Name of Book: Twilight
Pages Read This Week: 3-93.
One-Paragraph Summary of What Happened This In the Book This Week. (5-10 sentences)
: Bella moved in to her father Charlie’s house which is located in the city of Forks. On the school of Forks , Bella meets Edward Cullen. He is gorgeous but he is not interested in others(except his family). One day Edward sits next to Bella in a biology class, but he tries to devoid her. The next day, Bella got in danger and Edward saved her.
15 Vocabulary Words, Definitions, and Sentences Using Them (add links to your sources - the places where you found definitions)
Omnipresent: Something that is omnipresent is present everywhere or seems to be always present.
Ex) The sound of sirens was an omnipresent background noise in New York
Compel: If a situation, a rule, or a person compels you to do something, they force you to do it.
Ex) If you feel compelled to do something, you feel that you must do it, because it is the right thing to do.
stipulation: If you stipulate a condition or stipulate that something must be done, you say clearly that it must be done.
Ex) She could have stipulated that she would pay when she collected the computer
.trail: A trail is a rough path across open country or through forests
Ex) He was following a broad trail through the trees.
disorient: If something disorients you, you lose your sense of direction, or you generally feel lost and uncertain, for example because you are in an unfamiliar environment.
Ex) An overnight stay at a friend's house disorients me.
overwhelming: If something is overwhelming, it affects you very strongly, and you do not know how to deal with it.
Ex) The task won't feel so overwhelming if you break it down into small, easy-to-accomplish ste
utterly: You use utterly to emphasize that something is very great in extent, degree, or amount.
Ex) everything about the country seemed utterly different from what I'd experienced before.
enunciate: When you enunciate a word or part of a word, you pronounce it clearly.
Ex) His voice was harsh as he enunciated each word carefully.
crookedly: If you describe something as crooked, especially something that is usually straight, you mean that it is bent or twisted.
Ex) Polly gave her a crooked grin.
comparison: When you make a comparison, you consider two or more things and discover the differences between them.
Ex) By comparison, expenditure on education increased last year.
ominous: If you describe something as ominous, you mean that it worries you because it makes you think that something unpleasant is going to happen.
Ex) That man's angry threats are ominous; he may hurt someone
indicator: An indicator is a measurement or value which gives you an idea of what something is like.
Ex) vital economic indicators, such as inflation, growth and the trade gap.
muse: If you muse on something, you think about it, usually saying or writing what you are thinking at the same time.
Ex) He once mused that he would have voted Labour in 1964 had he been old enough.
myriad: A myriad or myriads of people or things is a very large number or great variety of them.
Ex) they face a myriad of problems bringing up children.
expose: To expose something that is usually hidden means to uncover it so that it can be seen.
Ex) Lowered sea levels exposed the shallow continental shelf beneath the Bering Sea.