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The Giver ch. 10-14
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Assuage | (verb) to make easier to handle (such as a burden or a task) Example: After Jill struck out during her first time at bat, the coach tried to ASSUAGE her fears and build her confidence for a second try. |
| Sinuous | (adjective) snake-like and wavy (having the qualities of sinew) Example: The greyhound is a natural racing dog, its SINUOUS body and slender frame help make it a fast runner. |
| Ominous | (adjective) showing a sign of something bad to come Example: The clouds hovered there, dark and OMINOUS, indicating it would rain for sure. |
| Irrational | (adjective) unable to reason with logic (without sense and reason) Example: When Charlie loses his temper, he gets so IRRATIONAL, that there is just no way to talk to him until he calms down. |
| Assimilate | (verb) to adopt the ways and adapt into a culture or society (to fit in by blending in with everyone else) Example: When Irish and Italian immigrants came to America, they tried their best to ASSIMILATE into the culture and blend in with everyone else |
| Destination | (noun) the goal of a journey Example: Our DESTINATION is Pittsburgh and we won’t rest until we get there. |
| Frigid | (adjective) freezing cold Example: The FRIGID temperatures made the water freeze into icicles and the children could see their breath. |
| Admonition | (noun) a gentle criticism Example: Janice’s mother gave her the routine ADMONITION when she burped at the dinner table. |
| Agony | (noun) extreme pain of the body or mind Example: Greg never felt such AGONY as when he broke his arm. |
| Sparse | (adjective)very few and far between (infrequent or lightly populated) Example: This used to be a forest, filled with green before all the trees were cut down, now it is SPARSE and empty. |
| Origin | (noun) the basic source or starting point of something Example: Superhero movies always start off with an ORIGIN story so the audience can learn how the hero got his special abilities. |
| Significance | (noun) the quality of being worthy of attention or having importance Example: The Declaration of Independence is a document of great SIGNIFICANCE. |
| Isolation | (noun) separation from other, being alone or apart from others Example: During the pandemic, it was lonely for many living in ISOLATION for so long. |
| Mutilate | (verb) to badly damage something by cutting it up or destroying it in some way Example: The vandals MUTILATED the paintings at the playground, carving their names into the artwork and peeling most of it away. |
| Skeptical | (adjective) being doubtful that something is true or is as it appears to be Example: Lisa was SKEPTICAL of the claims on the bottle, it seemed to her that this was too good to be true. |