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Out of Darkness: Chapters 5–8

Here are links to our lists for the book: Chapters 1–4, Chapters 5–8
30 words 108 learners

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Full list of words from this list:

  1. astound
    affect with wonder
    When he went home for vacation, his family was astounded at how much he had learned.
  2. artillery
    large but transportable armament
    Louis was just beginning his third year when Charles Barbier, a retired artillery captain in the French army, visited the Institute.
  3. sentry
    a person employed to keep watch for some anticipated event
    No matter how dark it might be, sentries at frontline outposts could read the orders merely by touching the raised impressions of the dots and dashes.
  4. tinker
    try to fix or mend in an unskilled manner
    Pignier, in turn, informed Barbier, and the captain hastened to the school to meet this student who was tinkering with his invention.
  5. intimidated
    made scared or fearful as by threats
    Barbier defended his system with such feeling, and in such a commanding voice, Louis felt intimidated and did not know how to answer.
  6. gaunt
    very thin, especially from disease or hunger or cold
    Louis’s mother worried about him when he came home for vacation. He looked so pale and gaunt.
  7. bask
    expose oneself to warmth and light, as for relaxation
    He would sit on a grassy slope, basking in the sun and working patiently as he punched dots into paper.
  8. transcribe
    rewrite in a different script
    Louis personally transcribed parts of a standard textbook, Grammar of Grammars, into his new alphabet.
  9. substantially
    to a great extent or degree
    When Louis celebrated his twentieth birthday in 1829, his raised-dot alphabet had been perfected to the point where it was substantially the same as the braille system used today.
  10. apprentice
    someone who works for an expert to learn a trade
    Louis had just turned twenty when he became an apprentice teacher at a modest salary of fifteen francs a month.
  11. modest
    not large but sufficient in size or amount
    Louis had just turned twenty when he became an apprentice teacher at a modest salary of fifteen francs a month.
  12. exposition
    a collection of things for public display
    The Paris Exposition of Industry was held that year in the Place de la Concorde, a huge open square in the heart of the French capital.
  13. distinguished
    standing above others in character or attainment
    One distinguished visitor was Louis-Philippe, the king of France. He was accompanied by the Minister of the Interior, the government official who had refused to adopt Braille’s alphabet.
  14. sonata
    a musical composition of movements of contrasting forms
    He would hold his audience spellbound as his fingers danced across the keys, playing everything from Beethoven sonatas to the popular songs of the day.
  15. tuberculosis
    infection transmitted by inhalation or ingestion of bacilli
    Louis was suffering from the early stages of tuberculosis, or “consumption” as it was then known, a disease that had afflicted other students and teachers at the Institute.
  16. consumption
    a lung disease involving progressive wasting of the body
    Louis was suffering from the early stages of tuberculosis, or “consumption” as it was then known, a disease that had afflicted other students and teachers at the Institute.
  17. afflict
    cause physical pain or suffering in
    Louis was suffering from the early stages of tuberculosis, or “consumption” as it was then known, a disease that had afflicted other students and teachers at the Institute.
  18. flourish
    grow vigorously
    We know today that tuberculosis flourishes in damp, overcrowded surroundings.
  19. radical
    markedly new or introducing extreme change
    Dufau felt that Braille’s system was too radical, too different from the conventional alphabet used by sighted people.
  20. privileged
    blessed with special advantages
    They feared that they would lose their privileged positions, and maybe their jobs, if the school adopted Braille’s alphabet—which could be taught just as well by blind teachers.
  21. confiscate
    take temporary possession of a security by legal authority
    To make sure that his orders were followed, Dufau confiscated all textbooks and pamphlets that had been transcribed into the raised-dot alphabet.
  22. defy
    resist or confront with resistance
    As a teacher, Louis could not openly defy the director’s wishes.
  23. banish
    expel, as if by official decree
    Braille’s system might be banned from the classroom, but Guadet realized that it could never be banished from the students’ minds.
  24. ambitious
    requiring full use of your abilities or resources
    At the moment, however, he was busy with ambitious plans to move the school to new quarters.
  25. benefactor
    a person who helps people or institutions
    He was ready to accept Braille’s alphabet and, by so doing, become the benefactor of every blind person in France.
  26. dignitary
    an important or influential person
    In a voice that rang proudly through the auditorium, Guadet read his booklet to the crowd—to the school’s students and teachers, to the assembled friends, relatives, officials, and dignitaries.
  27. mainstream
    the prevailing current of thought
    In his short lifetime, Louis Braille had done more than anyone in history to bring blind people into the mainstream of life.
  28. bestow
    present
    Today, the saddler’s son from Coupvray has received the highest honor his country can bestow.
  29. pantheon
    a monument commemorating a nation's dead heroes
    He rests in the Pantheon in Paris, the burial place of France’s greatest heroes.
  30. dialect
    the usage or vocabulary characteristic of a group of people
    The braille system is in use throughout the world, in nearly every country and every language. It has been adapted to African dialects and to the complexities of the Chinese ideogram.
Created on Thu Nov 12 21:44:18 EST 2020 (updated Mon Nov 16 10:05:26 EST 2020)

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