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A Gathering of Days: Chapters 9–11

This novel, written in the form of a journal, details the life of a New England girl in the 1830s.

Here are links to our lists for the novel: Chapters 1–3, Chapters 4–8, Chapters 9–11, Chapters 12–14, Chapters 15–18
30 words 11 learners

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Full list of words from this list:

  1. consternation
    sudden shock or dismay that causes confusion
    There is consternation here lest the warmer weather bring an early end to the sap.
  2. spry
    moving quickly and lightly
    The aging grandad sinks so low the family thinks him gone. Then is the oldster up and about, spry and bright as you please.
  3. quirky
    strikingly unconventional
    As feared, the sugaring was halted early by the quirky weather.
  4. frigate
    a medium-sized warship of the 18th and 19th centuries
    As has now been learned hereabouts, pirates attacked when the ship was mid-ocean and the youth became a hero! For but for his wit, and courage too, the frigate would have been over-run and all its men taken captive.
  5. resplendent
    having great beauty
    When, resplendent, he stood before the humble man whose service he’d escaped, the stranger announced most ringingly, “I, sir, am Count Zincheroff, of St. Petersburg.”
  6. pare
    remove the edges from and cut down to the desired size
    Yesterday, on conceiving the trick, I pared down a firm white turnip to resemble the end of a candle.
  7. refractory
    stubbornly resistant to authority or control
    Now indeed did he lose his temper, calling on spirits of every sort, and cursing the damp of a Spring-time morning which made the wick—or so he thought—so stubborn and refractory to the flint’s persuasion.
  8. severity
    excessive sternness
    “The best prank ever,” he then pronounced and added with mock severity, “But next time thrashing awaits such sisters as make the father the fool!”
  9. homespun
    made of cloth woven in one's household
    I suppose Cassie’s mother will say of the cloth, “Remember, Charles, that blue shows soil and would not homespun do?”
  10. vexed
    troubled persistently especially with petty annoyances
    “What promise, Cath?” he asked me, vexed. “I swear you’re making no sense at all. Come now, you can do it.”
  11. predecessor
    one who goes before you in time
    He copied it down and hurried off, the paper shoved firmly into a pocket, which threatened to reduce it to shreds, as its predecessor.
  12. vault
    jump across or leap over, as an obstacle
    Then he vaulted the wall at the property line, and struck out through the meadow, and by that means, to home.
  13. abecedarian
    a novice learning the rudiments of some subject
    We all did nicely with the spelling matches, saying of pieces, and recitations—even the abcedarians left naught to be ashamed of and made many a parent proud.
  14. preside
    act as executive officer
    Over all of this our teacher presidedpresided with a flourish I might say, as if he were determined to show that one might challenge his politics but never fault his teaching.
  15. dappled
    having spots or patches of color
    Asa proposed we cross through the woods. How different it looked—all dappled and warm—than it had done that Winter’s day when Cassie and I came bearing our quilt to do an act of charity (or folly) for fugitive (or villain).
  16. palate
    the surface of the mouth separating oral and nasal cavities
    Also, cut and packed in blocks, is maple sugar—the work of hours—to sweeten city palates.
  17. contraption
    a small mechanical device or tool
    These things will allow him for cash, or in trade, to obtain the next season’s supplies: such foods and herbs as we can not grow, items for mending tools and the like, and parts for the larger contraptions required by the farm.
  18. obscure
    make unclear or less visible
    However, the darkness obscur'd his form even before the curving road took him from our sight.
  19. quaint
    strange in an interesting or pleasing way
    I always find it quaint to see how shirts and trousers rise to the surface, the former waving their empty sleeves, and presently seeming to vanish beneath the sudsy, steaming waves.
  20. wearisome
    so lacking in interest as to cause mental fatigue
    The week is wearisome and long. The house, without Father, is empty and still and Matty shadows my every step as an infant will.
  21. magpie
    an obnoxious and foolish and loquacious talker
    I and Matty had much to say, whereat he called us “Magpies, both!” and claimed to have the best news of all would we but let him tell it.
  22. beholden
    under a moral obligation to someone
    Her labour being exchanged for the lodging she hadn’t felt beholden to him; and there she had stayed these twelve, thirteen, years; and there she had met my father.
  23. ware
    commodities offered for sale
    Then he explained that when first on the road he sold his wares as cheap as he might so to increase his trade. But customers told of his prices believed he carried tawdry stuff.
  24. tawdry
    cheap and shoddy
    Then he explained that when first on the road he sold his wares as cheap as he might so to increase his trade. But customers told of his prices believed he carried tawdry stuff.
  25. candor
    the quality of being honest and straightforward
    Such a curious fellow, and likeable in his candor. I hope when he comes by again he’ll not neglect to call.
  26. indisposed
    somewhat ill or prone to illness
    Cassie, known to be delicate, is this week indisposed.
  27. abound
    exist in large quantities
    Yesterday’s letter abounded with questions which Father read aloud.
  28. enjoin
    give instructions to or direct somebody to do something
    Even Cassie who is my friend is wont to take her side! “After all, Catherine,” she enjoins. “It must be ever so different for her, living in Boston till now.”
  29. fare
    the food and drink regularly served or consumed
    “We thought you might be tired a bit, from the exhaustion of the journey—and here, you see, we’ve brought you some pudding—’tis simple fare, but we’re farmers here, but my sister, who is from Salem, enjoys it when she’s here.”
  30. scorn
    look down on with disdain
    Yet she, on this occasion of meeting, was awkward and out of grace. Perhaps she feared the Boston woman would scorn her country ways.
Created on Tue Aug 24 17:31:56 EDT 2021 (updated Tue Aug 31 16:21:19 EDT 2021)

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