1 / 14

Creative Writing

Creative Writing. Vocab Lesson 2. flummox. The little sheep flummoxed the dim-witted troll that lived under the bridge. By confusing him, they escaped to greener pastures without being eaten. V. To confuse Adj = Flummoxed. serendipity.

Télécharger la présentation

Creative Writing

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. Creative Writing Vocab Lesson 2

  2. flummox • The little sheep flummoxed the dim-witted troll that lived under the bridge. By confusing him, they escaped to greener pastures without being eaten. • V. To confuse • Adj = Flummoxed

  3. serendipity • The serendipitous discovery of the oil lamp led the young boy to many adventures. The lamp he accidentally found contained a genie that granted him three wishes. • N. an accidental discovery that leads to good fortune; a fortunate, lucky discovery

  4. parsimonious • The parsimonious man used a frayed bungee cord to tie back the umbrella. He could afford a new one, but he was cheap and didn’t want to spend the extra money. • Adj. Cheap, stingy, frugal

  5. vex • The boy’s belly was vexed. Eating five candy bars would annoy anyone’s belly! • V. to annoy or irritate • Adj = vexing

  6. Chastise • After the boy threw up the candy bars, his mother chastised him. “You should know better,” she lectured. “What were you thinking? Won’t do that again, will you?” • V. to punish, usually verbally (though also in writing)

  7. Galumph • The ogre galumphed his way to the shower every morning, thudding and pounding the dirt floor. He trudged around, banging about until he had his first cup of ogre coffee. • V. to walk with a heavy tread

  8. Pulchritudinous • The pulchritudinous baby wasn’t just cute, he was “magazine cute.” Everyone stared at the beautiful baby. • Adj. physically beautiful

  9. Wanton • The wanton was thought to be a tramp. She really had an aversion to licentious behavior, but she did like to wear gaudy make up, low-cut shirts, and short skirts. • N. a person who is licentious • Adj. licentious

  10. Slothful • The slothful man was so lazy, he drove ten feet to the end of the driveway to get the mail. • Adj. Lazy

  11. Dubious • The gathering clouds hung low in the sky. The once beautiful day grew dubious as the hikers hurried to get off the summit before the dangerous storms hit. • Adj. threatening, doubtful, hesitating

  12. Brouhaha • Fred and George created a huge swamp in the middle of Hogwarts causing a huge tumult. The brouhaha that ensued took Umbridge much longer to settle than she expected. • N. A tumult, a hubbub

  13. Tempest • The saloon grew quiet, like a clam before the storm. Then, with a clap like thunder, one cowboy hit another with a bottle. The clouds burst, and the tempestuous fight began. • N. a violent storm • Adj = tempestuous This word is often use figuratively.

  14. Debauchery • Many people feel that Las Vegas is a debauchery, filled with sin and corruption of mind and soul; I’ve seen CSI, and, man, remind me never to go there! I sure hope what happens there, stays there! • N. Excessive indulgence in sensual pleasures; a lessening of morals

More Related