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Grow Your Vocabulary

What words will you need to know later in this lesson?

Patrick Henry had a difficult task: To convince American lawmakers that the time for diplomacy was past and that an armed rebellion was the colonists' only realistic option. It's not too dramatic to say that the fate of the country depended on Patrick Henry's choice of words. Henry knew that he needed to stir his fellow legislators to action, so he selected words that cast the British in a harsh, uncompromising light. To appreciate Henry's speech, you'll need to know the meanings of the words in the following chart. Click each tab below the chart to learn and practice recalling the meaning of each word.

solace insidious liberty or death
martial supplication
avert spurned
inviolate adversary
vigilant inevitable


Make a Guess

Pick and Choose

Flash Forward

First, see if you already know some of the words in this lesson's list. Read each word below and guess what it means. (Say the meaning to yourself or write it down.) Then, click the word to check your answer.

solace
insidious
martial
supplication
avert
spurned
inviolate
adversary
vigilant
inevitable

How is each of these words used in the context of a story? Read each passage below. Then, select the word that belongs in the blank. Click the Lookup button if you're not sure what any word means.

Once back home, soldiers who had succeeded well in their ______ activities had difficulty adjusting to civilian life.

  1. martial
  2. avert
  3. spurned
  4. solace

warlike; with weapons

to keep from happening; prevent

rejected with contempt

to comfort in misfortune or distress

Nice Job!

This word means almost the same thing as "military."

While some colonists chose to ignore the obvious, the ________ kept their eyes on the growing British military presence.

  1. insidious
  2. inviolate
  3. vigilant
  4. inevitable

working harmfully in a subtle or sly manner

free from violation or corruption

those who are alert or watchful

impossible to avoid or prevent

Nice Job!

This word is usually an adjective; in Patrick Henry's speech, he uses it as a noun to mean "people who possess the quality of watchfulness."

If Marli doesn't win the debate, we can ________ ourselves with homemade pie.

  1. martial
  2. avert
  3. spurned
  4. solace

warlike; with weapons

to keep from happening; prevent

rejected with contempt

to comfort in misfortune or distress

Nice Job!

Usually a noun, this word is used as a verb in Patrick Henry's speech. He says that the colonists have used unrealistic hopes to do this in response to the British government's unfair treatment.

I don't trust your little brother's ________ smile: he is trying to trick us into opening that box.

  1. insidious
  2. inviolate
  3. vigilant
  4. inevitable

working harmfully in a subtle or sly manner

free from violation or corruption

those who are alert or watchful

impossible to avoid or prevent

Nice Job!

This word comes from a Latin verb meaning "to lie in wait for."

In an attempt to ________ major flooding, city workers quickly built a wall of sandbags against the rising water.

  1. martial
  2. avert
  3. spurned
  4. solace

warlike; with weapons

to keep from happening; prevent

rejected with contempt

to comfort in misfortune or distress

Nice Job!

You would want to do this to something unpleasant that was about to happen.

In 1775, some American lawmakers were still unwilling to identify the British as their ________.

  1. adversary
  2. martial
  3. supplication
  4. solace

opponent or enemy

warlike; with weapons

humble pleas for something

to comfort in misfortune or distress

Nice Job!

This is the opposite of an ally.

Heartbroken, Mark couldn't believe that Shawna had ________ him after only a week of dating.

  1. martial
  2. avert
  3. spurned
  4. solace

warlike; with weapons

to keep from happening; prevent

rejected with contempt

to comfort in misfortune or distress

Nice Job!

You would not do this if you hoped to let someone down gently.

To keep the testing environment ________, lab workers wore surgical gloves and masks.

  1. insidious
  2. inviolate
  3. vigilant
  4. inevitable

working harmfully in a subtle or sly manner

free from violation or corruption

those who are alert or watchful

impossible to avoid or prevent

Nice Job!

If you felt protective of something, you would try to keep it in this state or condition.

The colonists had tried diplomacy and pleading, but their ________ had fallen on deaf ears.

  1. adversary
  2. martial
  3. supplication
  4. solace

opponent or enemy

warlike; with weapons

humble pleas for something

to comfort in misfortune or distress

Nice Job!

This manner of asking requires the asker to swallow their pride.

Khalil's improvement in math class was the ________ result of all his extra studying.

  1. insidious
  2. inviolate
  3. vigilant
  4. inevitable

working harmfully in a subtle or sly manner

free from violation or corruption

those who are alert or watchful

impossible to avoid or prevent

Nice Job!

You would use this word to describe something that is bound to happen.

Summary

Questions answered correctly:

Questions answered incorrectly:

Think you have these words figured out? Try matching the description on each flashcard to one of the words in the box. Once you think you know the word that is described on each card, click the card to check your answer.

those who are watchful

vigilant

enemy

adversary

comfort

solace

pure, uncorrupted

inviolate

harmfully subtle

insidious

unavoidable

inevitable

warlike

martial

rejected

spurned

stop from happening

avert

humble pleas

supplication

Summary

Correct:

Incorrect:



solace insidious martial supplication avert
spurned inviolate adversary vigilant inevitable