Ethan Frome by Edith Wharton:
Literary Naturalism
Learning Targets:
I can interpret words and phrases as they are used in the text, including technical, connotative and figurative meanings, and analyze how the specific word choices shape the meaning.
I can determine two or more central ideas of a text and analyze their development over the course of the text, including how they interact and build on one another to provide a complex analysis; provide an objective summary of the text.
I can analyze a complex set of ideas or sequence of events and explain how specific individuals, ideas, or events interact and develop over the course of the text.
In class: finishing any presentations left from Friday.
Ethan Frome first vocabulary list. Class handout / copy below.
note that there are 15 words. The quiz in on Tuesday, April 4. There will be a power point review on Monday, April 3
Collecting the novel Ethan Frome by Edith Wharton. You will need this in class everyday.
Ethan
Frome Vocabulary Words First List…quiz on Tuesday, April 4…power
point review on Monday, April 3
1. sardonic:
adj. Scornfully or cynically mocking; sarcastic.
2. colloquial: adj. 1. Characteristic of or appropriate to
the spoken language or to writing that seeks
the effect of
speech; informal. 2. Relating to conversation;
conversational.
3. innocuous: adj. 1. Having
no adverse effect; harmless. 2. Not
likely to offend or provoke to strong
emotion; insipid.
4. reticent:
adj. 1. Inclined to keep
one's thoughts, feelings, and personal affairs to oneself;
Restrained
or reserved in style. 3. Reluctant;
unwilling.
5.
poignant: adj. Keenly
distressing to the mind or feelings: poignant anxiety; profoundly moving; touching: a poignant memory.
6.
wraith: n. 1. An apparition of a living person that appears as a portent just
before that person's
death. 2. The ghost of a dead person. 3. Something shadowy and insubstantial.
7.
wistful: adj. 1. Full of wishful yearning. 2. Pensively sad; melancholy.
8.
undulation: n. 1. A regular rising and falling or movement to alternating sides;
movement in waves.
9.
tenuous: adj. 1. Long and thin; slender: tenuous strands. 2. Having a thin consistency; dilute;
having
little substance; flimsy: a tenuous argument.
10.
throng: n. 1. A large group of people gathered or crowded closely together; a
multitude.
throngs v.tr. 1. To
crowd into; fill: commuters thronging the subway platform.2. To press in
to gather, press, or move
in a throng.
11.
vex: (verb) 1. To annoy, as with petty importunities; bother. 2. To cause perplexity in; puzzle.
12.
laden: adj. 1. Weighed down with a load; heavy: "the warmish air,
laden with the rains of those
thousands of miles of western sea" Hilaire Belloc.
2. Oppressed; burdened: laden
with grief.
13.
preclude:
1. To make impossible, as
by action taken in advance; prevent. 2.
To exclude or prevent (someone) from a given condition or activity: Modesty
precludes me from accepting the honor.
14.
succumb: (verb) 1. To submit to an overpowering force or yield to an overwhelming
desire; give up or give in. 2. To
die.
15.
foist: (verb) 1.
To pass off as genuine, valuable, or worthy: "I can usually tell
whether a poet . . . is foisting off on us what he'd like to think is pure
invention" J.D. Salinger.
2. To
impose (something or someone unwanted) upon another by coercion or trickery: They
had extra work foisted on them because they couldn't say no to the boss. 3. To insert fraudulently or
deceitfully: foisted unfair provisions into the contract.
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