Category Archives: Glossary

Glossary Write Up

Genial
Temerity
Tumultuous
Espy
Perverse
Impertinence
Rebuked
Reverie
Gaiety
Deft
Sedition
Feeble
Commodity
Ravenous
Regalia

Writing up the glossary and finding words I don’t know every week really helped me better understand the short stories. I normally skim over the words I do not know and use context clues to figure out the overall meaning of the paragraph rather than the specific meaning of the sentence. This helps me to better understand the sentence, hence helping me understand the overall story a little bit better. The glossary of the entire class brings into context all the stories we have read and all the different themes we have seen.

Regalia

regalia

noun plural re·ga·lia \ri-ˈgāl-yə\

: special clothes and decorations (such as a crown or scepter) for official ceremonies

: special clothing of a particular kind

1
:  royal rights or prerogatives
2
a :  the emblems, symbols, or paraphernalia indicative of royalty

b :  decorations or insignia indicative of an office or membership

3
:  special dress; especially :  finery
In the short story What You Pawn I will Redeem Paragraph 13
“That’s my grandmother’s powwow regalia in your window,” I said. “Somebody stole it from her fifty years ago, and my family has been searching for it ever since.”
Inside this sentence, the powwow regalia is a special clothing that Indian people sew perhaps for special ceremonies. When he finally redeemed it at the end, he put it on and danced like his grandmother used to.

Glossary

This semester, the students of ENG 2001, Introduction to Fiction: Principles of Narrative, as a collaborative project, developed a glossary that draws words from all of the texts we read. As much as the process of looking up words and copying the definition interrupted their reading, students commented that the activity helped them learn the words, remember them, and incorporate them into their vocabulary. Want to expand your vocabulary? Check out our glossary!

 

-A-

Acquiescene

Aleut

Anathema

Annihilated

Aquiver

Arbor

Asocial

Aspen

Astonishing

Atheist

Atrocious

Austere

-B-

Barged

Barged

Barracks

Bereft

Bier

Bonnet

Boughs

Breadth

Breakneck

Buckboard

Bulbous

Bustle

-C-

Cajole

Calceolaria

Calligraphy 

Camphor

Capricious

Capricious

Capricious

Carmine

Catechism

Chastise

Cinder

Cistern

Clamor

Congenial

Contemplated

Coquettish

Cupola

-D-

Dainty

Demurred

Detox

Disdainful

Dispensation

Doggone

Domesticity

Drabness

Dray

-E-

Eaves

Elfin

Encroached

Evangelists

Exploited

Exquisite

-F-

Fatuity

Febrile

Febrile

Febrile

Firmament

Firmament

Flaws

Florid

Floundering

Flunked out

Fondle

Fortified

-G-

Gallantry

Genial

Giggle

Glen

Goblet

Gushed out

-I-

Idyllic

Impertinence

Impertinence

Importunities

Indolent

Indolent

Indolent

Infanticide

Inharmonious

Innumerable

-J-

Jalousies

Jarred

Jutting

-K-

Kindlin

-L-

Lamentations

Lamenting

Larynx

Leanto

Lisle

-M-

Macabre

Malevolent

Malice

Marvel

Melancholy

Mirth

Misconstrued

Monotonously 

Monotonously

Monotonously

Monotonously

Monotonously

Mule

Murmur

Muslin

Muslin

-N-

Noblesse Oblige 

Noisome

Noisome

-O-

Obstinate

Ocular

-P-

Palsied

Paternalistic

Pauper

Peddler

Persecution 

Perspiration

Petticoat 

Pilfer

Pilfer

Pious

Pious

Placid

Plagued

Pleating

Posse

Powwow

Powwow

Privy

Prodding

Pulsating

Puritan

-Q-

Querulous

Quizzical

Quizzical

-R-

Ravages

Ravenous

Ravenous

Reckon

Regalia

Regalia

Regalia

Regalia

Regalia

Regalia

Reins

Relinquished

Reluctant

Remitted

Rendezvous

Repression

Revulsion

Rhetorical

Riotus 

Ripple

Rivulets

-S-

Salsify

Salsify

Sassafras

Savage

Scoffingly

Scruples

Serenading

Serpentine

Shawl

Shawl

Shawl

Shoat

Shoat

Sibilant

Sibilant

Silhouette

Skulk

Skulking

Smother

Sobbing

Sopping

Soughing

Spigot

Spigot

Spry

Spry

Sullen

Sullenly

-T-

Tableau

Tarry

Teeming

Teetering

Teetering

Timorous

Tubercular

Tumultuously

Tumultuously

Tumultuously

-U-

Undulating

Ungainly

Unshriven

-V-

Vacant

Vanquish

Verily

Vexed

Virulent

-W-

Wares

Wharf

Wronghearted

Glossary Words

1) Perfunctory:

1. performed merely as a routine duty; hasty and superficial.

2. lacking interest, care, or enthusiasm; indifferent or apathetic

“Beloved by Toni Morrison”

 “Together they waged a perfunctory battle against the outrageous behavior of that place; against turned-over slop jars, smacks on the behind, and gusts of sour air.” (page 1)


2) Monotonously:

adjective

1. lacking in variety; tediously unvarying.

2. characterizing a sound continuing on one note.

3. having very little inflection; limited to a narrow pitch range.

The Shawl by Louise Erdrich

 She became a gray sky, stared monotonously at the walls, sometimes wept into her hands for hours at a time.


3) Lamenting:

verb

1. to feel or express sorrow or regret for.

2. to mourn for or over.

 The lamenting voices strummed so convincingly, so passionately, it was impossible to suspect them of being phantoms. (page 4 paragraph 2)


4) Bier:

noun

  1. 1. a table or platform on which a coffin or dead body is placed at a funeral

A Rose for Emily

“they held the funeral on the second day, with the town coming to look at Miss Emily beneath a mass of bought flowers, with the crayon face of her father musing profoundly above the bier and the ladies sibilant and macabre; and the very old men…” (Part 5 Paragraph 2)


5) Dray:

 1. a low, strong cart without fixed sides, for carrying heavy loads.

2. a sledge or sled.

3. any vehicle, as a truck, used to haul goods, especially one used to carry heavy loads.

Beloved by Toni Morrison

“He had already seen his brother wave goodbye from the back of a dray, fried chicken in his pocket, tears in his eyes. ” (pg 258)


6) Muslin:

1. A cotton fabric made in various degrees of fineness and often printed,woven, or embroidered in patterns, especially a cotton fabric of plain weave, used for sheets and for a variety of other purposes.

Beloved by Toni Morrison

“I set you down on the little table and figured if I got a piece of muslin the bugs and things wouldn’t get to you.”(Pg 109)


7) Quizzical:

1. odd, queer, or comical.

“I reached for the closest rag, and picked up this piece of blanket that my father always kept with him for some reason. And as I picked it up and wiped the blood off his face, I said to him, Your nose is crooked again. He looked at me, steady and quizzical, as though he had never had a drink in his life, and I wiped his face again with that frayed piece of blanket.”

The Shawl BY LOUISE ERDRICH


8) Spry:

1. full of energy, energetic, graceful

“now she is spry, executing, even extending the assignments Sethe leaves for them” (Beloved” by: Toni Morrison P. 142)


9) Impertinence:

noun

1.unmannerly intrusion or presumption; insolence.

2.impertinent quality or action.

3.something impertinent, as an act or statement.

4.an impertinent person.

5.irrelevance, inappropriateness, or absurdity.

The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman

“I get positively angry with the impertinence of it and the everlastingness. Up and down and sideways they crawl, and those absurd, unblinking eyes are everywhere.”


10) Cupola:

noun

1. A rounded roof or part of a roof
2. A small structure that is built on top of a roof.

“A Roe for Emily”

“It was a big, squarish frame house that had once been white, decorated with cupolas and spires and scrolled balconies…”


11) Spigot:

noun

1. A device that controls the flow of liquid from a large container.
2. An outdoor faucet.

“Beloved by Toni Morrison”

After the shed, I stopped. Now, in the morning, when I light the fire I mean to look out the window to see what the sun is doing to the day. Does it hit the pump handle first of the spigot?


12) Serenading:

noun

1. A love song that is sung or played outdoors at night for a woman.
2. A complimentary vocal of instrumental performance.
3. An instrumental composition in several movements, written for a small ensemble, and midway between the suite and the symphony in style.

“What You Pawn I Will Redeem”

“As Irene and I sat at the table and laughed and drank more whiskey, Honey Boy danced a slow circle around us and sang along with Willie. Are you serenading me? I asked him.”


13) Mirth:

Noun

  1. Amusement, especially as expressed in laughter.

“Thus far, the elder traveller had listened with due gravity, but now burst into a fit of irrepressible mirth, shaking himself so violently, that his snake-like staff actually seemed to wriggle in sympathy.”

“Young Goodman Brown”


14) Jutting:

verb

1. to extend beyond the main body or line.
“She was moody and sullen one moment, her lower lip jutting and her eyes flashing, filled with storms. The next, she would shake her hair over her face and blow it straight out in front of her to make her children scream with laughter.”
The Shawl by Louise Erdrich

15) Cistern

noun
1.a reservoir, tank, or container for storing or holding water orother liquid.
2.Anatomy. a reservoir or receptacle of some natural fluid of thebody.
“Once Stamp Paid brought you a coat, got the message to you, saved your life, of fixed the cistern he took the liberty of walking in your door as though if were his own”
Beloved by Toni Morrison

By doing these glossary assignments I believe that my vocabulary has increased significantly.  If you look up every word you come across that you don’t understand, you’re vocabulary will increase. It will probably increase much more quickly than if you just try to understand the meaning of the word from the context. You’re also much more likely to understand precisely what the writer meant to say.

Glossary words

  1. Tableau
  2. Boughs
  3. pious
  4. Drabness
  5. Leanto
  6. Bonnet
  7. perspiration
  8. Sopping
  9. Prodding
  10. Febrile
  11. monotonously 
  12. quizzical

This glossary assignment, was surprising because i did not expect to find so many words that i did not know. For this assignment i did slack off a bit by not explaining the meaning of the word in the context it is used in. I have not really used any of the words so far in normal usage but there may be a time i could uses these words. This assignment was a good one because it helps with the reading process, since it lets you help understand what is happening in the story instead of not know what is being said cause of a word. This assignment would help me greatly later on as i get to read more and i can be more aware of how important not knowing what a word means to the story.

Shawl

Shawl- fabric intended to cover a woman’s head and shoulders, protection, intended to hide a womans appearance

http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/shawl

The Shawl By Louise Erdrich

“who curled up each night exhausted in her red-and-brownplaid shawl, and slept and slept, until the husband had to wake her to awaken her mother”

“who curled up each night exhausted in her red-and-brownplaid fabric, and slept and slept, until the husband had to wake her to awaken her mother”

For my mothers birthday i made her a shawl for hot summer days to protect her from the sun.

quizzical

quizzical – odd, queer, or comical.

“I reached for the closest rag, and picked up this piece of blanket that my father always kept with him for some reason. And as I picked it up and wiped the blood off his face, I said to him, Your nose is crooked again. He looked at me, steady and quizzical, as though he had never had a drink in his life, and I wiped his face again with that frayed piece of blanket.”

The Shawl BY LOUISE ERDRICH

unshriven

unshriven- unforgiving, unwilling to confess, not free, guilty

http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/unshriven

“Beloved” by Toni Morrison P 130

“like the unshriven dead, zombies on the loose, holding the chains in their hands”.

“like the guilty dead, zombies on the loose, holding the chains in their hands”.

My neighbors ghost is unshriven, turning on and off the air conditioner.

“Words For a Better Understanding”

1: Spry

2: Indolent

3: Genial

4: Repression

5: Regalia

6: Teetering

7: Monotonously

8: Rivulets

9: Noisome

10: Bulbous

11: Marvel

12: Virulent

13: Acquiescene

14: Unshriven

15: Shawl

I eventually liked the idea of glossary posts. It made me stop look up words so that i can better understand what i was reading. Before this class i never wrote on books or short readings, i felt as if i was wasting someone else’s paper. Not anymore i realized highlighting or underlining made all the difference, because when your reflecting or trying to look for a specific passage it was easier to find. Many of my glossary posts if not all i will remember for years to come since i looked them up made up sentences and translated in ways i can not forget.

 

Spry

Spry- full of energy, energetic, graceful

http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/indolent

“Beloved” by: Toni Morrison P. 142

“now she is spry, executing, even extending the assignments Sethe leaves for them”

“now she is graceful, executing, even extending the assignments Sethe leaves for them”

The lazy old man drank coffee and became spry.