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Grade 11-12: Vocabulary Lesson for Friday, Week 15


Grade 11-12: Vocabulary Lesson for Friday, Week 15

Word List 15

  1. lucid: easily understood; intelligible; mentally sound; sane or rational; translucent or transparent
  2. livid: discolored, as from a bruise; black-and-blue; ashen or pallid; extremely angry; furious
  3. odious: arousing or meriting strong dislike, aversion, or intense displeasure
  4. prodigy: a person with exceptional talents or powers
  5. mundane: of, relating to, or typical of this world; secular; relating to, characteristic of, or concerned with commonplaces; ordinary
  6. pensive: deeply, often wistfully or dreamily thoughtful; suggestive or expressive of melancholy thoughtfulness
  7. sardonic: scornfully or cynically mocking

Friday Activities

  1. On week one, we suggested you create an account on Study Stack. Click the link to go to Study Stack.
  2. Log into your account. You will see the stack you created last week. Click on the "edit" button to the right of that stack. Click on the "Data" tab. Write your words on the left and the definitions on the right. If you run out of blank areas, click on the Save Changes button.
  3. Use the scroll down bar on the right to see the blank line at the bottom of the list. After entering your words and definitions, click on the "Save Changes" button. The icons at the bottom of the page are the various games you can choose to play. Select a game for this week and see how well you do!

Other Help

If you need more information on your words, click on the link to use a on-line dictionary.

Use the daily activities to help you remember words that you learn each week. It is much easier to remember what the words mean if you do something with them and use them frequently in talking with your parents, family and friends.

Sample sentences:

Although the man seemed lucid, nevertheless in the next moment he did something absolutely crazy.
Those who write instructions should strive to be extremely lucid in the text they produce.

Livid with anger, the policeman stood before us with clenched fists and piercing eyes.
For a week after the automobile accident the right side of my neck was livid.

"I realize that I have given you an odious task," he said, "Nevertheless, I expect you to do your job well.^
The odious little house elf muttered under his breath every time he got near us.

Bobby Fischer was an amazing chess prodigy.
LeBron James is one of the few high school prodigies to make it big in the NBA.

Retiring from thirty years of totally mundane work, the man suddenly found nothing to do.
"This mundane task might not seem important to you," our supervisor said, "But it is vital that we all work together.^

"Why so pensive Mom?" I asked as I came upon my mother staring longingly out the garden window.
Staring at nothing, I couldn't shake the pensive mood that had settled upon me.

I don't understand it, but the comedian had become famous with his sardonic wit and a few catchy phrases.
When I saw his sardonic smile I knew that this unpleasant little man had some very bad news he was about to deliver.


 
 

For more vocabulary, reading and other language arts resources, please visit our interactive skillbuilders.

 

 

Internet4classrooms is a collaborative effort by Susan Brooks and Bill Byles.
 

  

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