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CAESAR’S ENGLISH VOCABULARY FROM LATIN, Lesson IV

CAESAR’S ENGLISH VOCABULARY FROM LATIN, Lesson IV. Lesson IV. WORD audible benevolent somber prostrate profuse DEFINITION able to be heard charitable gloomy lying flat abundant.

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CAESAR’S ENGLISH VOCABULARY FROM LATIN, Lesson IV

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  1. CAESAR’S ENGLISHVOCABULARY FROM LATIN, Lesson IV

  2. Lesson IV WORD audible benevolent somber prostrate profuse DEFINITION able to be heard charitable gloomy lying flat abundant

  3. audible(AW-dih-bil) adj. – able to be heardThe English adjective audible, from the Latin audibilis, refers to anything that can be heard, but if often means something that is barely heard. In Treasure Island Robert Stevenson described “a steady whisper, that was no more than audible.” In Spanish, audible is audible.

  4. benevolent(ben-EH-vo-lent) adj. - charitableBenevolentcomes from the Latin benevolens. To be benevolent is to be charitable, to be of good (bene) will (vol). In his 1901 classic Kim, Rudyard Kipling wrote that “Kim considered the benevolent yellow face wrinkle by wrinkle.”In Spanish, benevolentis benevolo.

  5. somber(SOM-burr) adj. - gloomyThe adjective somberactually derives from the Latin umbra, shade, and refers to things that are dark, gloomy, melancholy. The British spell somber sombre. Esther Forbes wrote in Johnny Tremain that “Then he heard a somber rolling of the drums.”In Spanish, somber is sombrio.

  6. prostrate(PROSS-trait) adj. or v. – lying flatProstratecomes from the Latin prostatus. To be prostrate is to be lying down. You can prostrate yourself by throwing yourself down. In Kenneth Grahame’s The Wind in the Willows, one of the animals finds “himself lying on top of the prostrate Rat.”In Spanish, prostrate is prostrado.

  7. profuse (pro-FYOOS) adj. - abundantThe English adjective profuse,from the Latin profusus, means abundant. There can be profuse plants, profuse thanks, and profuse curls. In Herman Melville’s Moby Dick, a character wipes “the profuse sweat from his brow,” and in Charles Dicken’s David Copperfield, a character is “profuse in his farewells.”In Spanish, profuse is profuso.

  8. Lesson IV WORD audible benevolent somber prostrate profuse DEFINITION able to be heard charitable gloomy lying flat abundant

  9. Caesar’s Classic Words Challenge 1. From Alfred Lansing’s Endurance After supper that night there was a _______ quiet in the Ritz. a. audible b. profuse c. benevolent d. somber

  10. 1. From Alfred Lansing’s Endurance After supper that night there was a _______ quiet in the Ritz. a. audible b. profuse c. benevolent d. somber

  11. 2. From Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man It was like a small voice…barely _______ in the roar of city sounds. a. somber b. profuse c. audible d. benevolent

  12. 2. From Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man It was like a small voice…barely _______ in the roar of city sounds. a. somber b. profuse c. audible d. benevolent

  13. The Grammar of Vocabulary: benevolent, an adjective. The stoic emperor lived a benevolent life. __________________________________________ __________________________________________ __________________________________________ __________________________________________

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