out of the dust week one vocabulary. day one vocabulary (pgs. 3- 16)

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Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary

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Page 1: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Out of the DustWeek One Vocabulary

Page 2: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Day One Vocabulary (Pgs.

3-16)

Page 3: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Bawling (pg.3) I came too fast for the doctor, bawling soon as Daddy wiped his hand around inside my mouth.v. to cry or wail

Page 4: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Pledged (pg.6) They pledged revenge on the rabbit population; wagering who could kill more.v. to make a solemn promise

Page 5: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Wagering (pg.6) They pledged revenge on the rabbit population; wagering who could kill more. v. to bet on the outcome of a contest or question

Page 6: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Plowing (pg.6) …Miss Freeland says if we keep plowing under the stuff they ought to be eating, what are they supposed to do?v. to open, break up, or work with a plow on a piece of land

Page 7: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Civil (pg.7) Those men, they used to be friends. Now they can’t be civil with each other. They scowl as they pass on the street.adj. polite without being friendly

Page 8: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Scowl (pg.7) Those men, they used to be friends. Now they can’t be civil with each other. They scowl as they pass on the street.v. to make a frowning expression of displeasure

Page 9: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Slants (pg.8) I handed Livie the memory book we’d all filled with our different slants.

n. a personal point of view, attitude, or opinion

Page 10: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Riled (pg.11) I suspected Mad Dog had come first to Arley Wanderdale’s mind, but I didn’t get too riled. Not so riled I couldn’t say yes.v. to make angry

Page 11: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Bounty (pg.16) We haven’t had a good crop in three years, not since the bounty of ’31, and we’re all whittled down to the bone these days… n. a large growth, especially of a crop

Page 12: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Whittled (pg.16) We haven’t had a good crop in three years, not since the bounty of ’31, and we’re all whittled down to the bone these days… v. to reduce gradually

Page 13: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Day Two Vocabulary (Pgs.

17-29)

Page 14: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Parlor (pg. 24) In the kitchen she is my ma, in the barn and fields she is my daddy’s wife, but in the parlor Ma is something different. n. a room in a home, hotel, or club used for conversation or the receiving of guests

Page 15: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Brewing (pg.26) Daddy looks like a fight brewing.

v. to start to form

Page 16: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Feuding (pg. 27) He takes that red face of his out to the barn, to keep from feuding with my pregnant ma.v. to have a long lasting fight

Page 17: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Foul (pg.29) …all the while I glare at Ma’s back with a scowl foul as maggoty stew.

adj. disgusting in looks, taste, or smell

Page 18: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Maggoty (pg.29) …all the while I glare at Ma’s back with a scowl foul as maggoty stew.

adj. infested with maggots (larva of a fly)

Page 19: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Day Three Vocabulary (Pgs.

30-51)

Page 20: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Coo (pg.30) She was proud, I could tell. But she didn’t coo like Mad Dog’s ma.

v. to talk fondly or lovingly

Page 21: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Spindly (pg.31) The night sky kept flashing, lightning danced down on its spindly legs.

adj. of a tall or long and thin appearance

Page 22: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Ratcheted (pg.32) …it wasn’t until the dust hissed against the windows, until it ratcheted the roof, that Daddy woke.

v. to cause to move by steps or degrees

Page 23: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Wisp (pg.39) What remains is little more than a wisp of what it should be.

n. a small bunch of hay or straw

Page 24: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Dazed (pg.39) Joe De La Flor doesn’t see me pass him by; he rides his fences, dazed by the dust.

v. to be stunned or stupefied, especially by a blow

Page 25: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Wince (pg.39) I wince at the sight of his rib-thin cattle.

v. to shrink back (as from pain)

Page 26: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Seep (pg.40) Daddy grumbles, “The water’ll seep back into the ground as fast as I can pump it, Pol.” v. to flow or pass slowly through small openings

Page 27: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Leveling (pg. 41) “…Nothing needs more to drink than those two. But you wouldn’t hear of leveling your apples, would you?”v. to knock flat

Page 28: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Bittering (pg. 41) Ma is bittering. I can see it in her mouth…sounding crusty and stubborn.

v. to become sharp and resentful

Page 29: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Boughs (pg. 43) I stand under the trees and let the petals fall into my hair, a blizzard of sweet-smelling flowers, dropped from the boughs of the two… n. a branch of a tree

Page 30: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Searing (pg. 46) On Sunday, winds came, bringing a red dust like prairie fire, hot and peppery, searing the inside of my nose…v. to burn, scorch, mark, or injure with or as if with sudden heat

Page 31: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Soured (pg. 49) And every little crowd is grateful to hear a rag or two played on the piano…even when the piano has a few keys soured by dust.v. to become or make sour, of bad taste or sound

Page 32: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Gripe (pg. 49) …and only if she didn’t hear my gripe how I was tired…

n. a complaint

Page 33: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Out of the DustWeek Two Vocabulary

Page 34: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Day One Vocabulary (Pgs.

55-69)

Page 35: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Kerosene (60) Daddy put a pail of kerosene next to the stove…

n. a thin oil obtained from petroleum and used as a fuel

Page 36: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Antiseptic (62) He bathed my burns in antiseptic.

n. a substance that helps stop the growth or action of germs

Page 37: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Grit (63) Grit scratched my eyes, it crunched between my teeth.

n. a small hard sharp particle (as of sand or dirt)

Page 38: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Scorched (66) She smells like scorched meat.

adj. dried out or burnt by heat

Page 39: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Squirreled (67) Daddy found the money Ma kept squirreled in the kitchen under the threshold.

n. to store up for future use

Page 40: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Threshold (67) Daddy found the money Ma kept squirreled in the kitchen under the threshold.

n. the section of wood or stone that lies under a door

Page 41: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Descending (68) I saw a cloud descending. It whirred like a thousand engines.

v. to pass from a higher to a lower place or level

Page 42: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Day Two Vocabulary (Pgs.

70-84)

Page 43: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Stupor (71) They didn’t say a word about my father drinking himself into a stupor while Ma writhed, begging for water.n. a state of dullness or lack of interest resulting often from stress or shock

Page 44: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Writhed (71) They didn’t say a word about my father drinking himself into a stupor while Ma writhed, begging for water.v. to twist and turn this way and that way (normally in pain)

Page 45: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Carcasses (73) On either side of the road are the carcasses of jackrabbits, small birds, field mice, stretching out into the distance. n. a dead body

Page 46: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Sod (75) …He’s stubborn as sod. He and the land have a hold on each other.

n. the grass-covered surface of the ground

Page 47: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Raw (77) I kept my raw and stinging hands behind my back when he comes near…

adj. having the surface scraped or roughened

Page 48: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Grizzled (81) My stomach grizzled as I made my way through the dark to her house.

v. to complain; whimper; whine.

Page 49: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Stubble (83) …they grazed down the stubble till they reached root.

n. the stem ends of herbs and especially grasses remaining attached to the ground after harvest

Page 50: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Day Three Vocabulary (Pgs.

87-110)

Page 51: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Deformed (92) He doesn’t stare at my deformed hands.

adj. distorted or misshapen in form

Page 52: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Grime (104) I place a wet cloth over my nose to keep from breathing dust and wipe the grime tracings from around my mouth…n. dirt rubbed into or covering a surface

Page 53: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Forsaken (104) Restless…swearing I’ll leave this forsaken place.

Adj. completely deserted or helpless; abandoned

Page 54: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Cloaked (105) Monday morning dawns, cloaked in mist.

v. to cover

Page 55: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Surveying (105) …the farmers, surveying their fields, nod their heads as the frail stalks revive.

v. to look over and examine closely

Page 56: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Frail (106) …the farmers, surveying their fields, nod their heads as the frail stalks revive.

Adj. not having normal strength, fragile

Page 57: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Revive (106) …the farmers, surveying their fields, nod their heads as the frail stalks revive.

v. to bring back or come back to life

Page 58: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Sow (108) Will they sow wheat on his grave, where the buffalo once grazed?

v. to plant seed for growth

Page 59: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Day Four Vocabulary (Pgs.

111-118)

Page 60: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Festered (111) …the picked and festered bits of my hands in agony.

adj. to be formed of pus

Page 61: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Agony (111) …the picked and festered bits of my hands in agony.

n. intense pain of mind or body

Page 62: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Musky (113) None of the musky woman smell left that was Ma.

adj. to be of a smell of musk, strong smell from perfume

Page 63: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Out of the DustWeek Three Vocabulary

Pgs. 119-167

Page 64: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Day One Vocabulary (Pgs.

119-133)

Page 65: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Throb (127) I have practiced my piece over and over till my arms throb…

v. to beat hard or fast (as from fright or pain)

Page 66: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Parched (128) Course they never will, not with my hands all scarred up, looking like the earth itself, all parched and rough and cracking…adj. to toast by dry heat

Page 67: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Amateur (129) Backstage, we were seventeen amateur acts, our wild hearts pounding…

n. a person who is new at a given job or task

Page 68: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Jittery (131) I went on somewhere near the backside of middle, getting more and more jittery with each act, till my time came.adj. to be extremely nervous

Page 69: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Cripple (132) …it was all my fault she didn’t win, that the judges were just being nice to a cripple…

n. a lame or disabled person

Page 70: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Day Two Vocabulary (Pgs.

134-149)

Page 71: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Rugged (138) …he’s still good looking with his strong back, and his blondy-red hair and his high cheeks rugged with wind.adj. having wrinkles or uneven features

Page 72: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Pneumonia (140) Last Friday, Pete Guymon took ill with dust pneumonia.

n. a disease of the lungs marked by inflammation, congestion, fever, cough, and difficulty in breathing and caused especially by infection

Page 73: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Curdling (140) …and sits there still, the cream curdling, the apples going soft.

v. to cause curds to form in, for dairy to go bad

Page 74: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Brittle (148) …that no matter how brittle and sharp life seemed, no matter how brittle and sharp she seemed, she was still my ma who loved me…adj. easily broken, cracked, or snapped

Page 75: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Day Three Vocabulary (Pgs.

153-167)

Page 76: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Court (153) The hard part is in spite of everything if I had any boy court me, it’d be Mad Dog Craddock.

v. to engage in a social relationship usually leading to marriage

Page 77: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Soothe (153) And then later, she would curl beside my father, and assure him that everything was alright, and soothe him into his farmer’s sleep. v. to bring comfort : calm down

Page 78: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Ignite (157) But the entire Oklahoma Panhandle is so dry, everything is going up in flames. Everything too ready to ignite. v. to set on fire

Page 79: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Fierceness (156) Jim Goin and Harry Kesler spotted the fire, and that was a miracle considering the fierceness of the dust storm at the time.n. state of being furiously active or determined

Page 80: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Warped (157) …but the flames, crazy in the wind, licked away at the wooden frames of the three box cars, until nothing remained but warped metal.v. to turn or twist out of shape

Page 81: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Sparse (160) And so they go, fleeing the blowing dust, fleeing the fields of brown-tipped wheat barely ankle high, and sparse as the hair on a dog’s belly.adj. of few parts

Page 82: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Sulking (163) I was sulking in the truck beside my father…

v. to be silent or irritable in sadness

Page 83: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Barreling (163) …a black cloud, big and silent as Montana, boiling on the horizon and barreling towards us.v. to travel at a high speed

Page 84: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Out of the DustWeek Four Vocabulary

Pgs. 168-227

Page 85: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Day One Vocabulary (Pgs.

168-189)

Page 86: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Glowering (173) He just keeps that invitation from her, glowering down at me from the shelf above the piano.v. to stare angrily

Page 87: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Yield (177) And because the rain came so patient at first, and built up strength as the earth remembered how to yield, instead of washing off…v. to give up and stop fighting

Page 88: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Primed (178) …the rain came slamming down, tons of it, soaking into the ready earth to the primed and greedy earth…adj. to be ready for something

Page 89: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Idled (178) In the dark, headlights shining, he idled toward the freshened fields…

v. to spend time doing nothing

Page 90: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Parcel (184) He knelt, studying the parcel, and called to Reverend Bingham, who came right by and opened the package up. n. a wrapped bundle

Page 91: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Knoll (186) I sat…imagining a song for my little brother, buried in Ma’s arms on a knoll overlooking the banks of the Beaver.n. a small round hill

Page 92: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Shale (187) Once dinosaurs roamed in Cimmarron County. Bones showing in the green shale.n. a rock with a fine grain formed from clay, mud, or silt

Page 93: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Slogging (187) A chill shoots up my spine imagining a dinosaur slogging out of the Oklahoma sea.v. to work in a steady determined manner

Page 94: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Day Two Vocabulary (Pgs.

193-206)

Page 95: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Smothering (197) I go, knowing that I’ll die if I stay, that I’m slowly, surely smothering.

v. to prevent the development or actions of, suffocate

Page 96: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Hoarding (200) I feed him two of the stale biscuits I’ve been hoarding and save the rest.

v. to gather money, food, or the like, in a hidden or carefully guarded place for future use

Page 97: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Day Three Vocabulary (Pgs.

209-227)

Page 98: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Scowled (209) I scowled at Daddy. He looked at the wall.

v. to make a frowning expression of displeasure

Page 99: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Mottled (209) Doc looks carefully at the mottled skin…

adj. Spotted or blotched with different shades or colors

Page 100: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Flinch (217) I look straight into Louise’s face. Louise doesn’t flinch. She looks right back.

v. to draw back from or as if from physical pain

Page 101: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Sassy (222) I am getting to know the music again…We are both confident, and a little sassy.

adj. given to back talk

Page 102: Out of the Dust Week One Vocabulary. Day One Vocabulary (Pgs. 3- 16)

Diversification (226) Daddy said he’d try some sorghum, maybe some cotton, admitting as how there might be something to this notion of diversification folks were talking about… n. the increase in a variety of products