Class 12 NCERT English (Elective) Kaleidoscope Book Chapter Wise difficult word meanings

 

Here, the difficult words and their meanings of all the Chapters of CBSE Class 12 English (Elective) Kaleidoscope Book have been compiled for the convenience of the students. This is an exhaustive list of the difficult words and meanings of all the Chapters from the NCERT Class 12 English (Elective) Kaleidoscope Book. The difficult words’ meanings have been explained in an easy language so that every student can understand them easily.

 

Short Stories

 

Poetry

 

Non-Fiction

 

Drama

 

CBSE Class 12 English (Elective) Kaleidoscope Book – Short Stories

 


Chapter 1 – I Sell My Dreams

 

  1. Avenue: broad road in a town
  2. Pavement: a path with a hard surface on one or both sides of a road that people walk on.
  3. Embedded: fixed firmly and deeply in a surrounding mass
  4. Dynamite: a high-explosive
  5. Hailstorm: sudden heavy fall of hail
  6. Debris: waste
  7. Serpent: large snake
  8. Crane: lifting machine
  9. Encrusted: covered or decorated with a hard surface layer.
  10. Emerald: bright green precious stone
  11. Languid: unhurried
  12. Tavern: a pub
  13. Sausage: food in cylindrical form
  14. Espionage: spying
  15. Impertinence: rudeness
  16. Cliffs: steep
  17. Fugitive: escapee
  18. Compatriot: fellow countrymen 
  19. Ravine: narrow steep-sided valley
  20. Oracular: prophetic 
  21. Enforced: caused by necessity
  22. Infamy: disrepute
  23. Decipher: perceive
  24. Archaic: old-fashioned
  25. Sinister: threatening 
  26. Straitened: poverty
  27. Fiestas: religious festival
  28. Euphoria: joy
  29. Fortuitous: Unexpected
  30. Consulate: office of a consul
  31. Gluttonous: excessively greedy
  32. Prehistoric: period before written records.
  33. Dissecting: cut up
  34. Bib: a piece of cloth around the child’s neck
  35. Presided: be in the position of authority
  36. Intrepid: Fearless
  37. Clairvoyant: forecaster of the future
  38. Astound: shock or greatly surprise
  39. Prophetic: accurately predicting what will happen in the future.
  40. Stratagem: a plan or scheme
  41. Ineffable: too great or extreme to be expressed
  42. Patrons: a person who gives financial or other support to a person
  43. Lagged: showing a delayed effect.
  44. Stroll: walk in a leisurely way.
  45. Inevitable: certain to happen
  46. Slang: informal language
  47. Impudent: not showing due respect for another person
  48. Monogram: a motif of two or more interwoven letters
  49. Labyrinths: a maze.
  50. Disconcerted: confused
  51. Boarded: to get onto
  52. Verses: writing arranged with a metrical rhythm
  53. Siesta: an afternoon rest or nap
  54. Deck: a floor of a ship
  55. Disenchantment: a feeling of disappointment about someone or something you previously respected
  56. Diplomatic: acting in a way that does not cause offence
  57. Temptation: the desire to do something
  58. Concrete: existing in a material or physical form
  59. Obliged: make someone bound to do something.

 

Related:

Top
 


Chapter 2 – Eveline

 

  1. Odour: smell
  2. Cretonne: a heavy cotton fabric, typically with a floral pattern printed on one or both sides, used for upholstery.
  3. Concrete: a mixture of broken stone or gravel, sand, cement, and water, used as a building material
  4. Pavement: a raised path for pedestrians at the side of a road.
  5. Cinder: a small piece of partly burned coal or wood
  6. Invade: capture, occupy
  7. Belfast: the capital city and principal port of Northern Ireland
  8. Avenue: a street
  9. Cripple: a person with disability
  10. Blackthorn: name of a variety of bush or small tree
  11. Nix: an old slang word, originally used by thieves, to refer to the member of a gang who kept watch
  12. Familiar: someone or something that is known
  13. Yellowing photograph: as paper gets old, it starts turning yellow to brown in colour. Yellowing photograph means that it was old and the paper was turning yellow in colour.
  14. Consented: agreed to
  15. Weigh each side of the question: to think over the pros and cons of something
  16. Had an edge on her: had advantage over her
  17. Palpitations: strong, irregular heartbeat
  18. Never gone for her: didn’t like her
  19. Invariable: never changing
  20. Squabble: noisy quarrel
  21. Weary: tired
  22. Squander: to waste money
  23. Elbow her way: to push away people in a crowded place with the elbow, to make way
  24. Peaked: rising to a point
  25. Tumbled: to fall without control
  26. Face of bronze: bronze signifies strength and stability
  27. Elated: happy
  28. Unaccustomed: Not used to something
  29. Courting:  be involved with someone with the intention of marrying
  30. Lass: girl
  31. Affair: relationship
  32. Forbidden: not allowed
  33. Bonnet: a woman’s or child’s hat tied under the chin and with a brim framing the face.
  34. Melancholy: sad
  35. Strutting: a particular way of walking similar to a soldier’s march past
  36. Mused: thought
  37. Foolish: mindless
  38. Insistence: command
  39. Derevaun…. Seraun: possibly corrupt Gaelic for ‘the end of pleasure is pain’
  40. Impulse: a sudden desire to act
  41. Swaying: moving to and fro
  42. Glimpse: slight view
  43. Quay: a platform in the water used for loading and unloading boats and ships
  44. Illumined: brighten
  45. Porthole: a small window on the outside of a ship or aircraft.
  46. Maze: puzzle
  47. Distress: trouble
  48. Nausea: feeling of sickness
  49. Fervent: having a passionate intensity
  50. Clanged: rang
  51. Seize: grabbed
  52. Tumbled: fell and rolled
  53. Frenzy: madness
  54. Anguish: sadness
  55. Passive: not giving any response

 

Related: 

Top
 


Chapter 3 – A Wedding in Brownsville

 

  1. Zionists: a supporter of Zionism; a person who believes in the development and protection of a Jewish nation in what is now Israel
  2. Scholastic:  of or concerning schools and education
  3. Agnostic: a person who believes that nothing is known or can be known of the existence or nature of God.
  4. Atheist: a person who disbelieves or lacks belief in the existence of God or gods
  5. Seders: a Jewish home or community service including a ceremonial dinner
  6. Landsman: a countryman who knows nothing of the seas
  7. Rabbis: a Jewish scholar or teacher, especially one who studies or teaches Jewish law.
  8. Carted off: Transport or remove in an unceremonious way
  9. Gorge: eat a large amount greedily; fill oneself with food
  10. Prerogative: a right or privilege exclusive to a particular individual or class
  11. Anglicised:  to make or become English in sound, appearance, or character
  12. Yiddish: a language used by Jewish people in central and eastern Europe before the Holocaust.
  13. Unruly:disorderly and disruptive and not amenable to discipline or control
  14. Distorted: changed
  15. Skullcaps: a small, round hat that fits closely on the top of the head, worn especially by religious Jewish men or Roman Catholic priests of high rank
  16. Reverend: respected
  17. Cantor: an official of a Jewish synagogue (religious building) who sings and leads prayers
  18. Aped: copied
  19. Bar Mitzvah: the initiation ceremony of a Jewish boy who has reached the age of 13 and is regarded as ready to observe religious precepts and eligible to take part in public worship
  20. Palisades: cliffs that line the western side of the Hudson River, in New Jersey and in New York, beginning across from New York City in New Jersey and extending north to Newburgh in New York.
  21. Tereshpoler: Inhabitant of Terespol, a border town in eastern Poland on the border with Belarus
  22. Pester: disturb
  23. Reproach: express to (someone) one’s disapproval of or disappointment in their actions
  24. Aloof: not friendly
  25. Snob: a person who respects and likes only people who are of a high social class
  26. Dreary: dull, uninteresting
  27. Temples: part of the head where 4 bones meet
  28. Bags under his eyes: under eye area is puffy
  29. Exhaustion: tiredness
  30. Skimpy: short and revealing
  31. Calves: lower leg
  32. Vegetated: to live in a way that has no physical and mental activity
  33. Hadassah: American religious organization dedicated to preserving and promoting Jewish social and religious values in the United States and to strengthening ties between U.S. and Israeli Jewish communities.
  34. Lamented: feeling sad that someone or something has gone
  35. Catastrophe: a disaster
  36. Acclaimed: celebrated, praised
  37. Talmud: The Talmud is a collection of writings that covers the full gamut of Jewish law and tradition
  38. Prodigy: a young person with exceptional qualities or abilities
  39. Responsum:  a written reply by a rabbi or Talmudic scholar to an inquiry on some matter of Jewish law.
  40. Spinoza’s Ethics: Baruch Spinoza wrote Ethics, Demonstrated in Geometrical Order, a Philosophical treatise. Written in Latin, it puts forward definitions and assumptions to reach logical conclusions and deductions. Like – “When the Mind imagines its own lack of power, it is saddened by it”
  41. Squandered: wasted
  42. Plagued: to caste trouble or annoyance
  43. Hypochondria: abnormal chronic anxiety about one’s health.
  44. Carnage: the killing of a large number of people
  45. Despise: to feel a strong dislike for someone or something because you think that that person or thing is bad or has no value
  46. Matron: a woman in charge of domestic and medical arrangements at a boarding school or other institution
  47. Devising: planning
  48. To put on: to wear
  49. Mania: mental abnormality
  50. Scoured: cleaned by rubbing hard
  51. Lugged: carried or dragged with great effort
  52. Sized each other up: To make an estimate, opinion, or judgment of someone or something
  53. Wryly: in a way that expresses dry, especially mocking, humour
  54. Blurted: say (something) suddenly and without careful consideration 
  55. Illusions: a wrong interpretation
  56. Junker: a drug addict
  57. Anglo-Saxon: the people who lived in England from about AD 600 and their language and customs
  58. Stooped: bent forward
  59. Monocle: a single eyeglass, kept in position by the muscles around the eye
  60. Pretentious: attempting to impress by affecting greater importance or merit than is actually possessed
  61. Dubious: hesitating or doubting
  62. Smacked: a sharp slap or blow, typically one given with the palm of the hand
  63. Worth a pinch of dust: had no value
  64. Sagged: decline to a lower level
  65. Suffused: gradually spread over
  66. Jagged: with rough sharp points coming out
  67. Hauling: to transport heavy goods
  68. Barges: a long flat-bottomed boat for carrying freight on canals and rivers
  69. Grimaced: an ugly, twisted expression of face
  70. Chalky pallor: white colour
  71. Glazed: coated with a shiny surface
  72. Lumber: wood
  73. Scrap: discarded for reprocessing
  74. Tavern: inn or pub
  75. Incarnation: a lifetime of an individual
  76. Synagogue: place of worship for Jews
  77. Star of David: a six-pointed figure consisting of two interlaced equilateral triangles, used as a Jewish and Israeli symbol.
  78. Intimacy: closeness
  79. Engulfed: surround or cover
  80. Checkroom: a cloakroom in a hotel or theatre
  81. Hors d’oeuvres: small dish served before the meal in Europe
  82. Schnapps: a strong alcoholic drink
  83. Retinue: a group of assistants accompanying an important person
  84. Bridesmaid: a girl or woman, usually one of several, who accompanies a bride on her wedding day
  85. Amalgam: mix
  86. Sauerkraut: a German dish of chopped pickled cabbage.
  87. Snout: the protruding portion of an animal’s face, consisting of its nose, mouth, and jaw.
  88. Reeking: unpleasant smell
  89. Convulsed: recovered
  90. Trampled: walk over
  91. Delicatessen: a shop selling cooked meats, cheeses, and unusual or foreign-prepared foods
  92. Lechayim: an expression traditionally used by Jewish people before they drink an alcoholic drink together
  93. Tractate: a treatise
  94. Gleichgeschaltet!: (Gleichschaltung) A Nazi term which means “synchronization” or “bringing into line”. The process of Nazification.
  95. Exterminated: completely destroyed
  96. Cantor: an official who leads the prayer in a synagogue
  97. Scowl: frown in an angry or bad-tempered way
  98. Wrangling: Engage in complicated dispute or argument
  99. Fiddle: a violin
  100. Stamped: to bring the foot down heavily on the floor
  101. Romped around: a lively, merry play
  102. Commotion: a state of confused and noisy disturbance
  103. Warts: a small, hard, benign growth on the skin, caused by a virus
  104. Tumult: a loud, confused noise, especially one caused by a large mass of people
  105. Perished: here, no longer alive
  106. Swindler: a person who uses deception to deprive someone of money or possessions
  107. Amassed: gathered together
  108. abide by the rules: follow the rules
  109. Blotches: a large irregular patch or unsightly mark on the skin or another surface
  110. Husky: slightly hoarse
  111. Lying side by side: when they die, they will be placed in graves next to each other, thus, they will be lying side by side
  112. Intoxicated: drunk
  113. Foggy: unclear
  114. Carousel: Merry-go-round at a fair
  115. Contemplated: look thoughtfully for a long time
  116. Frantic: distraught with fear, anxiety, or other emotion
  117. Whirl: move or cause to move rapidly round and round
  118. Beckoned: to encourage or instruct someone to approach or follow
  119. Baffled: confused
  120. Braids: a plait
  121. Wreath: an arrangement of flowers, leaves, or stems fastened in a ring and used for decoration or for laying on a grave
  122. Adorned: decorated
  123. Incredible: unbelievable
  124. Deceived: cheated
  125. Messiah: God
  126. Steered: to control the movement of someone or something
  127. Chapel: a small building or room used for Christian worship in a school, prison, hospital, or large private house
  128. Goblet: a drinking glass with a foot and a stem
  129. Pew: a long bench with a back, placed in rows in the main part of some churches to seat the congregation
  130. Threshold: doorstep
  131. Canopy: a cover meant for shelter or decoration
  132. Part: here, separate
  133. Suppressed: forcibly put an end to
  134. Import: the deeper significance beyond literal meanings
  135. Falteringly: hesitant manner
  136. Bewildered: confused
  137. Discrepancy: difference between two things that should be the same
  138. Profound: deep
  139. Narcotic: a drug that affects the mood or behaviour and is consumed for non-medical purposes
  140. Trance: a half-conscious state characterized by an absence of response to external stimuli
  141. Eerie: strange and frightening
  142. Blurted: say suddenly without careful thought
  143. Perplexed: confused
  144. Ponder: think
  145. Hovering: moving around
  146. Astral body: a person’s energy and presence, sometimes called the aura
  147. Clinging: to hold together, adhere, or remain close.
  148. Illusion: an idea or belief that is not true
  149. Vanities: excessive pride in or admiration of one’s own appearance or achievements
  150. Oblivion: the state of being unaware or unconscious of what is happening around one
  151. Stupor: a state of near-unconsciousness or insensibility
  152. Hallucination: an experience involving the apparent perception of something not present
  153. Cantor: an official who sings liturgical music and leads prayer in a synagogue
  154. Benedictions: the utterance of a blessing, especially at the end of a religious service
  155. Aisle: a passage between rows of seats in a building such as a church or theatre, an aircraft, or train

 

Related: 

Top
 


Chapter 4 – Tomorrow

 

  1. Morbid: diseased
  2. Tyrant: oppressive ruler
  3. Fence: a barrier
  4. Unthrifty: not using money 
  5. Granite: rock
  6. Uncouth: lacking good manners
  7. Clime: a region known for its weather
  8. Insolently: rude
  9. Chaffing: tease
  10. Put to rest in Davy Jones’s locker: [Davy Jone’s Locker is a metaphor for the bottomless ocean]. It means that the sailor or ship has been consigned to the depth of the ocean or has drowned
  11. Perseverance: Determination
  12. Slunk off: leave silently
  13. Sardonic: mocking
  14. Ditches: gutter
  15. Gusto: Enjoyment
  16. Skipper: Captain of a ship
  17. Inducement: persuade
  18. Taproom: a bar in a hotel
  19. Majestic: great
  20. Evasive: avoiding
  21. Tarred: covered with tar
  22. Twine: strong thread
  23. Mourning of broadcloth: broadcloth is the cloth used for mourning
  24. Dailiness: routine life
  25. Skinflint: miser
  26. Quaint: Attractive
  27. Furtively: guilty nervousness
  28. Yore: yesteryear
  29. Diffident: lacking confidence 
  30. Incredulous: unbelievable
  31. Intimacy: closeness
  32. Dogmatically: unquestionable beliefs
  33. Hale: strong and healthy
  34. Discomposed: disturbed
  35. Arbitrariness: a lack of restrain in authority
  36. Expounded: explained
  37. Fathoms: measure the depth of water
  38. To be out of soundings: to be completely detached from the environment and things around
  39. Animosity: strong hostility
  40. East-coast collier: a ship especially designed to transport coal from the eastern coast of the country.
  41. Explicitly: clear, making something easy to understand 
  42. Salve: soothe
  43. Ravings: to say very good things
  44. Burlap: coarse cloth made of jute
  45. Firmament: sky
  46. Complacent: self-satisfied
  47. Incredulity: lack of belief 
  48. Opulence: wealth
  49. Queer: strange
  50. Vaunted: praised
  51. Full figure: round body shape
  52. Surly: unfriendly
  53. Gross: excessively fat
  54. Unwieldy: difficult to move or carry because of heavy weight
  55. Profound: feel strongly
  56. Confined: very small
  57. Bestial roaring: a sound that imitates the roar of a beast
  58. Rig: to control an event in an unfair way in order to get result you want
  59. Fiendish tone: extremely cruel and wicked
  60. Incurable: something that can’t be cured
  61. Bellow: to shout in the loud deep voice
  62. Father neptune: an allusion to Roman mythological God of sea called Neptune who held a spade in his hand.
  63. Infirm: weak
  64. Imperceptibly: subtly
  65. Promenade: a wide oath where people walk beside the sea in a town on the coast pottering: to spend your time doing small jobs that you enjoy
  66. Gait: the way somebody walks
  67. Toilful: demanding
  68. Bulk: heavy
  69. Half-crown: former British coin equal to two shillings and sixpence
  70. Cast him down: to make someone feel downhearted or depressed 
  71. lucidity: easy to understand 
  72. Derangement: mental disturbance 
  73. Delusion: a false belief 
  74. Wicked: evil or morally wrong
  75. Irritate him into flings: intentionally annoy someone that eventually leads to fleeting connections 
  76. Side- glance: showing disapproval
  77. Intimacy: closeness
  78. Endurance: tolerance 
  79. Drudgery: menial work
  80. Splendours: grandeur 
  81. Queerness: strange
  82. Quagmire: a soft boggy area of the land that gives way underfoot
  83. Disconsolate: unhappy
  84. Affliction: Suffering 
  85. Atrocious: brutal 
  86. Pace: speed
  87. Lingered: stay
  88. Equilibrium: balance 
  89. Gesticulated: gesture
  90. Resentful: irritated for being treated unfairly 
  91. Fancy: liking for
  92. Timidly: lacking confidence 
  93. Self-esteem: self-worth
  94. Notions: a belief
  95. Grins: broad smile
  96. Outraged: angry
  97. Crestfallen: sad
  98. Silhouette: shadow
  99. Flitted out: to leave a place quickly 
  100. Industry: the digging he was doing on his fence
  101. Rig: equipment 
  102. Gravely: serious
  103. Utter: voice out
  104. Squelch: sound made by walking on the mud
  105. Insurmountable: unconquerable
  106. Rabbit-hutches: cage
  107. Care a hang: to show no interest 
  108. Serenity: calmness
  109. Appalled: disgusted
  110. Swindle: fraud
  111. Echo: sound repetition 
  112. Gurgling: hollow bubbling sound
  113. Scornfully: hateful
  114. Daunted: intimated 
  115. Slamming: forcefully shut
  116. Insurmountable: too great to overcome 
  117. Contiguity: closeness
  118. Caress: stroke
  119. Chum: close friend
  120. Perplexed: confused
  121. Pondering over: thinking about something
  122. Loaf about the gate: to be idle
  123. Towered: taller than the person near
  124. Fancied: liking for
  125. Baffled: puzzled
  126. Scornful: contempt
  127. Mute: silent
  128. Notion: belief
  129. Contradicted: refute
  130. Squared his shoulder: stand errect
  131. Broad brimmed: hat with a wide brim
  132. Cavalierly: proudly 
  133. Walloped: trike hard
  134. Frisky: lively
  135. Quid: one pound sterlings
  136. Come off: meetup with
  137. Lark: business 
  138. Cleave: split
  139. Brusquely: blunt
  140. Hutch: a cupboard
  141. Whaling cruise: a voyage on a whaling ship, which is a large ship that used to hunt whales.
  142. The spit of his: to look extremely similar to someone
  143. Defiantly: not willing to accept criticism
  144. Years and a tail: tail coverage, which is an optional extension of insurance coverage that can last for three years or more. 
  145. Chokey: imprisonment
  146. Ragged: torn
  147. Halo: ring of light
  148. Mused: pondered
  149. Given the go-by: to disregard
  150. Sombre: dull
  151. Nape of her neck: the back of her neck, where the neck meets the head
  152. Keeps it up: to encourage someone
  153. By George: a type of swearing
  154. Confounded: anger
  155. Flinted: move quickly
  156. Capstan’s songs: songs about guilt, depression, and the human experience.
  157. Repressing a shudder: to stop the involuntary shaking movement that is a shudder.
  158. Reckless: careless
  159. Breaking on: smashing
  160. Rampart: defensive wall
  161. Chattered: clicking together sound
  162. Jolly good spree: a very enjoyable period
  163. Snatch: grab
  164. The swell of yesterday’s gale: the waves created by the gale winds.
  165. Worth my salt: competent at the job
  166. Chump: foolish
  167. Devil of a lark: a particularly mischievous or exciting bit of fun, essentially a hell of a good time
  168. Scraped: injury
  169. Egged him on: to encourage someone to do something
  170. Cleared out: to leave
  171. Hard heart: cold-hearted
  172. Black and blue: bruises 
  173. Outlandish: unfamiliar
  174. Rigged: set up
  175. Rigged ships: process of setting up and arranging various components on a sailing vessel.
  176. Sheared: cut the wool off
  177. Humped my swag: an informal expression that means to carry one’s belongings on one’s back, especially when referring to a tramp.
  178. Sheared sheep: a sheep that has had its wool cut off
  179. Harpooning a whale: the act of killing a whale with a barbed spear or projectile.
  180. Boulder: rock
  181. Spree: unrestrained activity
  182. On the edge of: very close to something, often implying a precarious or critical situation
  183. Handy: useful
  184. Spire: a tall, pointed structure that sits on top of a building or tower.
  185. Chum: a close friend
  186. Gallantly: heroic
  187. Brazen: bold
  188. Scraped: injury
  189. Devil of a fix: a seafaring saga
  190. Jestingly: jokingly
  191. Scathing: scornful
  192. Hutch: cage
  193. Contempt: disrespect
  194. Dash my soul: a dramatic expression meaning destroy my soul or completely upset me
  195. Fretting: anxious 
  196. Rattled: sharp noises
  197. Swell: waves
  198. Soughing: rushing sound
  199. Babbled: talk rapidly
  200. Dogmatically: unyielding
  201. Grinning: smile broadly
  202. Ebbing: flow back
  203. Poise: balance
  204. Tread: walk
  205. Ardour: passion
  206. Staggered: walk unsteady
  207. Buy out: to pay someone to give ownership
  208. Beat of the swell: the rhythmic pattern of larger wave
  209. Swaggered: walked confidently
  210. Scrapes: scratches 
  211. Inscription: writings
  212. Inferno: hell
  213. Surf: breaking waves of ocean
  214. Fiendish: cruel
  215. Chuckle: laugh inwardly
  216. Totter: move feebly

Related: 

Top
 


Chapter 5 – One Centimetre

 

  1. Astute: smart
  2. Wrenching: twisting
  3. Ballooning up: increase rapidly or swell out
  4. Aperture: opening
  5. Skimpy: stingy
  6. Slit: cut
  7. Overwhelmed: overcome
  8. Lustre: gloss
  9. Flawless: perfect
  10. Brushing away: to remove something from a surface with your hand
  11. Half-open blossom: a flower that is partially open
  12. Stamping on the floor: to forcefully bring your foot down onto the floor, usually making a loud noise, often expressing anger or frustration
  13. Aristocrat: rich
  14. Scoffed at: mocked
  15. Bellow: a deep roaring sound
  16. Beady eyes: keenly observant, typically in a sinister or hostile way
  17. Self-esteem: self-respect
  18. Poised: graceful
  19. Alight: get off
  20. Lose face: humiliated
  21. Interwoven: woven together
  22. Shrinks: get smaller
  23. Resist: avoid
  24. Beneficial: advantageous
  25. Nonchalantly: a casually calm and relaxed manner.
  26. Blue-collar workers: people who perform manual labor or skilled trades, often in physically demanding jobs.
  27. Stubs: ticket
  28. Rind: the tough outer skin of certain fruit
  29. Gnaw: to bite or chew something repeatedly
  30. Defiant: resistant
  31. Imitators: copier
  32. Shooting down aeroplanes with a small gun: attempting to do something seemingly impossible or trying to defeat a powerful opponent with inadequate means
  33. Indiscriminate: done at random or without careful judgement
  34. Famine: extreme scarcity of food
  35. Admiration: respect
  36. Speculation: opinions
  37. Gratitude: thankfulness
  38. Battered: damaged by age and repeated use.
  39. Kow-tow: kneel and touch the ground with the forehead in worship or submission as part of Chinese custom.
  40. Quench: extinguish
  41. Patch: spot
  42. Banishes: exile
  43. Snatch: grab
  44. Envelopes: wraps
  45. Unwinding: ease up
  46. Glided: covered in golden colors 
  47. Tilt: lean
  48. Fracas: disturbance or quarrel.
  49. Spitting out: to say something quickly and angrily
  50. Pithy voice: a brief, forceful, and meaningful way of speaking
  51. Exempt: not allowed
  52. Swarming: moving in dense group
  53. Sarcasm: to make fun of someone or something
  54. Smug: self-satisfied
  55. Awful: unpleasant
  56. Titters: giggle 
  57. Agitated: upset
  58. Courtesy: politeness
  59. Pretence: make-believe
  60. Towering: extremely tall
  61. Flummoxed: confused
  62. Sneer: a contemptuous or mocking smile
  63. Preserve: protect
  64. Way of putting it: to the manner in which something is expressed.
  65. Jeering: making rude and mocking remarks
  66. Edict: order
  67. Complimentary: free
  68. To have the nerve: have the daring to do something bold
  69. Pei Pa: the Chinese musical instrument called the “pipa,” which has four strings, and symbolically represent the four seasons: spring, summer, autumn, and winter
  70. Swallow her pride: to do something even though it might make someone feel embarrassed or ashamed
  71. Bewilderment: confused
  72. Sullen: gloomy
  73. Frightens: scare
  74. Encountered: meet
  75. Silhouette: shadow
  76. Incomprehensible: not able to be understood
  77. Glance: look quickly
  78. Glisten: shine
  79. Vanishing: disappear
  80. Viper: snake
  81. Flattering: praiseworthy
  82. Baffled: puzzled
  83. Convoluted: extremely complex and difficult to follow
  84. Cunning: crafty
  85. Shoot up: grow taller rapidly 
  86. Camouflage uniforms: special clothes that help soldiers and police blend in with their surroundings.
  87. Conscientious: diligent
  88. Tiny terrapins: turtles that live in fresh or brackish water.
  89. Queuing: line up
  90. Nicotine-stained fingers: a type of skin discoloration caused by long-term exposure to tobacco smoke
  91. Traces: uncover
  92. News rag: newspaper
  93. Melt the ice in her son’s eyes: to gradually ease someone’s discomfort or shock by gently introducing them to a new idea or situation
  94. An apple in a mound of potatoes: to be different in a group and thus, be easily spotted
  95. Touch his heart: something that has profound emotional impact
  96. Fawned someone: to praise someone too much and give them a lot of attention that is not sincere, in order to get a positive reaction
  97. Grieving soldiers always win: sorrow becomes a powerful motivator. 
  98. Threshold: doorstep
  99. Shrinks: to become smaller
  100. Voucher: coupon
  101. Token: sign
  102. Sombre: dull
  103. Misdeed: wrongdoings
  104. Classified advertisements: small ad in a newspaper 
  105. Depressed: sad
  106. Comrade: friend
  107. Immersed: soaked
  108. Glistens: shines
  109. Recesses of his mind: thoughts or feelings they have which are hidden or difficult to describe.
  110. Fantasies: imagination
  111. Stirred up: to cause an emotion or event to happen
  112. Demeanor: manner
  113. Refute: disapprove
  114. Poke out: to extend outward or to cause something to appear from behind or through something else
  115. Tempting: appealing
  116. Proposition: proposal
  117. Associated: linked
  118. Unison: together
  119. Nudges: pushes with elbow
  120. Shoves: push

 

Related: 

Top

 

CBSE Class 12 English (Elective) Kaleidoscope Book – Poetry

 


Poem 1 – A Lecture Upon the Shadow

 

  1. Thee: you
  2. Philosophy: the study of ideas and issues, and the pursuit of wisdom and understanding.
  3. Houres: hours
  4. Shadowes: shadows
  5. Sunne: sun
  6. Along with us, which we our selves produc’d: the shadows of the poet and his beloved walking behind them
  7. Our selves: ourselves
  8. Doe: do
  9. Tread: walk in a specific way
  10. Brave clearnesse: sunshine
  11. Reduc’d: reduced
  12. Whilst: while
  13. Disguises: give a different appearance to conceal one’s identity.
  14. Hath: have
  15. Lest: for the fear that
  16. Flow: the shadows are changing their position 
  17. Noone: noon
  18. Blinde: blind
  19. Faint: barely perceptible or unclear
  20. Thine: yours
  21. Worke: work
  22. Thou: you
  23. Behinde: behind

 

Related: 

Top
 


Poem 2 – Poems by Milton

 

  1. Envious: jealous
  2. Call on: make use of
  3. Leaden-stepping: moving slowly and heavily, like lead.
  4. Thou: you
  5. Thy: your
  6. Merely: only
  7. Mortal: perishable
  8. Plummet pace: to fall or drop very quickly and suddenly
  9. Leaden: dull, heavy, or slow
  10. Dross: worthless
  11. Glut: an excessively abundant supply of something.
  12. Devour: eat hungrily
  13. Vain: useless
  14. Mortal dross: things that are temporal, base, or vain, and therefore not worth much
  15. Entomb’d: bury
  16. Individual kiss: every individual will be blessed with happiness
  17. Sincerely: genuinely
  18. Supreme Throne: God
  19. Long Eternity: humans living with positive aspects on Earth
  20. Divine: connection with god
  21. Heav’nly guided soul: humans with positive aspects
  22. T’whose: that
  23. Overtake: go past something
  24. Eternity: unending time
  25. Hast: have
  26. Clime: climate
  27. Grossnes: offensive and disgusting
  28. Attir’d: dressed
  29. Triumphing: winning
  30. Honour’d: public praise
  31. Labour of an age: lifetime of work by labourers
  32. Piled: placed one on top of the other.
  33. Hallow’d reliques: holy remains
  34. Star-ypointing: Pointing towards heaven
  35. Pyramid: monumental structure with a square or triangular base and sloping sides that meet in a point at the top, especially one built of stone as a royal tomb in ancient Egypt.
  36. Son of memory: Shakespeare’s work
  37. Heir of Fame: Shakespeare’s work
  38. Need’st: need
  39. Thou: you
  40. Weak witness: tomb
  41. Wonder: admiration
  42. Astonishment: surprise
  43. Hast: have
  44. Thy self: yourself
  45. Live-long Monument: Shakespeare’s work 
  46. Endeavouring: try
  47. Whilst: while
  48. Thy: your
  49. Thou: you
  50. Th’shame: the shame
  51. Hath: have
  52. Slow endeavouring art: slow, uninspiring and forceful imitations by the poets of Shakespeare’s era
  53. Easie numbers flow: Poetic meter
  54. Delphic lines: an allusion to the God of Poetry, Apollo. Shakespeare’s work has been compared to the Delphic oracle by the god of poetry, Apollo. It is a prediction which gives a glimpse of truth from the god, leaving a deep impression on the reader’s mind and heart.
  55. Marble: readers
  56. Fancy: imagination
  57. Unvalu’d: invaluable
  58. Pomp: splendours
  59. Self-bereaving: process of acknowledging and mourning the pain of past hurts or losses.
  60. Conceaving: forming an idea in the mind
  61. Dost: do
  62. Sepulcher’d: tomb or a place of burial

 

Related: 

Top
 


Poem 3 – Poems by Blake

 

  1. Distress: suffering
  2. Virtues: moral qualities
  3. Mercy: compassion or forgiveness shown towards someone whom it is within one’s power to punish or harm.
  4. Pity: feel sorrow for the misfortunes of.
  5. Clime: of different region
  6. Dwell: living in a specific place
  7. Heathen: a person who does not belong to a widely held religion (especially one who is not a Christian, Jew, or Muslim) as regarded by those who do.
  8. Pity: feel sorrow for the misfortunes of.
  9. Mercy: compassion or forgiveness shown towards someone whom it is within one’s power to punish or harm.
  10. Snare: trap
  11. Baits: food placed on a trap
  12. Underneath: situated below
  13. Knit: made by interlocking loops
  14. Dismal: sadness
  15. Mystery: leaves
  16. Dismal: sadness
  17. Deceit: fraud
  18. Ruddy: damned fruit
  19. Humility: the quality of having a modest or low view of one’s importance.
  20. Sought: search for
  21. Thro’: through
  22. Vain: producing no result or useless.

 

Related: 

Top
 


Poem 4 – Kubla Khan Or A Vision in a Dream: A Fragment

 

  1. Xanadu: an idyllic, exotic, or luxurious place
  2. Kubla Khan founded the Mongol dynasty in China in the thirteenth century.
  3. Stately: impressive or grand in size, appearance, or manner.
  4. Dome: a rounded vault forming the roof of a building or structure, typically with a circular base.
  5. Decree: official order
  6. Alph: river in Antarctica
  7. Sacred: holy
  8. Caverns: large caves
  9. Measureless: unlimited
  10. Girdle: surround
  11. Sinuous: many curves and turns
  12. Rills: a small stream
  13. Blossom: bloom
  14. Incense-bearing tree: a tropical tree that produces a fragrant gum or resin burned as incense.
  15. Ancient: of long ago
  16. Enfolding: surrounding
  17. Chasm: a deep narrow opening in the earth’s surface
  18. Slanted down: moving towards
  19. Athwart: from side to side of
  20. Cedarn: made from or resembling the wood of a cedar tree.
  21. Savage: fierce, violent, and uncontrolled.
  22. Enchanted: placed under a spell
  23. Beneath: below
  24. Waning: diminishing
  25. Haunted: frequented by a ghost
  26. Wailing: crying with pain, grief, or anger.
  27. Ceaseless: constant and unending
  28. Turmoil: chaos or violent disturbance
  29. Seething: boil or be turbulent as if boiling.
  30. Fast thick pants: the forceful, rapid expulsion of water from a chasm, likened to the heavy breaths of a person exerting, creating a sense of intense, almost violent energy in the natural landscape; essentially, it means a powerful, rushing flow that sounds like heavy, quick breathing
  31. Mighty: possessing great and impressive power or strength, especially because of size
  32. Swift: happen quickly
  33. Half-intermitted: to stop or pause at intervals, or to be in a state of partial interruption.
  34. Burst: break open or apart suddenly and violently, especially as a result of an impact or internal pressure.
  35. Vaulted like rebounding hail: something is leaping or bouncing upwards in a similar way to how hailstones bounce off the ground after falling from the sky, creating a powerful and dynamic image of forceful movement upwards.
  36. Vaulted: sudden, arched upward movement
  37. Rebounding hail: the way hailstones bounce back up after hitting the ground, emphasising the energetic, repeated motion.
  38. Chaffy: seed coverings and other debris that is separated from the seed when grain is threshed
  39. Thresher’s flail: a hand tool used to separate grains from their husks
  40. Flung up: to throw off
  41. Momently: continually
  42. Meandering: moving slowly
  43. Mazy: like a maze
  44. Dale: valley
  45. Tumult: a state of confusion or disorder.
  46. Prophesying: forecast
  47. Floated: rest or move on or near the surface of a liquid without sinking.
  48. Midway: towards the middle of something
  49. Mingle: mix or cause to mix.
  50. Damsel: a young unmarried woman.
  51. Dulcimer: a musical instrument; dulcimer comes from the Latin and Greek words dulce and melos, which combine to mean “sweet tune”.
  52. Vision: the ability to think about or plan the future with imagination or wisdom.
  53. Abyssinian: ancient region in the Horn of Africa, modern-day Ethiopia
  54. Mount Abora: a mythical mountain. Coleridge was inspired by Mount Amara, a paradise-like mythical mountain in John Milton’s Paradise Lost.
  55. Revive: restore to life
  56. Symphony: musical composition
  57. Delight: happiness
  58. ’Twould: it would
  59. Flashing: shining brightly for a brief period
  60. Holy dread: a feeling of great fear or awe in the presence of something sacred or holy, or to a fear of God. 

 

Related: 

Top
 


Poem 5 – Trees

 

  1. Tassels: a group of short threads or ropes held together at one end, used as a hanging decoration on hats, curtains, furniture, etc.
  2. Swung: move or cause to move back and forth or from side to side while suspended or on an axis.
  3. Miniature: very small of its kind.
  4. Accompanying: provided or occurring at the same time as something else.
  5. Psalteries: an ancient and medieval musical instrument like a dulcimer but played by plucking the strings with the fingers or a plectrum.
  6. Enamoring: be filled with love for.
  7. Remotest: distant
  8. Utter: completely
  9. Optional: voluntarily or free
  10. Estates: ownership or belonging; an extensive area of land in the country, usually with a large house
  11. Enfold: surround
  12. Eternally: lasts forever
  13. Whim: a sudden desire or change of mind, especially unusual or unexplained.
  14. Orchard: a piece of enclosed land planted with fruit trees.
  15. Fence: a barrier, railing,
  16. Lane: a narrow path
  17. Winding round: twist or wrap something around another thing, or follow a course that forms a loop
  18. Slit: a long, narrow cut or opening.
  19. Calyx: the outer part of a flower formed by the sepals
  20. Soared: to fly or rise high in the air.
  21. Hindered: obstruct
  22. Hoisted: raise (something) using ropes and pulleys
  23. Spices: dry petals
  24. Hem: the edge of a piece of cloth
  25. ’Twas: it was
  26. Delineation: the action of describing or portraying something precisely.
  27. Vandyke: a famous painter who painted landscapes 

 

Related: 

Top
 


Poem 6 – The Wild Swans at Coole

 

  1. Woodland: land covered with trees.
  2. Twilight: evening
  3. Stillness: silence and quietness
  4. Brimming: be full to the point of overflowing.
  5. Mount: climb up
  6. Scatter: throw in various random directions.
  7. Wheeling: fly in a wide circle or curve.
  8. Clamorous: making a loud and confused noise.
  9. Looked upon: to consider or think of someone or something in a particular way
  10. Twilight: evening
  11. Shore: the land along the edge of a sea, lake, or other large body of water.
  12. Trod: walk in a specified way.
  13. Tread: walk in a specified way.
  14. Unwearied: not tired or becoming tired.
  15. Paddle: a short pole with a broad blade at one or both ends, used without a rowlock to move a small boat or canoe through the water.
  16. Companionable: friendly and sociable.
  17. Streams: a small, narrow river.
  18. Conquest: victory over something
  19. Wander: walk or move in a leisurely or aimless way.
  20. Attend upon still: be devoted to something, even if it changes or moves away.
  21. Drift: be carried slowly by a current of air or water.
  22. Rushes: nest
  23. Edge: the outside limit of an object, area, or surface.
  24. Delight: happiness
  25. Flown away: to move or go away gradually or suddenly. 

 

Related: 

Top
 


Poem 7 – Time and Time Again

 

  1. Clocktowers: a tower, typically forming part of a church or civic building, with a large clock at the top
  2. Beating their gongs round the clock: the clocks in a city are constantly striking their bells, signifying the continuous passage of time, happening all day and night, without interruption; essentially, it’s a poetic way of saying that time is always moving forward.
  3. Gongs: metal bells on a clock tower that chime to mark the time.
  4. Round the clock: the bells are ringing throughout the entire 24-hour day.
  5. Slightly off: something is a little different or strange, or not quite right.
  6. Out of the accidents: caused by an unexpected event
  7. Mutual distances: physical and emotional separation between individuals or groups.
  8. Commemorating: recall and show respect for (someone or something).
  9. Commemorating a donor’s whim: these distances are perhaps arbitrary and based on the whims of a giver or the arbitrary nature of certain choices.
  10. Whim: a sudden desire or change of mind, especially one that is unusual or unexplained.
  11. Perennial: everlasting
  12. Feuds: argument
  13. Seasonal: relating to or characteristic of a particular season of the year.
  14. Alliance: a relationship based on similarity of interests, nature, or qualities.
  15. Cut off: to stop or interrupt something suddenly, or to stop someone from speaking
  16. Change of wind: unforeseen circumstances
  17. Change of mind: individual decisions
  18. Siren: warning sound
  19. Zigzag: a line or course having abrupt alternate right and left turns.
  20. Knocked out: means to be rendered unconscious, usually due to a blow or some other cause

Related: 

Top
 


Poem 8 – Blood

 

  1. Cracked: damaged and showing lines on the surface from having split without coming apart.
  2. Whine: a long, high-pitched complaining cry.
  3. Groan: make a deep inarticulate sound conveying pain
  4. Scamper: run with quick light steps in fear or excitement.
  5. Snake-shrine: representations of Naga or snake deities, hold significance in various cultures, particularly in Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism, symbolizing rebirth, transformation, and protection, with snakes seen as divine or semi-divine beings.
  6. Weeds: any wild plant that grows in an unwanted place, especially in a garden or field where it prevents the cultivated plants from growing freely.
  7. Lichen: a plantlike organism that typically forms a low crusty, leaflike, or branching growth on rocks, walls, and trees.
  8. Hoods: a covering for the head and neck with an opening for the face
  9. She was really simple: suggests a lack of worldly distractions or complexities.
  10. Fed on God for years: a metaphor for the person’s spiritual sustenance, where their primary nourishment comes from their relationship or connection with God.
  11. Feast: a large meal, typically a celebratory one.
  12. Monotonous: dull
  13. All her feasts were monotonous: a lack of variety in her spiritual experiences, as the only dish ‘focus’ was always God.
  14. Condiments: a substance such as salt, mustard, or pickle that is used to add flavour to food.
  15. Brocade: a rich fabric woven with a raised pattern, typically with gold or silver thread.
  16. New-rich men: individuals who have recently acquired wealth, often through means that are not necessarily traditional or ethical.
  17. A blood thick as gruel: This is a metaphor. Gruel is a thick, often unappealing porridge, symbolising that the emotions and values of the new rich are heavy, unrefined, and lacking in purity.
  18. Gruel: something that lacks substance or significance
  19. Muddy as a ditch: the lack of purity. A ditch is a channel for dirty water, suggesting that the lives and actions of the new rich are tainted and morally questionable. 
  20. Wearied: cause to become tired.
  21. Grieve: feel intense sorrow.
  22. Feat: an achievement that requires great courage, skill, or strength.
  23. Crouching: adopt a position where the knees are bent and the upper body is brought forward and down, typically to avoid detection or to defend oneself.
  24. Pallid: pale
  25. Grotesque: repulsively ugly or distorted.
  26. Groan: make a deep inarticulate sound conveying pain
  27. Set forth: begin a journey.
  28. Shrine: holy place
  29. Shrubs: woody plants
  30. Rabid: extremely violent 
  31. Totems: a natural object or animal that is believed by a particular society to have spiritual significance and that is adopted by it as an emblem.
  32. Rattle: a rapid succession of short, sharp, sounds.
  33. Creaking: making a harsh, high-pitched sound when being moved or when pressure or weight is applied.
  34. Whine: a long, high-pitched complaining cry.
  35. Let you down: fail to support or help someone as they had hoped or expected.
  36. Mother’s mother’s mother: The repetition and alliteration serve to emphasize the concept of lineage and the extended family, making the phrase more memorable and impactful.
  37. Plucked your soul: to have your core essence or spirit forcibly removed or taken away, often in a way that leaves you feeling empty or lost.
  38. Pip: a small hard seed in a fruit.
  39. Pyre: a combustible heap for burning a dead body as a funeral rite
  40. Callous: showing or having an insensitive and cruel disregard for others.
  41. Stately: impressive or grand in size, appearance, or manner.

 

Related: 

Top

 

CBSE Class 12 English (Elective) Kaleidoscope Book – Non-fiction

 


Chapter 1- Freedom

 

  1. Necessities: an indispensable thing
  2. Shirk: avoid or neglect (a duty or responsibility).
  3. Peopled: fill (a place) with inhabitants.
  4. Shirked: avoid or neglect (a duty or responsibility).
  5. Bedding: bedclothes
  6. Trickery: the practice of deception.
  7. Beware: be cautious and alert to risks or dangers.
  8. Have the upper hand: have the advantage over someone or something.
  9. Regulate: control (something, especially a business activity) by means of rules and regulations.
  10. Chattel slavery of the negro: the historical practice of treating enslaved people, particularly those of African descent, as property, with owners having complete control over their lives, labor, and offspring.
  11. Wage slavery: a situation where individuals are dependent on wages or salaries for their livelihood, often with limited opportunities for advancement, and where their wages barely cover their basic needs, leaving them feeling trapped and unable to escape their financial circumstances.
  12. Triumph: victory
  13. Spite: to offend someone
  14. Constitute: be (a part) of a whole.
  15. Democratic: a system of government in which power is held by elected representatives who are freely voted for by the people, or held directly by the people themselves.
  16. Building societies: a business that lends you money if you want to buy a house, or pays you interest on money you invest there
  17. Resenting: dislike
  18. Supper: dinner
  19. Prophet: a person regarded as an inspired teacher or proclaimer of the will of God.
  20. Trade Unions: an organized association of workers in a trade, group of trades, or profession, formed to protect and further their rights and interests.
  21. Employers’ Federations: a collective organization of employers, often from the same sector, that aims to represent and promote the interests of its member companies, including negotiating with trade unions and advocating for their interests with government bodies.
  22. Canonized: (in the Roman Catholic Church) officially declare (a dead person) to be a saint.
  23. Abolition: the act of ending an activity or custom officially
  24. Compulsion: obligation
  25. Republic: a state in which supreme power is held by the people and their elected representatives, and which has an elected or nominated president rather than a monarch.
  26. Grumble: complain about something in a bad-tempered way.
  27. Dole: benefit paid by the state to the unemployed.
  28. Imposture: an instance of pretending to be someone else in order to deceive others
  29. Atheists: a person who disbelieves or lacks belief in the existence of God or gods.
  30. Libertine: a person, especially a man, who freely indulges in sensual pleasures without regard to moral
  31. Scoundrel: a dishonest or unscrupulous person; a rogue.
  32. Mourning: sorrow for someone’s death
  33. Calumnies: the making of false and defamatory statements about someone in order to damage their reputation; slander.
  34. Firstrate: of the best or highest quality, excellent, or superior.
  35. Denounce: publicly declare to be wrong or evil.
  36. Abominable: loathsome
  37. Tyrant: a cruel and oppressive ruler.
  38. Prodigious: remarkably or impressively great in extent, size, or degree.
  39. Humbug: deceptive
  40. Delude: mislead
  41. Cast-off-on-the-dole: those who were made satisfied by being unemployed and reliant on government assistance.
  42. Gangsterism: the behavior, methods, and activities characteristic of gangsters, encompassing the use of tactics like intimidation or violence to achieve goals, often associated with organized criminal groups.
  43. Ballot paper: a slip of paper used to register a vote.
  44. Controversy: heated discussion
  45. Obligation: a debt of gratitude for a service or favour.
  46. Accent: a distinctive way of pronouncing a language, especially one associated with a particular country, area, or social class.
  47. Idolaters: a person who worships an idol or idols.
  48. Enfranchised: given the right to vote.
  49. Fascinating: extremely interesting.
  50. Idolatry: extreme admiration, love, or reverence for something or someone.
  51. Arrogance: self-importance
  52. Propaganda: information, especially of a biased or misleading nature, used to promote a political cause or point of view.
  53. Prejudice: preconceived opinion that is not based on reason or actual experience.
  54. At the bottom of it: to be the real reason for or the cause of something
  55. Plough: a large farming implement with one or more blades fixed in a frame, drawn over soil to turn it over and cut furrows in preparation for the planting of seeds.
  56. Drawing from: to obtain or take something from a particular source, like inspiration, knowledge, or resources.
  57. Having tricks up your sleeve: to have secret plans, ideas, or advantages that you are keeping hidden and can use later when needed. 
  58. Wipe out: eliminate something completely.
  59. Enforced: caused by necessity or force; compulsory.
  60. Obliged: make (someone) legally or morally bound to do something.
  61. Administered: manage and be responsible for the running of (a business, organization, etc.).
  62. Assault: make a physical attack on.
  63. Intimate: closely acquainted
  64. Chapel: a small building or room used for Christian worship in a school, prison, hospital, or large private house.
  65. Nominee: a person who has been officially suggested for a position, an honor, or election
  66. Osteopathy: a form of complementary medicine involving the treatment of medical disorders through the manipulation and massage of the skeleton and musculature.
  67. Melancholy: sad
  68. Benighted: in a state of pitiful or contemptible intellectual or moral ignorance.
  69. Fancy: feel a desire or liking for.
  70. Lago: the villainous character in William Shakespeare’s play Othello, known for his manipulative and deceitful nature.
  71. In the lump: considered or dealt with as a whole or in total, rather than individually or separately.
  72. Clamouring: shout loudly and insistently.
  73. Gassing: talk excessively about trivial matters
  74. Rule, Britannia: British patriotic song
  75. Anarchist: a person who rebels against any authority, established order, or ruling power 
  76. Accustomed: be used to.
  77. Satan: the chief spirit of evil and the adversary of God, often portrayed as a fallen angel who tempts humanity towards sin and opposes God’s will.
  78. Leisure: use of free time for enjoyment.
  79. Conundrum: a confusing and difficult problem or question.
  80. Enclosed: surrounded or closed off on all sides.
  81. Tradition: the transmission of customs or beliefs from generation to generation, or the fact of being passed on in this way.
  82. Enclosure: an area that is surrounded by a barrier.
  83. Conform: comply with rules, standards, or laws.
  84. Imitate: take or follow as a model.
  85. Impose: force (an unwelcome decision or ruling) on someone.
  86. Perception: the ability to see, hear, or become aware of something through the senses.
  87. Inclination: a person’s natural tendency or urge to act or feel in a particular way; a disposition.
  88. Tenderest age: a very young age, often implying a lack of experience
  89. Entity: a thing with distinct and independent existence.
  90. Prestige: widespread respect and admiration felt for someone or something on the basis of a perception of their achievements or quality.
  91. Frightened: afraid
  92. Conform: comply with rules, standards, or laws.
  93. Initiative: ability to assess and initiate things independently.
  94. Dulled: less intense
  95. Conscious: aware
  96. Trodden: walk in a specified way.
  97. Sensitivity: feelings liable to be offended or hurt; sensibilities.
  98. Enclosed: closed off
  99. Imitation: copy something or someone
  100. Awaken: rouse from sleep; cause to stop sleeping.
  101. Tackle: take care of

 

Related: 

Top
 


Chapter 2 – The Mark on the Wall

 

  1. Chrysanthemums: a plant of the daisy family with brightly coloured ornamental flowers, existing in many cultivated varieties.
  2. Mantelpiece: a structure of wood, marble, or stone above and around a fireplace.
  3. My eye lodged for a moment: a brief, temporary feeling of something being stuck or caught in my eye, like a foreign object or a sensation of irritation.
  4. Flapping: move up and down when flying or preparing to fly.
  5. Cavalcade: a formal procession of people walking, on horseback, or riding in vehicles.
  6. Automatic: instinctive
  7. Swarm upon: to move or gather in a large, often overwhelming, group or crowd, often with a sense of speed or urgency.
  8. A little way: a short distance
  9. Feverishly: in an energetic manner.
  10. Miniature: the thing that is much smaller than normal, especially a small replica or model.
  11. Carnations: a double-flowered cultivated variety of clove pink, with grey-green leaves and showy pink, white, or red flowers.
  12. Queer: strange; odd.
  13. Torn asunder: to be forcefully separated or ripped into pieces, either literally or figuratively, signifying a violent or destructive splitting apart.
  14. Pour out: cause a liquid to flow from a container into a cup or other vessel.
  15. Inaccuracy: incorrectness
  16. Civilization: the stage of human social and cultural development and organization that is considered most advanced.
  17. Gnaw: chew
  18. Nibble: take small bites out of.
  19. Hoops: circlets
  20. Scutles: a metal container with a handle, used to fetch and store coal for a domestic fire.
  21. Bagatelle: a game in which small balls are hit and then allowed to roll down a sloping board on which there are holes, each numbered with the score achieved if a ball goes into it, with pins acting as obstructions.
  22. Opals and emeralds: gemstones
  23. Turnips: a round root with white or cream flesh which is eaten as a vegetable and also has edible leaves.
  24. Scraping: the act of removing the surface from something using a sharp edge or something rough
  25. Pairing: cut off (the outer skin) of something.
  26. Clothes on their back: a person having nothing but the clothes they are wearing, implying poverty or minimal possessions
  27. Tube: a long, hollow cylinder of metal, plastic, glass, etc. for holding or transporting something, chiefly liquids or gases.
  28. Asphodel: an everlasting flower said to grow in the Elysian fields
  29. Stalks: the slender attachment or support of a leaf, flower, or fruit.
  30. Deluge: a severe flood
  31. Groping: search blindly or uncertainty by feeling with the hands.
  32. Helpless, speechless, unable to focus one’s eyesight: the narrator’s feeling of being small and insignificant in the face of this vast world.
  33. Groping at the roots of the grass: the feeling of being lost and trying to find a foothold in a world that seems vast and unknowable
  34. Toes of the giant: overwhelming and seemingly incomprehensible nature of the world and the human experience.
  35. Blot: a dark mark or stain made by ink, paint, dirt, etc
  36. Vigilant: keeping careful watch for possible danger or difficulties.
  37. Annihilation: destruction
  38. Pane: glass sheet of window
  39. Hostility: unfriendly
  40. Steady: support
  41. Perpetually: constantly
  42. Modest: humble
  43. Botany: the scientific study of the physiology, structure, genetics, ecology, distribution, classification, and economic importance of plants.
  44. Heap: an untidy collection of objects placed haphazardly on top of each other.
  45. Tassels: a tuft of loosely hanging threads or cords knotted at one end and attached for decoration to soft furnishings, clothing, or other items.
  46. Stealthily: cautiously and surreptitiously, so as not to be seen or heard.
  47. Idolatry: extreme admiration, love, or reverence for something or someone.
  48. Gleam: shine brightly, especially with reflected light.
  49. Phantoms: illusions
  50. Damnation: condemnation to eternal punishment in hell.
  51. Luncheons: a formal lunch, or a formal word for lunch.
  52. Tapestry: a piece of thick textile fabric with pictures or designs formed by weaving coloured weft threads or by embroidering on canvas, used as a wall hanging or soft furnishing.
  53. Disbeliever: a person who refuses to believe something or who lacks religious faith.
  54. Whitaker’s Table of Precedency: The Table of Precedency in Whitaker’s Almanac laid out the castes of English society in a hierarchical relationship to each other.
  55. Landseer:  a black-and-white variety of the Newfoundland dog
  56. Intoxicating: exciting
  57. Perceptible: able to be seen or noticed.
  58. Tumulus: an ancient burial mound; a barrow.
  59. Melancholy: sad
  60. Turf: grass and the surface layer of earth held together by its roots.
  61. Antiquary: a person who studies or collects antiques or antiquities; an antiquarian.
  62. Perpetual: never ending or changing.
  63. Suspension: the system of springs and shock absorbers by which a vehicle is supported on its wheels.
  64. Indites: write; compose.
  65. Gigantic: huge
  66. Attrition: wearing away
  67. Descendants: successors
  68. Hermits: a person living in solitude as a religious discipline
  69. Crouched: squat down
  70. Brewing: the activity or business of producing beer.
  71. Shrew-mice: a small, mouse-like mammal with a long snout
  72. Superstitions: myths
  73. Gleams: shine
  74. Table of Precedency: a formal protocol list that determines the order of rank and importance for dignitaries, functionaries, and officials on ceremonial or state occasions, but it has no bearing on the day-to-day business of government. 
  75. Self-preservation: the protection of oneself from harm or death, especially regarded as a basic instinct in human beings and animals.
  76. Threatening: causing someone to feel vulnerable or at risk.
  77. Collision: an instance of one moving object or person striking violently against another.
  78. Archbishop: the chief bishop responsible for a large district.
  79. Quiescent: inactive
  80. Solidity: the quality or state of being firm or strong in structure.
  81. Moorhen: a small, black bird that lives near water
  82. Blown out: extinguished
  83. Ooze of sap: the slow, often sticky fluid (tree sap) leaking or flowing out of a tree, typically through wounds or cracks, which can indicate damage, disease, or insect infestation.
  84. Tumbling: fall suddenly
  85. Awning: sunshade
  86. Asphodel: an everlasting flower said to grow in the Elysian fields.
  87. Upheaval: a violent or sudden change or disruption to something.

 

Related: 

Top
 


Chapter 3 – Film-making

 

  1. Province: a large administrative division of a country, similar to a state, that has its own local government and is a unit within a larger political entity.
  2. Rugged: having a broken, rocky, and uneven surface.
  3. Rain-dimmed sky: a sky that appears dull or less bright due to the presence of rain clouds or the dampness of the atmosphere, which scatters and absorbs sunlight.
  4. Oil slickers: a waterproof coat, often made from oil-treated cotton, worn in wet weather, also known as a mackintosh or rain slicker.
  5. Coachmen’s coats, medieval robes: a specific scene or stylistic choice within a film, possibly a scene with diverse or unusual costumes
  6. Dolly the camera on: to move the camera smoothly forward or backward (dolly in/out) or sideways (truck) while filming, using a wheeled platform or track, creating dynamic and engaging shots.
  7. Robes: a long, loose outer garment reaching to the ankles
  8. Rusty: corroded
  9. Crane:  birds refers to any of the 15 species of tall, wading birds belonging to the family Gruidae, known for their long legs, necks, and bills
  10. Association: a connection or cooperative link between people or organizations.
  11. Gigantic: huge or enormous
  12. Cathedral: a large and important church, esp. one that is the center of a large area
  13. Waltzes: dance music in triple meter, often written in 34 times. A waltz typically sounds one chord per measure
  14. Gesticulated: use gestures, especially dramatic ones, instead of speaking or to emphasize one’s words.
  15. Vicarage: the residence of a vicar.
  16. Baptisms: the Christian religious rite of sprinkling water on to a person’s forehead or of immersing them in water, symbolizing purification or regeneration and admission to the Christian Church. In many denominations, baptism is performed on young children and is accompanied by name-giving.
  17. Sermons: a talk on a religious or moral subject, especially one given during a church service and based on a passage from the Bible.
  18. Wickedness: the quality of being evil or morally wrong.
  19. Temptation: the desire to do something, especially something wrong or unwise.
  20. Film: the first film he made using his film projector
  21. Rattling: making a series of knocking sounds.
  22. Projector: a device that is used to project rays of light, especially an apparatus with a system of lenses for projecting slides or film on to a screen.
  23. Mystifying: utterly bewildering or perplexing.
  24. Rascinating: extremely interesting.
  25. Mended: repair
  26. Rickety: poorly made and likely to collapse.
  27. Conjurer: a person who performs magic to entertain people
  28. Deception: act of causing someone to accept as true or valid what is false or invalid
  29. Apparatus: the technical equipment or machinery needed for a particular activity or purpose.
  30. Indignant: feeling or showing anger or annoyance at what is perceived as unfair treatment.
  31. Impostor: a person who pretends to be someone else in order to deceive others, especially for fraudulent gain.
  32. Vague: not clear
  33. Shaft: a ray of light or bolt of lightning.
  34. Envisioned: imagine as a future possibility; visualize.
  35. Abounding: very plentiful; abundant
  36. Unconscious: not awake and aware of and responding to one’s environment.
  37. Wind up: arrive or end up in a specified state, situation, or place.
  38. Primitive nucleus: filmmaker’s creative vision
  39. Strives: make great efforts to achieve or obtain something.
  40. Stimulus: a thing or event that evokes a specific functional reaction in an organ or tissue.
  41. Embryonic: in a rudimentary stage with potential for development
  42. Knack: an acquired or natural skill at doing something.
  43. Tempo: the rate or speed of motion or activity; pace.
  44. Between lines: look for or discover a meaning that is implied rather than explicitly stated.
  45. Perceptiveness: the ability to quickly notice and understand things, especially those that are not obvious, showcasing keen observation and insight. 
  46. Montage: the technique of selecting, editing, and piecing together separate sections of film to form a continuous whole.
  47. Pulsate: expand and contract with strong regular movements
  48. Explicit: stated clearly and in detail, leaving no room for confusion or doubt.
  49. Absolute: not qualified or diminished in any way; total.
  50. Assimilate: take in and understand fully (information or ideas)
  51. Alliance: a relationship based on similarity of interests, nature, or qualities.
  52. Recreation: activity done for enjoyment when one is not working.
  53. Stimulation: encouragement of something to make it develop or become more active.
  54. Untranslatable: not able to have its sense expressed in another language.
  55. Expended: spend or use up
  56. Proportion: a part, share, or number considered in comparative relation to a whole.
  57. Compels: force or oblige (someone) to do something
  58. Transmit: cause (something) to pass on from one person or place to another.
  59. Imperative: of vital importance; crucial.
  60. Sensitivity: feelings liable to be offended or hurt
  61. Unconventional: not based on or conforming to what is generally done or believed.
  62. Marching orders: instructions from someone in authority about what you should do
  63. Repelled: drive or force (an attack or attacker) back or away
  64. Indifferent: having no particular interest or sympathy; unconcerned.
  65. Fundamental: forming a necessary base or core; of central importance.
  66. Wholesomeness: the quality of being healthy, beneficial, and morally good, encompassing both physical and moral well-being.
  67. Scorned: feel or express contempt or disdain for.
  68. Rebelled: rise in opposition or armed resistance to an established government or leader.
  69. Bourgeois: belonging to or characteristic of the middle class, typically with reference to its perceived materialistic values or conventional attitudes.
  70. Conscientious: wishing to do one’s work or duty well and thoroughly.
  71. From scratch: from the very beginning, especially without making use of or relying on any previous work for assistance.
  72. Integrity: the quality of being honest and having strong moral principles.
  73. Ambitious: having or showing a strong desire and determination to succeed.
  74. Tightrope: a rope or wire stretched tightly high above the ground, on which acrobats perform feats of balancing.
  75. Conjurer: a performer of conjuring tricks
  76. Sausage: an item of food in the form of a cylindrical length of minced pork or other meat encased in a skin, typically sold raw to be grilled or fried before eating.
  77. Undisguised: not concealed 
  78. Clergyman: a male priest, minister, or religious leader, especially a Christian one.
  79. Intellectual: relating to your ability to think and understand things, especially complicated ideas
  80. Intuition: the ability to understand something instinctively, without the need for conscious reasoning.
  81. Tower of Babel: a story from Genesis 11, explains the origin of different languages and cultures, portraying God confusing the language of humanity to prevent them from building a tower reaching heaven and making a name for themselves.
  82. Thesis: a long essay or dissertation involving personal research, written by a candidate for a university degree.
  83. Shattering: very shocking or upsetting.
  84. Evasive: tending to avoid commitment or self-revelation, especially by responding only indirectly.
  85. Cathedral of Chartres: a popular pilgrimage destination in medieval France because it houses a piece of silk said to be part of the tunic worn by the Virgin Mary when she gave birth to Jesus Christ.
  86. Anonymous: (of a person) not identified by name; of unknown name.
  87. Umbilical cord: a vital, tube-like structure that connects a developing fetus to the placenta, acting as a lifeline for the transfer of nutrients and oxygen, and removal of waste products during pregnancy.
  88. Sterile: not able to produce children or young.
  89. Flourish: grow or develop in a healthy or vigorous way, especially as the result of a particularly congenial environment.
  90. Assurance: a positive declaration intended to give confidence; a promise.
  91. Bane: a cause of great distress or annoyance.
  92. Bleat: make a characteristic weak, wavering cry.
  93. Whim: a sudden desire or change of mind, especially one that is unusual or unexplained.
  94. Yarn: spun thread used for knitting, weaving, or sewing.
  95. Metaphysics: the branch of philosophy that deals with the first principles of things, including abstract concepts such as being, knowing, identity, time, and space.
  96. Theology: the study of the nature of God and religious belief.
  97. Medieval history: between the Roman empire and the Renaissance
  98. Starring: denoting a principal role or performer in a film, play, or other show.
  99. Lettuce: edible leaves that are eaten in salads.
  100. Jambon: meat from the top of a pig’s back leg. 
  101. Remuneration: money paid for work or a service.
  102. Enviable: arouse envy
  103. Foucault’s Pendulum: a novel by Umberto Eco 

 

Related: 

Top
 


Chapter 4 – Why the Novel Matters

 

  1. Mens sana in corpore sano: a Latin phrase meaning “a healthy mind in a healthy body”
  2. Flickers: shine unsteadily; vary rapidly in brightness.
  3. Gaily: in a cheerful or light-hearted way.
  4. Rudiments: fundamentals 
  5. Freckles: a small patch of light brown colour on the skin, often becoming more pronounced through exposure to the sun.
  6. Rubicon: a bounding or limiting line
  7. Bunk: complete nonsense
  8. Parson: a benefic member of the clergy; a rector or a vicar.
  9. Paradise: heaven as the ultimate abode of the just.
  10. Infinity: a number greater than any assignable quantity or countable number
  11. Emphatic: expressing something forcibly and clearly
  12. Nirvana: a transcendent state in which there is neither suffering, desire, nor sense of self, and the subject is released from the effects of karma and the cycle of death and rebirth. It represents the final goal of Buddhism.
  13. Conjecture: an opinion or conclusion formed on the basis of incomplete information.
  14. Accumulation: the acquisition or gradual gathering of something.
  15. Damned: condemned by God to suffer eternal punishment in hell.
  16. Creeping: growing along the ground or other surface by means of extending stems or branches.
  17. Tremulations: a slight trembling or vibration, suggesting a subtle, fleeting, or incomplete effect. 
  18. Eether: the intangible realm of communication or ideas, where things are transmitted or exist in a diffused state. 
  19. Tremulations on the ether: way other forms of writing, like philosophy or poetry, merely touch the surface of life, like faint echoes
  20. Sustenance: the maintenance of someone or something in life or existence.
  21. Myriad: countless or extremely great in number.
  22. Subsidiary: less important than but related or supplementary to something.
  23. C’est la vie!: From French, meaning “that’s life
  24. Renegades: a person who deserts and betrays an organization, country, or set of principles
  25. Multitude: a large number of people or things.
  26. Frances of Assisi: an Italian friar who lived in Italy in the 13th century. He lived a life of ascetic poverty and was dedicated to Christian charity.
  27. Angel-cake: a light, airy, and sweet cake, implying something desirable and easily shared.
  28. Flatly: in a firm and unequivocal manner; absolutely.
  29. Hog: to take or use more than necessary of something
  30. The Sermon on the Mount: a collection of sayings spoken by Jesus of Nazareth found in the Gospel of Matthew that emphasizes his moral teachings.
  31. The Ten Commandments: also known as the Decalogue, are a set of religious and ethical directives, believed to be divinely revealed to Moses by God, and are foundational to Judaism and Christianity, outlining basic moral and religious principles.
  32. Trembling: shaking or quivering, typically as a result of anxiety, excitement, or frailty.
  33. Stimulate: levels of physiological or nervous activity in (the body or any biological system).
  34. Cul-de-sac: a street or passage that is closed at one end.
  35. Dazzling: extremely bright, especially so as to blind the eyes temporarily.
  36. Fadeth: fade
  37. Ceases: stops
  38. Withered: dry and shrivelled
  39. Absolute: a rule or principle that is believed to be true, right, or relevant in all situations.
  40. Imperialism: a policy of extending a country’s power and influence through colonization, use of military force, or other means.
  41. Apparently: as far as one knows or can see.
  42. Incongruous: not in harmony or keeping with the surroundings or other aspects of something.
  43. Inertia: a tendency to do nothing or to remain unchanged.
  44. Staggered: walk or move unsteadily, as if about to fall
  45. Pepper-pot: a container with a perforated top for sprinkling pepper.
  46. Integrity: the quality of being honest and having strong moral principles.
  47. Woe betide me: used humorously to warn (someone) that they will be in trouble if they do a specified thing.
  48. Put my figure on it: to say exactly how much something is or costs
  49. Cut out: remove or make something by separating it from something larger with a sharp implement.
  50. Corsets: a woman’s tightly fitting undergarment extending from below the chest to the hips, worn to shape the figure.
  51. Volatile: liable to change rapidly and unpredictably, especially for the worse.
  52. Political reform: reform consists of changes and improvements to a law, social system, or institution
  53. Hideous: extremely ugly 
  54. Foundlings Home: orphanage for children 
  55. Co-respondent: a person cited in a divorce case as having committed adultery with the respondent.
  56. Wild welter: a state of unrestrained chaos, turmoil, or a confused jumble of things
  57. Thou Shalt Nots!: a prohibition or a command to refrain from certain actions or behaviors, often used in a religious or moral context, particularly in the context of the Ten Commandments. 
  58. Masticating: chew (food).
  59. Ghastly: causing great horror or fear.
  60. Simulacrum: an image or representation of someone or something.
  61. Carcass: dead body
  62. Pianoforte with half the notes mute: only half of the piano’s strings are vibrating when a note is played, resulting in a softer, more muffled sound, often achieved by using the soft pedal or a similar mechanism. 
  63. Inert: lacking the ability or strength to move.
  64. Wickedness: the quality of being evil or morally wrong.

 

Related: 

Top
 


Chapter 5 – The Argumentative Indian 

 

  1. Prolixity: the state of being unnecessarily wordy or long-winded, often to the point of being boring or tedious. 
  2. Delegation: the act of empowering to act for another; the delegation of responsibilities
  3. Loquaciousness: the quality or state of being very talkative or chatty.
  4. Colossally: extremely or very much, often implying a degree of greatness, size, or importance that is awe-inspiring. 
  5. Modest: unassuming in the estimation of one’s abilities or achievements.
  6. Enriched: to make rich or richer especially by the addition or increase of some desirable quality, attribute, or ingredient.
  7. Stimulation: encouragement of something to make it develop or become more active.
  8. Dilemmas: a situation in which a difficult choice has to be made between two or more alternatives, especially ones that are equally undesirable.
  9. Counter arguments: an argument or set of reasons put forward to oppose an idea or theory developed in another argument.
  10. Incessant: continuing without pause or interruption.
  11. Disputations: debate or argument.
  12. Substantive: having a firm basis in reality and so important, meaningful, or considerable.
  13. Tussle: a vigorous struggle or scuffle, typically in order to obtain or achieve something.
  14. Profound: very great or intense.
  15. Invincible: too powerful to be defeated or overcome.
  16. Usurpers: a person who takes a position of power or importance illegally or by force.
  17. Slaughter: kill (animals) for food.
  18. Incarnation: a person who embodies in the flesh a deity, spirit, or quality.
  19. Articulating: pronounce (something) clearly and distinctly.
  20. Waver: become weaker; falter.
  21. Obligations: an act or course of action to which a person is morally or legally bound; a duty or commitment.
  22. Hallowing: honour as holy.
  23. Treatise: a written work dealing formally and systematically with a subject.
  24. Theological: relating to the study of the nature of God and religious belief.
  25. Eloquently: in a fluent or persuasive manner.
  26. Endorsed: declare one’s public approval or support of.
  27. Philosophical: relating or devoted to the study of the fundamental nature of knowledge, reality, and existence.
  28. Spectacularly: in an impressive, dramatic, or eye-catching way.
  29. Quartets: a set of four people or things.
  30. Admonishment: a firm warning or reprimand.
  31. Voyagers: travelers who undertake long journeys, particularly by sea or into space, often to unknown or distant lands or regions.
  32. Sequentially: by forming or following a logical order or sequence.
  33. Desolation: a state of complete emptiness or destruction.
  34. Postcombat: happening or situated after a period of combat.
  35. Post-carnage: the aftermath or period following an event characterized by violence and widespread destruction, especially involving the killing of large numbers of people
  36. Vindication: the action of clearing someone of blame or suspicion.
  37. Vanquished: defeat thoroughly.
  38. Compulsion: the action or state of forcing or being forced to do something; constraint.
  39. Contemporary: living or occurring at the same time.
  40. Indifferent: having no particular interest or sympathy; unconcerned.
  41. Manifest: clear or obvious to the eye or mind.
  42. Epidemics: a widespread occurrence of an infectious disease in a community at a particular time.
  43. Gruelling: extremely tiring and demanding.
  44. Consequential: following as a result or effect.
  45. Univocal: having only one possible meaning; unambiguous.
  46. Supplementation: the addition of an extra element or amount to something.
  47. Argumentative: given to arguing.
  48. Wisdom: the quality of having experience, knowledge, and good judgement; the quality of being wise.
  49. Disputations: debate or argument.
  50. Generalisation: a general statement or concept obtained by inference from specific cases.
  51. Rule the roost: be in complete control.
  52. Interlocutors: a person who takes part in a dialogue or conversation.
  53. Pedagogue: a teacher, especially a strict or pedantic one.
  54. Valiantly: with courage or determination.
  55. Mutineers: a person, especially a soldier or sailor, who rebels or refuses to obey the orders of a person in authority.
  56. Strikingly: in a way that attracts attention by reason of being unusual, extreme, or prominent.
  57. Militant: favouring confrontational or violent methods in support of a political or social cause.
  58. Penetrating: able to make a way through or into something.
  59. Theological: relating to the study of the nature of God and religious belief.
  60. Substantive: having a firm basis in reality and so important, meaningful, or considerable.
  61. Modesty: the quality or state of being unassuming in the estimation of one’s abilities.
  62. Venerable: accorded a great deal of respect, especially because of age, wisdom, or character.
  63. Expounding: present and explain (a theory or idea) in detail.
  64. Rhetorical: (of a question) asked in order to produce an effect or to make a statement rather than to elicit information.
  65. Predicament: a difficult, unpleasant, or embarrassing situation.
  66. Immortality: the ability to live forever; eternal life.
  67. Transcendental: relating to a spiritual realm.
  68. Opulence: great wealth or luxuriousness.
  69. Usurpers: a person who takes a position of power or importance illegally or by force.
  70. Compel: force or oblige (someone) to do something.
  71. Rutting elephant tearing off his garland with his trunk: act reflecting the elephant’s heightened sexual and aggressive activity during the rutting period. 
  72. Heroic: grand or grandiose in scale or intention.
  73. Forbearance: patient self-control; restraint and tolerance.
  74. Hair matted in knots: hair that is densely tangled and knotted together, forming clumps or mats that are difficult to separate with normal brushing or combing
  75. Sequence: a particular order in which related things follow each other.
  76. Hermit: a person living in solitude as a religious discipline.
  77. Derision: contemptuous ridicule or mockery.
  78. Orthodoxy: authorized or generally accepted theory, doctrine, or practice.
  79. Undermining: the action or process of lessening the effectiveness, power, or ability of someone or something, especially gradually or insidiously.
  80. Levelling: give a flat and even surface to.
  81. Exalted: at a high or powerful level.
  82. Sceptical: not easily convinced; having doubts or reservations.
  83. Exposition: a comprehensive description and explanation of an idea or theory.
  84. Prominent: important; famous
  85. Anti-inequality: measures and approaches aimed at reducing or eliminating disparities and differences in status, rights, and opportunities between people or groups.
  86. Profound: very great or intense.
  87. Genealogical: relating to the study or tracing of lines of family descent.
  88. Scepticism: a sceptical attitude; doubt as to the truth of something.
  89. Obliterated: destroy utterly; wipe out.
  90. Mystical: inspiring a sense of spiritual mystery, awe, and fascination.
  91. Exponents: a person who supports an idea or theory and tries to persuade people of its truth or benefits.
  92. Egalitarianism: the doctrine that all people are equal and deserve equal rights and opportunities.
  93. Disparate: essentially different in kind; not able to be compared.
  94. Heretical: believing in or practising religious heresy.
  95. Dispossessed: deprive (someone) of land, property, or other possessions.
  96. Substantive: having a firm basis in reality and so important, meaningful, or considerable.
  97. Dialectics: the art of investigating or discussing the truth of opinions.
  98. Heterodoxy: deviation from accepted or orthodox standards or beliefs.
  99. Persistent: continuing firmly or obstinately in an opinion or course of action in spite of difficulty or opposition.
  100. Emergence: the process of becoming visible after being concealed.
  101. Secular: not connected with religious or spiritual matters.
  102. Temptation: the desire to do something, especially something wrong or unwise.
  103. Pitfalls: a likely mistake or problem in a situation

 

Related: 

Top
 


Chapter 6 – On Science Fiction

 

  1. Prehistoric: the time in human history before the existence of written records or documentation
  2. Lingers: be slow to disappear or die.
  3. Ice Age: the geological epoch known as the Ice Age is called the Pleistocene. It lasted from approximately 2.6 million years ago to 11,700 years ago. 
  4. Sophisticated: having, revealing, or involving a great deal of worldly experience and knowledge of fashion and culture.
  5. Accomplished: achieve or complete successfully.
  6. Hangs a tale: used to indicate that there is more to say about something.
  7. Industrial Revolution: the period of significant technological and societal change, starting in the 18th century, that transformed economies from agrarian and handicraft-based to those dominated by industry and machine manufacturing. 
  8. Transcending: be or go beyond the range or limits of
  9. Manipulate
  10. Steadily: in a regular and even manner.
  11. Thwart: prevent (someone) from accomplishing something.
  12. Ridden to glory: victorious or triumphant manner, leading to a position of honor and praise
  13. Analogous: comparable in certain respects, typically in a way which makes clearer the nature of the things compared.
  14. Resembling: have a similar appearance to or qualities in common with (someone or something); look or seem like.
  15. Beings who controlled natural phenomena: deities or supernatural entities responsible for natural events like storms, earthquakes, or the flow of rivers, according to various mythological systems.
  16. Phenomena: a fact or situation that is observed to exist or happen, especially one whose cause or explanation is in question.
  17. Whimsical: unusual and strange in a way that might be funny or annoying
  18. Placating: intended to make someone less angry or hostile.
  19. Disproven: having been proven false or incorrect. 
  20. Offend: cause to feel upset, annoyed, or resentful
  21. Wavered: become weaker; falter.
  22. Sneer: a contemptuous or mocking smile, remark, or tone
  23. Economists: an expert in economics.
  24. Sociologists: an expert in or student of the development, structure, and functioning of human society
  25. Meteorologists: an expert in or student of meteorology; a weather forecaster.
  26. Erratically: in a manner that is not even or regular in pattern or movement; unpredictably.
  27. Shaman: a person regarded as having access to, and influence in, the world of good and evil spirits, especially among some peoples of northern Asia and North America.
  28. Supernormal: exceeding or beyond the normal; exceptional.
  29. Aeronavigation: the process of guiding an aircraft from one point to another while maintaining its position and direction
  30. Partake: join in (an activity).
  31. Open sesame: the magical command used by Ali Baba to open the door of the robbers’ den in the story Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves.
  32. Travesties: a false, absurd, or distorted representation of something.
  33. Centaur: a false, absurd, or distorted representation of something.
  34. Satyr: one of a class of lustful, drunken woodland gods. In Greek art they were represented as a man with a horse’s ears and tail, but in Roman representations as a man with a goat’s ears, tail, legs, and horns.
  35. Sphinx: a winged monster having a woman’s head and a lion’s body. It propounded a riddle about the three ages of man, killing those who failed to solve it, until Oedipus was successful, whereupon the Sphinx committed suicide.
  36. Harpy: a rapacious monster described as having a woman’s head and body and a bird’s wings and claws or depicted as a bird of prey with a woman’s face.
  37. Gryphon: a mythical creature with the head and wings of an eagle and the body of a lion, typically depicted with pointed ears and with the eagle’s legs taking the place of the forelegs.
  38. Gorgon: each of three sisters, Stheno, Euryale, and Medusa, with snakes for hair, who had the power to turn anyone who looked at them to stone. Medusa was killed by Perseus.
  39. Extraterrestrials: a hypothetical or fictional being from outer space.
  40. Enchantments: a feeling of great pleasure; delight.
  41. Coerce: persuade (an unwilling person) to do something by using force or threats
  42. Cajole: persuade (someone) to do something by sustained coaxing or flattery.
  43. Impersonal: not influenced by, showing, or involving personal feelings.
  44. Unswervable: not changing or becoming weaker; unswerving.
  45. Dictates: state or order authoritatively.
  46. Mercy: compassion or forgiveness shown towards someone whom it is within one’s power to punish or harm.
  47. Haughty: arrogantly superior and disdainful.
  48. Tickled: lightly touch or prod (a person or a part of the body) in a way that causes mild discomfort or itching and often laughter.
  49. Accord: give or grant someone (power, status, or recognition).
  50. Duel: a contest with deadly weapons arranged between two people in order to settle a point of honour.
  51. Naval battles of the War of 1812: they demonstrated that the young American navy could compete with the Royal Navy, a force that had been dominant on the seas for decades.
  52. Napoleonic Wars: a series of major European conflicts from 1803 to 1815, primarily between France, led by Napoleon Bonaparte, and various coalitions of European powers. 
  53. Analogous: comparable in certain respects, typically in a way which makes clearer the nature of the things compared.
  54. Stick-in-the-muddish: a person who is dull and unadventurous and who resists change.
  55. Wrenched out: to forcibly pull or twist something away from its position, typically with a sudden or violent movement
  56. Pseudoscientific: falsely or mistakenly claimed or regarded as being based on scientific method
  57. Gloss: shine or lustre on a smooth surface.
  58. Senescence: the condition or process of deterioration with age.
  59. Turgid: swollen and distended or congested
  60. Bookkeeping: the activity or occupation of keeping records of the financial affairs of a business
  61. Anthology: a published collection of poems or other pieces of writing.
  62. Nomadic: living the life of a nomad; wandering.
  63. Implicit: suggested though not directly expressed.
  64. Wilderness: an uncultivated, uninhabited, and inhospitable region.
  65. Clash: a violent confrontation.
  66. Nomadic: living the life of a nomad; wandering.
  67. Herding: (with reference to a group of people or animals) move in a group.
  68. Mackerel: a predatory marine fish with a greenish-blue back, important as a food fish.
  69. Cod: a large marine fish with a small barbel on the chin.
  70. Amply: enough or more than enough; plentifully.
  71. Plumbs: measure (the depth of a body of water).
  72. Illuminates: make (something) visible or bright by shining light on it; light up.
  73. Interplanetary: situated or relating to travel between planets.
  74. Mainstream fiction: fiction that is widely popular and accessible to a broad audience
  75. Inconsiderable: of small size, amount, or extent
  76. Scoundrel: a dishonest or unscrupulous person; a rogue.
  77. Pocket-frannistan: This is a made-up scientific device, perhaps a type of advanced imaging technology, that Holmes uses. It’s meant to be a futuristic tool.
  78. Pocket-frannistan Container: This implies the device is portable and likely housed in a case for protection
  79. Q-rays: This is a hypothetical form of radiation or energy that Holmes claims to have discovered. The name “Q-rays” suggests a mysterious and advanced nature.
  80. Lead lining: Caskets are often lined with lead for protection, making it difficult to see what’s inside. Holmes’ device, with its Q-rays, allows him to penetrate this barrier.
  81. Bloopers: an embarrassing error.
  82. Antimony: the chemical element of atomic number 51, a brittle silvery-white metalloid.
  83. Antimony potassium tartrate: a crystalline salt used as a mordant in textiles and leather processing, as well as a pesticide.
  84. Pitfalls: a hidden or unsuspected danger or difficulty.
  85. Extrapolate: to predict by projecting past experience or known data. 
  86. Telepathy: the supposed communication of thoughts or ideas by means other than the known senses.
  87. Retrieval: the process of getting something back from somewhere.
  88. Herrings: a fairly small silvery fish which is most abundant in coastal waters and is of widespread commercial importance.
  89. Obscure: not discovered or known about; uncertain.
  90. Outré: unusual and typically rather shocking.
  91. Modest: unassuming in the estimation of one’s abilities or achievements.

 

Related: 

Top

 

CBSE Class 12 English (Elective) Kaleidoscope Book – Drama 

 


Chapter 1 – Chandalika

 

  1. Legend: folklore, myth
  2. Chandalika: low caste girl, untouchable
  3. Spell:enchantment,
  4. Will: Determination
  5. Monk: ascetic
  6. Remorse: repentance
  7. Psychic: mental, spiritual
  8. Devotee: follower Lust: desire
  9. Transformed: changed
  10. Psychological: mental
  11. Spiritual: religious
  12. Condemned: doomed
  13. Despised: hated
  14. Awakened: roused
  15. Consciousness: awareness
  16. Humanity: compassion
  17. Revelation: disclosure
  18. Degradation: humiliation
  19. Redeemed: saved
  20. Yearns: longs
  21. Detached: aloof
  22. Humiliated: embarrassed
  23. Sensibility: sensitivity
  24. Renunciation: abandonment
  25. Abjectness: misery
  26. Scruple: hesitation
  27. Creed: belief
  28. Gags: silences
  29. Conform: comply
  30. Spell: charm
  31. Primeval: ancient
  32. Potent: powerful
  33. Agony: pain
  34. Resplendent: splendid
  35. Transformed: changed
  36. Blinded: unable to see
  37. Remorse: regret
  38. Curses: denounces
  39. Forgiveness: pardon
  40. Revokes: cancels
  41. Redeemed: saved
  42. Purged: cleansed
  43. Egoism: selfimportance
  44. Possession: ownership
  45. Tragedy: disaster
  46. Dignity: respect
  47. Rights: entitlements
  48. Obligations: duties
  49. Slavery: bondage
  50. Vanity: conceit
  51. Pride: arrogance
  52. Trespasses: intrudes
  53. Eagerness: keenness
  54. Devotion: dedication
  55. Consciousness: awareness
  56. Suppression: oppression
  57. Restraint: control
  58. Suffering: pain, distress (पीड़ा)
  59. Willingly: voluntarily
  60. Chastened: disciplined
  61. Wisdom: knowledge
  62. Renunciation: abandonment
  63. Fulfilment: satisfaction
  64. Ails: troubles
  65. Blistering: extremely hot
  66. Pots: containers
  67. Gasping: struggling for breath
  68. Penance: self-punishment
  69. Purana: ancient Hindu texts, scriptures
  70. Dubbed: named, labeled
  71. Humiliate: embarrass
  72. Sin: wrongdoing
  73. Self-murder: suicide
  74. Former: previous
  75. Blazing: burning
  76. Calf: young cow
  77. Robes: clothing
  78. Leaped: jumped
  79. Trembling: shaking
  80. Radiant: glowing
  81. Dawn: sunrise
  82. Cupped: shaped
  83. Reckless: careless
  84. Fathomless: very deep
  85. Boundless: limitless
  86. Drowned: submerged
  87. Washed: cleansed
  88. Spell: magic
  89. Quenching: satisfying
  90. Merit: virtue
  91. Vow: promise
  92. Sacred: holy
  93. Stream: river
  94. Exile: banishment
  95. Changeling: transformed being
  96. Wayfarer: wanderer
  97. Waste: barren land
  98. Heathaze: mirage
  99. Quivers: shakes
  100. Intoxicated: drunk
  101. Marvellous: wonderful
  102. Poisonplant: a toxic herb
  103. Bosom: heart
  104. Warned: cautioned
  105. Filth: dirt
  106. Trespass: intrude
  107. Tainting: contaminating
  108. Spade: shovel
  109. Stray: wander
  110. Narrow: limited
  111. Unlooked: unexpected
  112. Roast: bake
  113. Radiant: shining
  114. Redemption: salvation
  115. Surrender: give up
  116. Yearned: longed
  117. Renunciation: giving up
  118. Lowliness: humility
  119. Heavenly: divine
  120. Queenliness: regality
  121. Handmaid: servant
  122. Defile: pollute
  123. Marvel: wonder
  124. Daring: boldness, courage (साहस),
  125. Glory: pride
  126. Delude: deceive
  127. Humiliation: shame
  128. Chandals: outcasts
  129. Cling: hold tightly
  130. Mingle: mix
  131. Longings: desires
  132. Drought: dryness
  133. Wither: dry up
  134. Clasp: grip
  135. Recklessness: carelessness
  136. Impaled: pierced
  137. Heritage: legacy
  138. Fulfilled: completed
  139. Blinds: obscured
  140. Gags: silences
  141. Honour: respect
  142. Lord Buddha: spiritual leader, enlightened one
  143. Conform: comply
  144. Wayfarer: traveler
  145. Churn: stir
  146. Cleansed: purified
  147. Exalted: esteemed
  148. Offend: insult
  149. Dishonour: disgrace
  150. Obesance: respect
  151. Longing: desire
  152. Code: rules
  153. Comfort: ease
  154. Mighty: powerful
  155. Illusion: delusion
  156. Begged: pleaded
  157. Alms: charity
  158. Burning ground: cremation site
  159. Wretch: unfortunate
  160. Overflowing: spilling over
  161. Inexhaustible: never-ending
  162. Sangha: Buddhist community
  163. Homage: respect
  164. Creation: formation
  165. Flings: throws
  166. Rampled: stepped on
  167. Momentary: brief
  168. Prisoned: confined
  169. Fibres: thread
  170. Grip: hold
  171. Awake: conscious
  172. Ancient: old
  173. Penance: repentance
  174. Fasting: abstaining from food
  175. Coils: loops
  176. Meditations: contemplations
  177. Fluttering: flapping
  178. Courtyard: open area, yard
  179. Whirled: spun
  180. Lightning flash: bright electrical discharge
  181. Shore: coastline
  182. Undo: reverse
  183. Ashes: burnt remains
  184. Doom: destruction
  185. Breaking of worlds: collapse
  186. Agony: pain
  187. Glory: magnificence
  188. Cords: ties
  189. Kindling: igniting, lighting
  190. Nectar: sweet liquid, ambrosia
  191. Anoint: bless, apply oil
  192. Weary: tired
  193. Wounded: injured
  194. Ashad: a month in the Hindu calendar
  195. Fast: abstain from food
  196. Monastery: religious residence, abbey
  197. Pitiless: merciless
  198. Meditation: contemplation
  199. Thunderbolt: lightning
  200. Pale: faded
  201. Weary: exhausted
  202. Demons: evil spirits
  203. Rifts: gaps
  204. Festering: rotting
  205. Sores: wounds
  206. Lightning: flash
  207. Fenced: enclosed, surrounded
  208. Copper: a metal, bronze-like element
  209. Fused: combined
  210. Creation: formation
  211. Detachment: disconnection
  212. Elemental: basic
  213. Sparks: small flames
  214. Twilight: dusk
  215. Spear: lance, weapon
  216. Amazed: astonished, stunned
  217. Turmoil: chaos, unrest
  218. Ferried: transported, carried
  219. Mazed: confused, bewildered
  220. Slack: loose
  221. Compulsion: force, coercion
  222. Turbulent: rough, agitated
  223. Ghat: river bank steps
  224. Lichened: covered with lichens
  225. Altar: shrine
  226. Wasted: squandered
  227. Uttermost: extreme
  228. Mockery: ridicule, scorn
  229. Beseech: implore, beg
  230. Complacent: self-satisfied
  231. Waxing moon: growing, expanding moon
  232. Courtyard: yard, enclosed area
  233. Vermilion: bright red pigment
  234. Sandalpaste: fragrant paste
  235. Garlands: flower chains, wreaths
  236. Invocation: calling upon, summoning
  237. Altar: sacred table, shrine
  238. Inmost: innermost
  239. Quivers: shakes, trembles
  240. Throbs: beats, pulsates
  241. Shattered: broken, destroyed
  242. Liongates: symbolic gates, entrance
  243. Tremors: vibrations
  244. Enrapture: delight
  245. Enthrone: place on a throne
  246. Dishonour: disgrace
  247. Faded: dimmed
  248. Paraphernalia: equipment, accessories
  249. Heroic: brave
  250. Deliverance: salvation
  251. Spurn: reject
  252. Reproach: criticism
  253. Soiled: dirtied
  254. Veil: cover
  255. Illusion: delusion
  256. Haven: sanctuary
  257. Homage: respect

 

Related: 

Top