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Born a Crime: Chapters 15–16

This memoir recounts Noah's childhood in South Africa during the last years of apartheid.Here are links to our lists for the novel: Chapters 1–2, Chapters 3–5, Chapters 6–11, Chapters 12-16, Chapters 17–18
35 words 1962 learners

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Full list of words from this list:

  1. disclaimer
    denial of any connection with or knowledge of
    Their children are taught the history of the Empire with a kind of disclaimer hanging over the whole thing.
  2. matriculate
    enroll as a student
    From that point on I worked for Daniel, and then as he was about to matriculate he decided to quit the game.
  3. bequeath
    leave or give, especially by will after one's death
    And, as thanks, he bequeathed unto me his CD writer.
  4. lore
    knowledge gained through tradition or anecdote
    That was the stuff of lore. It was mythical.
  5. aerial
    an electrical device that sends or receives radio signals
    I was that dude walking down the street holding a giant phone to my ear with the aerial fully extended, talking to my friend.
  6. piracy
    the act of plagiarizing
    Without him, I would never have mastered the world of music piracy and lived a life of endless McDonald’s.
  7. disenfranchised
    deprived of the rights of citizenship, as the right to vote
    What he did, on a small scale, showed me how important it is to empower the dispossessed and the disenfranchised in the wake of oppression.
  8. thatch
    cover with roofing material made of plant stalks
    For generations, while his people were preparing to go to university, my people were crowded into thatched huts singing, “Two times two is four. Three times two is six. La la la la la.”
  9. gig
    a job, especially a temporary job
    It was also where I was playing the most gigs, so to keep earning I naturally gravitated that way.
  10. gravitate
    move toward
    It was also where I was playing the most gigs, so to keep earning I naturally gravitated that way.
  11. lithe
    moving and bending with ease
    He had a looseness and a fluidity that defied physics—imagine a jellyfish if it could walk on land. Incredibly handsome, too, tall and lithe and muscular, with beautiful, smooth skin, big teeth, and a great smile, always laughing.
  12. reap
    gather, as of natural products
    I know guys named after Mussolini and Napoleon. And, of course, Hitler.
    Westerners are shocked and confused by that, but really it’s a case of the West reaping what it has sown.
  13. meticulous
    marked by precise accordance with details
    The Nazis kept meticulous records, took pictures, made films.
  14. yarmulke
    a skullcap worn by religious Jews, especially at prayer
    I looked out, and the whole hall was nothing but Jewish kids in their yarmulkes, ready to party.
  15. livid
    furiously angry
    The hall went dead silent, and she turned on me and she was livid.
  16. raze
    tear down so as to make flat with the ground
    So while Sophiatown and other black ghettos were razed and rebuilt as white suburbs, Alex fought and held on and asserted its right to exist.
  17. assert
    insist on having one's opinions and rights recognized
    So while Sophiatown and other black ghettos were razed and rebuilt as white suburbs, Alex fought and held on and asserted its right to exist.
  18. palatial
    relating to or being a large and stately residence
    You ride through one of the richest neighborhoods in Johannesburg, past palatial mansions and huge money.
  19. cordon
    a series of sentinels or posts enclosing some place or thing
    Then you go through the industrial belt of Wynberg that cordons off the rich and white from the poor and black.
  20. dissipate
    cause to separate and go in different directions
    There’s nowhere for all that energy to go, no mechanism for it to dissipate, so it erupts periodically in epic acts of violence and crazy parties.
  21. placid
    calm and free from disturbance
    One minute it’ll be a placid afternoon, people hanging out, doing their thing, and next thing you know there’s a cop car chasing gangsters, flying through the streets, a gun battle going off, helicopters circling overhead.
  22. hostel
    inexpensive supervised lodging
    There were a couple of hostels, giant projects built by the government for housing migrant workers.
  23. abet
    assist or encourage, usually in some wrongdoing
    ...the poor mom isn’t thinking, I’m aiding and abetting a criminal by buying these Corn Flakes.
  24. maize
    corn
    After lunch, business would die down, and that’s when we’d get our lunch, usually the cheapest thing we could afford, like a smiley with some maize meal.
  25. upstanding
    meriting respect or esteem
    We were upstanding, well-spoken East Bank boys.
  26. taper
    diminish gradually
    Slowly the rush would start to taper off and we’d wind down.
  27. desecrate
    violate the sacred character of a place or language
    Theft is theft. You’ve desecrated the community.
  28. pallet
    a portable platform for storing or moving goods
    Yeah, some guy might get fired because of the pallet of Corn Flakes that went missing from the supermarket, but that’s degrees removed.
  29. rationalization
    a defense mechanism explaining actions non-threateningly
    It’s such a strange thing, but in two years of hustling I never once thought of it as a crime. I honestly didn’t think it was bad. It's just stuff people found. White people have insurance. Whatever rationalization was handy.
  30. unconscionable
    greatly exceeding bounds of reason or moderation
    Because if white people ever saw black people as human, they would see that slavery is unconscionable.
  31. snobbish
    tending to associate only with people of a similar background
    Soweto was seen as the snobbish township and Alexandra was seen as the gritty and dirty township.
  32. berate
    censure severely or angrily
    Then he went down the line, slapping each of us across the face, berating us about the gun.
  33. euphemism
    an inoffensive expression substituted for an offensive one
    “Spot fine” is the euphemism everyone uses. You go through this elaborate dance with the cop where you say the thing without saying the thing.
  34. bail
    money forfeited if the accused fails to appear in court
    Later that day the dad came down and paid the money. The cops kept calling it “bail,” but it was a bribe. We were never formally arrested or processed. There was no paperwork.
  35. facade
    a showy misrepresentation to conceal something unpleasant
    The other option is to toughen up, put up this facade. You can’t leave the hood, so you survive by the rules of the hood.
Created on Wed Aug 01 09:04:31 EDT 2018 (updated Wed Aug 01 09:35:42 EDT 2018)

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