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These Violent Delights: Chapters 5–12

In this reimagining of Romeo and Juliet set in Shanghai in the 1920s, two teens from rival gangs must work together to end a feud.

Here are links to our lists for the novel: Prologue–Chapter 4, Chapters 5–12, Chapters 13–18, Chapters 19–28, Chapter 29–Epilogue
40 words 22 learners

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Full list of words from this list:

  1. smattering
    a small number or amount
    A smattering of sound came from right outside Juliette’s bedroom door then.
  2. coif
    arrange attractively
    Rosalind kicked out with her foot suddenly, using the momentum to push her body upright, sitting so fast that her coiffed hair whipped into her eyes.
  3. vanity
    low table with a mirror where one sits while dressing
    Juliette jerked to attention, using the vanity mirror to peer at Rosalind.
  4. brazen
    not held back by conventional ideas of behavior
    None of the household staff knew how to deal with Juliette. She was too bold, too brazen, too Western, while they were too new, too uncertain, never comfortable.
  5. chide
    scold or reprimand severely or angrily
    “Shoo,” Rosalind chided, smacking the slipper away and biting down on her laugh. “Go attend to your duties.”
  6. tribulation
    an annoying or frustrating or catastrophic event
    All she cared about was the Scarlet Gang, about whatever immediate dangers and tribulations they were facing on a day-to-day basis.
  7. pomade
    hairdressing consisting of a perfumed oil or ointment
    He leaned forward, like he could persuade her with mere eye contact. All it did was show Juliette that he hadn’t quite brushed out a clump of pomade in his sweep of dark-blond hair.
  8. brash
    offensively bold
    The foreigners had only claimed the nearby land in these recent years as they became more brash with their legal power.
  9. amok
    in a murderous frenzy
    The White Flowers would let the foreigners continue practicing their laws over a space that didn't seem to belong to either of them, and the pompous merchants with their floral coats and polished shoes stepped aside when the gangsters ran amok on the streets.
  10. gaunt
    very thin, especially from disease or hunger or cold
    In his mind, she had been gray and gaunt, but always alert, always ready to smile when Roma walked up to her bed.
  11. succumb
    be fatally overwhelmed
    She had not been told about the murder, only that Lady Montagova had at last succumbed to illness.
  12. gallivant
    wander aimlessly in search of pleasure
    “Just because I had reason to enter their burlesque club does not mean I can gallivant through their hospital—”
  13. flippant
    showing an inappropriate lack of seriousness
    “Papa, don’t make me laugh.”
    Lord Montagov shrugged flippantly, but there was something in his eyes that Roma didn’t like.
  14. reedy
    thin and high-pitched in tone
    “The lā-gespu is a man,” he snapped right into Juliette’s face, his voice a reedy hiss.
  15. lucrative
    producing a sizeable profit
    Kidnapping was a lucrative business.
  16. affront
    treat, mention, or speak to rudely
    In a split second, she ran through all the possibilities: an affronted merchant wanting comeuppance, a greedy foreigner wanting ransom, a confused addict on the streets who hadn’t recognized her by the sparkly beads of her foreign dress....
  17. comeuppance
    a usually negative outcome or fate that is well deserved
    In a split second, she ran through all the possibilities: an affronted merchant wanting comeuppance, a greedy foreigner wanting ransom, a confused addict on the streets who hadn’t recognized her by the sparkly beads of her foreign dress....
  18. zephyr
    a slight wind
    Roma still smelled as he used to: like gunmetal and mint and the softness of a gentle zephyr.
  19. erratic
    liable to sudden unpredictable change
    He acted flippant, but Juliette was tracking his erratic pulse as it thudded away beneath her fingers.
  20. begrudge
    allow unwillingly or reluctantly
    Begrudgingly, slowly, Juliette removed her knife from Roma’s throat and raised her hands high.
  21. palpable
    capable of being perceived
    They walked in tense, palpable silence.
  22. banter
    converse in a playful or teasing way
    Mid-October, the air warm but becoming brisk, workers bantering by the port-side as they volleyed packages into waiting boats.
  23. stilted
    artificially formal or stiff
    It was almost funny now, how Roma had startled upon hearing her Russian—flawless, if a little stilted from a lack of practice.
  24. shrewd
    good at tricking people to get something
    But she would return to find him anyway, thinking herself shrewd, thinking herself clever. For months they flirted and pretended and toed the line between enemy and friend, both knowing who the other was but neither admitting to it, both trying to gain something from this friendship but being uncareful, falling too deep without knowing.
  25. cursory
    hasty and without attention to detail; not thorough
    Between the cracks in the pavement, a black speck dotted the cement, ordinary upon a mere, cursory glance.
  26. culpable
    deserving blame or censure as being wrong or injurious
    He stood too, squinting at the culpable object on the ground.
  27. wayward
    unpredictable; following no clear pattern
    When Benedikt picked up the single dead thing and showed it to his wayward friend, he expected Marshall to make some crude comment or construct a song about the fragility of life.
  28. deadpan
    speak in a deliberately impassive or serious manner
    “That,” Marshall deadpanned, “is disgusting.”
  29. intersperse
    place between or among
    In tense silence, interspersed only by the occasional toot of a car chugging along the nearby street, Benedikt used the knife to slit the thin skin atop one of the dead insects.
  30. paraphernalia
    equipment consisting of miscellaneous articles
    The remnants of old China were stronger here, amid the various paraphernalia—the pipes and the oil lamps—that had been brought over from before the turn of the century.
  31. docile
    easily handled or managed
    She eyed the bodies slumped against the walls of the den. “I doubt these people are as docile as they look.”
  32. opulent
    rich and superior in quality
    A few centuries ago, when this place was still the home estate of a royal or a general, it might have been opulent and lush.
  33. insolence
    an offensive disrespectful impudent act
    “Will you accept a gift from me to make up for my insolence?”
  34. derision
    contemptuous laughter
    Her voice came out in a sneer, but the derision wasn’t directed at Kathleen.
  35. mull
    reflect deeply on a subject
    Lady Cai mulled over that for a long moment.
  36. insipid
    lacking interest or significance or impact
    “My sources say that the Communists may be the cause of this insipid madness.”
  37. filial
    relating to or characteristic of or befitting an offspring
    For thousands of years, the worst crime in China was a lack of filial piety.
  38. prodigal
    one who returns after a period of reckless behavior
    He would have rather disowned her than let her back in Shanghai wearing a qipao, and Kathleen would have rather packed her bags and made her own way across Europe than go on being her father’s prodigal son.
  39. fanfare
    a gaudy outward display
    Da Nao left the break room without any fanfare.
  40. reverie
    an abstracted state of absorption
    A sudden splashing noise by the wharf startled Kathleen out of her reverie, prompting her to hop off the ledge and back onto the ground outside the cotton mill.
Created on Mon Sep 20 11:06:08 EDT 2021 (updated Wed Sep 22 17:01:15 EDT 2021)

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