Thanks guys. Still waiting for Flight Lessons, hopefully Ill find a way to get them when I go off to college in a few years (fall 2007). Yeah, normally I could get those vocab words a little less obvious, but for some reason all of our words are always "bad" so its really hard sometimes. I could always go back and take them out to fix the story up.
I think I get it now: you had a list of "five dollar words" that you had to use in the story, right?
Been so long since I was saddled with that nearly-impossible task that it didn't occur to me..

However, the thing I see that really makes those cumbersome words stick out ("cumbersome"; nice word there) is that when you seem unsure of such a word, you set it in a very minimal, unsupportive sentence. "It was a pacific day" is tough, because hardly anybody uses that adjective anymore, especially to describe the weather. One more sentence or phrase that elaborates on that would make better use of the word... and get you closer to the minimum number of words or pages.
For example: "It was a pacific day, with gentle winds and scattered small clouds. The sun beamed benignly in the deep blue sky..."
"Benignly"... another good one...

You see what Imean... unusual or archaic words usually require a little window-dressing, or they just sort of lay down and die, instead of leaping off the page. An important goal is to convince the reader that even if
they[i/] have no clue what the word means, at least [i]you do...

Hang in there; soon enough you'll be done with school, then you can
really learn how to write.
