into the wild vocabulary

21
INTO THE WILD VOCABULARY actual definitions

Upload: teddy

Post on 24-Feb-2016

84 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

INTO THE WILD VOCABULARY. actual definitions. CHAPTERS 16 THROUGH 18. blithely = ??? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: INTO THE WILD  VOCABULARY

INTO THE WILD VOCABULARY

actual definitions

Page 2: INTO THE WILD  VOCABULARY

CHAPTERS 16 THROUGH 18blithely = ???

“To McCandless’s inexperienced eye, there was nothing to suggest that two months hence, as the glaciers and snowfields at the Teklanika’s headwater thawed in the summer heat, its discharge would multiply nine or ten times in volume, transforming the river into a deep, violent torrent that bore no resemblance to the gentle brook he’d blithely waded across in April” (Krakauer 163).

Page 3: INTO THE WILD  VOCABULARY

CHAPTERS 16 THROUGH 18

blithely (adv.) in a carefree manner

Page 4: INTO THE WILD  VOCABULARY

CHAPTERS 16 THROUGH 18axiom = ???

“Moreover, as the ground thawed, his route turned into a gauntlet of boggy muskeg and impenetrable alder, and McCandless belatedly came to appreciate one of the fundamental (if counterintuitive) axioms of the North: winter, not summer, is the preferred season for traveling overland through the bush” (Krakauer 165).

Page 5: INTO THE WILD  VOCABULARY

CHAPTERS 16 THROUGH 18

axiom (n.) a universally accepted principle or rule

Page 6: INTO THE WILD  VOCABULARY

CHAPTERS 16 THROUGH 18ambivalent= ???

“Although McCandless was enough of a realist to know that hunting game was an unavoidable component of living off the land, he had always been ambivalent about killing animals” (Krakauer 166).

Page 7: INTO THE WILD  VOCABULARY

CHAPTERS 16 THROUGH 18

ambivalent (adj.) UncertainNot sure either way

Page 8: INTO THE WILD  VOCABULARY

CHAPTERS 16 THROUGH 18idyll = ???

“As McCandless gradually stopped rebuking himself for the waste of the moose, the contentment that began in mid-May resumed and seemed to continue through early July. Then, in the midst of this idyll, came the first of two pivotal setbacks” (Krakauer 168).

Page 9: INTO THE WILD  VOCABULARY

CHAPTERS 16 THROUGH 18

idyll (n.) a carefree episode or experience

Page 10: INTO THE WILD  VOCABULARY

CHAPTERS 16 THROUGH 18unequivocally = ???

“When I’d questioned Gordon Samel and Ken Thompson shortly after they’d discovered McCandless’s body, both men insisted—adamantly and unequivocally—that the big skeleton was the remains of a caribou, and they derided the greenhorn’s ignorance in mistaking the animal he killed for a moose” (Krakauer 177).

Page 11: INTO THE WILD  VOCABULARY

CHAPTERS 16 THROUGH 18

unequivocally (adv.) unmistakeablywith certainty

Page 12: INTO THE WILD  VOCABULARY

CHAPTERS 16 THROUGH 18lambasting = ???

“Among the letters lambasting McCandless, virtually all those I received mentioned his misidentification of the caribou as proof that he didn’t know the first thing about surviving in the backcountry” (Krakauer 177).

Page 13: INTO THE WILD  VOCABULARY

CHAPTERS 16 THROUGH 18

lambasting (v., present participle) reprimanding or berating harshly

Page 14: INTO THE WILD  VOCABULARY

CHAPTERS 16 THROUGH 18staid = ???

“Even staid, prissy Thoreau, who famously declared that it was enough to have ‘traveled a good deal in Concord,’ felt compelled to visit the more fearsome wilds of nineteenth-century Maine and climb Mt. Katahdin” (Krakauer 183).

Page 15: INTO THE WILD  VOCABULARY

CHAPTERS 16 THROUGH 18

staid (adj.) of quiet and steady character

settledprim

Page 16: INTO THE WILD  VOCABULARY

CHAPTERS 16 THROUGH 18modicum = ???

“It would be easy to stereotype Christopher McCandless as another boy who felt too much, a loopy young man who read too many books and lacked even a modicum of common sense” (Krakauer 184).

Page 17: INTO THE WILD  VOCABULARY

CHAPTERS 16 THROUGH 18

modicum (n.) a tiny amount

Page 18: INTO THE WILD  VOCABULARY

CHAPTERS 16 THROUGH 18stymied = ???“After his attempt to depart the wilderness was stymied by the Teklanika’s high flow, McCandless arrived back at the bus on July 8” (Krakauer 188).

Page 19: INTO THE WILD  VOCABULARY

CHAPTERS 16 THROUGH 18

stymied (v., past tense) obstructedthwarted

Page 20: INTO THE WILD  VOCABULARY

CHAPTERS 16 THROUGH 18lethargy = ???

“They contain solanine, a poison that occurs in plants of the nightshade family, which causes vomiting, diarrhea, headache, and lethargy in the short term, and adversely affects heart rate and blood pressure when ingested over an extended period” (Krakauer 190).

Page 21: INTO THE WILD  VOCABULARY

CHAPTERS 16 THROUGH 18

lethargy (n.) a lack of energysluggishness