Vocabulary: part 2
· “All around me was the vomit of a dyspeptic ship.” (p.101)
o Dyspeptic: Having indigestion or a consequent air of irritable bad temper.
· “There was little looseness in the tarpaulin as the rope went from one hook on one side of the stem to the next hook on the other side.” (p.106)
o Tarpaulin: Heavy-duty waterproof cloth, originally of tarred canvas.
· “Then, with only a snarl for notice, the hyena went amok.” (p.125)
o Amok: Behave uncontrollably and disruptively.
· “...in a smooth-edged swath, only silently, in the way of tearing skin, and with greater resistance.” (p.125)
o Swath: A broad strip or area.
· “...the abomination of the moment was perfectly expressed.” (p.126)
o Abomination: A cause of hatred or disgust.
· “That is the plain empirical truth.” (p.130)
o Empirical: Based on, concerned with, or verifiable by observation or experience rather than theory or pure logic.
· “Her fear was something useless that only hampered her.” (p.131)
o Hampered: Hinder or impede the movement or progress of.
· “...its hardness had an invigorating effect on me, as if I had just stepped on solid ground. (p.131)
o Invigorating: Give strength or energy to.
· “She was the seventh person killed by the marauder.” (p.132)
o Marauder: Person who searches for things to steal and people to attack.
· “But the shipping clerk at the Howrah train station was evidently a man both befuddled and diligent.” (p.133)
o Befuddled: Muddled or confused.
· “I thought of sustenance for the first time.” (p.134)
o Sustenance: Food and drink regarded as sustaining life.
· “...was a conundrum I would have to try to crack later, when I had more energy.”(p.134)
o Conundrum: A confusing and difficult problem or question.
· “But in the final set, when the challenger has nothing left to lose, he becomes relaxed again, insouciant, daring.” (p135)
o Insouciant: Casually unconcerned.
· “It was a heavy, solid construction designed for stolid floating, not for navigating...” (p.139)
o Stolid: Calm, dependable, and showing little emotion or animation.
· “I had my first, unambiguous, clear-headed glimpse of Richard Parker.” (p.140)
o Unambiguous: Without ambiguity, or clarity.
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