2023-2024 P. 6 Class Words
Across
- 4. (adj) extremely loud; having a powerful voice (the name of a Greek warrior who fought at Troy)
- 6. (n) A box used to light sticks called matches on fire (friction match invented in 1820s)
- 8. (N) a sudden brief rush of wind (Norse “gustr”)
- 9. (n) training hawks to hunt in cooperation with a person (started 5000 BCE Mongolia)
- 14. (n) the land alongside or sloping down to a river or lake (Germanic origin; related to bench)
- 15. (adj) stubborn (“having a head resembling a pig,” 1610s)
- 16. (n) The ability to withstand hardship or adversity (from French word meaning make hard)
- 18. (detach a gun from its limber so it can be used (“un”+ “limber” 1760)
- 19. (n) The leaves of a tree or plant (Latin “folium” leaf)
- 20. (noun ) a mass nerve tissue at the base of the brian that controls bodily functions (Latin for oblong or elongated)
- 22. (n) a child prodigy (German “wunder” wonder + “kind” child)
- 23. (adj) having the power to increase proportion (Latin “dia” through’ + “phorein” carry)
Down
- 1. (v) to discourage or dispirit (originated in Shakespeare’s play Henry V)
- 2. (V) present or constitute a problem, danger, or difficulty (late Latin/French)
- 3. (adj) not allowing an opening for denial or refusal (Latin word, premiere)
- 5. (n) one who fusses over trifles (associated with Lucy from the 1960s Peanuts comic)
- 7. (n) Government by technical experts, scientists, and engineers (like democracy but with tech)
- 8. Biloba (n) a tree whose extract might improve mental functioning (from a wrong translation of its Japanese name)
- 10. (v) to repeat in a shorter form (Latin re- ‘again’ + capitulum ‘chapter’)
- 11. (n) theory of evolution that states animals and plants develop through natural selection (Charles Darwin)
- 12. (n) a name or title (from Latin word that means to appeal)
- 13. (verb) to bend one knee, as in worship (Latin noun genu “knee” and flectere “to bend”)
- 17. (n) the lifework of a writer, an artist, or a composer (Latin word “opera”)
- 21. (v) become pale (Germanic origin, related to blanch)