Wednesday 26 October 2011

Word of the Day

I learnt this word while doing a vocabulary test on dictionary.com. Because I am extremely cool.

Today's Word:

Glib

Readily (but insincerely) fluent; unconstrained

Sentence example: His glib chatter drove his friends to insanity.

Origin: From the Dutch word glibberig.

By Jess

Tuesday 25 October 2011

The Pressure is On...

Once upon a time, there was an English Lit. class who enjoyed discussing topics related to their wonderful language. One day, they became terribly confused when talking about words with the suffix -press. They soon figured it out, but I decided to pop it on the Internet so no one could ever forget.

Oppress

To be tyrannical (e.g. a king); to cause discomfort through excess (e.g. heat); to distress

Suppress

To put a stop to something (e.g. riots); to abolish; to withhold from publication (e.g. the truth or evidence)

Repress

To quell; to keep in control

By Jess

Word of the Day

Today's Word:

Flagrant

Shockingly noticeable; scandalous

Sentence example: His underwear was flagrant because he had forgotten to wear his belt on his jeans.

Origin: From the Latin flagrare, meaning to burn, since in archaic language the word meant literally burning or blazing.

By Jess

Monday 24 October 2011

Word of the Day

I found this one in The Tenant of Wildfell Hall a while ago, just thought you would all enjoy it.

Today's Word:

Desultory

Inconsistent; reluctant; random (e.g. an irrelevant comment)

Sentence example: The conversation between them was becoming desultory, and therefore proving to be a bit awkward, since it was only the first date.

Origin: From the Latin desultorius, meaning a circus performer who jumped from one horse to another.

By Jess

Friday 14 October 2011

Agnes Grey

When people think of Bronte, they think of controversial tales of passionate love on the moors of Yorkshire. Agnes Grey is not part of one such tale. She is a church-going young woman who goes out to earn a living for her impoverished family by being a governess.

You can pick up Agnes Grey at any point and be able to tell instantly what she is like as a person. Every chapter is filled with religious quotations and though she arrives at her first post with a fresh outlook and ready for anything that may come her way, she is not ready for the way of the upper-class children.
The children Agnes deals with are, plainly put, spoilt brats. They are their mothers' little darlings and hence anything that they may do wrong is never the mother's fault, it is that of Agnes. Over the course of the year she spends at her first chance at being a governess, in this instance to a noisy boy and two spoilt little girls, her once excitable desire for adventure is soon relinquished as she realises that not everyone has such good manners as she.

Being only working class, Agnes Grey has an incredibly satirical narrative, exposing to the reader the never-ending coquetry of characters such as Rosalie, a later pupil of Miss Grey, and how others such as Rosalie's sister Matilda may pick up bad habits from their far-too-fond-of-alcohol fathers. I especially liked the dashed out swear words such as "d-n" that terrible Tilly uses. It made me laugh to think of a typical Victorian lady reading Agnes Grey and falling off her seat in shock when none other than a young lady could say such a scandalous word.

Agnes Grey is a feel-good sort of book that mainly anyone can read. It makes the reader think - ah well my life may be rubbish now but maybe eventually a vaguely handsome priest with a good heart will turn up and sweep me off my feet. Or something...

By Jess