1 / 21

Level H Unit 4

Level H Unit 4. affinity – n. a natural attraction to a person, thing, or activity; a relationship, a connection. I have an affinity to all things chocolate!. bilious – adj. peevish or irritable; sickeningly unpleasant.

dea
Download Presentation

Level H Unit 4

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Level HUnit 4

  2. affinity– n. a natural attraction to a person, thing, or activity; a relationship, a connection I have an affinity to all things chocolate!

  3. bilious– adj. peevish or irritable; sickeningly unpleasant Spending even an hour with my bilious cousin on Thanksgiving makes me grateful I don’t have to seem him again for another year!

  4. cognate– (adj.) closely related in origin, essential nature, or function; (n.) such a person or thing Synonyms are cognates that usually differ only slightly in connotation.

  5. corollary – n. a natural consequence or result Sibling fist fights are a corollary of sibling teasing!

  6. cul-de-sac – (n.) a dead-end street; an impasse We live on a cul-de-sac, so we don’t see much traffic.

  7. derring-do – (n.) valor or heroism; daring deeds or exploits Growing up, my father told us tales of derring-do to impress us with his strength.

  8. divination – (n.) the art of predicting the future or discovering hidden knowledge I visited a psychic while on vacation, though I highly doubt her divination abilities; I could see her “cheat sheet” up her sleeve as she read my tarot cards!

  9. elixir – (n.) a potion once thought capable of curing all ills; a panacea Mary Poppins believed in the notion that a “spoon full of sugar” is an elixir to help the medicine go down! Apothecaries used to distribute the same elixir to everyone, regardless of symptoms.

  10. folderol – (n.) foolish talk, ideas, or procedures; nonsense Her lecture on physics was so above our heads that it sounded like little more than folderol.

  11. gamut – (n.) an entire range or series Our studies of American history ran the gamut from Christopher Columbus to President Obama.

  12. hoi polloi – (n.) the common people , the masses In A Tale of Two Cities, Dickens demonstrates the aristocracy’s disgust at having to associate with the hoi polloi when he includes the scene where the little boy gets trampled by the Monsigneur’s carriage.

  13. ineffable – (adj.) not expressible in words; too great or too sacred to be uttered A picture of the Red Rocks of Utah is truly worth the thousand words it would take to even begin to describe its ineffable beauty and majesty.

  14. lucubration – (n.) laborious study or thought, especially at night; the result of such work Dr. Frankenstein’s lucubrationsresulted in a monster that even he could not control.

  15. mnemonic – (adj.) relating to or designed to assist the memory; (n.) a device to aid the memory

  16. obloquy – (n.) public abuse indicating strong disapproval or censure; the disgrace resulting from such treatment

  17. parameter – (n.) a factor that shapes the total outcome; a limit, boundary Cost was an important parameter for me when choosing a college. The close-talker overstepped acceptable social parameters when he stood nose-to-nose with me upon introduction.

  18. pundit – (n.) one who gives authoritative opinions Al Michaels – sports pundit Keith Olbermann – political pundit Pundits are hired to share their thoughts on a gamut of topics on TV today, such as politics and sports.

  19. risible – (adj.) laughable He wasn’t a very good clown; the children ran screaming rather than find his pranks risible.

  20. symptomatic – (adj.) typical or characteristic; being or concerned with a symptom of a disease I knew my daughter had chicken pox the moment symptomatic red spots appeared on her stomach.

  21. volte-face – (n.) an about-face; a complete reversal

More Related