Left Hand of Darkness Vocabulary
Word | Definition | Know it well | Have heard of It | Don’t Know It |
Chapter 1 Vocabulary The Left Hand of Darkness | ||||
Phlegmatic | Having an unemotional and stolidly calm disposition. | |||
Obdurate | Stubbornly refusing to change one’s opinion or course of action. | |||
Pertinacious | Holding firmly to an opinion or a course of action. | |||
Animosity | Strong hostility. | |||
Genealogical | Have or relating to the study or tracing of lines of family descent. | |||
Adventitious | Associated with something by chance rather than as an integral part. | |||
Specious | Pleasing to the eye but deceptive. | |||
Adroit | Clever or skillful in using the hands or mind. | |||
Imposture | An instance of pretending to be someone else in order to device others. | |||
Obviate | To anticipate and prevent or eliminate by effective measures; render unnecessary | |||
Impugns | Dispute the truth, validity, or honesty of (a statement or motive) | |||
Rufous | Reddish | |||
Fulsome | Of large size or quantity. | |||
Perfidy | Untrustworthiness | |||
Chapter 3 Vocabulary | ||||
Augmented | To make larger; enlarge in size, number, strength, or extent; increase | |||
Resolutely | Marked by firm determination. | |||
Chapter 5 Vocabulary | ||||
Expunged | Erase or remove completely. | |||
Ignoble | Of low birth or common origin | |||
Hermaphrodite | An animal or plant having both male and female reproductive organs | |||
Repertory | A place where something may be found | |||
Abominations | A thing that causes disgust or hatred. | |||
Erratic | Not even or regular in pattern or movement. | |||
Encroached | Intrude on a person’s territory (or a thing considered to be right). | |||
Aerie | A large nest of a bird of prey, especially an eagle, typically built high in tree or on a cliff. | |||
Profuse | Pouring forth liberally | |||
Prodigious | Remarkably or impressively great in extent, size, or degree. | |||
Extortion | The practice of obtaining something, especially money, through force or threats. | |||
Elusive | Difficult to find, catch, or achieve. | |||
Manifestation | An event, action, or object that clearly shows or embodies something, especially a theory or an abstract idea. | |||
Intangible | Unable to be touched or grasped; not having physical presence. | |||
Sauntering | Walk in a slow, relaxed manner, without hurry or effort. | |||
Depilated | Remove the hair from. | |||
Sully | Damage the purity or integrity of. | |||
Dank | Disagreeably damp and typically cold. | |||
Limpid | Clear and simple in style | |||
Unfathomable | Of depth; not capable of being sounded or measured. | |||
Quintessence | The most perfect or typical example of a quality or class. | |||
Transients | A person who is staying. | |||
Extempore | Spoken or done without preparation. | |||
Subtle | Difficult to understand or perceive | |||
Anarchic | With no controlling rules or principles to give order. | |||
Fecund | Producing or capable of producing an abundance of offspring or new growth. | |||
Dolmens | A megalithic tomb with a large flat stone laid on upright ones. | |||
Augmenting | Make greater by adding. | |||
Imperative | Of, relating to, or constituting the grammatical moodthat expresses the will to influence the behavior of another | |||
Integral | Necessary to make complete. | |||
Chapter 6 Vocabulary | ||||
Bereft | Deprived of or lacking of something. | |||
Thwart | To run counter to so as to effectively oppose or baffle | |||
Indegent | Suffering from extreme poverty | |||
Subversive | A systematic attempt to overthrow or undermine a government or political system by persons working secretly from within | |||
Dour | Relentlessly sever, stern, or gloomy in manner or appearance. | |||
Goad | Something that pains as if by pricking | |||
Provocation | Action or speech that provokes someone. | |||
Obscuration | To make dark, dim, or indistinct | |||
Obfuscation | To make obscure | |||
Circumambulating | Walking around something. | |||
Chapter 7 Vocabulary | ||||
Estrus | Regularly recurrent state of sexual excitability during which the female of most mammals will accept the male and is capable of conceiving | |||
Androgyne | Having the characteristics or nature of both male and female | |||
Promiscuously | Characterized by or involving indiscriminate mingling or association, especially having sexual relations with a number of partners on a casual basis. | |||
Indubitably | Too evident to be doubted | |||
Slander | To utter slander against | |||
Anomalous | Inconsistent with or deviating from what is usual, normal, or expected | |||
Transcendent | Exceeding usual limits | |||
Appalling | Inspiring horror, dismay, or disgust | |||
Exculpate | To clear from alleged fault or guilt | |||
Sublimate | To divert the expression of (an instinctual desire or impulse) from its unacceptable form to one that is considered more socially or culturally acceptable | |||
Veneer | A thin sheet of a material | |||
Ubiquitous | Existing or being everywhere, especially at the same time; omnipresent | |||
Specious | ||||
Chapter 8 Vocabulary | ||||
Xenophobic | One unduly fearful of what is foreign and especially of people of foreign origin | |||
Revulsion | A strong pulling or drawing away | |||
Inimical | Being adverse often by reason of hostility or malevolence | |||
Vilification | ||||
Vituperation | Sustained and bitter railing and condemnation | |||
Adulation | Excessive or slavish admiration or flattery | |||
Anxiety | Painful or apprehensive uneasiness of mind usually over an impending or anticipated ill | |||
Infallibly | Incapable of error | |||
Meander | A winding path or course | |||
Benign | Of a mild type or character that does not threaten health or life | |||
Torpor | A state of mental and motor inactivity with partial or total insensibility | |||
Conflagration | A large disastrous fire | |||
Sinuous | Of a serpentine or wavy form | |||
Choler | Ready disposition to irritation | |||
Reticence | An instance of being reticent | |||
Grotesque | A style of decorative art characterized by fanciful or fantastic human and animal forms often interwoven with foliage or similar figures that may distort the natural into absurdity, ugliness, or caricature | |||
Promulgated | To make (as a doctrine) known by open declaration | |||
Condescension | Voluntary descent from one's rank or dignity in relations with an inferior | |||
Deigning | To condescend reluctantly and with a strong sense of the affront to one's superiority that is involved | |||
Cumbrous | Cumbersome, bothersome. | |||
Exploitive | To utilize, especially for profit; turn to practical account | |||
Chapter 9 Vocabulary | ||||
Umbrageous | Spotted with shadows | |||
Involute | Curled spirally | |||
Monolithic | ||||
Chapter 11 Vocabulary | ||||
Soliloquies | The act of talking to oneself | |||
Blandishments | ||||
Proselytizes | ||||
Astute | ||||
Faction | ||||
Suppressions | ||||
Conscience | The sense orconsciousness of the moral goodness or blameworthiness of one's own conduct, intentions, or character together with a feeling of obligation to do right or be good | |||
Inordinate | Exceeding reasonable limits | |||
Obtuseness | Not quick or alert in perception, feeling, or intellect; not sensitive or observant; dull. | |||
Arrogance | ||||
Machinations | A scheming or crafty action or artful design intended to accomplish some usually evil end | |||
Vengeance | ||||
Blasphemous | ||||
Atheist | One who believes that there is no deity | |||
Candor | ||||
Obstreperous | Noisy and difficult to control. | |||
Impudence | Qualities of being offensively bold. | |||
Abase | Behave in a way as to belittle or degrade (someone). | |||
Chapter 12 Vocabulary | ||||
Moraine | Accumulation of rocks deposited by a glacier. | |||
Chapter 13 Vocabulary | ||||
Sycophants | Someone who attempts to win favor by flattering influential people. | |||
Pallid | Pale, typically due to poor health. | |||
Edifices | Large or massive structure. | |||
Façade | The front of a building that looks onto a street or open space. | |||
Veridical | Truthful. | |||
Pandemonium | Very noisy place. | |||
Erratic | Not even or regular in movement. | |||
Furtive | Attempting to avoid notice or attention, typically because of guilt. | |||
Fetid | Smelling extremely unpleasant. | |||
Bovine | Oxlike; cowlike; Stolid; dull. | |||
Incredulous | (Of a person or their manner) Unwilling or unable to believe something. | |||
Meandering | Wander at random. | |||
Reminiscences | Story told about a past event remembered by the narrator. | |||
Chapter 14 Vocabulary | ||||
Perfidious | Deceitful and untrustworthy. | |||
Vestigial | Forming a very small remnant of something that was once much larger or more noticeable. | |||
Docile | Ready to accept control or instruction. | |||
Peevish | Easily irritated. | |||
Ascendance | State where one person has power over the other. | |||
Aggrieved | Feeling resentment at having been unfairly treated. | |||
Chapter 15 Vocabulary | ||||
Laconic | (Of a person, speech, or style of writing) using very few words. | |||
Obdurate | Stubbornly refusing to change one’s opinion or course of action. | |||
Abstraction | The quality of dealing with ideas rather than events. | |||
Scrupulous | Thorough and very attentive to details. | |||
Palliative | Relieving pain or alleviating a problem without dealing with the underlined cause. | |||
Ecliptic | Great circle in which Earth follows to orbit the sun. | |||
Aphelion | Point in the orbit of a planet, asteroid, or comet at which it is furthest from the sun. | |||
Oviparous | Producing young by means of eggs that are hatched after they have been laid by the parent. | |||
Peremptory | Not open to challenge; final. | |||
Rending | Tear into two or more pieces. | |||
Desolation | State of complete emptiness or destruction. | |||
Chapter 16 Vocabulary | ||||
Scree | Long speech or piece of writing. | |||
Fumaroles | Opening in or near a volcano, through which hot sulfurous gases emerge. | |||
Effluent | Liquid waste or sewage discharged into a river or sea. | |||
Lured | Tempt (a person or animal) | |||
Iridescent | Displaying a play of lustrous colors like those of the rainbow. | |||
Ethereally | Light, airy, or tenuous: an ethereal world created through the poetic imagination. | |||
Smudge | A dirty mark or smear. | |||
Chapter 18 Vocabulary | ||||
Susurrus | A soft murmuring or rustling sound; whisper. | |||
Obstinate | Firmly or stubbornly adhering to one's purpose, opinion, etc.; not yielding to argument, persuasion, or entreaty. | |||
Ambiance | A feeling or mood associated with a particular place, person, or thing | |||
Invocation | The act of invokingor calling upon a deity, spirit, etc., for aid, protection, inspiration, or the like; supplication. | |||
Assented | To agree or concur; subscribe to (often followed by to): to assent to a statement. | |||
Analogy | A similarity between like features of two things, on which a comparison may be based: the analogy between the heart and a pump. | |||
Chapter 19 Vocabulary | ||||
Alacrity | Cheerful readiness, promptness, or willingness: We accepted the invitation with alacrity. | |||
Zest | Keen relish; hearty enjoyment; gusto. | |||
Contentious | Likely to cause disagreement or argument | |||
Locutions | A particular form of expression; a word, phrase, expression, or idiom, especially as used by a particular person, group, etc. | |||
Covertly | Concealed; secret; disguised. | |||
Destitute | Without means of subsistence; lacking food, clothing, and shelter. | |||
Revocation | ||||
Chapter 20 Vocabulary | ||||
Querulous | Full of complaints; complaining. | |||
Abdication | ||||
Insurrection | An act or instance of rising in revolt, rebellion, or resistance against civil authority or an established government. | |||
Resolution | The act of resolving or determining upon an action or course of action, method, procedure, etc. | |||
Precipitous | Extremely or impassably steep | |||
Apprehensive | Uneasy or fearful about something that might happen | |||
Impugning | To challenge as false (another's statements, motives, etc.); cast doubt upon. |
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