Relier Pairs March for our lives vocabularyVersion en ligne Sentences extracted from a text and meanings par Elise Correa Rocha 1 Yolanda Renee King gave a -ROUSING speech at the Washington rally. 2 -DRAWing- from the civil rights leader's most famous words, she said: "I have a dream that enough is enough". 3 Hundreds of thousands -DECRY- guns. 4 Our -BALLOTs- will stop bullets. 5 Organizers of the big -RALLY- in the nation's capital hoped their protest would match in numbers and spirit last year's Women's March. 6 More than 20,000 people filled a park near the school, -CHANTing- slogans such as "Enough is enough". 7 one of the biggest -YOUTH- protests since the Vietnam era 8 We will get rid of these public servants who only care about the gun -LOBBY-. 9 Protesters complained that they are tired of inaction by -GROWN-UPS-. 10 They called for such measures as a ban on high-capacity -MAGAZINEs- and assault-type rifles. 11 A -BAN- on "weapons of war" for all but warriors. 12 In addition to pushing for -TIGHTer- gun laws, the students have been working to register young people to vote. 13 Students have -TAPped INTO- a current of gun control sentiment that has been building for years 14 President Donald Trump had yet to -WEIGH IN- on Twitter about the protests. 15 -SUMMONed- to action by student survivors of the Florida school shooting, hundreds of thousands of teenagers and their supporters rallied in the nation's capital. 16 Organizers hope the passions of the crowds will translate into a -TIPPING POINT- starting with the elections. fixed, fastened, or closed firmly; hard to move, undo, or open to take or obtain something from a particular source adults a group of people seeking to influence politicians or public officials on a particular issue say or shout repeatedly in a singsong tone to establish a connection with something, especially in order to take advantage of something a mass meeting of people making a political protest or showing support for a cause the point at which a series of small changes or incidents becomes significant enough to cause a larger, more important change young people considered as a group call people to attend (a meeting) to offer an opinion, advice, support, etc., especially in a forceful or authoritative way exciting; stirring the piece of paper used to record someone's vote to publicly denounce a chamber for holding a supply of cartridges to be fed automatically to the breech of a gun an official or legal prohibition