1 / 29

English III Fall Unit 3 Vocabulary

English III Fall Unit 3 Vocabulary. Unit 3 Week 1. New words to learn and add to our everyday vocabulary and writing. wan. Week 1. Adjective. Unhealthily pale of a grayish, sickly color. After spending most of his vacation in Borneo exploring the caves and rarely

Télécharger la présentation

English III Fall Unit 3 Vocabulary

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. English III Fall Unit 3 Vocabulary

  2. Unit 3 Week 1 New words to learn and add to our everyday vocabulary and writing

  3. wan Week 1 Adjective. Unhealthily pale of a grayish, sickly color • After spending most of his • vacation in Borneo exploring • the caves and rarely • venturing out into the light, • Armando finally emerged, • wan and exhausted.

  4. unkempt Week 1 Adjective. untidy, having a neglected appearance • During the ‘90s, grunge was • popular, and band members • worked hard at sporting an • unkempt look with torn • jeans and filthy, matted hair.

  5. svelte Week 1 Adjective. slender, willowy, elegant, graceful • Ballet dancers observe a very • strict diet to maintain their • svelte figures.

  6. denounce Week 1 Verb. to criticize or condemn someone/something publically and harshly • During the 1992 Los • Angeles Riots, government • officials denounced the • use of looting and violence.

  7. deduct Week 1 Verb. to take away from a total; subtract • Liam was shocked at how • much money was • deducted from his • paycheck for state and • federal taxes.

  8. de- Week 1 The words denounce and deduct contain the PREFIX: “de-” means out of/away from

  9. Unit 3 Week 2 New words to learn and add to our everyday vocabulary and writing

  10. disgruntled Week 2 Adjective discontented; in a bad mood or bad humor • After having to spend the day • listening to his friends talk • about the great vacation he • chose not to take, Mark was • disgruntled and eager to • change the subject.

  11. lugubrious Week 2 Adjective. mournful, gloomy, dismal • Even when his tail was • wagging so hard he knocked • over three lamps and two • toddlers, the lugubrious • expression on the basset • hound’s face made him look • sad.

  12. sanguine Week 2 I was not sanguine about the chances of my friend’s relationship getting serious when I realized her boyfriend listed his profession as “philogynist” on his resume. • Adjective. cheerful, optimistic

  13. amorous Week 2 Adjective. strongly moved by love • The male bird engaged in • amorous behavior—nest • building, singing, showing • off their finery—in order to • attract females.

  14. amicable Week 2 There are about a million couples who divorce each year in the United States, and most start out striving to keep the split amicable. • Adjective.characterized by friendly • goodwill

  15. am- Week 2 The words amorous and amicable have the PREFIX: “am-” means love/liking

  16. Unit 3 Week 3 New words to learn and add to our everyday vocabulary and writing

  17. puerile Week 3 Adjective. childish, silly, immature • It was obvious he was • fond of puerile humor • when my six year old • sister thought he was • hilarious and no one else • in the family laughed.

  18. novice Week 3 Adjective. a beginner, an apprentice • The more experienced nurses • teased the novice saying she • had to carry her supplies with • her at all times or she could • fired for “being absent without • gauze.”

  19. antiquated Week 3 Adjective. old-fashioned, obsolete • The antiquated car was • quite dilapidated and • sported a bumper sticker • saying, “Honk if anything • falls off!”

  20. extradite Week 3 Verb. to deliver somebody to a different legal authority • Martin Luther King Jr.'s • assassin, James Earl Ray, • was arrested in London, • England, on June 8th and • promptly extradited to the • USA.

  21. extraneous Week 3 Adjective. 1. existing on or coming from the outside; 2. not relevant or essential • In nine cases out of ten, worry and anxiety is not a • voluntary feeling but springs from some extraneous • cause, stemming from something you can’t control.

  22. extra- Week 3 The words extradite and extraneous have the PREFIX: “extra-” means beyond, outside

  23. Unit 3 Week 4 New words to learn and add to our everyday vocabulary and writing

  24. expedite Week 4 Verb. to speed up, hasten, facilitate • In an attempt to expedite • the physical, the patient • had printed out a long list • of his symptoms, including • a sore throat and sneezing • fits.

  25. languid Week 4 Adjective. drooping, weak, sluggish • The overwhelming heat left • everyone languid, especially • the Inuit student who had just • transferred to San Diego from • Anchorage, Alaska where he • had been used to • temperatures below zero.

  26. vivacious Week 4 Adjective. lively, energetic • Accustomed to a far more • vivacious class, the physical • education teacher berated her • students in terms they couldn’t • understand, telling them they • were playing as slowly as 22K • modems.

  27. durable Week 4 Adjective. lasting for a long time, especially without sustaining damage or wear • Unfortunately because my mom • was more concerned with • durability, I received clunky, • thick-soled shoes for Christmas • rather than the dainty, high • heeled pairs I always wanted.

  28. risible Week 4 Adjective. causing or capable of laughter; provoking laughter Experiments at Washington State University show that rats are every bit as risible as humans — at least when tickled.

  29. -ible/-able Week 4 The words durableand risible have the SUFFIX: “-ible/-able” means capable of

More Related