Tag Archives: Glossary

All the Announcements

Homework: As  you probably noticed, I didn’t assign homework this week as you prepare the final version of Project #2. Instead, I ask for the following as you submit your project by the end of Wednesday, 5/6:

  • Write one post with Part 1:
    • give it a title that reflects your work
    • choose the category Project #2
    • add any tags you think apply
  • Write another post with Part 2:
    • include the image/video/text of your creative work
    • include the curatorial comment (200-300 words)
    • choose the categories Project #2 and Gallery
    • add any tags you think apply
  • Write a third post that serves as your cover letter (this is what will count as this week’s homework):
    • It must address, in any order:
      • what are you most proud of in each part of the project?
      • what did you find most challenging in each part of the project?
      • what new skills do you have or tools did you acquire through this project?
      • if you could change any part of your project, what would it be?
      • if you could change any part of the Project #2 assignment, what would it be?
      • is there anything you would like me to know about you as a writer in general or about your work for this project?
    • It must include links to Part 1’s post and Part 2’s post.
    • Choose the category Project #2.
    • Tag it Cover Letter and any other tags you want.
    • If you do not want to share the cover letter with the whole class and everyone who finds our OpenLab site, you can make it private:
      • in the sidebar menu called Publish, look for the eye icon. It should say Visibility.
      • the default is Public. Click Edit, and choose Private instead.
      • click Publish, as usual
      • now only the posts’s author (that’s you) and the site administrator (that’s me) can read the post.

Presentations: The presentation guidelines are now available. Please read them and come to class ready to answer any questions about them. Presentations are due 5/18.

Glossary: At the beginning of the semester, I announced our semester-long glossary project that required each student in our course to gloss 15 words and blog about them according to assignment guidelines to crowd-source the effort of building a course glossary to improve our vocabulary and our understanding of the course texts. Included in that assignment is a final glossary reflection, with a due date TBD. That due date is 5/17. Please refer to the assignment and follow all steps to successfully complete your glossary assignment for the semester.

**If you have been neglecting your glossary work this semester, I strongly encourage you to take the time remaining to work on catching up. I will not look kindly on 15 consecutive glossary entries submitted at the end of the semester.**

Extra Credit: In last week’s in-person class, we talked about the opportunity to make up missed work by participating in and blogging on our site (according to our course’s blogging guidelines) about the “Presenting Yourself Online” OpenLab workshop. I want to extend the offer for a couple of other upcoming events:

The Research Mixer: every semester, the Coordination of Undergraduate Research committee sponsors an event that’s both informational and social to promote research opportunities for City Tech students. This Research Mixer is on Wednesday from 3:00-5:00pm in N119.

The Student Research Poster Session: The Research Mixer is held each semester during the poster session that showcases the fantastic research students do at City Tech through a variety of sponsored programs. The posters are up in the Atrium on the first and ground floors from Wednesday at 11:00am until approximately 3:00pm on Thursday, though you’ll only find students there to talk about their work from 11:00-4:00 on Wednesday and 10:00-3:00 on Thursday, with an awards ceremony on Thursday during Club Hour in N119.

 

 

SPIGOT

Spigot (Beloved/Part 2/Page 237)
noun
Pronunciation: Spi-get

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

Context: 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?

Source: http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/spigot

Muslin

Muslin

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

“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 in PDF)

Reading this it seems like muslin is some pant or bug repellent. I guess she was going to use it to cover Denver to keep the bugs off her.

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Bereft

Bereft (adjective): 1 a: deprived or robbed of the possession or use of something b: lacking something needed, wanted, or expected; 2: suffering the death of a loved one (Merriam-Webster)

Found on Page 78, paragraph 2 of Beloved–>“This girl Beloved, homeless and without people, beat all, though he couldn’t say exactly why, considering the colored people he had run into during the last twenty years. During, before and after the War he had seen Negros so stunned, or hungry, or tired or bereft it was a wonder they recalled or said anything.”

I believe this word in the quote means when Paul D observed Beloved’s nice dress and shoes, he was suspicious of her being homeless because the slaves Paul D encountered were either hungry, robbed, or deprived of something. This meant that Beloved did not look hopeless and she did not look like she was lacking anything according to Paul D’s assumptions.

Malevolent

Malevolent (adjective): having or showing a desire to cause harm to another person (Merriam-Webster)

Found on Page 77, paragraph 15 of Beloved–> “I take the shoes! I take the dress! The shoe strings don’t fix!” she shouted and gave him a look so malevolent Denver touched her arm.”

I believe this word in the quote means that Beloved was getting so upset with Paul D that she gave him a look of wanting to harm him because he kept questioning why she had new shoes if she had walked a long way to 124.

Privy

Privy (noun): 1 a: a small building having a bench with holes through which the user may defecate or urinate; b: toilet; (Merriam-Webster)

Found on Page 61, paragraph 2 of Beloved–>“She hoped Paul D wouldn’t take it upon himself to come looking for her and be obliged to see her squatting in front of her own privy making a mudhole too deep to be witnessed without shame.”

I believe this word in the quote means that Sethe did not want Paul D to witness her urinating heavily in the outhouse.

RENDEZVOUS

Rendezvous (Beloved/Part 1/Page 29)
noun
Pronunciation: ren-dez-vous

-A meeting with someone that is arranged for a particular time and place and that is often secret.
-A place where people agree to meet at a particular time.
-A place where many people go to spend time.

Context: “Now it was too late for the rendezvous to happen at Redman’s house, so they dropped where they were.

Source: http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/rendezvous

Archaic

(A rose from Emily)Archaic- Adjective

Pronounce: ahr-key-ik

Archaic-(1)marked by the characteristics of an earlier period; antiquated.

(2) commonly used in an earlier time but rare in present-day usage except to suggest the older time, as in religious rituals or historical novels.

Sentence-A week later the mayor wrote her himself offering to call and send his car for her, and received in reply a note on paper of an Archaic shape, in a thin, flowing calligraphy in faded ink, to the effect that she no longer went out at  all.

 

Florid

florid
adjective
  1. having a red or flushed complexion.
    “a stout man with a florid face”
  2. elaborately or excessively intricate or complicated.
    “florid operatic-style music was out”
    The outside pattern is a florid arabesque, reminding one of a fungus.
    Found in The Yellow Wallpaper, by Charlotte Gilman , the word florid tells us that the design (arabesque) of the pattern was very complex.