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Unit 4: Vocabulary from Readings

This list covers "Shakespeare dumbed down in comic strips for bored pupils," "Shakespeare’s Life," "Reading Shakespeare’s Language," and "The Millionaire Miser."
12 words 49 learners

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Full list of words from this list:

  1. emerge
    happen or occur as a result of something
    Shakespeare’s plays are being rewritten as comic strips for pupils who find his poetry boring, it emerged today.
  2. bard
    a lyric poet
    The publishers hope the comics—illustrated by artists who have worked on the Spiderman series—will inspire disaffected readers with a love of the Bard’s plays.
  3. eventually
    after an unspecified period of time or a long delay
    The firm hopes eventually to publish comic strip versions of all Shakespeare’s plays.
  4. genius
    someone who has exceptional intellectual ability
    “The genius of Shakespeare is in the language, but for some students understanding it can be a struggle. It will be useful for teachers to have three different versions of the text.
  5. regulate
    bring into conformity with rules, principles, or usage
    Printing was regulated by the ecclesiastical authorities and the Stationers’ Company, although the regulations were not always enforced.
  6. copyright
    the exclusive right to sell a work
    There was no law of copyright to protect their interests. Once a manuscript play had been sold to a publisher, and he had paid for its approval and licensing for printing, he had sole rights over the work.
  7. dwelling
    housing that someone is living in
    Those which were still structurally sound were either converted into dwellings, or demolished so that their timbers could be reused elsewhere.
  8. immense
    unusually great in size or amount or extent or scope
    Most of his immense vocabulary is still in use, but a few of his words are not, and, worse, some of his words now have meanings quite different from those they had in the sixteenth century.
  9. woo
    make amorous advances towards
    In the opening scenes of the main body of the play, the setting in Italy and the story’s focus on wooing are created through repeated [local references and phrases].
  10. emphasize
    stress or single out as important
    Shakespeare frequently shifts his sentences away from “normal” English arrangements—often to create the rhythm he seeks, sometimes to use a line’s poetic rhythm to emphasize a particular word, sometimes to give a character his or her own speech patterns or to allow the character to speak in a special way.
  11. pauper
    a person who is very poor
    You will make a pauper of me!
  12. millennium
    a span of 1000 years
    Not in seventy-seven millennia have I ever seen such a miser! I will teach this fellow not to be so stingy.
Created on Tue Jan 05 12:53:54 EST 2021 (updated Thu Jan 07 10:36:58 EST 2021)

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