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Unit 5: Selection Vocabulary 2

This list covers The Glass Menagerie, A Room of One’s Own, and "The New Dress."
16 words 58 learners

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Full list of words from this list:

  1. annunciation
    a formal public statement
    Legend on the screen: “Annunciation.”
  2. emulate
    strive to equal or match, especially by imitating
    There is only one respect in which I would like you to emulate your father.
  3. sphinx
    a mysterious or enigmatic person
    TOM: You’re not a sphinx.
    AMANDA: No, I don’t have secrets.
  4. supercilious
    having or showing arrogant superiority
    AMANDA: Don’t be supercilious with your mother!
  5. homely
    lacking in physical beauty or proportion
    TOM: No, he’s not too good-looking. He’s covered with freckles and hasn’t too much of a nose.
    AMANDA: He’s not right-down homely, though?
    TOM: Not right-down homely. Just medium homely, I’d say.
  6. portiere
    a heavy curtain hung across a doorway
    Then vitality and optimism return and she turns from the door, crossing to the portieres.
  7. logic
    the branch of philosophy that analyzes inference
    Shakespeare himself went, very probably—his mother was an heiress—to the grammar school, where he may have learnt Latin—Ovid, Virgil and Horace—and the elements of grammar and logic.
  8. poach
    hunt illegally
    He was, it is well known, a wild boy who poached rabbits, perhaps shot a deer, and had, rather sooner than he should have done, to marry a woman in the neighborhood, who bore him a child rather quicker than was right.
  9. substantial
    of good quality and condition; solidly built
    They would have spoken sharply but kindly, for they were substantial people who knew the conditions of life for a woman and loved their daughter—indeed, more likely than not she was the apple of her father's eye.
  10. servile
    relating to or involving enslaved people
    For genius like Shakespeare's is not born among labouring, uneducated, servile people.
  11. asunder
    into parts or pieces
    For it needs little skill in psychology to be sure that a highly gifted girl who had tried to use her gift for poetry would have been so thwarted and hindered by other people, so tortured and pulled asunder by her own contrary instincts, that she must have lost her health and sanity to a certainty.
  12. profound
    of the greatest intensity; complete
    And at once the misery which she always tried to hide, the profound dissatisfaction—the sense she had had, ever since she was a child, of being inferior to other people—set upon her, relentlessly, remorselessly, with an intensity which she could not beat off...
  13. sordid
    foul and run-down and repulsive
    And at once the whole of the room where, for ever so many hours, she had planned with the little dressmaker how it was to go, seemed sordid, repulsive...
  14. chastise
    scold or criticize severely
    ...oh, it was foolish—trying to be like them, pluming herself in fact, upon being modest and old-fashioned, and very charming, giving herself up, no doubt about it, to an orgy of self-love, which deserved to be chastised, and so rigged herself out like this.
  15. veneer
    an outward appearance that is deliberately misleading
    He had no heart, no fundamental kindness, only a veneer of friendliness. Miss Milan was much more real, much kinder.
  16. endure
    put up with something or somebody unpleasant
    But that was deplorable! That was not to be endured! That made her feel ashamed of herself!
Created on Tue Dec 15 11:41:19 EST 2020 (updated Tue Feb 02 10:51:13 EST 2021)

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