1 / 22

Vocab for Bierce “ An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge”

Vocab for Bierce “ An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge”. Patsy Hamby. Vocab for Bierce. 1. acclivity n. . an ascending slope; a hill

creola
Download Presentation

Vocab for Bierce “ An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge”

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Vocab for Bierce “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge” Patsy Hamby

  2. Vocab for Bierce

  3. 1. acclivity n. • an ascending slope; a hill • 1610s, from L. acclivitatem (nom. acclivitas) "an ascending direction, an upward steepness," from acclivis "mounting upwards, ascending," from ad- "up"

  4. 2. dignitary n. • one who holds a position of honor • early 13c., from O.Fr. dignite "dignity, privilege, honor," from L. dignitatem (nom. dignitas) "worthiness," from dignus "worth (n.), worthy, proper, fitting"

  5. 3. efface v. • to erase, as if by erosion • late 15c., from M.Fr. effacer, from O.Fr. esfacier (12c.) "to wipe out, destroy," lit. "to remove the face," from es- "out" (see ex-) + face "appearance," from L. facies "face"

  6. 4. embrasure n. • an opening in a wall or fort to allow for firing of a cannon • 1702, from Fr. embrasure (16c.), from O.Fr. embraser "to cut at a slant, make a groove or furrow in a door or window," from en- "in" (see en- (1)) + braser "to cut at a slant."

  7. 5. encompass v. • to form a circle around; to enclose • 1550s, from en- (1) "make, put in" + compass. c.1300, "space, area, extent, circumference," from O.Fr. compas "circle, radius, pair of compasses"

  8. 6. hemp n. • tough fiber used for cords or ropes • from P.Gmc. *hanapiz (cf. O.S. hanap, O.N. hampr, O.H.G. hanaf, Ger. Hanf)

  9. 7. inconceivably adv. • in a manner that cannot be comprehended or understood • 1630s, from in- (1) "not, opposite of" + conceivable; from conceive + -able. Originally in a now-obsolete sense "that can be received." Meaning "that can be imagined

  10. 8. intolerable adj • unbearable • late 14c., from L. intolerabilis "that cannot bear, that cannot be borne," from in- "not, opposite of" (see in- (1)) + tolerabilis "that may be endured," from tolerare "to tolerate"

  11. 9. ludicrous adj. • foolish; laughable • 1610s, "pertaining to play or sport," from L. ludicrus, from ludicrum "source of amusement, joke," from ludere "to play," which, with L. ludus "a game, play,"

  12. 10. luminous adj. • emitting or reflecting continuous light • early 15c., "full of light," from L. luminosus "shining, full of light," from lumen

  13. 11. periodicity n. • quality of regularly recurring • 1833, from Fr. périodicité from L. periodicus. for a time period

  14. 12. ramification n. • a consequence; an outgrowth • 1670s, "a branching out," from Fr. ramification, ramus "branch" (related to radix "root;")

  15. 13. sentinel n. • a guard • 1570’s from sentire "to hear, perceive," from L. senire "feel" (see sense).

  16. 14. sluggish adj. • slow-moving • mid-15c., from M.E. slugge "lazy person"

  17. 15. span v. • to extend across • O.E. span "distance between the thumb and little finger of an extended hand," probably related to M.Du. spannen "to join, fasten";that of "space between abutments of an arch, etc." is from

  18. 16. traverse v. • to travel across • early 14c., "pass across, over, or through," from O.Fr. traverser "to cross, thwart" (11c.), from V.L. *traversare, from L. transversare "to cross, throw across," from L. transversus "turn

  19. 17. undulation n. • a rising and falling like waves • 1640s, from M.L. *undulatio, from L.L. undulatus "wavy, undulated," from undula "wavelet," dim. of L. unda "wave" (see water)

  20. 18. vigorously adv. • with great physical or mental strength • L. vigere "be lively, flourish, thrive"

  21. 19. villainous adj. • like an evil person or villain • 1300, "base or low-born rustic," from Anglo-Fr. and O.Fr. villain, from M.L. villanus "farmhand," from L. villa "country house"

  22. 20. vulgar adj. • ordinary, common, usual • late 14c., "common, ordinary," from L. vulgaris "of or pertaining to the common people, common, vulgar," from vulgus "the common people, multitude, crowd, throng,"

More Related