improperly forward or bold
    I didn’t care if they all thought I was a spoiled, disrespectful, impertinent brat.
  17. rapture
    a state of being carried away by overwhelming emotion
    Men and women who until that day had been sedate citizens—a solemn storekeeper, the unsmiling man who delivered the mail, the stern school crossing guard, the methodical newspaper vendor—stood up in rapture, ran to the front of the room, knelt in front of Don Joaquín, grabbed for his hand, waved their arms about in jerky motions.
  18. timbre
    the distinctive property of a complex sound
    Don Joaquín’s voice rose in timbre and pitch, until he seemed to disappear and only his words remained, reverberating against the cement walls, piercing the assembled into delirious convulsions and ecstatic trances.
  19. reverberate
    ring or echo with sound
    Don Joaquín’s voice rose in timbre and pitch, until he seemed to disappear and only his words remained, reverberating against the cement walls, piercing the assembled into delirious convulsions and ecstatic trances.
  20. exuberance
    joyful enthusiasm
    I wanted to wail, to wave my arms in exuberance, to give myself up right then and there to the unexplainable force that overpowered the others in the room.
  21. relinquish
    part with a possession or right
    But my fear was too great, my conscience too precocious to allow me to relinquish control of my well-guarded soul.
  22. implication
    something that is inferred
    I held on to Papi’s hand as to a lifeline, not trusting my knocking knees to hold me up. But Don Luis’s warm smile soon melted my fear into awe at finding myself in his house, away from the unpleasant implications of a student face-to-face with the school principal.
  23. utilitarian
    having a useful function
    We shared the joy of being in this room, in the home of an artist, a person whose life was gracious and carefree, whose furnishings and decorations were as impractical as ours were utilitarian.
  24. mottled
    having spots or patches of color
    His eyes were wide, his skin mottled pink and white, his mouth invisible behind his mustache.
  25. turbulent
    agitated vigorously
    Shame rose from the ground and wrapped me in a hot, turbulent funnel that I wished would lift me out of this room, away from my school principal’s startled blue eyes and quivering, elegant fingers.
  26. brooding
    deeply or seriously thoughtful
    “He’s in Heaven, with Papa Dios,” Abuela said behind me, startling me out of the brooding sorrow that pressed against my chest.
  27. stipple
    produce a mottled effect
    I took the emptiness of Abuelo’s room inside myself, the cold, stippled walls desolate and hard.
  28. desolate
    crushed by grief
    I took the emptiness of Abuelo’s room inside myself, the cold, stippled walls desolate and hard.
  29. reverence
    a feeling of profound respect for someone or something
    He got to travel to New York, a place Mami spoke of with reverence.
  30. muster
    summon up, call forth, or bring together
    It wasn’t that when Mami was gone we misbehaved more. It was simply that I couldn’t muster her authority, couldn’t manage to keep my sisters and brother in line with her strict rules of behavior.
  31. euphemism
    an inoffensive expression substituted for an offensive one
    She lived next to her mother, my abuela, whose every other word had God in it, was sister to my father, who wrote poems, and to Tío Vidal, who recited poetry as he clipped men’s hair in his barbershop. But Titi Generosa wasn’t inclined toward elegant speech, nor toward euphemisms.
  32. farfetched
    highly imaginative but unlikely
    The other thing we liked about Titi Generosa was that even though she was a mother herself, she believed everything we told her, no matter how farfetched.
  33. ingratiate
    gain favor with somebody by deliberate efforts
    Héctor, who had a gift for talking people into doing things they weren’t sure they wanted to do, ingratiated himself with the candy store owner down the street and spent most of his day “helping” the owner and himself.
  34. affable
    diffusing warmth and friendliness
    Affable, placid Alicia whiled away her days in bed, playing with dolls in tents constructed from Mami’s sheets.
  35. impropriety
    the condition of being unsuitable or offensive
    I heard them whisper at the impropriety of my roving about unaccompanied, but I didn’t care.
  36. rove
    move about aimlessly or without any destination
    I heard them whisper at the impropriety of my roving about unaccompanied, but I didn’t care.
  37. ingenuous
    lacking in sophistication or worldliness
    The freedom I had gained from Titi Generosa’s ingenuousness was usually given only to boys, and it set me apart from any friends I might have had at the time, whose mothers were as cautious as mine.
  38. sequester
    keep away from others
    Occasionally, Angie joined us, but most of the time she remained sequestered in her pink room, listening to the music we were forbidden in the rest of the house.
  39. manifest
    reveal its presence or make an appearance
    Fingers burning, I stripped the hot skin off potatoes in silence, swallowing hurt and resentment with the same outward resignation that Gladys manifested.
  40. meekness
    a disposition to be patient and long suffering
    But although it seemed that Gladys had simply accepted her lot with meekness, I seethed, playing Titi Avena’s dirtiest words inside my head as I dropped potato after potato into the bowl where they would be mashed.
Created on Fri Jul 19 09:04:48 EDT 2019 (updated Wed Jul 24 09:58:46 EDT 2019)

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