LORD THE VOCABULARY FLIEScchsherda.weebly.com/uploads/2/4/2/9/24290920/lotf... · 2018. 9. 9. ·...

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CH. 3-8 VOCABULARY 27 30 29 28 26 21 23 22 24 25 8 10 3 2 9 6 5 1 7 4 20 19 18 17 13 14 11 12 15 16 42 46 41 49 50 48 47 43 45 44 52 56 51 59 60 58 57 53 55 54 39 37 40 38 33 35 31 36 34 32 VOCABULARY DIRECTIONS: Write a definition for each word using your own words based on the context within the book. On the quiz, you will need to know how to word might be used in a sentence (not just the simple matching of definitions). LORD OF FLIES THE VICISSITUDES (p.49) CASTANET (p.49) INSCRUTABLE (p.49) BRIMMED (p.50) ANTAGONISM (p.51) DECLIVITIES (p.54) TACIT (p.55) GAY (p.55) BAFFLED (p.55) PERCEPTIBLE (p.56) FLAUNTED (p.56) GAUDY (p.57) OPALESCENCE (p.58) BLATANT (p.58) DUBIOUS (p.59) BELLIGERENCE (p.60) IMPALPABLE (p.61) CROONING (p.61) LIBERATED (p.64) IRKED (p.65) GOUTS (p.69) MALEVOLENTLY (p.71) GYRATION (p.) INGRACIOUS (p.72) ASSERTION (p.72) OMISSION (p.74) JEERINGLY (p.76) PERPETUALLY (p.77) LAMENTABLY (p.77) LUDICROUS (p.79) INEFFECTUAL (p.79) TOTTERY (p.80) LAVATORY (p.80) LAMENTATION (p.87) DECORUM (p.89) TEMPESTUOUSLY (p.91) DISCURSIVE (p.92) THEOREM (p.92) APPALLED (p.93) OBLONG (p.99) DIFFIDENTLY (p.103) LEVIATHAN (p.105) GUANO (p.106) BASTION (p.106) MUTINOUSLY (p.108) BRINE (p.110) LUXURIANCE (p.116) CRESTFALLEN (p.117) QUEER (p.117) INFURIATINGLY (p.117) BROODING (p.118) IMPERVIOUS (p.121) SERENADING (p.125) DEMURE (p.133) FERVOR (p.133) IMMEDIACY (p.135) RUNNELS (p.138) FRONDS (p.142) PARODY (p.143) OBSCENE (p.143) T EACHERS PAY C REATED L EARNING T EACHERS AUTHOR A FOR _

Transcript of LORD THE VOCABULARY FLIEScchsherda.weebly.com/uploads/2/4/2/9/24290920/lotf... · 2018. 9. 9. ·...

  • CH. 3-8

    VOCABULARY

    27

    30

    29

    28

    26

    21

    23

    22

    24

    25

    8

    10

    3

    2

    9

    6

    5

    1

    7

    4

    20

    19

    18

    17

    13

    14

    11

    12

    15

    16

    42

    46

    41

    49

    50

    48

    47

    43

    45

    44

    52

    56

    51

    59

    60

    58

    57

    53

    55

    54

    39

    37

    40

    38

    33

    35

    31

    36

    34

    32

    VOCABULARYDIRECTIONS:Write a definition for each word using your own words based on the context within the book. On the quiz, you will need to know how to word might be used in a sentence (not just the simple matching of definitions).

    LORD OF

    FLIESTHE

    VICISSITUDES (p.49)

    CASTANET (p.49)

    INSCRUTABLE (p.49)

    BRIMMED (p.50)

    ANTAGONISM (p.51)

    DECLIVITIES (p.54)

    TACIT (p.55)

    GAY (p.55)

    BAFFLED (p.55)

    PERCEPTIBLE (p.56)

    FLAUNTED (p.56)

    GAUDY (p.57)

    OPALESCENCE (p.58)

    BLATANT (p.58)

    DUBIOUS (p.59)

    BELLIGERENCE (p.60)

    IMPALPABLE (p.61)

    CROONING (p.61)

    LIBERATED (p.64)

    IRKED (p.65)

    GOUTS (p.69)

    MALEVOLENTLY (p.71)

    GYRATION (p.)

    INGRACIOUS (p.72)

    ASSERTION (p.72)

    OMISSION (p.74)

    JEERINGLY (p.76)

    PERPETUALLY (p.77)

    LAMENTABLY (p.77)

    LUDICROUS (p.79)

    INEFFECTUAL (p.79)

    TOTTERY (p.80)

    LAVATORY (p.80)

    LAMENTATION (p.87)

    DECORUM (p.89)

    TEMPESTUOUSLY (p.91)

    DISCURSIVE (p.92)

    THEOREM (p.92)

    APPALLED (p.93)

    OBLONG (p.99)

    DIFFIDENTLY (p.103)

    LEVIATHAN (p.105)

    GUANO (p.106)

    BASTION (p.106)

    MUTINOUSLY (p.108)

    BRINE (p.110)

    LUXURIANCE (p.116)

    CRESTFALLEN (p.117)

    QUEER (p.117)

    INFURIATINGLY (p.117)

    BROODING (p.118)

    IMPERVIOUS (p.121)

    SERENADING (p.125)

    DEMURE (p.133)

    FERVOR (p.133)

    IMMEDIACY (p.135)

    RUNNELS (p.138)

    FRONDS (p.142)

    PARODY (p.143)

    OBSCENE (p.143)

    T EACHERS PAYC REATED L EARNING T EACHERS AUTHORAFOR _

  • LORD OF

    FLIESTHE

    VOCABULARY

    NAME ____________________________

    PERIOD _____

    DIRECTIONS:Choose the word that best belongs in the blank and bubble that answer on your scantron.

    1 Jack stood there, streaming with sweat, streaked with brown earth, stained by all the ________ of a day’s hunting.

    2 Jack took up a coconut shell that ________ with fresh water from among a group that was arranged in the shade, and drank.

    6 Jack nodded, as much for the sake of agreeing as anything, and by ________ consent they left the shelter and went toward the bathing pool.

    3 From the pig-run came the quick, hard patter of hoofs, a ________ sound, seductive, maddening - the promise of meat.

    4 Jack lifted his head and stared at the ________ masses of creeper that lay across the trail. Then he raised his spear and sneaked forward.

    5 “We want meat, and we don’t get it.” Now the ________ was audible.

    c

    b

    a

    d

    e

    c

    b

    a

    d

    e

    c

    b

    a

    d

    e

    Nothing moved but a pair of ________ butterflies that danced round each other in the hot air.

    13

    The decrease in size, from Ralph down, was gradual; and though there was a ________ region inhabited by Simon and Robert and Maurice, nevertheless no one had any difficulty in recognizing biguns at one end and littluns at the other.

    15

    A great tree, fallen across one corner, leaned against the trees that still stood and a rapid climber ________ red and yellow sprays right to the top.

    14

    The glittering sea rose up, moved apart in planes of ________ impossibility.12

    7 Simon turned away from them and went where the just ________ path led him.

    8 He was a small, skinny boy, his chin pointed, and his eyes so bright they had deceived Ralph into thinking him delightfully ________ and wicked.

    9 They looked at each other, ________, in love and hate.

    10 But Jack was pointing to the high ________ that led down from the mountain to the flatter part of the island.

    11 Toward noon, as the floods of light fell more nearly to the perpendicular, the stark colors of the morning were smoothed in pearl and ________.

    QUIZVOCABULARY

    #1-60CH. 3-8

    VICISSITUDES

    CASTANET

    INSCRUTABLE

    BRIMMED

    ANTAGONISM

    DECLIVITIES

    TACIT

    GAY

    BAFFLED

    PERCEPTIBLE

    FLAUNTED

    GAUDY

    OPALESCENCE

    BLATANT

    DUBIOUS

    BELLIGERENCE

    IMPALPABLE

    CROONING

    LIBERATED

    IRKED

    GOUTS

    MALEVOLENTLY

    GYRATION

    INGRACIOUS

    ASSERTION

    OMISSION

    JEERINGLY

    PERPETUALLY

    LAMENTABLY

    LUDICROUS

    INEFFECTUAL

    TOTTERY

    LAVATORY

    LAMENTATION

    DECORUM

    TEMPESTUOUSLY

    DISCURSIVE

    THEOREM

    APPALLED

    OBLONG

    DIFFIDENTLY

    LEVIATHAN

    GUANO

    BASTION

    MUTINOUSLY

    BRINE

    LUXURIANCE

    CRESTFALLEN

    QUEER

    INFURIATINGLY

    BROODING

    IMPERVIOUS

    SERENADING

    DEMURE

    FERVOR

    IMMEDIACY

    RUNNELS

    FRONDS

    PARODY

    OBSCENE

    ADBCE

    BECDA

    CDBAE

    Please continue on the next page...T EACHERS PAYC REATED L EARNING T EACHERS AUTHORAFOR _

  • 2

    23 Jack had meant to leave him in doubt, as an ________ of power.

    22 Piggy grabbed and put on the glasses. He looked ________ at Jack.

    24 Jack broke out of his ________ and stood facing Ralph. His words came out in a shout.

    25 The twins stood with the pig swinging between them, dropping black ________ on the rock.

    21 Ralph’s final word was an ________ mutter. “All right. Light the fire.”

    Of all the boys, he was the most at home there; but today, ________ by the mention of rescue, the useless, footling mention of rescue, even the green depths of water and the shattered, golden sun held no balm.

    16

    He capered toward Bill, and the mask was a thing on its own, behind which Jack hid, ________ from shame and self-consciousness.

    20

    With ________ organs of sense they examined this new field. Perhaps food had appeared where at the last incursion there had been none.

    19

    He sat there, ________ to himself and throwing sand at an imaginary Percival.17

    Percival was mouse-colored and had not been very attractive even to his mother; Johnny was well built, with fair hair and a natural ________. Just now he was being obedient because he was interested.

    18

    With a convulsion of the mind, Ralph discovered dirt and decay, understood how much he disliked ________ flicking the tangled hair out of his eyes, and at last, when the sun was gone, rolling noisily to rest among dry leaves.

    26

    Once more that evening, Ralph had to adjust his values. Piggy could think. He could go step by step inside that fat head of his, only Piggy was no chief. But Piggy, for all his ________ body, had brains.

    28

    On the left were four small logs, one of them - the farthest - ________ springy.27

    By advertising his ________, Piggy made more cruelty necessary.29

    He stopped, facing the strip; and remembering that first enthusiastic exploration as though it were part of a brighter childhood, he smiled _______.

    30

    VICISSITUDES

    CASTANET

    INSCRUTABLE

    BRIMMED

    ANTAGONISM

    DECLIVITIES

    TACIT

    GAY

    BAFFLED

    PERCEPTIBLE

    FLAUNTED

    GAUDY

    OPALESCENCE

    BLATANT

    DUBIOUS

    c

    b

    a

    d

    e

    c

    b

    a

    d

    e

    BELLIGERENCE

    IMPALPABLE

    CROONING

    LIBERATED

    IRKED

    GOUTS

    MALEVOLENTLY

    GYRATION

    INGRACIOUS

    ASSERTION

    c

    b

    a

    d

    e

    OMISSION

    JEERINGLY

    PERPETUALLY

    LAMENTABLY

    LUDICROUS

    INEFFECTUAL

    TOTTERY

    LAVATORY

    LAMENTATION

    DECORUM

    TEMPESTUOUSLY

    DISCURSIVE

    THEOREM

    APPALLED

    OBLONG

    DIFFIDENTLY

    LEVIATHAN

    GUANO

    BASTION

    MUTINOUSLY

    BRINE

    LUXURIANCE

    CRESTFALLEN

    QUEER

    INFURIATINGLY

    BROODING

    IMPERVIOUS

    SERENADING

    DEMURE

    FERVOR

    IMMEDIACY

    RUNNELS

    FRONDS

    PARODY

    OBSCENE

    ECABD

    DBECA

    CDEAB

    Please continue on the next page...T EACHERS PAYC REATED L EARNING T EACHERS AUTHORAFOR _

  • 3

    42 A steep slope up to the shattered rocks that crowned the ________.

    41 Then the sleeping ________ breathed out, the waters rose, the weed streamed, and the water boiled over the table rock with a roar.

    43 ________, the boys fell silent or muttering.

    44 ________, Simon allowed his pace to slacken until he was walking side by side with Ralph and looking up at him through the coarse black hair that now fell to his eyes.

    45 Nothing but what you might expect: pink, tumbled boulders with ________ layered on them like icing.

    36 “If you give up,” said Piggy, in an ________ whisper, “what ‘ud happen to me?”

    37 A shadow fronted him ________.

    38 Ralph answered in the cautious voice of one who rehearses a ________.

    39 Piggy bumped into him, and a twin grabbed him as he made for the ________ of paling stars.

    40 The assembly shredded away and became a ________ and random scatter from the palms to the water and away along the beach, beyond night-sight.

    33 At first he was a silent effigy of sorrow; but then the ________ rose out of him, loud and sustained as the conch.

    34 That was from Piggy, shocked out of ________.

    35 We chose those rocks right along beyond the bathing pool as a ________.

    31 Piggy tiptoed to the triangle, his ________ protest made, and joined the others.

    32 We all built the first one, four of us the second one, and me ‘n Simon built the last one over there. That’s why it’s so ________. No. Don’t laugh.

    VICISSITUDES

    CASTANET

    INSCRUTABLE

    BRIMMED

    ANTAGONISM

    DECLIVITIES

    TACIT

    GAY

    BAFFLED

    PERCEPTIBLE

    FLAUNTED

    GAUDY

    OPALESCENCE

    BLATANT

    DUBIOUS

    BELLIGERENCE

    IMPALPABLE

    CROONING

    LIBERATED

    IRKED

    GOUTS

    MALEVOLENTLY

    GYRATION

    INGRACIOUS

    ASSERTION

    OMISSION

    JEERINGLY

    PERPETUALLY

    LAMENTABLY

    LUDICROUS

    c

    b

    a

    d

    e

    c

    b

    a

    d

    e

    INEFFECTUAL

    TOTTERY

    LAVATORY

    LAMENTATION

    DECORUM

    TEMPESTUOUSLY

    DISCURSIVE

    THEOREM

    APPALLED

    OBLONG

    c

    b

    a

    d

    e

    DIFFIDENTLY

    LEVIATHAN

    GUANO

    BASTION

    MUTINOUSLY

    BRINE

    LUXURIANCE

    CRESTFALLEN

    QUEER

    INFURIATINGLY

    BROODING

    IMPERVIOUS

    SERENADING

    DEMURE

    FERVOR

    IMMEDIACY

    RUNNELS

    FRONDS

    PARODY

    OBSCENE

    ABDEC

    DACEB

    BDEAC

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  • 46 Ralph looked back at Jack, seeing him, ________, for the first time.

    47 For most of the way they were forced right down to the bare rock by the water and had to edge along between that and the dark ________ of the forest.

    48 Jack cleared his throat and spoke in a ________, tight voice.

    49 “I don’t remember this cliff,” said Jack, ________, “so this must be the bit of the coast I missed.”

    50 Faces cleaned fairly well by the process of eating and sweating but marked in the less accessible angles with a kind of shadow; clothes, worn away, stiff like his own with sweat, put on, not for decorum or comfort but out of custom; the skin of the body, scurfy with ________ -

    4

    57 Gorged, they alighted by his ________ of sweat and drank. They tickled under his nostrils and played leapfrog on his thighs.

    56 They were black and ________ green and without number; and in front of Simon, the Lord of the Flies hung on his stick and grinned.

    58 His eyes were half closed as though he were imitating the ________ thing on the stick.

    59 For a moment or two, the forest and all the other dimly appreciated places echoed with the ________ of laughter.

    60 At last, the ________ of the kill subsided. The boys drew back, and Jack stood up, holding out his hands.

    55 If Jack was astonished by their ________, he did not show it.

    51 He led the way and set himself as by right to hack at the tangles. Jack brought up the rear, displaced and ________.

    53 As though he were ________ the rising sun, Jack went on blowing till the shelters were astir and the hunters crept to the plaform and the littluns whimpered as now they so frequently did.

    54 Each of them wore the remains of a black cap, and ages ago they had stood in two ________ rows and their voices had been the song of angels.

    52 So they sat, the rocking, tapping, ________ Roger and Ralph, fuming; round them the close sky was loaded with stars, save where the mountain punched up a hole of blackness.

    VICISSITUDES

    CASTANET

    INSCRUTABLE

    BRIMMED

    ANTAGONISM

    DECLIVITIES

    TACIT

    GAY

    BAFFLED

    PERCEPTIBLE

    FLAUNTED

    GAUDY

    OPALESCENCE

    BLATANT

    DUBIOUS

    BELLIGERENCE

    IMPALPABLE

    CROONING

    LIBERATED

    IRKED

    GOUTS

    MALEVOLENTLY

    GYRATION

    INGRACIOUS

    ASSERTION

    OMISSION

    JEERINGLY

    PERPETUALLY

    LAMENTABLY

    LUDICROUS

    INEFFECTUAL

    TOTTERY

    LAVATORY

    LAMENTATION

    DECORUM

    TEMPESTUOUSLY

    DISCURSIVE

    THEOREM

    APPALLED

    OBLONG

    DIFFIDENTLY

    LEVIATHAN

    GUANO

    BASTION

    MUTINOUSLY

    c

    b

    a

    d

    e

    c

    b

    a

    d

    e

    BRINE

    LUXURIANCE

    CRESTFALLEN

    QUEER

    INFURIATINGLY

    BROODING

    IMPERVIOUS

    SERENADING

    DEMURE

    FERVOR

    c

    b

    a

    d

    e

    IMMEDIACY

    RUNNELS

    FRONDS

    PARODY

    OBSCENE

    EBDCA

    ABCDE

    CBEDA

    T EACHERS PAYC REATED L EARNING T EACHERS AUTHORAFOR _

  • VOCABULARY

    1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 -

    6 - 7 - 8 - 9 -

    10 -

    11 - 12 - 13 - 14 - 15 -

    16 - 17 - 18 - 19 - 20 -

    21 - 22 - 23 - 24 - 25 -

    26 - 27 - 28 - 29 - 30 -

    31 - 32 - 33 - 34 - 35 -

    36 - 37 - 38 - 39 - 40 -

    41 - 42 - 43 - 44 - 45 -

    46 - 47 - 48 - 49 - 50 -

    51 - 52 - 53 - 54 - 55 -

    56 - 57 - 58 - 59 - 60 -

    QUIZKEY

    VOCABULARY

    ADBCE

    BECDA

    CDBAE

    ECABD

    DBECA

    CDEAB

    ABDEC

    DACEB

    BDEAC

    EBDCA

    ABCDE

    CBEDA

    LORD OF

    FLIESTHE

    CH. 3-8

    T EACHERS PAYC REATED L EARNING T EACHERS AUTHORAFOR _

  • 1st Quiz = #1-30

    2nd Quiz = #31-60

    CH. 3-8

    VOCABULARY

    27

    30

    29

    28

    26

    21

    23

    22

    24

    25

    8

    10

    3

    2

    9

    6

    5

    1

    7

    4

    20

    19

    18

    17

    13

    14

    11

    12

    15

    16

    42

    46

    41

    49

    50

    48

    47

    43

    45

    44

    52

    56

    51

    59

    60

    58

    57

    53

    55

    54

    39

    37

    40

    38

    33

    35

    31

    36

    34

    32

    VOCABULARYDIRECTIONS:Write a definition for each word using your own words based on the context within the book. On the quiz, you will need to know how to word might be used in a sentence (not just the simple matching of definitions).

    LORD OF

    FLIESTHE

    VICISSITUDES (p.49)

    CASTANET (p.49)

    INSCRUTABLE (p.49)

    BRIMMED (p.50)

    ANTAGONISM (p.51)

    DECLIVITIES (p.54)

    TACIT (p.55)

    GAY (p.55)

    BAFFLED (p.55)

    PERCEPTIBLE (p.56)

    FLAUNTED (p.56)

    GAUDY (p.57)

    OPALESCENCE (p.58)

    BLATANT (p.58)

    DUBIOUS (p.59)

    BELLIGERENCE (p.60)

    IMPALPABLE (p.61)

    CROONING (p.61)

    LIBERATED (p.64)

    IRKED (p.65)

    GOUTS (p.69)

    MALEVOLENTLY (p.71)

    GYRATION (p.)

    INGRACIOUS (p.72)

    ASSERTION (p.72)

    OMISSION (p.74)

    JEERINGLY (p.76)

    PERPETUALLY (p.77)

    LAMENTABLY (p.77)

    LUDICROUS (p.79)

    INEFFECTUAL (p.79)

    TOTTERY (p.80)

    LAVATORY (p.80)

    LAMENTATION (p.87)

    DECORUM (p.89)

    TEMPESTUOUSLY (p.91)

    DISCURSIVE (p.92)

    THEOREM (p.92)

    APPALLED (p.93)

    OBLONG (p.99)

    DIFFIDENTLY (p.103)

    LEVIATHAN (p.105)

    GUANO (p.106)

    BASTION (p.106)

    MUTINOUSLY (p.108)

    BRINE (p.110)

    LUXURIANCE (p.116)

    CRESTFALLEN (p.117)

    QUEER (p.117)

    INFURIATINGLY (p.117)

    BROODING (p.118)

    IMPERVIOUS (p.121)

    SERENADING (p.125)

    DEMURE (p.133)

    FERVOR (p.133)

    IMMEDIACY (p.135)

    RUNNELS (p.138)

    FRONDS (p.142)

    PARODY (p.143)

    OBSCENE (p.143)

    T EACHERS PAYC REATED L EARNING T EACHERS AUTHORAFOR _

  • LORD OF

    FLIESTHE

    VOCABULARY

    QUIZ

    NAME ____________________________

    PERIOD _____

    VOCABULARY

    DIRECTIONS:Choose the word that best belongs in the blank and bubble that answer on your scantron.

    #1-30CH. 3-8

    VOCABULARY

    1 Jack stood there, streaming with sweat, streaked with brown earth, stained by all the ________ of a day’s hunting.

    2 Jack took up a coconut shell that ________ with fresh water from among a group that was arranged in the shade, and drank.

    6 Jack nodded, as much for the sake of agreeing as anything, and by ________ consent they left the shelter and went toward the bathing pool.

    3 From the pig-run came the quick, hard patter of hoofs, a ________ sound, seductive, maddening - the promise of meat.

    4 Jack lifted his head and stared at the ________ masses of creeper that lay across the trail. Then he raised his spear and sneaked forward.

    5 “We want meat, and we don’t get it.” Now the ________ was audible.

    c

    b

    a

    d

    e

    c

    b

    a

    d

    e

    c

    b

    a

    d

    e

    Nothing moved but a pair of ________ butterflies that danced round each other in the hot air.

    13

    The decrease in size, from Ralph down, was gradual; and though there was a ________ region inhabited by Simon and Robert and Maurice, nevertheless no one had any difficulty in recognizing biguns at one end and littluns at the other.

    15

    A great tree, fallen across one corner, leaned against the trees that still stood and a rapid climber ________ red and yellow sprays right to the top.

    14

    The glittering sea rose up, moved apart in planes of ________ impossibility.12

    7 Simon turned away from them and went where the just ________ path led him.

    8 He was a small, skinny boy, his chin pointed, and his eyes so bright they had deceived Ralph into thinking him delightfully ________ and wicked.

    9 They looked at each other, ________, in love and hate.

    10 But Jack was pointing to the high ________ that led down from the mountain to the flatter part of the island.

    11 Toward noon, as the floods of light fell more nearly to the perpendicular, the stark colors of the morning were smoothed in pearl and ________.

    VICISSITUDES

    CASTANET

    INSCRUTABLE

    BRIMMED

    ANTAGONISM

    DECLIVITIES

    TACIT

    GAY

    BAFFLED

    PERCEPTIBLE

    FLAUNTED

    GAUDY

    OPALESCENCE

    BLATANT

    DUBIOUS

    Please continue on the next page...T EACHERS PAYC REATED L EARNING T EACHERS AUTHORAFOR _

  • 2

    23 Jack had meant to leave him in doubt, as an ________ of power.

    22 Piggy grabbed and put on the glasses. He looked ________ at Jack.

    24 Jack broke out of his ________ and stood facing Ralph. His words came out in a shout.

    25 The twins stood with the pig swinging between them, dropping black ________ on the rock.

    21 Ralph’s final word was an ________ mutter. “All right. Light the fire.”

    Of all the boys, he was the most at home there; but today, ________ by the mention of rescue, the useless, footling mention of rescue, even the green depths of water and the shattered, golden sun held no balm.

    16

    He capered toward Bill, and the mask was a thing on its own, behind which Jack hid, ________ from shame and self-consciousness.

    20

    With ________ organs of sense they examined this new field. Perhaps food had appeared where at the last incursion there had been none.

    19

    He sat there, ________ to himself and throwing sand at an imaginary Percival.17

    Percival was mouse-colored and had not been very attractive even to his mother; Johnny was well built, with fair hair and a natural ________. Just now he was being obedient because he was interested.

    18

    With a convulsion of the mind, Ralph discovered dirt and decay, understood how much he disliked ________ flicking the tangled hair out of his eyes, and at last, when the sun was gone, rolling noisily to rest among dry leaves.

    26

    Once more that evening, Ralph had to adjust his values. Piggy could think. He could go step by step inside that fat head of his, only Piggy was no chief. But Piggy, for all his ________ body, had brains.

    28

    On the left were four small logs, one of them - the farthest - ________ springy.27

    By advertising his ________, Piggy made more cruelty necessary.29

    He stopped, facing the strip; and remembering that first enthusiastic exploration as though it were part of a brighter childhood, he smiled _______.

    30

    c

    b

    a

    d

    e

    c

    b

    a

    d

    e

    BELLIGERENCE

    IMPALPABLE

    CROONING

    LIBERATED

    IRKED

    GOUTS

    MALEVOLENTLY

    GYRATION

    INGRACIOUS

    ASSERTION

    c

    b

    a

    d

    e

    OMISSION

    JEERINGLY

    PERPETUALLY

    LAMENTABLY

    LUDICROUS

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  • VOCABULARY

    LORD OF

    FLIESTHE

    NAME ____________________________

    PERIOD _____

    DIRECTIONS:

    QUIZVOCABULARY

    #31-60CH. 3-8

    12 A steep slope up to the shattered rocks that crowned the ________.

    11 Then the sleeping ________ breathed out, the waters rose, the weed streamed, and the water boiled over the table rock with a roar.

    13 ________, the boys fell silent or muttering.

    14 ________, Simon allowed his pace to slacken until he was walking side by side with Ralph and looking up at him through the coarse black hair that now fell to his eyes.

    15 Nothing but what you might expect: pink, tumbled boulders with ________ layered on them like icing.

    6 “If you give up,” said Piggy, in an ________ whisper, “what ‘ud happen to me?”

    7 A shadow fronted him ________.

    8 Ralph answered in the cautious voice of one who rehearses a ________.

    9 Piggy bumped into him, and a twin grabbed him as he made for the ________ of paling stars.

    10 The assembly shredded away and became a ________ and random scatter from the palms to the water and away along the beach, beyond night-sight.

    3 At first he was a silent effigy of sorrow; but then the ________ rose out of him, loud and sustained as the conch.

    4 That was from Piggy, shocked out of ________.

    5 We chose those rocks right along beyond the bathing pool as a ________.

    1 Piggy tiptoed to the triangle, his ________ protest made, and joined the others.

    2 We all built the first one, four of us the second one, and me ‘n Simon built the last one over there. That’s why it’s so ________. No. Don’t laugh.

    c

    b

    a

    d

    e

    c

    b

    a

    d

    e

    INEFFECTUAL

    TOTTERY

    LAVATORY

    LAMENTATION

    DECORUM

    TEMPESTUOUSLY

    DISCURSIVE

    THEOREM

    APPALLED

    OBLONG

    c

    b

    a

    d

    e

    DIFFIDENTLY

    LEVIATHAN

    GUANO

    BASTION

    MUTINOUSLY

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  • VOCABULARY 2

    16 Ralph looked back at Jack, seeing him, ________, for the first time.

    17 For most of the way they were forced right down to the bare rock by the water and had to edge along between that and the dark ________ of the forest.

    18 Jack cleared his throat and spoke in a ________, tight voice.

    19 “I don’t remember this cliff,” said Jack, ________, “so this must be the bit of the coast I missed.”

    20 Faces cleaned fairly well by the process of eating and sweating but marked in the less accessible angles with a kind of shadow; clothes, worn away, stiff like his own with sweat, put on, not for decorum or comfort but out of custom; the skin of the body, scurfy with ________ -

    27 Gorged, they alighted by his ________ of sweat and drank. They tickled under his nostrils and played leapfrog on his thighs.

    26 They were black and ________ green and without number; and in front of Simon, the Lord of the Flies hung on his stick and grinned.

    28 His eyes were half closed as though he were imitating the ________ thing on the stick.

    29 For a moment or two, the forest and all the other dimly appreciated places echoed with the ________ of laughter.

    30 At last, the ________ of the kill subsided. The boys drew back, and Jack stood up, holding out his hands.

    25 If Jack was astonished by their ________, he did not show it.

    21 He led the way and set himself as by right to hack at the tangles. Jack brought up the rear, displaced and ________.

    23 As though he were ________ the rising sun, Jack went on blowing till the shelters were astir and the hunters crept to the plaform and the littluns whimpered as now they so frequently did.

    24 Each of them wore the remains of a black cap, and ages ago they had stood in two ________ rows and their voices had been the song of angels.

    22 So they sat, the rocking, tapping, ________ Roger and Ralph, fuming; round them the close sky was loaded with stars, save where the mountain punched up a hole of blackness.

    c

    b

    a

    d

    e

    c

    b

    a

    d

    e

    BRINE

    LUXURIANCE

    CRESTFALLEN

    QUEER

    INFURIATINGLY

    BROODING

    IMPERVIOUS

    SERENADING

    DEMURE

    FERVOR

    c

    b

    a

    d

    e

    IMMEDIACY

    RUNNELS

    FRONDS

    PARODY

    OBSCENE

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    key #1-30

    key #31-60

    VOCABULARY

    QUIZKEY

    VOCABULARYLORD OF

    FLIESTHE

    CH. 3-4

    ADBCE

    BECDA

    CDBAE

    ECABD

    DBECA

    CDEAB

    ABDEC

    DACEB

    BDEAC

    EBDCA

    ABCDE

    CBEDA

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