Leiningen Versus the Ants Vocabulary
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- plantation
farm
- placidly
pleasantly calm or peaceful; unruffled
- lucid
clear, transparent; shining or bright; easily understood and intelligible
- bunk
humbug; nonsense
- saurians
any of various reptiles of the suborder Sauria, which includes the lizards and in former classifications also the crocodiles and dinosaurs.
- distended
increased in volume, size, etc; swollen
- blindgut
a digestive cavity having only one opening
- conceivably
possibly; imaginably
- obstinacy
stubborn persistence
- moored
to fix in place, secure, especially a boat
- imploring
to beg urgently or piteously for aid or mercy
- ravenous
extremely hungry; famished
- campaigns
military operations for a specific objective
- peril
exposure to injury, loss, or destruction; grave risk; jeopardy; danger
- conquer
to win, especially through struggle
- dullards
a person regarded as mentally dull; a dolt.
- reeled
to go around and around in a whirling motion; to stagger or sway
- cranks
eccentric persons, especially who are unduly zealous.
- accelerate
to increase in speed; to go faster, especially in a vehicle
- sluggards
a slothful person; an idler
- grapple
to seize another, or each other, in a firm grip, as in wrestling; clinch.
- vanquished
defeated or conquered in battle
- primal
first; original; fundamental
- cunning
to be able to; have the ability, power, or skill to
- imminent
likely to occur at any moment
- tapir
any of several large, stout, three-toed ungulates of the family Tapiridae, of Central and South America, the Malay Peninsula, and Sumatra, somewhat resembling swine and having a long, flexible snout: all species are threatened or endangered
- kinkajous
a brownish, arboreal mammal, Potos flavus, of Central and South America, having a prehensile tail, related to the raccoon and coat
- loping
to move with long, bounding steps; to walk long, leisurely steps, especially referring to horses
- dementia
severe impairment or loss of intellectual capacity and personality integration, due to the loss of or damage to neurons in the brain
- denizens
an inhabitant or resident; a foreigner who is granted permission to live in a place
- steppe
an extensive plain, especially without trees
- pell-mell
in disorderly, headlong haste; in a recklessly hurried manner
- advent
a coming into place, view, or being; arrival
- blighters
diseases that cause plants, trees or fruits to wither or decay.
- cranium
the skull of vertebrae
- mandibles
the jaw, particularly the lower jaw
- besieged
make a long continued attempt to get possession of a place
- deluge
a great flood
- dwelt
to have a fixed home; to reside
- cataract
a waterfall of a good size; a heavy downpour
- shoals
an assembly of many; throng
- weir
obstruct or dam placed in a stream to raise the water, steer it into a trough or irrigation
- coursing
the act of water or other liquid rushing through a river, trough or similar space
- spades
implements used for digging; shovels
- deem
to judge; to think
- impelled
to drive or push forward; propelled
- submerging
to place under or plunge into water or other liquid
- annihilation
to destroy utterly
- aura
a distinctive and pervasive quality or character; air; atmosphere
- peril
exposure to injury, loss, or destruction; grave risk; jeopardy; danger
- fervidly
burning; glowing; intensely hot.
- clod
a lump or mass, esp. of earth or clay
- perilous
hazardous; risky and unsafe
- Dervish
Moslem monk or a friar
- Pirouette
A dancer’s whirling about on one foot or on toes.
- transfixed
to pierce through
- myriad
an extremely large number
- elemental
of the four elements: earth, water, wind and fire.
- eddied
water or air moving against the main current when having a whirling motion; small whirl pool or whirlwind.
- coherent
logically connected; consistent in structure and thought.
- fusillades
continuous discharge
- tamarind
a large tropical tree; the pods of such tree
- forlorn
desolate or dreary; unhappy or miserable, as in feeling, condition, or appearance.
- ceaselessly
without stop or pause; unending; incessant.
- illuminate
to supply or brighten with light; to enlighten, as in with knowledge
- victualing
to supply with food and provisions
- provender
food, especially for cattle
- foray
to plunder, pillage, raid
- fey
acting as if enchanted or under a spell; foredoomed to die at a certain time, especially suddenly.
- alacrity
cheerful willingness and promptitude, liveliness
- raze
to tear down; demolish; level to the ground
- intermittent
stopping or ceasing for a time; alternately ceasing and beginning again
- fording
the act of crossing a stream or river by wading or in a car or on a horse
- vanguard
the foremost division or the front part of an army; advance
- skirmishers
soldiers who are responsible for overseeing outlying posts
- novel
of a new kind; different from anything seen or known before
- slow-witted
not very smart
- dumbfounded
to be made dumb or stupid because of a surprise or shock
- belied
to cause someone to lie; contradicted by
- knitted brows
scowls
- zealously
with extreme, and sometimes religious, enthusiasm
- cordon
a line or circle of soldiers, policemen, forts, etc. placed at intervals to guard a place.
- sentries
guards; watchmen
- betook
to cause something to be taken
- sated
to be satisfied fully; supplied with more than enough, so as to disgust or weary
- voracious
eating much; greedy in eating, ravenous
- glutted
having eaten too much
- razing
destroying or ruining completely
- granaries
storage areas for grain
- impel
to drive or to force
- garrison
the soldiers stationed in a fort or town, usually for the purpose of defending it
- listlessly
seeming too tired to care about anything; indifferently
- rampart
a wide bank of earth, often with a wall on top, built around a fort to defend it; anything that defends
- ecstasy
a state of great joy; thrilling or overwhelming delight; rapture
- holocaust
mass murder, or genocide, as by bomb or other devastation within a relatively short time span. (In WWII the Nazis murdered millions of Jews and other people. Also a nuclear bomb murdered millions in Japan. These were holocausts.)
- havoc
very great destruction or injury
- whet
to make keen or eager; to stimulate
- anew
once more; again
- immolate
to kill as a sacrifice
- cistern
a reservoir or tank for carrying water or other fluids
- disused
not used
- spry
active; lively; nimble
- flogged
whipped very hard; beaten
- inundate
overflow; flood
- gauntlet
formerly, a military punishment in which the offender had to run between two rows of men who struck him with clubs or other weapons as he passed; now to carry out an action despite danger on all sides.
- nil
nothing; zero
- apathy
laziness or indifference, in particular towards a cause
- breeches
short trousers reaching to the knee
- salve
a soft, greasy substance put on wounds or sores
- chafer
any group of beetles that feed on plants
- beleaguered
besieged; surrounded
- aloft
far above the earth; high up
- lurid
lit up with red or fiery glare; glaring in brightness or colour; terrible, sensational or startling
- cuirasses
a piece of armour for the body; breastplate
- pyre
a pile of wood on which a dead body is burned as a funeral rite; any large heap of burnable material
- appreciably
an amount enough to be appreciated or noticed; significantly
- hulled
a hull is a body or frame of a ship, therefore hulled means to be framed or enclosed in a strong structure
- smart
intelligence; also an injury
- etching
engraving a piece of art by using acid to eat a design into a plate of metal, which is then used as a stamp
- panorama
a wide, unbroken view of a surrounding region
- apparition
a ghost or spirit
- lacerated
cut; sliced
- thwarted
opposed and defeated; obstructed or prevented from doing something
- illimitable
without limit
- alluvium
the sand and mud left from flowing water
- swathed
wrapped up closely or fully; bandaged
- fomentations
medicines or concoctions
- draught
a drink, as in, “a draught of beer”
Questions
A)Why do you think the author chose to use these words, instead of using ones that are more commonly used and known?
B)In the following sentences replace the word in italics with a stronger word:
After I left the doctor’s office, I sat down and cried. ______
The wind blew through the woods, knocking down trees. ______
Mr. Dover is nice ______
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