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2012 - 2013 Vocabulary Test #2
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Vocabulary Test #2

Mar 22, 2016

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Vocabulary Test #2 . 2012 - 2013. intentionally - (adverb) – to do something on purpose. “Unless Mrs. DiAngelo had intentionally paddled up one of the creeks, there was no way they would have drifted here.” Red Kayak p. 29. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Vocabulary Test #2

2012 - 2013

Vocabulary Test #2

Page 2: Vocabulary Test #2

“Unless Mrs. DiAngelo had intentionally paddled up one of the creeks, there was no way they would have drifted here.” Red Kayak p. 29

intentionally - (adverb) – to do something on purpose

Page 3: Vocabulary Test #2

“Once, she barked at the ceiling in our basement so insistently that my father pulled down part of the insulation and found a possum’s nest made out of leaves.” Red Kayak p. 32

insistently – (adverb) – to do something over and over, not giving up

Page 4: Vocabulary Test #2

“Better not be a squirrel or something stupid like that,’ I grumbled as I swung the boat toward the cove.” Red Kayak p. 32

grumbled – (verb) – another word for “said,” to say in a grumpy, mumbling way

Page 5: Vocabulary Test #2

“I just sat there with the engine in neutral, resting my head against the fingers of my tightly folded hands, because it had just hit me what happened.” Red Kayak p. 41

neutral – (noun) – the position of staying still; not moving forward, backward, or to either side

Page 6: Vocabulary Test #2

“… I almost drowned in a cow pond when I was little, maybe eight. J.T., Digger, and I were playing ice hockey, and I fell clear through the ice. The memory of that accident made me shudder.” Red Kayak p. 29

shudder – (verb) – when something can’t control vibrations or shaking

Page 7: Vocabulary Test #2

“It was hard to ignore Tilly’s instincts. Once, she barked at the ceiling in our basement so insistently that my father pulled down part of the insulation and found a possum’s nest made out of leaves.” Red Kayak p. 32

instincts – (noun) – a feeling that you already know something, even though you have no proof

Page 8: Vocabulary Test #2

“Tall marsh grass obscured my view to the right, but as soon as we had motored around it, I glimpsed the remains of an old dock - …” Red Kayak p. 32

obscured – (adjective) – to cover or hide something

Page 9: Vocabulary Test #2

“Then I sat up, put the heel of my right hand on his chest, covered it with my left, and pressed down. Five times I pressed down. Five compressions.” Red Kayak p. 36

compressions – (noun) – act of pressing down on something

Page 10: Vocabulary Test #2

“That cantankerous ton of beef was restless no more. He became as playful as a kitten and even tried to purr.” Thunder Rose p. 65

cantankerous – (adjective) – full of bad attitude

Page 11: Vocabulary Test #2

“… Jesse Baines and his gang of desperadoes tried to rustle that herd away from Rose. …She dropped them all off to jail, tied up… ‘It wasn’t any trouble at all,’ she told Sheriff Weaver. ‘Somebody had to put a stop to their thieving ways.’” Thunder Rose p. 66

thieving – (verb) – taking something that doesn’t belong to the taker.

Page 12: Vocabulary Test #2

“Is this the fork in the road with which I have my final supper? Will this be my first and my last ride of the roundup?’ she queried.” Thunder Rose p. 71

queried – (verb) – another word for “wondered”

Page 13: Vocabulary Test #2

“Calmly Rose spoke out loud to the storm as she stood alone to face the wrack and ruin, the multiplying devastation.” Thunder Rose p. 71

devastation – (noun) – the act of destroying something

Page 14: Vocabulary Test #2

“His predicament was that Peter just refused to part with even his oldest, ripped-up pair.”

predicament – (noun) – problem; difficult situation

Page 15: Vocabulary Test #2

“Your sneakers were definitely the most disgusting. You won first place! We are displaying them in a closed case where people can admire the shoes without the odor.”

admire – (verb) – to really like something

Page 16: Vocabulary Test #2

“He knew precisely where he wanted Grandfather to take him, Smith’s Athletic Store, a paradise for sneaker lovers.”

paradise – (noun) – a place of great happiness or joy

Page 17: Vocabulary Test #2

“It said that Peter was entitled to one free pair of sneakers!”

entitled – (verb) – to give a right or claim to

Page 18: Vocabulary Test #2

“Inside the cramped submarine, all I could hear was the steady pinging of the sonar and the regular breathing of the pilot and engineer.” The Unsinkable Wreck of the R.M.S. Titanic by R. Ballard and R. Archbold p. 207

cramped – (adjective) – describes not having very much space or crowding a small area

Page 19: Vocabulary Test #2

“In 1912, the Titanic had set sail on her maiden voyage, the largest, most luxurious ship the world had ever seen.” The Unsinkable Wreck of the R.M.S. Titanic by R. Ballard and R. Archbold p.208

luxurious – (adjective) – very grand or deluxe; super fancy

Page 20: Vocabulary Test #2

“Then, on the fifth night out – tragedy. An iceberg, seen too late. Too few lifeboats. Pandemonium, and over 1,500 dead out of the more than 2,200 people on board.” The Unsinkable Wreck of the R.M.S. Titanic by R. Ballard and R. Archbold p. 209

tragedy – (noun) – terrible disaster

Page 21: Vocabulary Test #2

“The glass dome over the first-class grand staircase was long gone, providing a perfect opening for exploring the interior of the ship.” The Unsinkable Wreck of the R.M.S. Titanic by R. Ballard and R. Archbold p. 213

interior – (noun) – the inside location of something