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Grade 9-10: Vocabulary Lesson for Thursday, Week 13


Grade 9-10: Vocabulary Lesson for Thursday, Week 13

Word List 13

  1. supposition: the act of supposing; something supposed; an assumption
  2. virulent: extremely infectious, malignant, or poisonous; capable of causing disease by breaking down protective mechanisms of the host; bitterly hostile or antagonistic; hateful; intensely irritating, obnoxious, or harsh
  3. validate: to declare or make legally valid; to mark with an indication of official sanction; to establish the soundness of; corroborate
  4. tantalize: to excite (another) by exposing something desirable while keeping it out of reach
  5. stagnant: not moving or flowing; motionless; foul or stale from standing
  6. scuttle: to cut or open a hole or holes in (a ship's hull); to sink (a ship) by this means
  7. reiterate: to say or do again or repeatedly

Thursday Activities

  1. Create your own crossword puzzle. Click on this link and scroll down to the bottom of the page. Enter your words and your clues (definition), then click "Create Crossword Now." A new web page will appear. You can put a title on your puzzle if you wish, then click "Create Crossword." Print this out and complete the puzzle. Insert the completed work in your vocabulary notebook.
  2. Word Scrambler - Click on the link and create your own word scrambler with your vocabulary words. Type in the number of words you wish to scramble and press the "next" buton. You will see a sheet that has the answers for you. Press next again and print out the page. Complete it and put it in your notebook.
  3. Go to the Spelling City website. Type in your list of vocabulary words. Click on the button that says Play A Game. Select Which Word. Play the game and write down the fill-in-the-blank sentences in your notebook.

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:

"That's an interesting supposition boys," the headmaster told us frowning, "you are about to find out just how wrong you were.^
Supposition without all of the facts can often lead to disaster.

A particularly virulent strain of the disease wiped out more than half of the village.
His virulent rhetoric directed at all who worked with him eventually isolated the sad little man.

In an attempt to defuse the tense situation the detective held up a ticket and asked, "Do you validate parking?^
I was pleased that the professor's remarks served to validate my months of research.

Bart decided to tantalize me, moving the water bottle just out of my reach.
I tantalize my kitten by dragging a catnip mouse just out of his reach.

We later found out that the biggest problem from the flood was the huge mass of stagnant water that stayed around for weeks.
The stagnant floodwater soon began to smell awful.

After removing anything of worth, the pirates decided to scuttle the ship.
"I'm not trying to scuttle your plans, but," the professor said and then proceeded to tear my thesis apart.

"Allow me to reiterate," the professor told us, repeating to underscore the importance of what he said, "Do your own work!^
Really upset, Mom stood with hands on her hips glowering at us as she quietly said, "I reiterate, wipe those muddy feet before coming in this house.^


 
 

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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