Lit Vocabulary Word Scramble
|
Embed Code - If you would like this activity on your web page, copy the script below and paste it into your web page.
Normal Size Small Size show me how
Normal Size Small Size show me how
| Term | Definition |
| Litany | A tedious recital or repetitive series |
| Ostentatious | Attracting or seeking to attract attention |
| Vehement | Showing strong feeling; passion; intense |
| Lament | Mourn; passionate expression of grief |
| Contentious | Likely to cause disagreement or argument |
| Incongruous | Out of place; incompatible |
| Illicit | Unlawful, not legally permitted; forbidden by laws, rule, or custom |
| Fervor | Intense and passionate feeling |
| Crass | Without refinement, delicacy, or sensitivity; stupid |
| Piety | Devotion to God or to religious practices |
| Bellicose | Demonstrating aggression or willingness to fight |
| Discourse | Written or spoken communication or debate |
| Vacillate | Alternate or waiver between opinions or actions; be indecisive |
| Profound | Very great or intense |
| Superficial | Surface level |
| Strident | Presenting a point, especially a controversial one, in an excessively forceful way |
| Idyllic | Extremely happy, peaceful, or picturesque |
| Sublime | Of such excellence, grandeur, or beauty as to inspire great admiration or awe |
| Reprieve | Cancellation or postponement of a punishment of someone (especially someone condemned to death) |
| Approbation | Approval or praise |
| Fervent | Having or displaying a passionate intensity |
| Aesthetic | Concerned with beauty or the appreciation of beauty |
| Vexation | Something that causes annoyance, frustration, or worry |
| Rumination | Obsessive thinking about an idea, situation, or choice especially when it interferes with normal mental functioning |
| Aloof | Not friendly or forthcoming; cool and distant |
| Elegiac | Relating to or characteristic of an elegy |
| Obdurate | Stubbornly refusing to change one's opinion or course of action |
| Callous | Showing or having an insensitive and cruel disregard for others |
| Stoic | A person who can endure pain or hardship without showing their feelings or complaining |
| Assuage | Make (an unpleasant feeling) less intense |
| Profiligate | Recklessly extravagant or wasteful in the use of resources |
| Vitiate | Spoil or impair the quality or efficiency of |
| Trepidation | A feeling of fear or agitation about something that may happen |
| Malady | A disease or ailment |
| Corpulent | (of a person) fat |
| Derisive | Expressing contempt or ridicule |
| Penitent | Feeling or expressing humble or regretful pain or sorrow for sins or offenses; repentant |
| Inundate | Overwhelm (someone) with things or people to be dealt with |
| Secular | Denoting attitudes, activities, or other things that have no religious or spiritual basis |
| Censure | Express severe disapproval of (someone or something), especially in a formal statement |
| Defray | Provide money to pay (a cost or expense) |
| Interloper | A person who becomes involved in a place or situation where they are not wanted or are considered not to belong |
| Fatuous | Silly or pointless |
| Patronizing | Apparently kind or helpful but betraying a feeling of superiority; condescending |
| Incensed | Very angry; enraged. |
| Accede | Agree to a demand, request, or treaty |
| Errant | Straying from the proper course or standards. |
| Phlegmatic | (of a person) having an unemotional and stolidly calm disposition |
| Prostrate | Lying stretched out on the ground with one's face downward. |
| Jocund | Cheerful and lighthearted |
| Sanguine | Optimistic or positive, especially in an apparently bad or difficult situation |
| Hegemony | Leadership or dominance, especially by one country or social group over others |
| Lassitude | A state of physical or mental weariness; lack of energy |
| Licentious | Promiscuous and unprincipled in sexual matters |
| Presumptuous | (of a person or their behavior) failing to observe the limits of what is permitted or appropriate |
| Indolent | Wanting to avoid activity or exertion; lazy |
| Chasten | (of a rebuke or misfortune) have a restraining or moderating effect on |
| Corporeal | Having, consisting of, or relating to a physical material body |
| Enumerate | Mention (a number of things) one by one |
| Sordid | immoral or dishonest |
| Etymology | the study of the origin of words and the way in which their meanings have changed throughout history |
| Acquiesce | accept something reluctantly but without protest |
| Idiosyncratic | peculiar or individual |
| Surfeit | an excessive amount of something |
| Ignominious | deserving or causing public disgrace or shame. |
| Goad | provoke or annoy (someone) so as to stimulate some action or reaction |
| Languor | the state or feeling, often pleasant, of tiredness |
| Generalization | a stereotype or concept obtained by inference from specific cases |
| Allocation | the action or process of distributing something. |
| Redundant | not or no longer needed or useful; superfluous |
| Wry | using or expressing dry, especially mocking, humor |
| Ruminate | think deeply about something |
| Admonish | warn or reprimand someone firmly |
| Visage | a person's face, with reference to the form or proportions of the features |
| Jovial | cheerful and friendly |
| Invocation | the action of asking something or someone for assistance or as an authority |
| Sanctity | the state or quality of being holy, sacred, or saintly |
| Opulence | great wealth or luxuriousness |
| Indignation | anger or annoyance provoked by what is perceived as unfair treatment |
| Virtue | behavior showing high moral standards |
| Beget | give rise to; bring about |
| Cajole | persuade (someone) to do something by sustained coaxing or flattery |
| Concrete | existing in a material or physical form; not abstract |
| Indulgence | the action or fact of indulging |
| Deportment | the manner in which one conducts oneself |
| Sanctioned | give official permission or approval for (an action). |
| Corroborate | to support with evidence or authority |
| Consonance | the recurrence of similar sounds, especially consonants, in close proximity (chiefly as used in prosody) |
| Assonance | in poetry, the repetition of the sound of a vowel or diphthong in nonrhyming stressed syllables near enough to each other for the echo to be discernible (e.g., penitence, reticence ) |
| Synesthesia | the production of a sense impression relating to one sense or part of the body by stimulation of another sense or part of the body |
| Enjambment | (in verse) the continuation of a sentence without a pause beyond the end of a line, couplet, or stanza |
| Vacuous | emptied of or lacking content |
| Assertion | a confident and forceful statement of fact or belief |
| Melancholy | a feeling of pensive sadness, typically with no obvious cause |
| Nonchalant | relaxed and calm |
| Copious | large in quantity; abundant; plentiful |
| Scrupulous | (of a person or process) diligent, thorough, and extremely attentive to detail |
| Transcendent | beyond or above the range of normal or merely physical human experience |
| Deference | humble submission and respect |
Created by:
Rylee11
Popular Literature sets