{"content":{"sharePage":{"page":0,"digests":[{"id":"9447770","dateCreated":"1235342197","smartDate":"Feb 22, 2009","userCreated":{"username":"baxterj1","url":"https:\/\/www.wikispaces.com\/user\/view\/baxterj1","imageUrl":"https:\/\/ssl.wikicdn.com\/i\/user_none_lg.jpg"},"monitored":false,"locked":false,"links":{"self":"https:\/\/speicher2.wikispaces.com\/share\/view\/9447770"},"dateDigested":1532288087,"startDate":null,"sharedType":"discussion","title":"Obeisance","description":"Obeisance- A Gesture of respect p.204","replyPages":[{"page":0,"digests":[{"id":"9447922","body":""THE TWO GENTLEMEN left Rosings the next morning; and Mr. Collins, having been in waiting near the lodges, to make them his parting obeisance, was able to bring home the pleasing intelligence of their appearing in very good health, and in as tolerable spirits as could be expected, after the melancholy scene so lately gone through at Rosings."","dateCreated":"1235342645","smartDate":"Feb 22, 2009","userCreated":{"username":"baxterj1","url":"https:\/\/www.wikispaces.com\/user\/view\/baxterj1","imageUrl":"https:\/\/ssl.wikicdn.com\/i\/user_none_lg.jpg"}},{"id":"9448096","body":"Caprice- the ability to change one's mind without motive p.7
\n
\n"Mr. Bennet was so odd a mixture of quick parts, sarcastic humour, reserve, and caprice, that the experience of three and twenty years had been insufficient to make his wife understand his character."","dateCreated":"1235343105","smartDate":"Feb 22, 2009","userCreated":{"username":"baxterj1","url":"https:\/\/www.wikispaces.com\/user\/view\/baxterj1","imageUrl":"https:\/\/ssl.wikicdn.com\/i\/user_none_lg.jpg"}}],"more":0}]},{"id":"9336874","dateCreated":"1235000803","smartDate":"Feb 18, 2009","userCreated":{"username":"cpacefishes","url":"https:\/\/www.wikispaces.com\/user\/view\/cpacefishes","imageUrl":"https:\/\/ssl.wikicdn.com\/i\/user_none_lg.jpg"},"monitored":false,"locked":false,"links":{"self":"https:\/\/speicher2.wikispaces.com\/share\/view\/9336874"},"dateDigested":1532288087,"startDate":null,"sharedType":"discussion","title":"abhorrent, abominate, susceptibility","description":"Abhorrent- page 322- "There is no indignity so abhorrent to their feelings!" definition: disagreeable, unpleasant, opposed
\n
\nAbominate- page 344- "Much as I abominate writing, I would not give up Mr. Collins's correspondence for any consideration." definition: to hate or loathe intensely
\n
\nSusceptibility- page 270- "She has been diong every thing in her power by thinking and talking on the subject to give greater- what shall I call it? susceptibility to her feelings; which are naturally lively enough." definition: inability to resist something
\n
\npreceeding three words posted by Carson Pace","replyPages":[{"page":0,"digests":[],"more":0}]},{"id":"9263696","dateCreated":"1234818556","smartDate":"Feb 16, 2009","userCreated":{"username":"johnsonaf","url":"https:\/\/www.wikispaces.com\/user\/view\/johnsonaf","imageUrl":"https:\/\/www.wikispaces.com\/user\/pic\/1225370715\/johnsonaf-lg.jpg"},"monitored":false,"locked":false,"links":{"self":"https:\/\/speicher2.wikispaces.com\/share\/view\/9263696"},"dateDigested":1532288087,"startDate":null,"sharedType":"discussion","title":"Paltry","description":"Paltry: trifling, petty
\n
\n\u201cInsolent girl! You are much mistaken if you expect to influence me by such a paltry attack as this.\u201d (99 or 8 pages into chapter 18)
\n
\nHere Elizabeth uses the word paltry to describe how Miss Bingley told her that Wickham wasn\u2019t a good man to say that the attack didn\u2019t mean anything and was not a big deal.","replyPages":[{"page":0,"digests":[],"more":0}]},{"id":"9263692","dateCreated":"1234818541","smartDate":"Feb 16, 2009","userCreated":{"username":"johnsonaf","url":"https:\/\/www.wikispaces.com\/user\/view\/johnsonaf","imageUrl":"https:\/\/www.wikispaces.com\/user\/pic\/1225370715\/johnsonaf-lg.jpg"},"monitored":false,"locked":false,"links":{"self":"https:\/\/speicher2.wikispaces.com\/share\/view\/9263692"},"dateDigested":1532288087,"startDate":null,"sharedType":"discussion","title":"Odious","description":"Odious: very unpleasant; hateful; disgusting
\n
\n\u201cHow many letters you must have occasion to write in the course of the year! Letters of business too! How odious I should think them!\u201d (32 or the first page of chapter 10)
\n
\nHere Miss Bingley is trying to flirt with Darcy in saying how unpleasant she finds letter-writing, so she uses the word odious.","replyPages":[{"page":0,"digests":[],"more":0}]},{"id":"7051765","dateCreated":"1226871167","smartDate":"Nov 16, 2008","userCreated":{"username":"samrichardson","url":"https:\/\/www.wikispaces.com\/user\/view\/samrichardson","imageUrl":"https:\/\/ssl.wikicdn.com\/i\/user_none_lg.jpg"},"monitored":false,"locked":false,"links":{"self":"https:\/\/speicher2.wikispaces.com\/share\/view\/7051765"},"dateDigested":1532288087,"startDate":null,"sharedType":"discussion","title":"Antipathies","description":"Antipathies
\nopposition in feeling
\n"How it would be a weakness in the government to break down in this attempt to practice for popularity on the lowest national antipathies and fears, and therefore Mr Attorney-General had made the most of it; . . ."(79)","replyPages":[{"page":0,"digests":[],"more":0}]},{"id":"7051675","dateCreated":"1226870966","smartDate":"Nov 16, 2008","userCreated":{"username":"samrichardson","url":"https:\/\/www.wikispaces.com\/user\/view\/samrichardson","imageUrl":"https:\/\/ssl.wikicdn.com\/i\/user_none_lg.jpg"},"monitored":false,"locked":false,"links":{"self":"https:\/\/speicher2.wikispaces.com\/share\/view\/7051675"},"dateDigested":1532288087,"startDate":null,"sharedType":"discussion","title":"Munificent","description":"Munificent
\nextremely liberal in givin; very generous
\n\u201cAgain: Tellson\u2019s was a munificent house, and extended great liberality to old customers who had fallen from their high estate.\u201d (244)","replyPages":[{"page":0,"digests":[],"more":0}]},{"id":"6942911","dateCreated":"1226525581","smartDate":"Nov 12, 2008","userCreated":{"username":"RishiBajaj","url":"https:\/\/www.wikispaces.com\/user\/view\/RishiBajaj","imageUrl":"https:\/\/ssl.wikicdn.com\/i\/user_none_lg.jpg"},"monitored":false,"locked":false,"links":{"self":"https:\/\/speicher2.wikispaces.com\/share\/view\/6942911"},"dateDigested":1532288087,"startDate":null,"sharedType":"discussion","title":"Redundancy","description":""The wood-sawyer, who was a little man with a redundancy<\/strong> of gesture (he had once been a mender of roads), cast a glance at the prison, pointed at the prison, and putting his ten fingers before his face to represent bars, peeped through them jocosely. (286-287)"
\n
\nRedundancy<\/strong> is unnecessary repetition. In this sentence, it means that the wood-sawyer's many actions are done more times than needed.","replyPages":[{"page":0,"digests":[],"more":0}]},{"id":"6941111","dateCreated":"1226522151","smartDate":"Nov 12, 2008","userCreated":{"username":"RishiBajaj","url":"https:\/\/www.wikispaces.com\/user\/view\/RishiBajaj","imageUrl":"https:\/\/ssl.wikicdn.com\/i\/user_none_lg.jpg"},"monitored":false,"locked":false,"links":{"self":"https:\/\/speicher2.wikispaces.com\/share\/view\/6941111"},"dateDigested":1532288088,"startDate":null,"sharedType":"discussion","title":"Retinue","description":"" Daring burglaries by armed men, and highway robberies, took place in the capital itself every night; families were publicly cautioned not to go out of town without removing their furniture to upholsterers' warehouses for security; the highwayman in the dark was a City tradesman in the light, and, being recognized and challenged by his fellow-tradesman whom he stopped in his character of 'the Captain,' gallantly shot him through the head and rode away; the mail was waylaid by seven robbers, and the guard shot three dead, and then got shot dead himself by the other four, 'in consequence of the failure of his ammunition': after which the mail was robbed in peace; the magnificent potentate, the Lord Mayor of London, was made to stand and deliver on Turnham Green, by one highwayman, who despoiled the illustrious creature in sight of all his retinue<\/strong>; prisoners in London gaols fought battles with their turnkeys, and the majesty of the law fired blunderbusses in among them, loaded with rounds of shot and ball; thieves snipped off diamond crosses from the necks of noble lords at Court drawing-rooms, and the mob fired on the musketeers, and the musketeers fired on the mob; and nobody thought any of these occurrences much out of the common way. (7)"
\n
\nRetinue<\/strong> means " a group of followers or supporters." In this sentence, which relates the unmanaged violence in London, it refers to his following as an official of a high position.","replyPages":[{"page":0,"digests":[],"more":0}]},{"id":"6836757","dateCreated":"1226280244","smartDate":"Nov 9, 2008","userCreated":{"username":"coveyl","url":"https:\/\/www.wikispaces.com\/user\/view\/coveyl","imageUrl":"https:\/\/www.wikispaces.com\/user\/pic\/1222125551\/coveyl-lg.jpg"},"monitored":false,"locked":false,"links":{"self":"https:\/\/speicher2.wikispaces.com\/share\/view\/6836757"},"dateDigested":1532288088,"startDate":null,"sharedType":"discussion","title":"inexorable (re-post)","description":"Implacable(adjective)- not to be appeased, mollified, or pacified; inexorable
\n
\n"Good-humored looking on the whole, but implacable looking too; evidently a man of a strong resolution and a set purpose; a man not desirable to be met, rushing down a narrow path with a gulf on either side, for nothing would turn the man." (35)
\n
\n
\nThe word is describing Monsieur Defarge as being some one who looks as if they can no be calmed or satisfied easily.
\n
\n"implacable." Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1). Random House, Inc. 27 Oct. 2008. <Dictionary.com http:\/\/dictionary.reference.com\/browse\/implacable<\/a>>.","replyPages":[{"page":0,"digests":[],"more":0}]},{"id":"6836733","dateCreated":"1226280202","smartDate":"Nov 9, 2008","userCreated":{"username":"coveyl","url":"https:\/\/www.wikispaces.com\/user\/view\/coveyl","imageUrl":"https:\/\/www.wikispaces.com\/user\/pic\/1222125551\/coveyl-lg.jpg"},"monitored":false,"locked":false,"links":{"self":"https:\/\/speicher2.wikispaces.com\/share\/view\/6836733"},"dateDigested":1532288088,"startDate":null,"sharedType":"discussion","title":"Oblivion (re-post)","description":"Oblivion
\n1. The state or condition of being completely forgotten.
\n2. Forgetfulness or an instance of forgetting or overlooking.
\n3. An official forgetting of offenses, or remission of punishment of them.
\n
\n\u201c\u2026for instance the privlage of filling up black forms for the consignment of any one to the oblivion of prison for any length of time.\u201d (27)
\n
\nThe use of the word here implies that anyone who is sent to prison is forgotten about; the whole idea of out of sight out of mind.","replyPages":[{"page":0,"digests":[],"more":0}]}],"more":true},"comments":[]},"http":{"code":200,"status":"OK"},"redirectUrl":null,"javascript":null,"notices":{"warning":[],"error":[],"info":[],"success":[]}}