Author Archives: Jahanzeb Siddiqy

Temerity

: unreasonable or foolhardy contempt of danger or opposition : rashness, recklessness(Merriam-Webster)

I came across this word when reading quicksand by Nella Larson in Chapter 1: “Ideas it rejected, and looked with open hostility on one and all who had the temerity to offer a suggestion or ever so mildly express a disapproval.”

Magnanimity

: the quality of being magnanimous : loftiness of spirit enabling one to bear trouble calmly, to disdain meanness and pettiness, and to display a noble generosity He had the magnanimity to forgive her for lying about him. (Merriam-Webster)

I came across this word in chapter one of Quicksand: “It was now a showplace in the black belt, exemplification of the white mans magnanimity, refutation of the black mans inefficiency.”

Nasturtium

any of a genus (Tropaeolum of the family Tropaeolaceae, the nasturtium family) of herbs of Central and South America with showy spurred flowers and pungent edible seeds and leaves; especially : either of two widely cultivated ornamentals (T. majus and T. minus) (Merriam-Webster)

I came across this word in chapter one of quicksand: “on the shining brass bowl crowded with many-colored nasturtiums beside her”

Cowrie

any of various marine gastropods (family Cypraeidae) that are widely distributed in warm seas and have glossy and often brightly colored shells; also the shell of a cowrie(Merriam-Webster)

I came across this word while reading You In America where the speaker says “His mother told you she loved your braids, asked if those were real cowries strung through them and what female writers you read.” Knowing what a cowrie is would help the reader visualize what the speaker looks like.

Solemn

  • : very serious or formal in manner, behavior, or expression

  • : sad and serious

  • : done or made sincerely

(Merriam-Webster)

I came across this word while reading You In America where the speaker says: “But you did not tell him because he would look solemn and hold your hand and tell you it was your burnished skin color that first attracted him.” This helps the reader understand that she did not tell him because she thought it would make him sad.

Maudlin

weakly and effusively sentimental(Merriam-Webster)

I came across this word while reading “You In America” where the reader says: ” After your shift that day, he was waiting outside, leaning by a pole, asking you to go out with him because your name rhymed with hakuna matata and The Lion King was the only maudlin movie he’d ever liked.”

Condescending

showing or characterized by a patronizing or superior attitude toward others

I came across this word while reading You In America where the speaker says: “You wanted to feel disdain, to show it as you brought his order, because white people who liked Africa too much and who liked Africa too little were the same—condescending. ” This helps the reader understand that the speaker views the white people who spoke of Africa to have a sense of superiority or arrogance.

Disdain

a feeling of contempt for someone or something regarded as unworthy or inferior

I came across this word while reading “You In America” where the speaker says: “You wanted to feel disdain, to show it as you brought his order, because white people who liked Africa too much and who liked Africa too little were the same—condescending.” This shows that she naturally felt like she needed to feel contempt or offended by him due to her experience with other white people, but she didnt feel that way since he did not act the way she expected him to.

Expiation

the act of making atonement. (Merriam-Webster)

I came across this word while reading “You In America” where the speaker says: ” The people who never broke a profit from the mangoes and akara they hawked, whose houses—zinc sheets precariously held by nails—fell apart in the rainy season.” This shows that compared to her own home country, the people in America lived a life of comfort and did not realize the value of the things available to them.

Hawked

to offer (something) for sale by calling out in the street (Merriam-Webster)

I came across this word while reading You In America where the speaker says: ” The people who never broke a profit from the mangoes and akara they hawked, whose houses—zinc sheets precariously held by nails—fell apart in the rainy season.” This shows that the speaker and most of her family and friends had poor living conditions and were not able to make a profit from their work.