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Unit 1: Selection Vocabulary 1

This list covers Hatchet and Guts: The True Stories Behind Hatchet and the Brian Books.
10 words 276 learners

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Full list of words from this list:

  1. extensive
    large in spatial extent or range or scope or quantity
    When a plane went down they mounted extensive searches and almost always they found the plane within a day or two.
  2. amphibious
    operating or living on land and in water
    Probably come in here with amphibious planes, small bushplanes with floats that could land right here on the lake and pick him up and take him home.
  3. obvious
    easily perceived by the senses or grasped by the mind
    There was nothing obvious to eat and aside from about a million birds and the beaver he hadn’t seen animals to trap and cook, and even if he got one somehow he didn’t have any matches so he couldn’t have a fire...
  4. motivated
    strongly driven to succeed or achieve something
    All Perpich would say is that I have to get motivated. He was always telling kids to get motivated.
  5. asset
    a useful or valuable quality
    Perpich used to drum that into them—"You are your most valuable asset. Don’t forget that. You are the best thing you have.”
  6. catastrophic
    extremely harmful; bringing physical or financial ruin
    Perhaps the single most catastrophic event in Brian’s life in Hatchet is when the pilot dies of a heart attack.
  7. confluence
    a place where things merge or flow together
    My wife and I lived then in a small prairie town in the middle of farm country, near the confluence of two major highways.
  8. sheepishly
    in a manner showing embarrassment or shame
    He looked at me and smiled sheepishly, as if to apologize for the inconvenience, and started to say something but then stopped and looked again at the floor in what soldiers call the thousand-yard stare.
  9. inconvenience
    an unwanted discomfort
    He looked at me and smiled sheepishly, as if to apologize for the inconvenience, and started to say something but then stopped and looked again at the floor in what soldiers call the thousand-yard stare.
  10. expression
    the feelings shown on a person's face
    His wife, a thin woman in jeans and a sweatshirt, stood by him, and she gave me what we called the Look—an expression that meant Thank God you’re here please save him please save him please save him.
Created on Thu Apr 22 16:11:16 EDT 2021 (updated Wed Apr 28 14:34:26 EDT 2021)

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