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undistinguished
(adj) Common; nothing special.
āIts furnishings are typical and undistinguished and their primary feature now is that they have clearly had to accommodate the living of too many people for too many years and they are tiredā (23).
pretense
(n) Pretending or feigning; make-believe; a false show of something.
āAll pretenses but living itself have long since vanished from the very atmosphere of this roomā (24).
exasperated
(adj) Irritated; provoked; irked.
ā(The boy gives her an exasperated look for her lack of understanding, and eats grudgingly)ā(28).
viciously
(adv) With violence or fury.
ā(Travis jabs his spoon into his cereal bowl viciously, and rests his head in anger upon his fists)ā (29)
sullen
(adj) Showing irritation or ill humor by a gloomy silence or reserve.
ā(With sullen politeness) Yes'mā (29).
vindicated
(v) Cleared of accusation, blame, or doubt.
ā(The boy finally turns around and rolls his eyes at her, knowing the mood has changed and he is vindicated; he does not, however, move toward her yet)ā (30)
proposition
(n) A suggested plan.
āThis ain't no fly-by-night proposition, babyā (33).
vengeance
(n) Revenge.
āShe closes the door with a sleepy vengeance and crosses to the table and sits down a little defeatedā (35)
tentatively
(adv) Uncertainly.
ā(She waits several seconds, trying to make up her mind about something, and looks at RUTH a little tentatively before going on)ā (44)
furtively
(adv) Stealthily; in a way that hides motive.
ā(Studying her mother-in-law furtively and concentrating on her ironing, anxious to encourage without seeming to)ā (44)
futile
(adj) Useless.
ā(Dropping her hands in a futile gesture)ā(45)
tyrant
(n) Dictator; harsh ruler.
āI also see that everybody thinks it's all right for Mama to be a tyrantā (52)
forlornly
(adv) Pitifully; desperately; hopelessly.
āRUTH comes in forlornly and pulls off her coat with dejectionā (57)
mutilated
(adj) Maimed; damaged.
āYou wear it well ā¦ very well ā¦ mutilated hair and allā (61)
assimilationism
(n) Belief that minority cultures should be absorbed into a dominant culture.
āAssimilationism is so popular in your countryā (63)
insinuatingly
(adv) With more meaning than is spoken; implied.
ā(Insinuatingly, to her daughter) Yes, I guess I see why we done commence to get so interested in Africa 'round hereā (66)
haphazardly
(adv) Carelessly.
āShe sets the headdress on haphazardly and then notices her hair again and clutches at it and then replaces the headdress and frowns at herselfā (66)
arrogant
(adj) Proud; haughty, having/revealing an exaggerated sense of one's own importance or abilities
ā(She promenades to the radio and, with an arrogant flourish, turns off the good loud blues that is playing)ā (76)
eccentric
(adj) Deviating from the norm; strange.
āOh, don't be so proud of yourself, Bennie just because you look eccentricā (80)
oppressive
(adj) Tyrannical.
ā It means someone who is willing to give up his own culture and submerge himself completely in the dominant, and in this case oppressive culture! ā (81)
(n) clichƩ
Trite or overused expression or idea.
āShe smiles happily at this cliche of clichesā(82)
plaintively
(adv) Sorrowfully; pathetically.
āRuth: (Plaintively) Walter Lee why don't we just try to talk about it ā¦ā (86)
menacingly
(adv) Threateningly.
ā(MAMA clamps her lips together, and RUTH advances toward her son menacingly)ā (90)
exuberant
(adj) Marked by unrestrained enthusiasm.
ā(And she builds with momentum as she starts to circle the room with an exuberant, almost tearfully happy release)ā (93)
presumably
(adv) Probably; reasonably supposed.
āBENEATHA and GEORGE come in, presumably from an evening out again.ā (96)
rebuff
(n) Blunt refusal.
ā(He starts to kiss her, she rebuffs him again and he jumps up)ā (96)
revelation
(n) New information.
She went out and she bought you a house! (The explosion comes from WALTER at the end of the revelation and he jumps up and turns away from all of them in a fury.ā (91)Ā
āWalter, you ain't been to work for three days! (This is a revelation to her) Where you been, Walter Lee Younger?ā (105)
amiably
(adv) Good-naturedly.
āWALTER: (Amiably, as he sits himself easily on a chair, leaning forward on his knees with interest and looking expectantly into the newcomer's face) What can we do for you, Mr. Lindner!ā (114)
ludicrous
(adj)Ridiculous.
ā(She pops it on her head to prove it to her grandson, and the hat is ludicrous and considerably oversized)ā (124)
ominous
(adj) Menacing; threatening. (giving the impression that something bad or unpleasant is going to happen)
āIn the living room BENEATHA sits at the table, still surrounded by the now almost ominous packing crates.ā (131)
plunder
(v) To rob; to loot.
āWhat about all the crooks and thieves and just plain idiots who will come into power and steal and plunder the same as before only now they will be black and do it in the name of the new Independence WHAT ABOUT THEM?!ā (134)
wrought
(v) Shaped; made.
Ā āHow often I have looked at you and said, āAh so this is what the New World hath finally wroughtā¦āā(137)
monologue
(n) Long speech by one person.
ā(WALTER ignores her completely and continues frantically and destructively looking for something and hurling things to floor and tearing things out of their place in his search. BENEATHA ignores the eccentricity of his actions and goes on with the monologue of insultā (138)
eccentricity
(n) Quality of being strange or unusual in behavior.
ā(WALTER ignores her completely and continues frantically and destructively looking for something and hurling things to floor and tearing things out of their place in his search. BENEATHA ignores the eccentricity of his actions and goes on with the monologue of insultā (138)
epitaph
(n) Inscription on a tombstone.
āYes? What you tell him a minute ago? That he wasn't a man? Yes? You give him up for me? You done wrote his epitaph too like the rest of the world? Well, who give you the privilege?ā (145)
amid
(adv) Among; in the midst of.
ā(She flies to get it amid the general bustling of the family, who are deliberately trying to ignore the nobility of the past moment)ā (149)