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Unit 5: Vocabulary from Readings 6

This list covers "Why It’s Time to Give the Bard the Heave-ho!"
13 words 23 learners

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Full list of words from this list:

  1. curriculum
    an integrated course of academic studies
    As a tribute to Shakespeare this St George's day, isn’t it time we dropped him from the National Curriculum?
  2. trappings
    ornaments; embellishments to or characteristic signs of
    Along with a flag, an anthem, and a football team, a national writer is part of the trappings of nationhood.
  3. pantheon
    a monument commemorating a nation's dead heroes
    The Italians have Dante, the Germans have Goethe, the French have a pantheon which includes Molière, Racine, Victor Hugo, and Proust.
  4. putative
    purported
    The date of his death and the putative date of his birth neatly fall on our patron saint's day; he belongs to the golden age of Elizabethan expansionism; his history plays chronicle our kings and queens and contain quotable patriotic gobbets (“This precious stone set in the silver sea,” “We few, we happy few,” etc.).
  5. acute
    demonstrating ability to recognize or draw fine distinctions
    He had, as George Orwell put it, an amazing skill at putting one word beside another; as well as acute psychological insight, the largeness of mind to give great lines even to minor or unfavored characters, an unmatched ear for rhythm, and an uncanny ability to coin memorable phrases which, in many cases, have passed into general usage.
  6. uncanny
    surpassing the ordinary or normal
    He had, as George Orwell put it, an amazing skill at putting one word beside another; as well as acute psychological insight, the largeness of mind to give great lines even to minor or unfavored characters, an unmatched ear for rhythm, and an uncanny ability to coin memorable phrases which, in many cases, have passed into general usage.
  7. compulsory
    required by rule
    But that cannot be the justification for making Shakespeare compulsory—to teach outdated idioms that no one under the age of 40 uses.
  8. enshrine
    hold sacred
    We need to think more clearly about the purpose of enshrining Shakespeare in this manner.
  9. aesthetic
    characterized by an appreciation of beauty or good taste
    If it is to teach those things that literature is supposed to teach—aesthetic pleasure, understanding of character, moral sensitivity, liberal humanist values, an inkling of the techniques by which literary texts work their magic—then Shakespeare is simply not delivering.
  10. inkling
    a slight suggestion or vague understanding
    If it is to teach those things that literature is supposed to teach—aesthetic pleasure, understanding of character, moral sensitivity, liberal humanist values, an inkling of the techniques by which literary texts work their magic—then Shakespeare is simply not delivering.
  11. circumvent
    avoid or try to avoid fulfilling, answering, or performing
    Yet it’s laid down in the National Curriculum that all British children of secondary school age must study not one but two Shakespeare plays. It is, as Will himself would say, a custom more honored in the breach than in the observance—and in practice, many teachers circumvent the difficulty by teaching a fragment of Romeo and Juliet and then showing the class West Side Story.
  12. induce
    cause to arise
    Force-feeding children Shakespeare can only induce nausea and a lifelong aversion.
  13. aversion
    a feeling of intense dislike
    Force-feeding children Shakespeare can only induce nausea and a lifelong aversion.
Created on Tue Jan 12 09:53:25 EST 2021 (updated Thu Jan 14 12:49:49 EST 2021)

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