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Caesar’s English II Lesson XV

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Caesar’s English II. Lesson XV. culp (blame) culprit, culpable, exculpate. CULP means blame. We blame the culprit ; to be culpable is to be guilty; and to exculpate someone is to free them from blame! Spanish… culpable. pugn (fight) pugnacious, pugilist, oppugn. PUGN means fight. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Caesar’s English II

Caesar’s English II

Lesson XV

Page 2: Caesar’s English II

culp (blame) culprit, culpable, exculpate

CULP means blame.

We blame the culprit; to be culpable is to be guilty; and to exculpate someone is to free them from blame!

Spanish…culpable

Page 3: Caesar’s English II

pugn (fight) pugnacious, pugilist, oppugn

PUGN means fight.

A pugnacious person is combative; a puglilist is a fighter; and to oppugn something is to attack or resist it!

Spanish…pugnaz

Page 4: Caesar’s English II

URB (city) urban, suburb, urbane

URB means city.

An urban environment is a city environment; the suburbs are the neighborhoods around the city; and an urbane person is sophisticated and citified!

Spanish…urbano

Page 5: Caesar’s English II

numer (number) numeral, enumeration, supernumerary

NUMER means number.

A numeral is a number; to enumerate is to list; and supernumeraries are extra people!

Spanish…enumeración

Page 6: Caesar’s English II

acr (sharp) acrid, acerbity, acrimony

ACR means sharp.

An acrid smell such as ammonia is sharp; acerbity is sharpness of temper; and acrimony is a sharp and heated dispute!

Spanish…acrimonia

Page 7: Caesar’s English II

Advanced Word: PugnaciousThe adjective pugnacious

comes from the stems pugn, fight, and ous, full of. To be pugnacious is to be combative, ready to fight anyone. Pugnacious people are aggressive and ready to challenge. Sometimes they seem insulting, with a chip on their shoulder. In 1974 E.L. Doctorow wrote, in his novel Ragtime, that “This caused him to tile his chin upwards in order to see, giving him a pugnacious look.” In Joseph Heller’s novel Catch-22 a character “thundered pugnaciously in a voice loud enough to rattle the whole building.”

Page 8: Caesar’s English II

Caesar’s English II Lesson XV

Stem meaning Example

culp blame culprit

pugn fight Pugnacious

urb city urban

numer number Numeral

acr sharp acrid

Page 9: Caesar’s English II

PUGILIST : PUGNACIOUS ::

a. urban : suburban

b. culprit : culpable

c. exculpate : innocent

d. enumerate : items

Page 10: Caesar’s English II

PUGILIST : PUGNACIOUS ::

a. urban : suburban

b. culprit : culpable

c. exculpate : innocent

d. enumerate : items

Page 11: Caesar’s English II

OPPUGN : SANCTION ::

a. pugilist : glove

b. city : suburb

c. supernumerary : extra

d. exculpate : convict

Page 12: Caesar’s English II

OPPUGN : SANCTION ::

a. pugilist : glove

b. city : suburb

c. supernumerary : extra

d. exculpate : convict

Page 13: Caesar’s English II

Find the best opposite.

ACRIMONY

a. pugnacity

b. verisimilitude

c. urbanity

d. harmony

Page 14: Caesar’s English II

Find the best opposite.

ACRIMONY

a. pugnacity

b. verisimilitude

c. urbanity

d. harmony

Page 15: Caesar’s English II

PUGNACIOUS

a. mollifying

b. oppugning

c. enumerating

d. exculpating

Page 16: Caesar’s English II

PUGNACIOUS

a. mollifying

b. oppugning

c. enumerating

d. exculpating

Page 17: Caesar’s English II

The gladiators were trained as expert ___________.

a. culprits

b. pugilists

c. supernumeraries

d. interlocutors

Page 18: Caesar’s English II

The gladiators were trained as expert ___________.

a. culprits

b. pugilists

c. supernumeraries

d. interlocutors

Page 19: Caesar’s English II

Prisoners captured in Gaul were rarely ____________.

a. exculpated

b. oppugned

c. disputed

d. enumerated

Page 20: Caesar’s English II

Prisoners captured in Gaul were rarely ____________.

a. exculpated

b. oppugned

c. disputed

d. enumerated

Page 21: Caesar’s English II

The spectacles in the Colosseum required a great many ______________.

a. acrimonies

b. numerals

c. exculpations

d. supernumeraries

Page 22: Caesar’s English II

The spectacles in the Colosseum required a great many ______________.

a. acrimonies

b. numerals

c. exculpations

d. supernumeraries

Page 23: Caesar’s English II

The Grammar of Vocabulary: pugnancious, an adjective.

The pugnacious Gauls were no match for the legions.

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Page 24: Caesar’s English II

Caesar’s Classic Words Challenge

From Frederick Douglass’s Narrative

I would allow myself to suffer…rather than ______________ myself.

a. enumerate

b. oppugn

c. exculpate

d. impute

Page 25: Caesar’s English II

Caesar’s Classic Words Challenge

From Frederick Douglass’s Narrative

I would allow myself to suffer…rather than ______________ myself.

a. enumerateb. oppugnc. exculpated. impute

Page 26: Caesar’s English II

From James Watson’s The Double Helix

Rosy and Gosling were ___________ assertive.

a. urbanely

b. acrimoniously

c. culpably

d. pugnaciously

Page 27: Caesar’s English II

From James Watson’s The Double Helix

Rosy and Gosling were ___________ assertive.

a. urbanely

b. acrimoniously

c. culpably

d. pugnaciously

Page 28: Caesar’s English II

From Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre

They treated her with coldness and ___________.

a. enumeration

b. acrimony

c. pugnacity

d. urbanity

Page 29: Caesar’s English II

From Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre

They treated her with coldness and ___________.

a. enumeration

b. acrimony

c. pugnacity

d. urbanity