Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
100

Someone or something that is quick and skillful in movement, agile or clever.

Nimble

100

Acts of severe violence, cruelty, and systematic oppression.

Atrocities

100

Expressing contempt, disapproval, or negativity.

Pejoratively.

100

A state of wild disorder, noise, and confusion.

Pandemonium.

100

Someone who has a great appetite or desire for something, whether it's food or another activity, often to the point of excess  

Voracious.

200

Walking heavily, o plodding.

Slog

200

Recklessly wasteful or extravagant.

Prodigal

200

Rough and noisy in a cheerful way, high-spirited.

Boisterous.

200

Something is in a state of severe decay or ruin, often due to neglect or misuse

Dilapidated.

200

Something appears to be true or has a stated reason, but there is a suspicion that the truth or deeper motivation is different

Ostensibly.

300

Delivering a long aggressive a, and critical lesson or verbal attack, often with strong emotion.

Haranguing.

300

A person who lives outside their native country, often for work, study, or lifestyle reasons.

Expatriate.

300

Unconventional and slightly strange.

Eccentric.

300

To do something in a sneaky, secret, or stealthy way to avoid being noticed.

Furtively.

300

Something that deviates from what is standard, normal, or expected.

Anomaly.

400

South Africa's former system of institutionalized racial segregation and discrimination

Apartheid.

400

Domestic work and factory or industrial labor.

Job choices for black women in South Africa during Apartheid.

400

Strategy used by Trevor Noah's family when walking together.

Pretending not to know each other

400

Strategy to adapt speech depending on who one is talking to.

Code-switching.

400

Official job title given to Patricia’s maid, despite the fact that she worked far more than her position suggested.

The second girl.

500

A mixed-race church, a white church, and a black church.

Types of church Trevor Noah attends.

500

Language spoken by Trevor Noah's mother and many Black South Africans, considered inferior under Apartheid.

Xhosa

500

Trevor's parents had to hide their relationship because of this law.

The Immorality Act.

500

Trevor compares himself with this animal to describe how he adapts to different social groups by changing language and behavior

Chameleon.

500

Patricia tells Trevor that “knowledge is power,” which is why she insists on spending her money on this instead of luxuries

Books and education.