200 likes | 326 Views
Vocabulary PowerPoint. Alex Bradford Freshman English 1 st September 18,2008. excerpt. A passage taken from a book, speech, etc. It is required to have a excerpt from a famous speech in your essay. hover. To float or hang suspended over; to move back and forth uncertainly over or around.
E N D
Vocabulary PowerPoint Alex Bradford Freshman English 1st September 18,2008
excerpt • A passage taken from a book, speech, etc. • It is required to have a excerpt from a famous speech in your essay.
hover • To float or hang suspended over; to move back and forth uncertainly over or around.
plaudits • Applause, enthusiastic praise or approval. • The skaters loved the plaudits of their audience.
rubble • Broken stone or bricks; ruins • Massive earthquakes are the reason for the rubble in the streets.
wrangle • To quarrel or argue in a noisy, angry way; to obtain by argument; to herd. • The farmer had to wrangle the pigs back into their pin.
bountiful • Giving freely, generous; plentiful, given abundantly. • On Thanksgiving people eat a bountiful amount of food.
congested • Overcrowded, filled or occupied to excess. • He gets very congested when he becomes sick.
durable • Sturdy, not easily worn out or destroyed; lasting for a long time; • He bought very durable shoes to work in.
incognito • In a disguised state; under an assumed name or identity. • The detective was incognito.
legendary • Described in well-known stories; existing in old stories rather than real life. • Batman is my favorite legendary character.
maim • To cripple, disable, injure, mar, disfigure, mutilate. • He was maimed in the car accident.
minimize • To make as small as possible, make the least of; to make smaller than before. • She had to minimize her ego before she could have friends.
audacious • Bold, adventurous, recklessly daring. • She had a very audacious style.
elite • The choice part of a group of people or things; superior. • She went to an elite college because she wanted to be a doctor.
grapple • An iron hook used to grab and hold. • Batman has a grapple in his belt.
myriad • In very great numbers. • There are myriad butterflies at the garden house.
tether • A rope or chain used to fasten something to a fixed object; the outer limit of strength or resources. • They used a tether to secure the fishing boat to the dock.
bolster • To support, give a boost to. • When you write an essay you have to bolster your point with facts.
residue • A remainder, that which remains when a part has been used up or removed. • There was blood residue on his shirt.