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Aristotle and Dante Dive into the Waters of the World: List 3

In this second book of the series, high school seniors Aristotle Mendoza and Dante Quintana struggle to find places and ways for them to safely figure out what love means to them.

This list covers "The World, the Universe, and Aristotle and Dante."

Here are links to our lists for the novel: List 1, List 2, List 3, List 4
35 words 20 learners

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Full list of words from this list:

  1. constitute
    compose or represent
    But what we do with the time in between the day we are born and the day we die, that is what constitutes a human life.
  2. gaunt
    very thin, especially from disease or hunger or cold
    And he spit into my face and then I was standing next to you again and I was afraid because you were afraid and when I turned to look at you, you were gaunt and I knew you were dying and I also knew you were dying from AIDS.
  3. saute
    fry briefly over high heat
    She said she was just the kind of mean mother who served her children liver on special occasions because she knew her children hated it. She didn’t believe in happy children. So she’d serve them all a plate of liver and sautéed onions and when they’d all finally managed to get it all down, she was back up, standing in front of their empty plates, asking, ‘More liver?’
  4. inferior
    of low quality
    “She doesn’t hate us. She just thinks we’re inferior.”
  5. imposter
    a person who makes deceitful pretenses
    “Lovely couple? Every time someone says something like that, I feel like a total fraud. I feel like an impostor.”
  6. transcend
    go beyond the scope or limits of
    But my want was beyond desire. Because what I felt transcended my own body.
  7. chronic
    habitual
    One of them said that they were happy for my mother because I was such a good kid, not like my brother, who had a severe and chronic allergy to goodness.
  8. notion
    an odd or fanciful or capricious idea
    That is an unfair and unjust accusation. I have no idea where you got the notion that you were entitled to attack your teachers with such venomous slanders.
  9. derogatory
    expressive of low opinion
    “I was being friendly, and I don’t know why you think what I said is in any way derogatory.”
  10. rosary
    a series of prayers counted using a string of beads
    Mrs. Livermore was pulling on her pearl necklace and fingered each pearl as if she were praying a rosary.
  11. punitive
    inflicting punishment
    The just thing to do would be to suspend these students. I am not a punitive person, and I will not insist that they not be allowed to graduate.
  12. slander
    words falsely spoken that damage the reputation of another
    “There. See for yourself how they give themselves the freedom to say whatever they feel like saying. They have no understanding of the consequences of their actions. These three barbarians apparently have no respect for my position as a teacher, and I will never accept what this”—she pointed at Susie—“this person, this, this—I will never accept her slanders. Tell him, tell him what you said to me.”
  13. repentant
    feeling or expressing remorse for misdeeds
    Susie wasn’t the least bit repentant.
  14. ersatz
    artificial and inferior
    “I’ve had enough. I leave these ersatz human beings to you, Mr. Robertson. I don’t care what you do with them so long as you do not return them to my classroom.”
  15. elaborate
    marked by complexity and richness of detail
    They had the best costumes by far. Nobody came even close. Certainly, they were the most elaborate.
  16. mayhem
    violent and needless disturbance
    “Make sure the students read the next chapter in the textbook, and if there is mayhem in the class when I return, I’m going to hold you responsible.”
  17. paragon
    model of excellence or perfection of a kind
    After they’d left for their little visit with Mr. Robertson, Sheila looked at me and said, “Go, go. Go and sit at the teacher’s desk, you paragon of responsibility.”
  18. straggler
    someone who strays or falls behind
    The stragglers were filing into the classroom just as the bell rang.
  19. mesmerize
    attract strongly, as if with a magnet
    I was staring at the painting Emma had given us. It was a strange and mesmerizing painting.
  20. liberal arts
    studies that provide general knowledge and skills
    It’s a small liberal arts college in Oberlin, Ohio.
  21. implicated
    culpably involved
    You know, Ari, racism is something that’s almost impossible to talk about. And so most of us don’t talk about it. I think that we somehow know that we’re all implicated. Racism is a finger that points at all of us, and every few years, there’s an explosion—and we all talk about it for a little while.
  22. coddle
    treat with excessive indulgence
    Go and run into the arms of one of your pretty girlfriends and let them coddle you.
  23. misogynist
    a misanthrope who dislikes women in particular
    Most misogynists are married to women. They think that being married to a woman means they’re not misogynists. Wrong. Think about all those women marching for the right to get the vote. Where were their husbands? They were fighting against the rights of women wanting to get the vote. Misogynists, all of them.
  24. coroner
    an official who investigates death not due to natural causes
    I don’t remember the coroner arriving and pronouncing my father dead.
  25. dote
    shower with love; show excessive affection for
    Dante took Sophocles in his arms and we both kind of doted on him.
  26. quintessential
    representing the perfect example of a class or quality
    “Mom, you are the quintessential schoolteacher.”
  27. eulogy
    a formal expression of praise for someone who has died
    “Will you honor your father by giving his eulogy?”
  28. sheer
    complete and without restriction
    I think we both wanted to start crying again—but we refused to do it out of sheer stubbornness.
  29. sporadically
    in an irregular or unpredictable manner
    Oh, your father kept a journal sporadically. I have the others put away. Sometimes he wrote in it every day. Sometimes he’d go weeks without writing in it.
  30. cliche
    a trite or obvious remark
    And each one of them just hugged me and they didn’t say stupid things like Don't cry or Be a man and they didn’t utter clichés like He's in a better place.
  31. impediment
    something immaterial that interferes with action or progress
    But will I ever be a real American? That’s the question. It used to be my last name that was an impediment.
  32. enfranchise
    grant freedom to, as from slavery or servitude
    But now I think it’s the fact that I’m gay that’s the real impediment to being a fully enfranchised American citizen.
  33. invoke
    request earnestly; ask for aid or protection
    I think there are people all over this nation who are invoking Scotty’s name.
  34. pulpit
    a platform raised to give prominence to the person on it
    I rose from the pew and made my way to the pulpit.
  35. fickle
    liable to sudden unpredictable change
    Happiness. Sorrow. Emotions were fickle things. Sadness, joy, anger, love.
Created on Fri Oct 21 13:45:53 EDT 2022 (updated Wed Aug 30 10:59:50 EDT 2023)

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