unit two: chapter 11

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Unit Two: Chapter 11 blatant gloat blight immaculate contrive plagiarism garble qualm gaunt retaliate

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Unit Two: Chapter 11. • blatant • gloat • blight • immaculate • contrive • plagiarism • garble • qualm • gaunt • retaliate. TEN WORDS IN CONTEXT. Choose the meaning closest to that of the boldfaced word. 1 blatant. – adjective. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Unit Two: Chapter 11

Unit Two: Chapter 11

• blatant • gloat

• blight • immaculate

• contrive • plagiarism

• garble • qualm

• gaunt • retaliate

Page 2: Unit Two: Chapter 11

TEN WORDS IN CONTEXTChoose the meaning closest to that of the boldfaced word.

1 blatant

Blatant means

A. unmistakable.

B. scrambled.

C. not noticeable.

– adjective

• Eva is a blatant bargain-hunter. Not only does she wait for end-of season sales, but she chooses an already-reduced item and then asks if the salesperson will accept a lower price.

• The company’s disregard of the environment is blatant. It makes no effort to stop polluting coastal waters with garbage.

Page 3: Unit Two: Chapter 11

TEN WORDS IN CONTEXTChoose the meaning closest to that of the boldfaced word.

1 blatant

Blatant means

A. unmistakable.

B. scrambled.

C. not noticeable.

– adjective

• Eva is a blatant bargain-hunter. Not only does she wait for end-of season sales, but she chooses an already-reduced item and then asks if the salesperson will accept a lower price.

• The company’s disregard of the environment is blatant. It makes no effort to stop polluting coastal waters with garbage.

If Eva tries to get an even lower price on an already-reduced item, she is an unmistakable bargain-hunter. If the company makes no effort to stop polluting, its disregard of the environment is unmistakable.

Page 4: Unit Two: Chapter 11

TEN WORDS IN CONTEXTChoose the meaning closest to that of the boldfaced word.

2 blight – noun

Blight means

A. something that assists.

B. something that is new.

C. something that harms.

• Nothing has hurt our country more than the blight of drugs.

• There are two ways of looking at TV: as a valuable source of information or as a blight that dulls the mind.

Page 5: Unit Two: Chapter 11

TEN WORDS IN CONTEXTChoose the meaning closest to that of the boldfaced word.

2 blight – noun

Blight means

A. something that assists.

B. something that is new.

C. something that harms.

• Nothing has hurt our country more than the blight of drugs.

• There are two ways of looking at TV: as a valuable source of information or as a blight that dulls the mind.

In the first item, the word hurt suggests that blight means “something that harms.” Something that dulls the mind would be considered something that harms the mind.

Page 6: Unit Two: Chapter 11

TEN WORDS IN CONTEXTChoose the meaning closest to that of the boldfaced word.

3 contrive – verb

Contrive means

A. to think up.

B. to mix up.

C. to avoid.

• My eight-year-old son could write a book titled 101 Ways I Have Contrived to Stay Up Past My Bedtime.

• Jill has to contrive a way to get a day off from work for her friend’s wedding. She’s already used up her vacation time.

Page 7: Unit Two: Chapter 11

TEN WORDS IN CONTEXTChoose the meaning closest to that of the boldfaced word.

3 contrive – verb

Contrive means

A. to think up.

B. to mix up.

C. to avoid.

• My eight-year-old son could write a book titled 101 Ways I Have Contrived to Stay Up Past My Bedtime.

• Jill has to contrive a way to get a day off from work for her friend’s wedding. She’s already used up her vacation time.

An eight-year-old boy would think up ways to stay up past his bedtime. If Jill has used up her vacation time, she’ll have to think up a way to get another day off from work.

Page 8: Unit Two: Chapter 11

TEN WORDS IN CONTEXT

• The new reporter garbled the newspaper story; the result was an article that made no sense at all.

• The company had garbled the bike’s assembly instructions so badly that we were constantly confused about which step to do next.

4 garble

Choose the meaning closest to that of the boldfaced word.

Garble means

A. to read.

B. to lose.

C. to jumble.

– verb

Page 9: Unit Two: Chapter 11

TEN WORDS IN CONTEXT

• The new reporter garbled the newspaper story; the result was an article that made no sense at all.

• The company had garbled the bike’s assembly instructions so badly that we were constantly confused about which step to do next.

4 garble

Choose the meaning closest to that of the boldfaced word.

Garble means

A. to read.

B. to lose.

C. to jumble.

– verb

If the article made no sense at all, the reporter must have jumbled the story. In the second item, if the instructions were confusing about which step to do next, the company must have jumbled the instructions.

Page 10: Unit Two: Chapter 11

TEN WORDS IN CONTEXTChoose the meaning closest to that of the boldfaced word.

Gaunt means

A. very thin.

B. wide.

C. confused.

5 gaunt – adjective

• Abraham Lincoln’s beard made his gaunt face look fuller.

• Sharon’s eating disorder, called anorexia nervosa, has made her so gaunt that she looks like a walking skeleton.

A gaunt musician

Page 11: Unit Two: Chapter 11

TEN WORDS IN CONTEXTChoose the meaning closest to that of the boldfaced word.

Gaunt means

A. very thin.

B. wide.

C. confused.

5 gaunt – adjective

• Abraham Lincoln’s beard made his gaunt face look fuller.

• Sharon’s eating disorder, called anorexia nervosa, has made her so gaunt that she looks like a walking skeleton.

Abraham Lincoln is known for being very thin (among other things). If Sharon looks like a skeleton, she must be very thin.

A gaunt musician

Page 12: Unit Two: Chapter 11

TEN WORDS IN CONTEXTChoose the meaning closest to that of the boldfaced word.

Gloat means

A. to apologize fully.

B. to be overly self-satisfied.

C. to pay back.

• The coach told his team, “There’s only one thing worse than a sore loser, and that’s a mean winner. Don’t gloat.”

• Neil’s sister always tattles on him and then gloats when he’s punished, saying, “I told you so.”

6 gloat – verb

Page 13: Unit Two: Chapter 11

TEN WORDS IN CONTEXTChoose the meaning closest to that of the boldfaced word.

Gloat means

A. to apologize fully.

B. to be overly self-satisfied.

C. to pay back.

• The coach told his team, “There’s only one thing worse than a sore loser, and that’s a mean winner. Don’t gloat.”

• Neil’s sister always tattles on him and then gloats when he’s punished, saying, “I told you so.”

6 gloat – verb

If the coach doesn’t want his team to be mean winners, he must be telling them not to be overly self-satisfied. By saying “I told you so,” Neil’s sister is being overly self-satisfied.

Page 14: Unit Two: Chapter 11

TEN WORDS IN CONTEXTChoose the meaning closest to that of the boldfaced word.

Immaculate means

A. uncomfortable.

B. spotless.

C. soiled.

• It’s amazing that while Carolyn’s appearance is always immaculate, her apartment often seems very dirty.

• Don’t expect a child to come home from a birthday party with immaculate clothing. Children usually manage to get as much birthday cake on their clothing as in their mouths.

7 immaculate – adjective

Page 15: Unit Two: Chapter 11

TEN WORDS IN CONTEXTChoose the meaning closest to that of the boldfaced word.

Immaculate means

A. uncomfortable.

B. spotless.

C. soiled.

• It’s amazing that while Carolyn’s appearance is always immaculate, her apartment often seems very dirty.

• Don’t expect a child to come home from a birthday party with immaculate clothing. Children usually manage to get as much birthday cake on their clothing as in their mouths.

7 immaculate – adjective

In contrast with Carolyn’s spotless appearance is her dirty apartment. If children get as much cake on their clothing as in their mouths, their clothing will not be spotless.

Page 16: Unit Two: Chapter 11

TEN WORDS IN CONTEXTChoose the meaning closest to that of the boldfaced word.

Plagiarism means

A. creativity.

B. the stealing of ideas.

C. planning.

• When the author saw a movie with the same plot as one of her novels, she sued for plagiarism.

• The teacher warned her students that using an author’s exact words as one’s own is plagiarism.

8 plagiarism – noun

Page 17: Unit Two: Chapter 11

TEN WORDS IN CONTEXTChoose the meaning closest to that of the boldfaced word.

Plagiarism means

A. creativity.

B. the stealing of ideas.

C. planning.

• When the author saw a movie with the same plot as one of her novels, she sued for plagiarism.

• The teacher warned her students that using an author’s exact words as one’s own is plagiarism.

8 plagiarism – noun

If the movie had the same plot as the author’s novel, she would sue the filmmaker for stealing her ideas. Using an author’s exact words as one’s own is stealing that author’s ideas.

Page 18: Unit Two: Chapter 11

TEN WORDS IN CONTEXTChoose the meaning closest to that of the boldfaced word.

Qualm means

A. a guilty feeling.

B. a proud memory.

C. a clever plan.

• Lorenzo is so honest that he has qualms about telling “little white lies.” For instance, it bothers him to say he likes a friend’s new haircut when he really doesn’t.

• After hiding Kwan’s bike as an April Fool’s joke, I began to have qualms. What if she thought it was stolen and called the police?

9 qualm – noun

Page 19: Unit Two: Chapter 11

TEN WORDS IN CONTEXTChoose the meaning closest to that of the boldfaced word.

Qualm means

A. a guilty feeling.

B. a proud memory.

C. a clever plan.

• Lorenzo is so honest that he has qualms about telling “little white lies.” For instance, it bothers him to say he likes a friend’s new haircut when he really doesn’t.

• After hiding Kwan’s bike as an April Fool’s joke, I began to have qualms. What if she thought it was stolen and called the police?

9 qualm – noun

If Lorenzo is very honest, he would have guilty feelings about telling “little white lies.” In the second item, if the person begins to worry about Kwan’s reaction to his joke, he must have guilty feelings.

Page 20: Unit Two: Chapter 11

TEN WORDS IN CONTEXTChoose the meaning closest to that of the boldfaced word.

Retaliate means

A. to forgive.

B. to take revenge.

C. to confuse.

10 retaliate • When I broke my sister’s stereo, she retaliated by taking my

iPod earphones and refusing to give them back.

• When Ron refused to pay his younger brother for washing his car, he retaliated by washing it again—with its windows open.

– verb

Page 21: Unit Two: Chapter 11

TEN WORDS IN CONTEXTChoose the meaning closest to that of the boldfaced word.

Retaliate means

A. to forgive.

B. to take revenge.

C. to confuse.

10 retaliate • When I broke my sister’s stereo, she retaliated by taking my

iPod earphones and refusing to give them back.

• When Ron refused to pay his younger brother for washing his car, he retaliated by washing it again—with its windows open.

– verb

If the sister took the earphones and refused to give them back, she must have been taking revenge. If the younger brother washed the car with the windows open, he was taking revenge for not being paid.