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The Trouble with Tuck: Chapters 11–17

Here are links to our lists for the novel: Chapters 1–3, Chapters 4–10, Chapters 11–17
35 words 8 learners

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Full list of words from this list:

  1. lope
    run easily
    Tuck started off as he did on any other morning, loping down the driveway, but less than ten seconds had passed when Mother heard the sickening screech of car brakes and a muffled yelp.
  2. matted
    tangled in a dense mass
    Blood was oozing from it, and the yellow hair was already matted.
  3. suture
    a seam used in surgery
    Finally the doctor did come out, saying, “He’s bruised mostly, and I had to do some stitchwork. He now has a crown of sutures.”
  4. groggy
    stunned or confused and slow to react
    “Sure, he’ll live. You can pick him up tomorrow. I put him under, of course. He’ll be groggy for the rest of the day. I want to watch him for a while.”
  5. tender
    hurting
    He was still very sore and tender.
  6. curlicue
    a round shape formed by a series of concentric circles
    On Sunday morning he apparently felt well enough to jump the fence and take his usual prowl of the neighborhood, even with the black curlicue stitch ends still crowning his stubborn head.
  7. amble
    walk leisurely
    I found him, all right, ambling without concern along Wickenham, as if cars had never been invented, as if he didn’t have an ugly scar on his half-bald head.
  8. frayed
    worn away or tattered along the edges
    Only a few frayed feet remained on his collar. He’d chewed through it.
  9. confine
    to close within bounds, limit or hold back from movement
    Tuck would now have to spend most of the day locked up in the house, to which he’d never been confined.
  10. vigorously
    in an energetic manner
    That day his tail wagged vigorously all right but I knew something was wrong the moment the door swung open.
  11. shackle
    restrain with or as if with fetters
    The rope had been bad enough, but now to have Tuck shackled to steel was almost more than I could bear, or watch, despite all the problems.
  12. corral
    a pen for cattle
    He went to the chain’s full length and pulled against it, as if he were pulling a sled. Or he’d turn the other way, rearing on his hind legs the way a wild stallion fights a rope in a corral.
  13. stricken
    affected by something overwhelming
    Stricken with grief, I ran from the room.
  14. valiantly
    with heroic courage or bravery
    He fought the chain valiantly, even wearing all the grass away.
  15. subdue
    hold within limits and control
    But, at last, we have subdued him, and none of us is proud.
  16. bureau
    furniture with drawers for keeping clothes
    I had a dollar and forty cents in my top bureau drawer and stuffed that into my pocket.
  17. waver
    pause or hold back in uncertainty or unwillingness
    I took one look back at 911 West Cheltenham, wavered a moment, and pressed on.
  18. din
    a loud, harsh, or strident noise
    He knew that a canine intruder was on his front porch, and he set up a din in the backyard, straining at the very end of his chain.
  19. sedate
    dignified and somber in manner or character
    My mother said, “That’s the most sedate, serene dog I’ve ever seen in my entire life.”
  20. resent
    feel bitter or indignant about
    When I returned to the living room, my mother was saying, “I’m worried that Tuck might resent her. Plain jealousy. Listen to him now.”
  21. neutral
    not supporting or favoring either side in a dispute
    By bedtime, when Mother came into my room, Tuck was in his usual place on the rug beside me, and Daisy had taken up a neutral position in the middle of the floor.
  22. petty
    preoccupied with unimportant matters in a spiteful way
    Whether he understood or not, he began to display almost every bad trait there is. Selfishness, jealousy, anger, pettiness.
  23. ample
    fairly large
    I then led Daisy up to his side, positioning her so that his big ears were about opposite her ample rump.
  24. passive
    peacefully resistant in response to injustice
    Daisy had been trained to resist attack by remaining completely passive, and she stood quietly with her front paws on the steps, looking away from him as if to say, I will not allow you to upset me.
  25. flank
    the side between ribs and hipbone
    I remember I was holding Daisy’s collar in my left hand and Tuck’s in my right, positioning myself on Daisy’s right flank, to walk them around the lot, which had some gravel scattered here and there.
  26. promptly
    at once (usually modifies an undesirable occurrence)
    Maybe if she towed him along, he’d get the idea of what it was all about. But when I attempted to lead her away, Tuck promptly backed up and sat down, donkey-style.
  27. remorse
    a feeling of deep regret, usually for some misdeed
    Yet I hadn’t hit Tuck for years, for anything, and here I was, feeling terrible remorse. Kneeling down, I said, “I’m sorry, Tuck. I didn’t mean to do that.”
  28. defeatist
    someone who is resigned to an unsuccessful ending
    By now, however, I wouldn’t discuss with anyone anything I was going to try. They were all defeatists, except Mr. Ishihara.
  29. casual
    without or seeming to be without plan or method; offhand
    I went into Luke’s room to ask casually, “Don’t you have a book on elephants?”
  30. pry
    be nosey
    To keep prying, snoopy eyes out of my dog business, I went to the very end of the park, over where Wickenham takes the long curve toward Wilshire.
  31. pungent
    strong and sharp to the sense of taste or smell
    He was in the back storage room, which always had a dozen good pungent smells wafting around it.
  32. dainty
    affectedly refined
    “He likes to sleep on my dirty shirts. I think he likes to smell me.”
    My own dainty Rachel had never done that, to my knowledge.
  33. giddy
    exultantly proud and joyful; in high spirits
    Running over, I hugged them both and gave them their due biscuit rewards. I felt giddy, like telling the whole world, but I said to them, “We’ll not tell a soul until we’re ready.”
  34. convenient
    suited to your comfort or purpose or needs
    He now seemed content to trot along with her, his left ear rubbing conveniently against her flank, listening to her bell as if it were a symphony.
  35. rivet
    direct one's attention on something
    Those sightless eyes were riveted on me, and I think he understood.
Created on Thu Sep 02 14:34:01 EDT 2021 (updated Fri Sep 03 13:20:36 EDT 2021)

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