Sunday, 17 November 2013
New vocabulary list
Set one: abate, baleful, baseless, bedecked, blighted, blunder, boon, breadth, calamity, capricious, contempt, crave, defile, desolate, despondency.
Set two: discern, enmity, enthrall inch, entreaty, esteem, exalt, extradite, foremost, forsake, fret, grievous, impetuous, implacable, impudent, infamous.
Set three: innumerable, insolence, muse, obstinate, perfidious, plausible, precipice, prostration, recluse, refuge, reproach, resolute, revere, revile, rhetoric.
Set four: soughing, palsy, rememory, quarry, waspish, paterollers, riven, flay, coffle, dote, unshriven, perfunctory, privy, incontinence, croup.
Friday, 20 September 2013
POETIC VOICES - CAN'T WAIT TO HEAR YOU ON NOVEMBER 11TH...
POETRY ASSIGNMENT: READ THE FOLLOWING ATTEMPTS TO DEFINE POETRY. CREATE A POEM OF YOUR OWN - WITHOUT ANY VOCABULARY OR SUBJECT LIMITATIONS FROM ME. IT IS WORTH TWO QUIZ GRADES. IT MUST BE MEMORIZED AND PERFORMED IN FRONT OF THE CLASS ON NOVEMBER 11TH. ENJOY!
Attempts at a Definition of Poetry by Famous Poets
"Poetry is when an emotion has found its thought and the thought has found words."
Poetry Quote by Robert Frost
American Poet (1874-1963)
"Poetry is what gets lost in translation."
Poetry Quote by Robert Frost
American Poet (1874-1963)
"A poem should not mean but be."
Poetry Quote by Archibald MacLeish
American Poet (1892-1982)
"The true philosopher and the true poet are one, and a beauty, which is truth, and a truth, which is beauty, is the aim of both."
Poetry Quote by Ralph Waldo Emerson
American Poet (1803-1882)
"Poets are masters of us ordinary men, in knowledge of the mind,
because they drink at streams which we have not yet made accessible to science."
Poetry Quote by Sigmund Freud
Everywhere I go I find that a poet has been there before me.
Poetry Quote by Sigmund Freud
"Poetry is boned with ideas, nerved and blooded with emotions, all held together by the delicate, tough skin of words."
Poetry Quote by Paul Engle
(1908-1991) University of Iowa
"To have great poets there must be great audiences too."
Poetry Quote by Walt Whitman
American Poet (1819-1892)
"Poetry is an orphan of silence.
The words never quite equal the experience behind them."
Poetry Quotes by Charles Simic
American Poet born in 1938
"One demands two things of a poem. Firstly, it must be a well-made verbal object that does honor to the language in which it is written. Secondly, it must say something significant about a reality common to us all, but perceived from a unique perspective. What the poet says has never been said before, but, once he has said it, his readers recognize its validity for themselves."
Poetry Quote by W. H. Auden
English and American Poet (1907-1973)
"Poetry lifts the veil from the hidden beauty of the world, and makes familiar objects be as if they were not familiar."
Poetry Quote by Percy Bysshe Shelley
English Poet (1792-1822)
"Poetry should be great and unobtrusive, a thing which enters into one's soul,
and does not startle it or amaze it with itself, but with its subject."
Poetry Quotes by John Keats
English Poet (1795-1821)
"Poetry ... should strike the reader as a wording of his own highest thoughts, and appear almost a remembrance."
Poetry Quote by John Keats
English Poet (1795-1821)
"No man was ever yet a great poet, without being at the same time a profound philosopher. For poetry is the blossom and the fragrancy of all human knowledge, human thoughts, human passions, emotions, language."
Poetry Quote by Samuel Taylor Coleridge
English Poet (1772-1834).
"There's no money in poetry, but then there's no poetry in money, either."
Poetry Quote by Robert Graves
English Poet (1895-1985)
"A poet who makes use of a worse word instead of a better, because the former fits the rhyme or the measure, though it weakens the sense, is like a jeweler, who cuts a diamond into a brilliant, and diminishes the weight to make it shine more."
Poetry Quote by Horace Walpole
English Poet (1717-1797)
"God is the perfect poet,
Who in his person acts his own creations."
Poetry Quote by Robert Browning
Famous English Poet (1812-1889)
"A poem is never finished, only abandoned."
Poetry Quote by Paul Valery
French Poet (1871-1945)
"He who draws noble delights from sentiments of poetry is a true poet,
though he has never written a line in all his life."
Poetry Quote by George Sand
Female French writer who used the pseudonym George Sand (1804-1876)
"Each memorable verse of a true poet has two or three times the written content."
Poetry Quote by Alfred de Musset
French Romantic Poet (1810-1857)
"Poets utter great and wise things which they do not themselves understand."
Poetry Quote by Plato
"Poetry is more philosophical and of higher value than history; for poetry tends to express the universal, history the particular."
Poetry Quote by Aristotle
"Poetry is the revelation of a feeling that the poet believes to be interior and personal which the reader recognizes as his own."
Wednesday, 18 September 2013
THEME CARD DIRECTIONS

You will need to create a theme card for each play or novel we read in class. I will assign a specific due date for each. The THEME CARD REQUIREMENTS ARE: 1. Give a brief plot synopsis of the novel or play in a short paragraph. 2. Identify the author and publication date information. 3. Discuss the significance of the title 4. List all major characters. 5. Identify five excellent quotes from the work. 6. Identify five major symbols and what they represent in the novel. 7. Identify three major literary elements that are integral to the particular work other than symbolism. Write a topic sentence for each. 8. Identify three major subjects and write a thematic statement for each.
Sunday, 15 September 2013
Tutorial for How to Write a College Essay
You are all unique and wonderful individuals. The problem most of you are having is how to communicate this. Many of the essays sound the same, and I want you to try to bring an aspect of yourself that shows what specific, unique contribution you will make to your college campus. Here is a tutorial that will remind you of the basics. The majority of you are already here, but there are some areas he covers that a few of you could work on a bit. http://youtu.be/Vf2LQFG0lZs
Tuesday, 10 September 2013
VOCABULARY QUIZ - SEPTEMBER 18TH - ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST - LIST ONE
Create your own satire on your chosen Brave New World subject. You have until the 18th of September to do this. Do this in honor of The Onion piece you enjoyed and in preparation for your research paper. You must use TEN words in your piece. They must be highlighted. Please watch the tutorial on writing a SATIRE to help you get started.
http://youtu.be/PuvjDK3mpA0
What will you satirize???
ALDOUS HUXLEY'S BRAVE NEW WORLD HAS ARRIVED. PROVE IT.
Brave New World Research Paper. The Brave New World has arrived. Prove it. Using scientific, historic, anthropological, and psychological resources - explain how the ideas and values concerning science and technology, sex, drugs, death, aging, censorship, art, religion, emotion, and consumerism that are espoused in Huxley's Brave New World mirror those in contemporary American culture. YOU MUST PICK ONE AREA OF FOCUS AND CARVE YOUR THESIS OUT OF THIS AREA. YOU MUST FOCUS YOUR RESEARCH ON THIS ONE PARTICULAR AREA. For research you must use at least three scientific resources. The rest are up to you. RESEARCH is an integral part of the research paper, and you need to do your best to come up with creative and interesting resources. You must also use two interviews and one survey in your research paper. You can create a survey in Google Drive. You will also need to incorporate at least two artifacts into your paper in addition to five quotes from Huxley's text. The paper must be a minimum of FIVE pages typed, double spaced. We will be using APA formatting unless otherwise noted. Make sure you have a solid, workable thesis ready to turn in on TUESDAY, SEPT 24TH. The tentative due date for the final paper is Wednesday, October 9th. Do not procrastinate.
READ THE FIRST SECTION FROM THE AP LANGUAGE TEXT, PAGES 154 - 176 BY FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 13TH (E-MAILED PDF)
READ: READING, WRITING, AND SYNTHESIS: THE RESEARCHED ARGUMENT ON PAGES 176 - 188 FOR TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17TH. (E-MAILED PDF)
READ 192 - 218 BY SEPTEMBER 19TH
GATHER YOUR TEN ARTIFACTS AND POST TO YOUR BLOG BY FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20TH.
THESIS IS DUE, TUESDAY - SEPTEMBER 24TH
ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY IS DUE - FRIDAY - SEPTEMBER 27TH
TENTATIVE DUE DATE FOR PAPER: OCTOBER 9TH - 5 PAGES, DOUBLE SPACED.
Saturday, 7 September 2013
A SAMPLE THESIS FOR YOUR ESSAY ON BNW
In Aldous Huxley's Brave New World , he employs soma as a symbol to reveal man's escapist tendencies. Through Linda's addiction, he underscores soma's ability to alleviate reality's horrors; in the hospital scene, the government's manipulation of drugs to control it's denizens; and in the church scene, human willingness to compromise morality for social acceptance.
Ok, so it is not perfect, but it is working. This one is based on the three by three: ESCAPISM NUMBS HUMANITY...Cody, Farah, and Sarah worked on this one. Now, they will still need a solid hook in their intro, solid transitions that link ideas as they switch from one to the next, well developed evidence with insights as they make their arguments, and a great conclusion that avoids simple restatements. Is this possible??? YES!!! If you need help developing a theme, the three by three is a solid springboard, but you can also check out the links below on theme and symbolism to help you. Remember the theme is also known as THE MEANING OF THE WORK AS A WHOLE...
WE WILL BE WRITING MONDAY!!!!
Saturday, 31 August 2013
Monday, 26 August 2013
Glogster directions: Your Glogster poster is worth one reading quiz grade. It must include the following: 1. Your completed group paragraph that synthesizes general quotes about the symbol's archetypal meaning and specific quotes that allow us to see references to the symbol in context of Brave New World. 2. Three images that visually represent your symbol. 3. A title for your poster that emphasizes a main idea about your symbol in sentence form. 4. An appropriate background that makes solid use of color for readability and clarity. 5. Solid font selection. 6. Cohesive design elements. 7. Two subtitles...one for each aspect of the symbol. One for the universal aspects and one for the textual aspects.
Saturday, 24 August 2013
Monday, 12 August 2013
SAMPLE STUDENT ESSAY
CHELSEA SNIDER
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
Florida State University College Essay
“Florida State University is more than just a world-class academic
institution preparing you for a future career. We are a caring
community of well-rounded individuals who embrace leadership, learning,
service, and global awareness. With this in mind, which of these
characteristics appeal most to you, and why?”
Honestly, service didn’t become a huge part of my life until I began
high school. From elementary to middle school, I was always too shy or
too scared of the strangers met while volunteering to care about the
impact of the work done or who it benefitted. In fact, it wasn’t until
my junior year of high school, through a unique opportunity wrapped up
in an odd package, that I realized the full impact of volunteer work.
We were on a family vacation to SeaWorld when my grandpa pulled me to
the back of the group as we walked between rides. "Your National Honor
Society does service projects outside of school, right?" I met his
quizzical stare with an eyebrow raise of my own and gave a slow yes.
"And as an official member, you can propose a donation, correct?" With
another yes Papa gave me a smile that furthered my confusion. He had
been a member of his own National Honor Society and already knew the
answers to his own inquires. "Your mission, if you choose to accept it,
is this. I would like you to organize a book drive to plump up the ward
library. The men need somewhere to spend time and better themselves;
neither of which they can accomplish with a library of twelve books.” In
a vain attempt to buy some time to think, I took a sip of water before
replying. Papa worked as the ward psychologist at Coffee Correctional
Facility in Georgia and I had always held fanciful illusions concerning
his profession. His ward was probably full of tough burly men who had
plenty of time to plan the demise of the small marshmallowy girl who
recommended that book they didn't care for. Mouth open and half-brained
excuse at the ready, Papa stared straight down into my eyes. The look he
gave me was more than just a man waiting for an answer; it was one of
trust, of expectation. In that gaze I saw the confidence that Papa had
in me, even if I couldn't see it in myself. So, with a heart thumping
like a piston in overdrive, I presented the idea to our branch of the
Society the next opportunity at school. To my surprise a chorus of
'yays' followed my tentative explanation of Papa's request and no one
seemed to mind that the recipients of our donation were both out of
state and incarcerated within a mental ward. With renewed spirit, the
real work of the donation began. A cardboard box was placed in each of
the English teachers classrooms and instructions for the collection soon
followed. On one hand, I knew that my school was a tight community but I
wasn't sure how enthusiastically they could fall behind a cause that
was both far from home and mildly scary if misconstrued. After fourteen
days of incessantly checking boxes, the final count wiped every doubt
from my mind. It took two trips between my house and the school, four
extra boxes, and five sweaty football players to haul all of the books
safely into my garage. Weeks later when Papa came to collect all
thirteen boxes, his smile brought tears to my eyes. I didn’t feel like
just his granddaughter anymore, I was someone who had made a difference.
Finally, with a hug and a 'job well done', two weeks of work was on its
way to Georgia. Weeks later after I had nearly forgotten about the
whole undertaking, a letter came. Inside of the envelope was a manila
folder, cut into an even rectangle and lined with yellow construction
paper. A large rose was drawn on the front of the card with the name of
an author written on each petal and delicately shaded with colored
pencils. Two puppies were playing underneath the rose and across the top
"Thank You National Honor Society" was drawn in elegant script. Inside,
each of the inmates had signed their name and those that couldn't were
helped by a friend. Some of the signatures were in perfect handwriting,
others were in a scrolling hand that you see on formal documents, and
still others were in the shaky handwriting of someone just learning
their letters. Now, at almost every family event, Papa updates me on the
status and growth of the library as well as how the men treat the books
like porcelain. Each of these conversations recalls the satisfaction of
making my grandfather proud when he had expected so much was nothing
compared to the joy brought by that letter. There is something innately
gratifying in bringing a stranger joy; no matter that person's
background, their past indiscretions, or their current situation.
Word count: 780
SAMPLE STUDENT ESSAY
College Essay
Kate English College Essay
Evaluate
a significant experience, achievement, risk you have taken, or ethical
dilemma you have faced and its impact on you. – Common App (250- 500
words)
The
summer before my freshman year of high school, I learned from my
friends that Bishop Verot had a cross country team. My friends had
received phone calls from the coach, inviting them to summer workouts.
Although not a runner at the time, I had previously participated in 5Ks
and triathlons and was therefore intrigued, plus it was another excuse
to hang out with my friends. Nevertheless, by the end of the summer, all
my friends quit, I was unsure if I wanted to pursue this without them,
but I chose to stay and that undoubtedly was one of my best decisions.
Three years later, I am the last member of that original team my
freshman year. I have experienced sweltering heat, a medley of
teammates, runner’s high, and the passing of coaches. All of which has
shaped me to be a determined, strong, caring person.
I
have a love- hate relationship with cross country. Honestly, after some
long days of school, the last thing I want to endure is an intense two
hour practice where the hot Florida sun pounds on me, causing me to
sweat so profusely, I wish my eyes had windshield wipers. The physical
hindrances such as side pains or shin splints however are nothing in
comparison to the mental “wall”. With each pounding step, your brain
mocks you, telling you to quit. Pain tries to overcome me; I breathe
out, relax my shoulders and battle back, believing my task is overcome
able and reminding myself this is worth it. Every mile logged in brings
me one step closer to my goal. Pushing harder and harder, I found myself
saying, “Only two miles” and have progressively worked my way to the “only
four miles” stepping stone. With this, I approach each tasks, whether
academic, athletic, etc. with fervor. No task is too great, unless I
think it is.
Although
personal perseverance can take one far, tough practices are definitely
much easier with great teammates. A plethora of personalities, we have
found a way to blend, calling ourselves a “dysfunctional family”.
Spending countless hours together at practice, meets, pasta nights,
etc., we unavoidably get on each other’s nerves ( some of us aren’t
morning people), but in the end we have each other’s backs. While
running, the encouraging voices of my teammates energize me like a shock
of electricity. We push each other not only to be the best runners we
can be, but also the best persons and students, as we have been ranked
as the second smartest team in Florida Class 2A. I’m better in all
aspects of life because of them, but most of all they have taught me the
importance of compassion, support, and service.
In
an effort to give back to them what they have given to me, I implore to
be a great captain like my previous teammates. Because we are so close,
I have learned how to best inspire our team. With Lauren, nice, soft
encouragement works; Kirstin, breaking down each run into tinier goals;
and with Brooke and Cathrine, just plain beating them does the trick.
Words let me encourage by telling them, but my actions show them what we
need. In a sport, where almost every day you want to quit, a positive
attitude is your strongest defender. No complaining, no cutting corners,
running strong each time.
Fr.
Joseph Beattie and Father John Beattie founded the cross country
programs at Bishop Verot. Both coached me and both passed away in my
time at Bishop Verot. Their dedication has allowed me to experience the
wonderful sport of cross country. Their deaths took a heavy toll on my
heart, but each one also rededicated me to the sport we all loved. Cross
country has allowed me to learn qualities such as endurance,
responsibility, and kindness. With these growing abilities, it has
inspired me to serve and make some sort of positive difference like Fr.
Joseph and John did for me. I am no longer my freshman self who
questioned and doubted whether she should try something new all by
herself. Unafraid, seeking new opportunities and experiences, I know I
will make an impact.
AHH!!! 693 words, 193 too many. I think I can abbreviate the intro and congregate the 3rd and 4th paragraph into one shorter one.
2 comments:
Sam DaviesSeptember 5, 2011 at 12:28 PMHey Kate! I really, really like this! I think your personality really shines through in your essay with the combination of great big words and then ones that you would normally speak in. That alone gives a good insight into you. I think that the two paragraphs about the team would be good combined, like you said. They would flow together nicely and would probably allow you to cut your word count, since you could easily substitute some things that are slighty repetative when talking about your team. I think this was a great choice for you to write about:)!
Nice essay Kate!! You showed your leadership skills really clearly when you talked about the ways you motivate different people, and that line: "Three years later, I am the last member of that original team my freshman year." - Hot dang! that's impressive determination! You may want to shorten and edit your intro- there's a few run-on sentences. But awesomely awesome job :)Reply
Saturday, 10 August 2013
Upcoming due dates...
1. Summer reading essay exam: August 13th
2. Blog created by: August 13th. Send your link to Mrs.Elmeer
3. Voki avatar created by: August 15th.
4. College essay posted by midnight on August 16th.
5. First vocabulary quiz: August 20th
6. Group paragraph and Roots/ conflict poem typed and submitted on paper by August 21st. This particular assignment is worth two grades.
2. Blog created by: August 13th. Send your link to Mrs.Elmeer
3. Voki avatar created by: August 15th.
4. College essay posted by midnight on August 16th.
5. First vocabulary quiz: August 20th
6. Group paragraph and Roots/ conflict poem typed and submitted on paper by August 21st. This particular assignment is worth two grades.
Welcome to AP English Literature !!!!
Our unifying "subject" for the year is ROOTS...those of our family, our faith, our heritage, and our culture. How do these roots shape who we are?
We will be sharing much but not all of our writing. You will have a summer reading exam on Tuesday, August 13th. For the first quarter, English will be testing on the odd days. We have major exams, vocabulary and word of the day quizzes, multiple choice quizzes, and various writing assignments that involve digital media, creative writing, and analysis. The first book we cover will be Brave New World; next, One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest; and last in the third quarter, Wuthering Heights. Your success depends upon close reading of all the texts. On average we will read three novels per quarter. We have some lofty works to comprehend, but you will all rise to the challenge.
Your first three blog assignments:
1. Create a blog and send me a link so that I can connect you to our main blog by Tuesday, August 13th.
2. Post your college essay by Friday, August 16th at midnight. Before posting your essay consider looking into the essay requirements for your top school. Length of essays vary, so research the word count before you write. We will be working on one essay, but I will happily look at any other essay you need to write for your college application. Make sure your essay has VOICE and personality, but don't overdo it. Consider your use of DICTION in terms of strong verbs, specific nouns, and strong vocabulary. Remove forms of be, excess prepositions, and words like who, which, and that if you do not need them. Vary your syntax and employ parallelism for effect. Make sure your purpose is clear, deep, and meaningful. You can make good use of humor; some of the best essays do. Not all personal essays need to revolve around tragedy or death. I will be giving you some basic building blocks to work with on Monday and Wednesday of next week during class.
3. Create a voki avatar that welcomes people to your blog by Thursday, August 15th at midnight. You've used voki before, www.voki.com, so you hopefully remember how it works. You will need to copy the embed code and embed it on your blog. This is worth a homework grade and will enable you to start becoming more comfortable with technology. We will use several technological tools this year in class. iPads and laptops are always welcome, and we do have six computers to work on in class. You may also use your phones.
We will be sharing much but not all of our writing. You will have a summer reading exam on Tuesday, August 13th. For the first quarter, English will be testing on the odd days. We have major exams, vocabulary and word of the day quizzes, multiple choice quizzes, and various writing assignments that involve digital media, creative writing, and analysis. The first book we cover will be Brave New World; next, One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest; and last in the third quarter, Wuthering Heights. Your success depends upon close reading of all the texts. On average we will read three novels per quarter. We have some lofty works to comprehend, but you will all rise to the challenge.
Your first three blog assignments:
1. Create a blog and send me a link so that I can connect you to our main blog by Tuesday, August 13th.
2. Post your college essay by Friday, August 16th at midnight. Before posting your essay consider looking into the essay requirements for your top school. Length of essays vary, so research the word count before you write. We will be working on one essay, but I will happily look at any other essay you need to write for your college application. Make sure your essay has VOICE and personality, but don't overdo it. Consider your use of DICTION in terms of strong verbs, specific nouns, and strong vocabulary. Remove forms of be, excess prepositions, and words like who, which, and that if you do not need them. Vary your syntax and employ parallelism for effect. Make sure your purpose is clear, deep, and meaningful. You can make good use of humor; some of the best essays do. Not all personal essays need to revolve around tragedy or death. I will be giving you some basic building blocks to work with on Monday and Wednesday of next week during class.
3. Create a voki avatar that welcomes people to your blog by Thursday, August 15th at midnight. You've used voki before, www.voki.com, so you hopefully remember how it works. You will need to copy the embed code and embed it on your blog. This is worth a homework grade and will enable you to start becoming more comfortable with technology. We will use several technological tools this year in class. iPads and laptops are always welcome, and we do have six computers to work on in class. You may also use your phones.
Vocabulary Lists for Quarter One
There are three lists for each novel. We may not make it through every one, but for now...here they are:
Brave New World: 1. Utopia, dystopia, largesse, florid, prodigious, decant, suffuse, officious, aperture, surreptitious, evocation, pneumatic, soma, incessant, annihilate. 2. Imperious, plangent, solecism, intrinsic, predestine, effusive, surrogate, paradoxical, Demi-John, tactile, viviparous, sibilant, maudlin, discarnate, monogamy. 3. Truculent, promiscuous, simian, ruminate, ascetic, satiate, fulminate, pueblo, precipice, incredulity, prone, asceptic, obsidian, vestal, languish, eminence.
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest: 1. Cagey, brassy, ornery, defunct, sinewy, overzealous, protocol, taut, veritable, ethereally, matriarchy, placate, prattle, thwarted, aplomb. 2. Mete, indigents, forlornly, philanthropy, chicanery, effrontery, arbitrate, courtesan, atrocities, dogged, Jezebel, irrevocable, hovel, circumvent, flouting. 3. Apathy, knead, schematic, nemesis, squalid, sadistic, wheedle, ramshackle, ineffectual, jounce, gaff, prototype, folio, lobotomy, punitive.
Wuthering Heights: 1. Virulency, canister, ensconce, condole, actuate, churlish, guffaw, signet, gaiter, laconic, slovenly, reprobate, disparity, vex, flummox. 2. Evince, miscreant, morose, taciturn, physiognomy, interpose, encroach, tacit, conjecture, parry, hale, rheumatism, copious, surmise, vigilant. 3. Solace, griffin, beneficent, deign, stalwart, amiss, austere, malignant, haughty, tumult, tempest, provincial, pious, obscure, retort.
Brave New World: 1. Utopia, dystopia, largesse, florid, prodigious, decant, suffuse, officious, aperture, surreptitious, evocation, pneumatic, soma, incessant, annihilate. 2. Imperious, plangent, solecism, intrinsic, predestine, effusive, surrogate, paradoxical, Demi-John, tactile, viviparous, sibilant, maudlin, discarnate, monogamy. 3. Truculent, promiscuous, simian, ruminate, ascetic, satiate, fulminate, pueblo, precipice, incredulity, prone, asceptic, obsidian, vestal, languish, eminence.
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest: 1. Cagey, brassy, ornery, defunct, sinewy, overzealous, protocol, taut, veritable, ethereally, matriarchy, placate, prattle, thwarted, aplomb. 2. Mete, indigents, forlornly, philanthropy, chicanery, effrontery, arbitrate, courtesan, atrocities, dogged, Jezebel, irrevocable, hovel, circumvent, flouting. 3. Apathy, knead, schematic, nemesis, squalid, sadistic, wheedle, ramshackle, ineffectual, jounce, gaff, prototype, folio, lobotomy, punitive.
Wuthering Heights: 1. Virulency, canister, ensconce, condole, actuate, churlish, guffaw, signet, gaiter, laconic, slovenly, reprobate, disparity, vex, flummox. 2. Evince, miscreant, morose, taciturn, physiognomy, interpose, encroach, tacit, conjecture, parry, hale, rheumatism, copious, surmise, vigilant. 3. Solace, griffin, beneficent, deign, stalwart, amiss, austere, malignant, haughty, tumult, tempest, provincial, pious, obscure, retort.
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