no.
1
Summary:
Dad’s off from his bookshop. When I come home late, went to the
bookshop for something. A letter for me. Through reading the letter, I became
enthralled to Vida Winter. Knowing her through epithets, I start to make
impressions from her. As I have seen her from a photograph, I’ve known the
mystery behind her, “Why would she want to tell the truth from me?”.
I, Margaret Lea, who had lived in an environment filled with books,
gave me the destiny of becoming a famous biographer. In that case, Vida Winter
forced me to be her biographer. But as I’ve known the truth that I have a dead
twin, I decided to wrote a letter of refusal to Vida Winter’s invitation. From
the letter of invitation by Vida Winter, I can’t sleep from the words keep
uttering through my head – Tell me the
truth – so I ran downstairs to find a book that could replaced those words
by reading through it. From my rummaging to the shop, I’ve found the Thirteen Tales of Change and Desperation by
Vida Winter. The next morning, my father groaned from the disappearance of one
of his Vida Winter’s books. To stopped him from groaning, I’ve said that I
borrowed it. Through his indulgence to Vida Winter, my mind have forced me to
take the invitation of Vida Winter and so I did.
The next day, I left our house via a train. As I came closer to the
house of Vida Winter, I felt a cold and queer feeling about her house. Though
her house was the same as the person that had lived in there. Silent. Alone.
Cold. Though my impressions suited to it, I felt a warm hospitability by
Judith, her housekeeper. Vida Winter invited me to her library, until in my
memory it was forgotten as I read through the books in her library. She
surprised me through the back-of-the-neck experience and we started the
interview with the magic three rule. I asked her of her name, place of birth
and the life before she changes her real name. She started it with her lost
twin, Emmeline, in what she called the five at Angelfield. And the scar that unfolds
her prfect mystery.
The following day, I went again to her library for the continuation of
her story. She started making conditions and with her birth by Mathilde where
her mother died. When her mother died, George don’t want for longer life until
he was fainted by Isabelle. When George made life with Isabelle, Charlie’s life
went gone. Through that condition, Charlie hated Isabelle that he maim her
thoroughly. So Isabelle went off from her house and Charlie’s solitude grew
longer as the months go by. Until they meet again with Isabelle’s babies from
Ronald.
The next day, I woke early gazing and puzzled by the confusing maze
and had met Maurice. Miss Winter continued the story by introducing Missus
(Mrs. Dunne) by her hardworking for Emmeline, Adeline, Charlie and Isabelle to
let them change from poor habits to a healthy lifestyle and the other person is
John-the-Dig, the great head gardener maintaining the topiary garden to be
clean and beautiful. Until he lost his hope when the little girls distract his
great industrious topiary garden. The fourth day of my stay, she started her
story of merrily and perambulator. The story preludes of Mary and Fred Jameson
having a baby that besofted Emmeline and Adeline to pilfer it. They’ve done it
by their surreptitious manner; they’ve also pilfered it’s perambulator.
At my last day, Miss Winter told me about Dr. and Mrs. Maudsley, how
they will change the house of Angelfield as with the behavior of the little
girls. As they were doing these tasks, ghosts appeared that let them to be
frayed on what they’re doing. After she tells me the story, I left her with her
wolf and come back on Thursday. Before I left, she tell me, she has a
resemblance with Dicken’s photograph from the way they lived. She even has the
sincerity of asking if I will come back again though she already knew I will
come back because her story has not yet finished.
As I went home, I continued my researches through the almanacs by
finding lives of Angelfield family. After prolonged researching, I found out
according to law, Charlie had been dead. For more information, I traveled to
the offices of Banbury Herald to knew what happened to the fire at Angelfield.
But I was shocked as I found none of these, even the interview of a man in
brown suit to Vida Winter. From Banbury I moved to Angelfield to find artifacts
that can be help in my study. But as I entered it, almost of the house was
ruined, not even ghosts would like to stay here. Few minutes later, I craved
onto the library and there I saw a giant named Aurelius Love. We’ve spent the
afternoon introducing ourselves to each other, he soon be of big help to my
study as he know the Angelfield girls. It’s coming late so I’d have to go with
the treasure of meeting him. After I went home, I walked to the churchyard
where there are graves each with the Angelfield family’s names. At last,
searching for Charlie, I found him there. After finding him I went home, packed
my things for I was going to meet again Miss Vida Winter.
On the second time, Emmeline and Adeline’s bad behavior had turned
into good while the grubbiness of their house turned to be pristine by the
arrival of Hester, a governess. Everything, everybody become different. At
last, tranquility triumphed. I found out Hester’s mystery on th box of lives I
kept for my biographical projects. And the mission to do is to find her as I
was enthralled from dreaming of her. She continued her mission to see the
development, that was Emmeline and Missus. She and Dr. Maudsley are still
working on the regime they’re going to have to make Adeline be good.
Alright, I can’t go to sleep because of the 5 notes that kept on
bothering me (La la la la la). I awake and followed the tracks of those notes
that came to a suspicion that she is Emmeline. And I realized I come to a wrong
judgment, It was only a cat named Shadow.
The next day, Hester and Dr. Maudsley find a regime how to change the
little girls by the result of the examination that was undertaken. The regime
is the painful separation. It’s hard for the little girls to do it cause they
are twins, their minds are connected to each other. Hester, after accomplishing
her duties, gone off through the roads and have seen Adeline and Emmeline
playing together, though it was impossible. But when he went to Mr. Maudsley’s
house, there was Adeline in tranquility. The separation was over when Mrs.
Maudsley had known of Hester’s secret love affair to her husband and Hester was
gone after that event.
The next day, when Judith came, she had given me a letter saying that
Emmeline was survived the fire and was not really dead according to the
attorney I had consulted a while ago. Then, back to Winter’s story, so Hester
was gone and the house and th little girls have changed from good to bad. Now,
Missus and John was already confused from what she’d done. It made Charlie’s
room to be dirty and silent for he is also gone. Missus also received a letter
that Isabelle had already gone from the asylum. Everything in the house was
being enthralled by Charlie’s disappearance.
Because of Winter’s illness, I need to have a holiday for it would be
her resting days. So I planned to visit Aurelius and had shocked me with his
revealing statement about her mother, her birthday and the fire. He also share
a story about Mrs. Love, her young man, her kitting and her socks. He also
taught of the recipes in the book that Mrs. Love gave to him.
When I came back to Miss Winter, she is still ill, but it doesn’t
bother her. Thus, she told me of the game of Jane Eyre and the furnace. We’ve
also examined the photographs from the Angelfield and we’ve noticed a ghost, a
boy with a yellow hat.
I stood awake during the day, to find adventure, I followed the cat to
the garden and was shocked when I’ve seen Emmeline there.
Wandering through the past, when I was little I’ve learned the
phonetic alphabet. Within it, the discovery of my sister to my father.
For 6 months, things went on until John-the-Dig was put into test.
Digence had died after he didn’t have the safety catch. We are the ones who are
responsible for his funeral so Mr. Lomax rescued us to take all of it. Thanks
lot to him, now we’re stressed free.
The following day, I have seen Miss Winter suffering from her wolf so
I soothed her with my soothing words that my father used to console me. I’m
still puzzled how did John-the-Dig died, was it Adeline?, was to her tears of
guilt?, of remorse? I’ll take a bath before I go to sleep to erase my puzzles.
‘Til I have been puzzled by this statement (The dead go underground) as it was
released from now here.
The next day, she offered me to cut her hair being ready to be
oblivioned. While I was cutting her hair. The following day it was my birthday
and it greeted to me coldly not only literally but figuratively. Aurelius
visits me to greet me and I’ve told him about his mother and that was Emmeline
living with Adeline, known as Miss Winter. At last, Emmeline and her son
Aurelius did see each other blood in blood.
At the end of the day, my birthday, I felt so sick so Dr. Clifton came
to the rescue. And this was the relief from my brain, A Cas Book of Sherlock
Holmes by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. I followed Dr. Clifton’s prescriptions and as
the days pass by, I did got well. Miss Winter, in turn, make her apology for
not telling me that Emmeline is here, and this is the reason why Margaret got
ill. After that apology, too many revelations I have said to her that alarmed
her so much.
With Emmeline’s prolonged dying, Vida forced me to leave, have a
vacation because Emmeline’s sickness might got severed. Before I left, she
handed me this Emmeline’s book (The Hester’s Diary).
Along the travelling hours, I went on reading the diary. The diary is
all about Hester’s observations on the Angelfield’s house and its inhabitants.
Through reading I’ve changed my mind from going home, then to Angelfield. I
went there not knowing that it had been demolished and had seen bones of a
buried body. At first, I thought it was Hester because I’m longing to search
her. There I’ve discovered Ambrose’s other family, with Karen and her two kids.
I left Angelfield and went back to Winter for they might need my help.
In the train I continued reading Hester’s diary, it is all about the ghost twin
up to the ending of her story, she will not write anymore. When I’ve got in
there, I was not scrupulously in time, Emmeline was already dead. Then Miss
Winter told me about her revelations in the story. The fire. The baby.
She told me that Emmeline is pregnant with Ambrose. She did everything
to hide Emmeline’s pregnancy. It did worked and at the 7th of
January, a boy was released.
Adeline intended to hurt the baby by burning him to the furnace. In
that case, Emmeline and the baby get rid of Adeline and went to church. To get
her revenge to Adeline, she burned the Angelfield’s house. But on the other
hand, Emmeline was burned completely by her intended revenge. Adeline, on the
other case, put the baby in Mrs. Love’s arms, safe and sound.
After she ended her own story, she gasped for breath and had died.
After the sorrowful grief, we all start another day reminiscing what she had
done. Upon knowing this, Aurelius also grieved of having no family. But I came
to the rescue and I make him realize that he has his family with Ambrose’s
second family and they lived happily ever after.
All was ended. Aurelius now had a family. Dr. Maudsley and Hester
found love and had four children but they had died. But to me it was just the
beginning of my life and for Moira who’s been living in my scar.
VOCABULARY:
- Paean – a joyous
song/ hymn of praise, thanksgiving
- Laundress – woman
who is a laundry worker
- Foolscap – cap or
hood with bells worn by jesters (lazy students)
- Etched – to produce
on a hard material by eating into the material’s surface
- Queer – strange
- Fringe – an
ornamental border consisting of short straight or twisted threads or strips
- Sheaf – a quantity
of the stalks and ears of a cereal grass or sometimes other plant
- Laborious – devoted
to labor
- Vellum –
fine-grained unsplit lambskin, kidskin or calfskin prepared especially for
binding books.
- Curt – marked by
rude or peremptory shortness
- Chap – child
- Gripe – complaint
- Succor – aid or help
- Soothing –
comforting
- Thrive – to gain in
weight or possessions
- Frail – weak
- Cowers – shelters
- Hacks – working for
hire especially with mediocre professional standards
- Startle – to
frighten or surprise suddenly
- Bait – to persecute
or exasperate with unjust, malicious or persistent attacks. To tease
- Dazzling – to lose
clear vision especially from looking at bright light
- Rite of passage –
ritual associated with the crisis or a change of status for an individual
- Mere – pure, having
no admixture
- Stillborn – abortive
- Clutching – the
claws or a hand in the act of grasping or seizing firmly
- Devise – invent
- Probing – to search
into and explore with great thoroughness: subject to a penetrating
investigation
- Impoverished –
represented by few species or individuals
- Frayed – to frighten
- Drooping – to sink
gradually; to become depressed or weakened
- Verve – talent
- Fidgeted – to move
or act restlessly or nervously
- Gnaws – to bite or
chew on with the teeth especially to wear away by persistent biting or
nibbling
- Dormancy – quality
or state of being inactive
- Meek – enduring
injury with patience and without resentment: mild
- Biddable – easily
taught or led
- Innards – internal
organs of human being; animal; structure; mechanism
- Deftly –
characterized by facility and skill
- Enthralled –
spellbound
- Epithets – a
characterizing word or phrase accompanying or occurring in place of the
name or a person or thing
- Detritus – loose material that results
from disintegration: debris
- Oblivious – being
forgotten or unknown
- Stunted – to
performed or undertaken chiefly to gain attention or publicity
- Grandeur – the
quality or state of being grand: magnificence
- Impeccable – not
capable of being sinned or liable to sin
- Blunt-tooled – to
make less sharp or definite
- Endeavor – to work
with set purpose
- Alabaster – a
compact fine textured usually white and translucent gypsum often carved
into vases and ornaments
- Extravagant –
exceeding the limits of reason or necessity
- Sleight – deceitful
craftiness: stratagem, dexterity, skill
- Inexpression –
lacking the expression
- Perspective – point
of view
- Scant – hardly,
scarcely, slight; having a small or insufficient supply
- Migratory –
characterized by passing usually periodically from one region or climate
to another
- Tranquility – peace
- Detour – a deviation
from a direct course or the usual procedure especially a roundabout way
temporarily replacing a part of a route: bypass
- Amiable – capability
of having many friends
- Auction – sale or
property to the highest bidder
- Vaguely – not
clearly expressed; stated in indefinite terms; slight, vacant, hazy
- Prelude –
introduction
- Indulgence – act of
yielding the desire of; humor, gratify, poll
- Repository – a place
or room or container where something is deposited or stored
- Forbade – to hinder
or prevent as if by an effectual command
- Graze – to eat small
amounts of food several times
- Gory – bloody
- Arduous – difficult
- Treacherous – marked
by dangers, hazards or perils
- Spinsters – an
unmarried woman of gentle family
- Crinolines – an open
weave fabric of horsehair or cotton that is usually stiffened and used
especially for interlinings and millinery
- Decorum – propriety
and good taste in conduct or appearance: orderliness
- Eradicate – to pull
up by the roots; exterminate
- Seams – to join two
pieces by sewing: entirely, completely
- Grime – dirt
- Recoiled – to shrink
back physically and emotionally; degenerate, rebound
- Snagged – to catch
and usually damage by cutting roughly or jaggedly
- Malevolence –
quality or state of being of having, showing or arising from intense often
vicious ill will, spite or hatred
- Retrospect – past
- Albeit – conceding
the fact that; even though
- Meandering – to
wander aimlessly or casually without urgent destination
- Devoured – to eat up
greedily
- Frail – weak
- Vocation – a work in
which a person is regularly employed; occupation
- Rekindling – easily
combustible material to starting a fire
- Obscurity – shrouded
in or hidden by darkness
- Flimsy – lacking in
physical strength or substance
- Dilettante – amateur
- Banal – lacking
originality
- Dreadful – great
fear; extremely bad, distasteful, unpleasant, or shocking; extreme
- Annihilation – to
cause to be of no effect; nullify, no consequence
- Perplex – puzzle
- Amber – hard
yellowish or brownish translucent fossil that takes a fine polish and is
used chiefly in making ornamental objects
- Resonate – to
produce or exhibit echoing
- Reticence – inclined
to be silent or uncommunicate in speech
- Seasick – affected
with or suggestive with motion sickness experienced on the water
- Sensible – considerable;
substantial
- Proviso – an article
or clause that introduces a condition
- Insubstantial –
lacking substance
- Cloaked – disguise
- Rite – prescribed
form or manner governing words or actions of a ceremony
100. Fumbled – to grope for or
handle something clumsily or aimlessly
101. Corrugated – having to
form or shape into wrinkles or folds or into alternating ridges and grooves;
furrow
102. Rummaged – to make a
thorough search or investigation
103. Tangled – confused state
or condition; snarl
104. Skein – something
suggesting twists or coils
105. Wriggling – to move the
body or a bodily part to and fro with a short writhing motion like a worm
106. Dislodged – to drive from
a position of hiding, defense or advantage
107. Frill – a gathered,
pleated or bias-cut fabric edging used on clothing
108. Valance – drapery hung
along the edge of a bed, table, altar, canopy or shelf
109. Crags – steep rugged rock
or cliff
110. Firs – any of a genus of
north temperate evergreen trees of a pine family that have flattish leaves;
circular leaf scars, and erect female cones and are valued for their wood
111. Pang – brief piercing
spasm of pain
112. Tumult – disorderly
agitation or milling about of a crowd usually with uproar and confusion of
voices; commotion, riot
113. Duress – unlawful
constraint
114. Pondered – to think or
consider quietly, deeply
115. Tingled – to feel a
ringing, stinging, prickling, or thrilling sensation
116. Gaze – a fixed intent
look
117. Inexplicably –
unquestionable
118. Torso – trunk
119. Flaccid – not firm or
stiff
120. Esoteric – private,
confidential
121. Paradox –
self-contradictory statement that at first seems true
122. Fêtes – festival
123. Tainted – touched
124. Amenable – answerable;
willing; obedient, responsible, suited, capable of submission
125. Nagged – persistent
source of annoyance; complain
126. Darted – to throw with a
sudden movement
127. Draped – arrangement in
or folds
128. Hovered – searched
129. Bewildered – puzzle
130. Ransacked – examine
closely and carefully
131. Utter – pronounce, speak
132. Desolation – deserted,
joyless, lifeless
133. Denouements – final
outcome
134. Ambiguity – uncertainty
135. Creasing – line, mark or
ridge made by or as if by folding a pliable substance: wrinkle
136. Flawed – an imperfection
or weakness especially one that detracts from the whole
137. Nostalgic – homesickness
138. Counterpane – bedsheet
139. Novice – a person
admitted in probationary membership in religious community: beginner
140. Scraped – to remove from
a surface by usually repeated strokes of an edged instrument: discard
141. Haggis – a traditionally
Scottish dish that consists of the heart, liver and lungs of a slip or a calf
minced with suet, onions, oatmeal and seasonings boiled in the stomach of the
animal.
142. Coriander – an Old World
herb of the carrot family with aromatic fruits
143. Wry – twist, to pull out
of or as if out of proper shape
144. Pinnacle – highest point
of development or achievement
145. Lupine – wolfish cry
146. Rabble – broken fragments
from decay or destruction
147. Taut – high-strung; tense
148. Spontaneous – arising
from momentarily impulse
149. Gauzy – open thin weave
fabric chiefly used for clothing or draperies
150. Bloated – being much
larger than what is warranted, obnoxiously vain
151. Scrutiny – examination,
surveillance
152. Smothered – to overcome
or kill with smoke or fumes
153. Chaise lounges – long
reclining chair
154. Upholstered – to furnish
with materials (fabric, padding and springs) used to make a soft covering
especially for a seat
155. Damask – a firm lustrous
fabric made with flat patterns in a satin weave on a plain woven ground on
jacquard looms(linen, cotton, silk or rayon)
156. Convoluted – having a
form or shape that is folded in curved or tortuous windings; involved,
intricate
157. Halt – to walk or proceed
lamely: limp, end, stop, discontinue, terminate
158. Abashed – embarrass
159. Shrouded – shelter,
protection, obscure
160. Levity – changeableness,
excessive or unseemly frivolity
161. Solitary – living or
going alone, desolation, unfrequented
162. Magisterial – having the
characteristics of a master or a teacher; authoritative, dictatorial
163. Rigidity – firmness
164. Incongruous –
incompatible, disagreeing
165. Tartly – marked by
biting, acrimonious/cutting quality
166. Pecuniary – consisting of
or measured in money
167. Quaint – marked by
skillful design; expert; skilled
168. Palling – to lose
strength, effectiveness, interest, attraction
169. Compromised – settlement
of differences by arbitration or by consent reached by mutual concessions
170. Abide – to wait for;
await
171. Chucked – toss, dismiss,
pat, tap, discard, clucked
172. Affronted – to insult
especially to the face by behavior or language
173. Averted – avoided
174. Truce – suspension of
fighting especially of considerable duration by agreement of opposing forces
175. De rigueur – prescribed
or required by fashion, etiquette or custom: proper
176. Veracity – truthfulness,
accuracy
177. Posterity – future
generations
178. Stilted – having the
curve beginning above the impost; pompous; lofty; formal; stiff
179. Bereavement – loss of
loved one by death
180. Vertigo – disordered
state in which the individual or the individual’s surroundings seem to whirl
dizzily
181. Vise – to hold, force or
squeeze with or as if with a vise
182. Thud – to move or strike
with a dull sound
183. Atonic – uttered without
accent or stress
184. Portents – something that
foreshadows a coming event; prodigy; marvel
185. Subplot – subordinate
plot in fiction or drama
186. Atrophied – decrease in
size or wasting away of a body part or tissue; arrested development or life of
an animal or plant; progressive decline
187. Vicar – one serving as a
substitute or agent
188. Papoose – young child of
American Indian parents
189. Maim – to mutilate,
disfigure or wound seriously
190. Inflict – to give by or
as if by striking
191. Veritable – being in fact
the thing named and not false, unreal or imaginary
192. Caprices – sudden,
impulsive, and unseemingly unmotivated notion or action
193. Squalor – quality or
state of being covered with scales or dirt
194. Enticement – to attract
artfully or adroitly or by arousing hope or desire: tempt
195. Frocks – an outer garment
worn by monks and friars: habit
196. Sweltering – oppressively
hot
197. Feign – pretend,
dissemble, disguise, fictitious
198. Jollity – festive
gathering; merriment
199. Gasped – to catch the
breath convulsively and audibly
200. Pallor – deficiency of
color especially of the face, paleness
201. Canopy – to cover with
cloth covering suspended over a bed
202. Lolled – relaxed posture
203. Adenoidal – exhibiting
the characteristics (as snoring, mouth breathing and voice nasality) of one
affected with abnormally enlarged adenoids
204. Vent – an opportunity or
means of escape, passage or release, outlet
205. Eluded – escape understanding,
to avoid adroitly
206. Raged – to be in tumult
207. Placatory – pacify
208. Agonizing – painful
209. Subtlety – quality or
state of being delicate, elusive, obscure, perceptive, refined
210. Vexed – harassed
211. Farriers – persons who
shoes horses
212. Gratified – give pleasure,
reward, satisfy, indulge
213. Glint – to glance off an
object
214. Afoot – in the process of
development; underway
215. Clod – lump or mass
especially of earth or clay
216. Aghast – struck with
terror, amazement or horror
217. Auburn – of a reddish
brown color
218. Poacher – one that
trespasses or steals
219. Pilfered – stealed
220. Fey – doomed, touched,
crazy, unconventional
221. Insouciance – nonchalance
222. Perturbed – to throw into
confusion
223. Pristine – fresh and
clean
224. Engulfed – to flow over
and enclose; overwhelmed
225. Trepidation – fear;
horror
226. Scalding – to burn or as
if with hot liquid or steam
227. Sheer – a complete manner
228. Hawthorne – the
stimulation to output or accomplishment that results from the mere fact of
being under observation; such an increase in output or accomplishment
229. Privet – a European deciduous
shrub of the olive family with semi-evergreen leaves and small white leaves,
flowers that is widely used for hedges
230. Beech – any of a genus of
hardwood trees with smooth gray bark and small edible nuts
231. Ivy – a widely cultivated
ornamental climbing or prostrate or sometimes shrubby chiefly Eurasian vine of
the ginseng family with evergreen leaves, small yellowish flowers, and black
berries
232. Clematis – any of a genus
of vines or herbs of the buttercup family having three leaflets on each leaf
usually white, red, pink or purple flowers
233. Fathom – comprehensible
234. Shrubberies – planting or
growth of shrubs
235. Thwart – transverse
236. Flailingly – to strike
with or as if with a flail
237. Wieldingly – manage
238. Retaliated – to get
revenge
239. Ravenously – to eat up
greedily
240. Gammon – pretend, feign
241. Chided – scolded
242. Exhorted – to give
warnings or advice
243. Amputees – one that has
had a limb amputated
244. Succinctly – concisely
245. Bafflingly – to feat or
check by confusing or puzzling
246. Bulgingly – being longer
than what is warranted
247. Pruning – to cut off or
cut back parts of for better shape or more fruitful growth
248. Desiccation – drying out
249. Agape – being in a state
of wonder: love
250. Afield – away from home
251. Pantry – a room or closet
used for storing or from which food is brought to the table
252. Disinclination – a
preference for avoiding something; slight aversion
253. Chemise – woman’s one
piece undergarment; a loose straight hanging dress
254. Pegged – identify;
restrict
255. Besotted – to make dull
or stupid
256. Brambles – any of a genus
of usually prickly shrubs of the rose family including the raspberries and
blackberries
257. Perambulator – a baby
carriage
258. Crooning – to sing or
speak in a gentle or murmuring manner
259. Surreptitious – silent
260. Indefatigable – incapable
of being fatigue
261. Serene – calm; clear and
free of storms or unpleasant change
262. Exhilarating – to make
cheerful, enliven
263. Reverberating – reflect,
repel, echo, resound
264. Sidle – to cause to move
or turn sideways
265. Preamble – an
introductory statement
266. Cessation – temporary or
final ceasing; stop
267. Concurred – to act
together to a common end or single effect
268. Amanuensis – one employed
to write from dictation or to copy manuscript
269. Impertinent – irrelevant
270. Unflinching – not
flinching or shrinking, uncompromising
271. Inadvertence – result of
inattention
272. Anesthetic – lacking
awareness or sensitiveness; palliative; producing anesthesia
273. Pace – to move along
274. Scurrying – to move
around in an agitated, confused or fluttering manner
275. Panting – visible
movement of chest accompanying such a breath; throbbing or puffing sound
276. Tonic – producing or
adapted to produce healthy muscular condition and reaction of organs
277. Cognizant – knowledgeable
of something especially through personal experience; mindful; aware
278. Filthy – dirty
279. Wonky – unsteady, shaky,
awry, wrong
280. Fastidious – having
meticulous, sensitive; demanding attitude; capricious standards
281. Faintly – to lose
courage, spirit, strength
282. Slump – collapse, slouch
283. Reverie – the condition
of being lost in thought
284. Engrossed – to take or
engage the whole attention of
285. Girded – to encircle or
bind with a small band; encircle
286. Assault – a violent
physical or verbal attack
287. Relented – soften
288. Dilapidation – to bring
into a condition of decay or partial ruin; squander
289. Notion – an individual’s
conception or impression of something known, experienced or imagined
290. Stricken – afflicted or
overwhelmed by a disease, misfortune, or sorrow
291. Throbbing – to pulsate or
pound with abnormal force or rapidity
292. Haphazard – chance
293. Impotence – quality or
state of being helpless
294. Winced – to turn aside
295. Brougham – light-closed
horse-drawn carriage with the driver outside in front
296. Trotted – to drive, ride
or proceed at a frot( a moderately fast gait of a quadruped in which the legs
move in diagonal pairs).
297. Ruminated – reflected
298. Eavesdropped – to listen
secretly to what is said in private
299. Impunity – exemption or
freedom from punishment, harm or loss
300. Quills – one of the stiff
feathers of a wing or tail
301. Nobility – the quality or
state of being possessed outstanding qualities
302. Bustle – to move briskly;
to be busily astir
303. Archive – a place in
which public records or historical documents are preserved
304. Reckon – computation,
calculation
305. Yew – any of a genus of
evergreen trees and shrubs with stiff linear leaves and fruits
306. Thatch – plant material
used as a sheltering cover especially of a house
307. Gables – the vertical
triangular end of a building from cornice or eaves to ridge
308. Restrained – to prevent
from doing, exhibiting or expressing something
309. Studded – to furnish with
studs (one of the smaller uprights in the framing of the walls of a building to
which sheathing, paneling, or laths are fastened).
310. Mackintoshes –
lightweight waterproof fabric originally of rubberized cotton; raincoat
311. Jolted – a sudden feeling
of shock, surprise or disappointment
312. Veiled – obscured,
disguised
313. Writhing – to twist into coils or folds
314. Inveterate – firmly
established by long persistence; habitual
315. Clambered – to climb
awkwardly
316. Latch – any of various
devices in which mating mechanical parts engage to fasten but usually not to
look something
317. Graveled – to cover or
spread with gravel
318. Interspersed – to place
something at intervals in or among
319. Flint – a massive hard
quartz that produces a spark when struck by steel
320. Lych-gate – a roofed gate
in a churchyard under which a bier rests during the initial part of a burial
service
321. Spire – to rise in or as
if a spiral
322. Vista – a distant view
through or along an avenue or opening; prospect
323. Repress – to check by or
as if by pressure
324. Facade – front of a
building
325. Higgledy-piggledy – a
confused, disordered or random manner
326. Disparate – containing or
made up of fundamentally different and often incongruous elements
327. Jutting – to project
beyond
328. Balustrade – row of
balusters topped by a rail
329. Quarried – to dig or take
or as if from a quarry
330. Tutters – small towers
331. Brooding – worry; state
of depression
332. Menace – to make a show
of intention to harm
333. Undulations – rising and
falling of waves
334. Masonry – something
constructed of materials used by masons
335. Encampment – a place
where a group of persons is encamped
336. Buddleia – any of a genus
of shrubs or trees of warm regions with showy terminal clusters of usually
yellow or violet flowers
337. Craning – to raise a lift
or as if by a crane
338. Draperies – decorative
piece of material usually hang in loose folds and arranged in a graceful design
339. Squinted – cross-eyed
340. Timber – growing tress or
their wood
341. Planks – a heavy thick
board
342. Lurched – cheated
343. Scrabbled – repeated
scratching
344. Empathy – imaginative
projection of a subjective state into an object so that the object appears to
be infused with it
345. Girth – a band or strap
that encircles the body of an animal to fasten something on its back
346. Squabbles – quarrels
347. Mirth – merry
348. Effigies – an image or
representation especially of a person
349. Murky – characterized by
dimness or obscurity caused by or like that caused by overhanging fog or smoke
350. Lurked – to lie in wait
in a place of concealment especially for an evil purpose
351. Pleats – folds
352. Cashmere – fine wool from
the undercoat of the goat
353. Brimful – ready to
overflow
354. Vigil – watch formerly
kept on the night before a religious feast with prayer or other devotions
355. Idling – power is not
used for useful work
356. Stash – hiding place
357. Devoid – being without a
usual, typical, or expected attribute or accompaniment
358. Fiddling – to move the
hands or fingers restlessly
359. Jiggling – to give a
rapid jerky motion
360. Countenance – calm
expression
361. Lumpen – member of a
crude or undedicated low class of society
362. Pudgy – short and plump,
chubby
363. Squalid – dirty
364. Motes – small particle;
speck
365. Alcove – a small recessed
section of a room; nook
366. Haste – to move or act
swiftly
367. Chaos – state of utter
confusion
368. Scribbled – to write
carelessly or hastily without regard to legibility or form
369. Vigor – active bodily or
mental strength or force
370. Strolling – to walk in a
leisurely or idle manner
371. Fatalistic – a doctrine
that events are fixed in advance so that human beings are powerless to change
them
372. Galvanized – to subject
to the action of an electric current especially for the purpose of stimulating
psychologically
373. Poplin – a strong fabric
in plain weave with crosswise ribs
374. Trances – state of partly
suspended animation or inability to function
375. Sly – wise in practical
affairs
376. Plundered – to take the
goods by force
377. Unscrupulous –
unprincipled
378. Realm – kingdom, sphere,
domain
379. Lucid – intelligible,
luminous, translucent
380. Abomination – extreme disgust and hatred
381. Cleaves – to adhere
firmly and closely or loyally and unwaveringly
382. Limbo – place or state of
being oblivion
383. Condescension – voluntary
descent from one’s rank or dignity in relations with an inferior
384. Obelisk – an upright four
sided usually monolithic pillar that gradually tapers as it rises and
terminates in a pyramid
385. Dodecahedron – solid
having twelve plane faces
386. Cunning – dexterous or crafty in skill in the
use of special resources or attaining an end
387. Wily – crafty; sly
388. Splayed – to cause to spread
outward
389. Regime – regular pattern
of occurrence or action
390. Detrimental – damaging,
pernicious
391. Squelch – emit a sucking
sound; silence
392. Atonal – marked by
avoidance of traditional musical tonality
393. Blundered – to move
unsteadily or confusedly
394. Frenzy – violent mental
or emotional agitation
395. Stumped – challenge,
baffle
396. Prodded – to thrust a
pointed instrument into
397. Eloquence – discourse
marked by force
398. Articulate – jointed,
intelligible
399. Indolent – causing little
or no pain
400. Rhetorical – art of
speaking or writing effectively
401. Copious – yielding
something abundantly
402. Cogent – convincing,
relevant
403. Agitated – to move with
an irregular, rapid or violent motion
404. Preposterous – obvious
405. Culmination – to rise to
or form a summit
406. Shunted – shift, shuffle
407. Aired – become exposed to
air
408. Distraught – insane
409. Shuddered – quivered,
shivered
410. Terrain – geographical
area, ground
411. Apricot – moderate orange
412. Conjure – to charge or
entreat earnestly or solemnly
413. Protégée – female who is
protected or trained or whose career is furthered by a person of experience,
prominence or influence
414. Catatonic – characterized
by a marked lack of movement, activity or expression
415. Undeterred – does not
have the inhibition of criminal behavior by fear of punishment
416. Bauble – trinket, trifle
or fool’s scepter
417. Torpor – state of mental,
and motor inactivity with partial or insensibility, apathy, dullness
418. Vehemently – deeply felt,
forcibly expressed, powerful, impassioned fervid
419. Genealogical – an account
of the descent of a person, family or group from ancestor or elder forms
420. Edifice – building
421. Tacit – expressed or
carried on without words or speech
422. Convalescent – to recover
health and strength gradually after sickness or weakness
423. Discreetly –
unnoticeable, unpretentious modest, prudent
424. Woeful – bringing a
condition of deep suffering from misfortune, affliction or grief
425. Fugue – a musical
composition in which one or two themes are repeated or imitated by successively
entering voices and contrapuntally developed in a continuous interweaving of
voice parts
426. Reassert – to re
demonstrate the existence of often forcefully or aggressively
427. Cellar – lowest grade or
rank; basement
428. Baize – a coarse woolen
or cotton fabric napped to imitate felt
429. Euphemism – substitution
of an agreeable or inoffensive expression for one that may offend or suggest
something unpleasant
430. Congealed – to change
from fluid to solid
431. Crockery – earthenware
432. Toted – to carry by hand
433. Battering – to beat by
successive blows
434. Billowed – great wave or
surge of water
435. Queue – waiting line
436. Gruesome – inspiring
horror or repulsion
437. Darning needle – a long
needle with a large eye for use in darning
438. Swill – wash, drench
439. Effluence – something
that flows out
440. Recluse – person who
leads a solitary life
441. Eccentric – strange
442. Hermit – recluse
443. Undermined – inadequately
staffed
444. Asylum – an institution
for the care of the destitute or sick especially of the insane
445. Dotes – to be lavish or
excessive in one’ attention, fondness or affection
446. Envisaged – to think
about
447. Grouse – complain,
grumble
448. Pheasant – any of
numerous large often long tailed and brightly colored Old World gallinaceous
birds including many raised as ornamental or game birds
449. Sniveling – to cry or
whine with sniffling
450. Deceit – act or practice
of deceiving; trick
451. Subterfuge –
deception by artifice or stratagem in
order to conceal, escape or evade
452. Oppressive – overwhelming
or depressing the spirit or senses
453. Semaphore – an apparatus
for visual signaling
454. Plangent – having a loud
reverberating sound
455. Fervor – passion
456. Incantation – use of
spells or verbal charms
457. Sieved – sift
458. Satchel – small bag often
with a shoulder strap
459. Kneading – to work and
press into a mass or as if with hands
460. Exasperating – to cause
irritation, anger or annoyance
461. Stow – to put away
462. Demarcated – delimit, to
separate
463. Sou’wester – a waterproof
hat with wide slanting brim longer in back than in front
464. Evanescent – tending to
vanish like a rapor, transient
465. Ajangle – noisy
quarreling
466. Jagged – having a sharply
uneven edge or surface
467. Surge – to rise and fall
actively; toss
468. Lingered – to be slow in
parting or in quitting something; tarry
469. Intent – concentrated
470. Slunk – to go or move
stealthily or furtively; steal
471. Hellebore – any of a
genus of poisonous herbs of the buttercup family having showy flowers with
petaloid sepals
472. Hazel – any of a genus of
shrubs or small trees of the birch family bearing nuts enclosed in a leafy
involucres.
473. Reeled – to turn and move
round and round
474. Swiveled – swivel or turn
on or as if on a swivel
475. Turmoil – a state or
condition of extreme confusion, agitation or commotion
476. Enamored – to inflame with
love
477. Tang – sharp distinctive
often lingering flavor
478. Sibilants – having,
containing or producing the sound of or a sound resembling that of a s or the
sh
479. Fricatives – a consonant
characterized by frictional passage of the expired breath through a narrowing
at some point in the vocal tract
480. Plosives – stop; short
for explosive
481. Trills – alternation of
two musical tones adiatonic second apart – called also shake
482. Travestied – to make a
caricature
483. Assail – to attack by
violent blows or attacks
484. Squiggles – to write or
paint hastily
485. Sequestered – to set
apart
486. Moribund – being in a
state of dying
487. Pester – overcrowd; to
harass with petty irritations
488. Begrudge – to look upon
with disapproval
489. Hoarded – to supply or
fund stored up and often hidden away
490. Listless – characterized
by lack of interest, energy or spirit
491. Kink – short twist or
curl caused by doubling or winding upon of something upon itself
492. Placid – serenely free of
interruption or disturbance
493. Shard – small piece or
part
494. Stubbed – to grub up by
the roots
495. Enticements – to attract
artfully or adroitly or by arousing hope or desire
496. Thicket – dense growth of
shrubbery or small trees; coppice
497. Gnarled – full of knots
or gnarls
498. Bereft – deprived or
robbed of the possession or use of something
499. Dregs – the sediment contained
in a liquid or precipitated from it
500. Sissy – timid or cowardly
person
501. Quandary – state of
perplexity or doubt
502. Veered – change in course
or direction
503. Mundane – commonplace
504. Unequivocal –
unambiguous, unquestionable
505. Ardor – passion
506. Exonerate – to relieve of
a response
507. Macula – an anatomical
structure having the form of a spot differentiated from surrounding tissues
508. Fraught – loaded,
fraughted
509. Chronometry – measure of
time
510. Dwindled – make steadily
less, shrink
511. Abdicate – discard
512. Frenetically – frenzied,
frantic
513. Gritty – courageously
persistent; tough qualities of uncompromising realm
514. Idle – lazy
515. Mulched – a protective
covering spread or left on the ground to reduce evaporation, maintain even soil
temperature, prevent erosion, control weeds, or kept fruit clean
516. Dingy – dirty, shabby,
discolored
517. Languorous – produce
state of depression
518. Shorn – past tense of
shear
519. Grizzled – grayish
520. Unfathomable –
incomprehensible
521. Tolling – lead or attract
to a desired point
522. Havoc – destroy
523. Foliage – representation
of leaves, flowers and branches of architectural ornamentation
524. Genteel – polite
525. Embittered – to put some
bitter
526. Divested – dispossess of
property, authority
527. Splutter – to make a
noise as if spitting
528. Chatter – to utter rapid
short sounds suggestive of language but inarticulate and indistinct
529. Disgorged – to discharge
by throat and mouth
530. Thaw – to go from frozen
to liquid
531. Ferocity – state of being
extremely intense
532. Exertion – a laborious or
perceptible effort
533. Attuned – to bring into
harmony
534. Soporific – causing or
tending to go to sleep
535. Euphoric – a feeling of
well-being or elation
536. Anguish – suffering
extreme pain, distress or anxiety
537. Vied – to strive for
superiority, compete
538. Whimper – to make a long
whining plaintive or broken sound
539. Repel – to drive back, to
force away or tend to do so by mutual action at a distance
540. Feeble – markedly lacking
in strength
541. Monolith – a single great
stone often in the form of an obelisk or column
542. Ascent – progress, climb
upward
543. Ascribed – to refer to a
supposed cause, source or author
544. “L’ appétit vient en mangeant” – Appetite comes by eating
545. Tampered – carry on
underhand or improper negotiations
546. Vagabond – to wander in a
manner of moving from place to place with a fixed home
547. Horticultural – science
and art of growing fruits, vegetables, flowers, or ornamental plants
548. Candid – white
549. Inaudibility – not
capable of hearing
550. Susurration – whispering
sound; murmur
551. Elusive – not able to
define
552. Bestowed – applied
553. Innocuous – harmless
554. Rapture – being carried
away by overwhelming emotion
555. Blissful – being in a
state of happiness
556. Tide – opportunity;
current
557. Imperturbable – serene,
cool
558. Imminent – to project,
threaten
559. Submersion – submerge
560. Untrammeled – not
restraint
561. Anecdotes – short
narrative of an interesting, amusing or biographical incident
562. Instill – to cause to
enter drop by drop
563. Disconcert – embarrass
564. Tatters – to become
ragged
565. Muster – to cause to
gather
566. Ally – one that is
associated with another as a helper; auxiliary
567. Bribery – act or practice
of or taking a bribe
568. Coaxing – to influence or
gently urge by caressing or flattering; wheedle
569. Gouged – to scoop out
with or as if with a gorge
570. Scarred – to mark with a
scar
571. Conspirators – one that
conspires; plotter
572. Drollery – something that
is droll – a comic picture or drawing
573. Truant – one who stays
out of school without permission
574. Hubbub – noise
575. Parterres – an ornamental
garden with paths between the beds
576. Ingrained – forming a
part of the essence or inmost being
577. Solace – alleviation of
grief or anxiety
578. Skeptics – persons
disposed to skepticism especially regarding religion or religious principles
579. Infinitesimal –
immeasurably or incalculably small
580. Theft – act of stealing
581. Fruition – realization or
enjoyment
582. Beset – trouble
583. Perverts – to cause to
turn aside or away from what is good or true or morally right; corrupt
584. Aggravating – arousing
displeasure, impatience or anger
585. Eureka – used to express
triumph on a discovery
586. Conjecture – conclusion
deduced by surmise or guesswork
587. Absurd – state or
condition in which human beings exist in an irrational and meaningless universe
in which human life has no ultimate meaning
588. Bedazzlement – dazzle,
enchant
589. Crone – withered old
woman
590. Desecrated – to violate
the sanctity of; profane
591. Nook – secluded or
sheltered place or part
592. Cranny – small break or
slit; crevice
593. Peripheral – outer part
of the clear vision
594. Incorporeal – having no
material body or form
595. Ethereal – heavenly,
celestial
596. Knack – clever way of
doing something
597. Rampage – to rush wildly
about
598. Agitations – meditations
599. Gruffly – rough, brusque,
or stern in manner, speech or aspect
600. Tenterhooks – state of
uneasiness, strain or suspense
601. Impetuously – marked by
force and violence of action
602. Irrevocable – not
possible to revoke; unalterable
603. Implacable – not capable
of being appeased, changed, or mitigated
604. Nacreous – mother of
pearl
605. Translucence – quality or
state of being clear and transparent
606. Turbulence – quality or
state of being characterized by agitation or tumult
607. Grit – coarsely ground
hulled grain
608. Advent – the period
beginning four Sundays before Christmas and observed by some Christians as a
season of prayer and fasting
609. Phantasmagoria – an
exhibition or display of optical effects and illusions
610. Floppy – soft and
flexible
611. Upturned – upward turn;
turn up or over especially toward better conditions
612. Tweezers – any of various
small metal instruments that are usually held between the thumb and forefinger,
are used for plucking, holding or manipulating, and consist of two legs joined
at one end
613. Castor oil – pale viscous
fatty oil from castor beans used especially as a lubricant and plasticizer
614. Flannels – a soft twilled
wool or worsted fabric with a loose texture and slightly napped surface
615. Anteroom – an outer room
that leads to another room and that is often used as a waiting room
616. Scrupulously –
punctitiously exact
617. Squawked – to utter a
harsh abrupt scream
618. Strangled – to choke to
death by compressing the throat with something
619. Gait – manner of walking
or going on foot
620. Carapace – protective,
decorative or disguising shell
621. Usurped – to take or make
use without right
622. Animus – basic attitude,
governing spirit, malevolent ill will, prejudiced and often spiteful ill will
623. Rigmarole – confused or
meaningless talk
624. Colicky – suffering from
colic
625. Grunts – deep short sound
characteristic of a hog
626. Scuttle – short swift run
627. Hearth – a brick, stone,
or cement area in front of a fireplace
628. Pyre – combustible heap
for burning a dead body as a funeral rite
629. Bolster – long pillow or
cushion
630. Flotsam – floating
wreckage of a ship or its cargo; floating debris
631. Mewl – to cry weakly
632. Ablaze – radiant with
light
633. Inferno – intense heat
634. Docile – easily taught;
easily led
635. Chars – a charred
substance; charcoal
636. Smoldering – to burn
sluggishly, without flame and often with much smoke
637. Scorched – to burn a
surface or so as to change the color and texture
638. Slate-black – nearly
neutral purplish black
639. Plume – contour feather
640. Eerie – mysterious,
scared, fright, weird
641. Rummy – drunkard, queer,
odd
642. Melancholy – depression
of spirits
643. Untainted – untouched
644. Delineaments – painted
lines
645. Melded – blended
646. Delved – to make a
careful or detailed search for information
647. Casket – small chest or
box
648. Morsel – small piece of
food; bites
649. Urn – a vessel that is
typically an ornamental vase on a pedestal and that is used for various
purposes
650. Niche – habitat supplying
the factors necessary for the existence of an organism or species
651. Agog – full of interest
or excitement
652. Posthumous – published
after the death of the author
653. Swathes – an enveloping
medium
654. Vantage – benefit, gain,
advantage
655. Denuded – lay bare by
erosion
656. Equanimity – evenness of
mind under stress
657. Moors – an expanse of
open rolling infertile land
658. Composure – a calmness or
repose especially of mind, bearing, or appearance; self possession
659. Dilemma – an argument of
two or more equally conclusive alternatives against an opponent
660. Entwined – to become
twisted or twined
661. Recalibrating – repeating
the standardization by determining the deviation from a standard so as to
ascertain the proper correction factors
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