The Great Gatsby Chapter 9
Across
- 2. of or concerning the appreciation of beauty or good taste
- 7. lacking in brightness, sparkle, or sheen
- 9. slightly improper or indelicate
- 10. showing irritation or ill humor by a gloomy silence or reserve
- 13. carried
- 14. unspeakable; beyond expression
- 16. to avoid or escape by speed, cleverness, trickery, etc.; to evade
- 18. without stopping or pausing; unendingly; incessantly
- 20. a person's manner of speaking or reading aloud in public
- 21. difficult to perceive or understand
Down
- 1. proportionate; adequate
- 3. bulb-shaped; bulging
- 4. thin
- 5. things to be added; an addition
- 6. being more than is sufficient or required; excessive; unnecessary or needless
- 8. a satire or lampoon, esp. one posted in a public place
- 11. to disturb the condition, action, or function of; to make insane
- 12. occurring accidentally or spontaneously
- 15. to cater to the lower tastes and desires of others or to exploit their weaknesses
- 17. a loose, long overcoat made of heavy, rugged fabric and often belted
- 19. to think or infer without certain or strong evidence; conjecture; guess