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Unit 9: Vocabulary from Readings 4

This list covers "The Train from Rhodesia" and "No Witchcraft for Sale."
17 words 5 learners

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Full list of words from this list:

  1. elongate
    having notably more length than width
    More lions, standing erect, grappling with strange, thin, elongated warriors who clutched spears and showed no fear in their slits of eyes.
  2. valance
    a decorative framework at the top of a window casing
    Her eye followed the funny little valance of scrolled wood that outlined the chalet roof of the station; she thought of the lion and smiled.
  3. segment
    divide into sections
    There was a shout. The flag drooped out. Joints not yet coordinated, the segmented body of the train heaved and bumped back against itself.
  4. splay
    widen or spread apart
    Here, one-and-six baas!—As one automatically opens a hand to catch a thrown ball, a man fumbled wildly down his pocket, brought up the shilling and sixpence and threw them out; the old native, gasping, his skinny toes splaying the sand, flung the lion.
  5. wry
    bent to one side
    Her face was drawn up, wryly, like the face of a discomforted child.
  6. impotence
    the quality of lacking strength or power
    If you wanted the thing, she said, her voice rising and breaking with the shrill impotence of anger, why didn’t you buy it in the first place?
  7. atrophy
    undergo weakening or degeneration as through lack of use
    A weariness, a tastelessness, the discovery of a void made her hands slacken their grip, atrophy emptily, as if the hour was not worth their grasp.
  8. reverent
    feeling or showing profound respect or veneration
    Later, when Teddy had his first haircut, Gideon the cook picked up the soft gold tufts from the ground, and held them reverently in his hand.
  9. reproachful
    expressing disapproval, blame, or disappointment
    “Why did you frighten him?” asked Gideon, gravely reproachful.
  10. inevitable
    incapable of being avoided or prevented
    He seemed to be putting a distance between himself and Teddy, not because of resentment, but in the way a person accepts something inevitable.
  11. efficacy
    capacity or power to produce a desired result
    She had scarcely heard Gideon’s words; but when she saw that her remedies had no effect at all, and remembered how she had seen natives with no sight in their eyes, because of the spitting of a snake, she began to look for the return of her cook, remembering what she heard of the efficacy of native herbs.
  12. exasperation
    a feeling of annoyance
    And, as always, with a certain amount of exasperation, because while all of them knew that in the bush of Africa are waiting valuable drugs locked in bark, in simple-looking leaves, in roots, it was impossible to ever get the truth about them from the natives themselves.
  13. perfunctory
    hasty and without attention to detail; not thorough
    He was perhaps a trifle perfunctory: It was not the first time he had come salting the tail of a fabulous bush secret.
  14. incredulously
    in a disbelieving manner
    He spoke incredulously, as if he could not believe his old friends could so betray him.
  15. annul
    cancel officially
    They were beginning to feel annoyed; and this feeling annulled the guilt that had been sprung into life by Gideon’s accusing manner.
  16. perverse
    marked by a disposition to oppose and contradict
    The Farquars could hardly recognize their gentle, lovable old servant in this ignorant, perversely obstinate African, standing there in front of them with lowered eyes, his hands twitching his cook’s apron, repeating over and over whichever one of the stupid refusals that first entered his head.
  17. eminent
    standing above others in quality or position
    Throwing the flowers casually into the back of his car, the eminent visitor departed on his way back to his laboratory.
Created on Tue Mar 09 10:38:42 EST 2021 (updated Tue Mar 16 14:29:24 EDT 2021)

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